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Faith in Roleplaying
Today in many games especially games like Shadowrun it
has become the way for the games to work is to choose
one religion over another as the correct way things in
the universe. In SR it is the pagan religions that turn
out to be correct and expressed throughout the games and
the characters within. In the real world it is especially
cool to be pagan and receive special treatment in the
world. In job selection, on college campuses and the like.
It became O.K. for one type of faith to predominate the
rest. In the early part of this century is was the WASPS
who controlled everything and they were what was considered
vogue. Everyone wanted to be one of them because they
held the power. Before that it was the Catholics and the
Protestants and so on. Today it is the Pagans and all
that the term encompass. Now don't get me wrong I'm not
trying to slam anybody's personal faith. I respect everybody's
right to believe in what they choose to. From the Native
Americans, who have a beautiful religion, one that I admire
and respect deeply, although it's not one I choose to
believe in, to the Houngan of Haiti to the new Druids
of England. What I however perceive as a problem is that
today as before one is being chosen to come out on top
in today's game world. Now it's cool to slam those who
believe in the Cross or the Star of David. It's O.K. to
ignore their contributions to the world in favor of what's
in vogue right now. For that matter the followers of the
Space Brothers are more in vogue than the Judeo-Christian
faith. For the most part they are ignored in favor of
the pagan religions and those characters who follow these
beliefs are portrayed as either stupid or evil and sometimes
both. Now the point of the article is not to say that
Judeo-Christian faiths are better. Not by any means is
this the intent of the article. the intent of the article
is to criticize the choice to ostracize one faith over
another.
When the pagan religions where on the down and out that
was wrong. When the Jews where persecuted in W.W.II that
was wrong. Telling any one their faith is incorrect or
evil is just plain wrong. Except today it's "PC"
to do it to the mainstream. It's the gaming companies
do the same it's correct and "PC" to make one
faith seem to be the correct one over another. As Huston
Smith, a theologian on many religious practices and faith
once said, Each religion is special in it's own right.
No one faith is correct over another. Each one is deserving
of respect and admiration. Each is just as right as another
as each seeks it own way to express that which is divine
in the universe. Now to reiterate I'm not trying to tell
you that one faith is better than another. Wicca is just
as valid to those who practice it as Islam is to the Muslims.
But in gaming today it is popular to deny many groups
of the validation of their faiths. Only once has a priest
ever shown up as a character and he was a minor one at
best. When a Houngan showed up he was portrayed as a villain
of the deepest dye. I have never heard of hero or even
a secondary character in the books being a Rabbi or a
Shinto priest, for that matter I can't remember seeing
a atheist. Who's belief for that matter are just a valid
as any one else's. I've yet to see somebody portrayed
with a Norse idol except for Winterknight who practice
the toxic versions of that. None of the characters in
the SR books have had beliefs from Africa. I haven't seem
anybody except for "Pride" from a module from
1st edition who had any connections with Africa and it's
religious practices. The aborigines from Australia made
a cameo as a bad guy, but no real information on the beliefs
of dreamtime. I guess what I'm trying to get at is that
it's just plain wrong to have one religion coming out
on top over another. No one faith is better than another
and each is just as deserving of respect as another.
From my personal experience I've met people from many
faiths who's beliefs have impressed me. From Rick a guy
who's on the out's with me as we plainly don't see eye
to eye on many things and don't really like each other
right now. I did respect him for his beliefs and the strength
of them. The same with a guy we all called Ogre up in
Dayton who practiced Wicca, and the strength's of his
beliefs where just as impressive as a guy from Zaire who's
name I can't even pronounce. His African beliefs were
just as strong and beautiful as anyone else's.
Nightlife - 2nd January 2001
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