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Flying Spaghetti Monster

The Flying Spaghetti Monster (FSM) is the deity of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, or Pastafarianism, a parodic new religious movement that promotes a light-hearted view of religion.[3] It originated in opposition to the teaching of intelligent design in public schools in the United States. According to adherents, Pastafarianism (a portmanteau of pasta and Rastafarianism) is a "real, legitimate religion, as much as any other".[4] It has received some limited recognition as such.[5][6][7][8][9]

Flying Spaghetti Monster
Pastafarianism
Touched by His Noodly Appendage, a parody of Michelangelo's The Creation of Adam, is an iconic image of the Flying Spaghetti Monster[1] by Arne Niklas Jansson.[2]
Abodespaghettimonster.org
Symbol
TextsThe Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, The Loose Canon, the Holy Book of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster
Festivals"Holiday"

The "Flying Spaghetti Monster" was first described in a satirical open letter written by Bobby Henderson in 2005 to protest the Kansas State Board of Education decision to permit teaching intelligent design as an alternative to evolution in state school science classes.[10] In the letter, Henderson demanded equal time in science classrooms for "Flying Spaghetti Monsterism", alongside intelligent design and evolution.[11] After Henderson published the letter on his website, the Flying Spaghetti Monster rapidly became an Internet phenomenon and a symbol of opposition to the teaching of intelligent design in state schools.[12]

Pastafarian tenets (generally satires of creationism) are presented on Henderson's Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster website (where he is described as "prophet"), and are also elucidated in The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, written by Henderson in 2006, and in The Loose Canon, the Holy Book of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. The central creation myth is that an invisible and undetectable Flying Spaghetti Monster created the universe after drinking heavily. Pirates are revered as the original Pastafarians.[13] The FSM community congregates at Henderson's website to share ideas about and sightings of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, and display crafts representing images of it.[4]

Because of its popularity and exposure, the Flying Spaghetti Monster is often used as a more modern version of Russell's teapot—an argument that the philosophic burden of proof lies upon those who make unfalsifiable claims, not on those who reject them. Pastafarians have engaged in disputes with creationists, including in Polk County, Florida, where they played a role in dissuading the local school board from adopting new rules on teaching evolution.[14] Pastafarianism has received praise from the scientific community and criticism from proponents of intelligent design.

History

In January 2005,[15] Bobby Henderson, a 24-year-old[16] Oregon State University physics graduate, sent an open letter regarding the Flying Spaghetti Monster to the Kansas State Board of Education.[12][17][18] In that letter, Henderson satirized creationism by professing his belief that whenever a scientist carbon-dates an object, a supernatural creator that closely resembles spaghetti and meatballs is there "changing the results with His Noodly Appendage". Henderson argued that his beliefs were just as valid as intelligent design, and called for equal time in science classrooms alongside intelligent design and evolution.[11] The letter was sent prior to the Kansas evolution hearings as an argument against the teaching of intelligent design in biology classes.[12] Henderson, describing himself as a "concerned citizen" representing more than ten million others, argued that intelligent design and his belief that "the universe was created by a Flying Spaghetti Monster" were equally valid.[12] In his letter, he noted,

I think we can all look forward to the time when these three theories are given equal time in our science classrooms across the country, and eventually the world; one third time for Intelligent Design, one third time for Flying Spaghetti Monsterism, and one third time for logical conjecture based on overwhelming observable evidence.

— Bobby Henderson[11]

According to Henderson, since the intelligent design movement uses ambiguous references to a designer, any conceivable entity may fulfill that role, including a Flying Spaghetti Monster.[19] Henderson explained, "I don't have a problem with religion. What I have a problem with is religion posing as science. If there is a god and he's intelligent, then I would guess he has a sense of humor".[10][20]

In May 2005, having received no reply from the Kansas State Board of Education, Henderson posted the letter on his website, gaining significant public interest.[4][15] Shortly thereafter, Pastafarianism became an Internet phenomenon.[10][19] Henderson published the responses he then received from board members.[21] Three board members, all of whom opposed the curriculum amendments, responded positively; a fourth board member responded with the comment "It is a serious offense to mock God".[22] Henderson has also published the significant amount of hate mail, including death threats, that he has received.[23][24] Within one year of sending the open letter, Henderson received thousands of emails on the Flying Spaghetti Monster, eventually totaling over 60,000,[25] of which he has said that "about 95 percent have been supportive, while the other five percent have said I am going to hell".[10] During that time, his site garnered tens of millions of hits.[25]

Internet phenomenon

 
The FSM version of the "Jesus fish" emblem has become accepted as the symbol of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. The symbol was originally created by readers of the Boing Boing web site in 2005.[26][27]

As word of Henderson's challenge to the board spread, his website and cause received more attention and support. The satirical nature of Henderson's argument made the Flying Spaghetti Monster popular with bloggers as well as humor and Internet culture websites.[28] The Flying Spaghetti Monster was featured on websites such as Boing Boing, Something Awful, Uncyclopedia, and Fark. Moreover, an International Society for Flying Spaghetti Monster Awareness and other fan sites emerged.[29] As public awareness grew, the mainstream media picked up on the phenomenon. The Flying Spaghetti Monster became a symbol for the case against intelligent design in public education.[12][30][31] The open letter was printed in several major newspapers, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Chicago Sun-Times,[25] and received worldwide press attention.[32] Henderson himself was surprised by its success, stating that he "wrote the letter for [his] own amusement as much as anything".[19]

In August 2005, in response to a challenge from a reader, Boing Boing announced a $250,000 prize—later raised to $1,000,000—of "Intelligently Designed currency" payable to any individual who could produce empirical evidence proving that Jesus is not the son of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.[33] It was modeled as a parody of a similar challenge issued by young-earth creationist Kent Hovind.[19][34]

According to Henderson, newspaper articles on the Flying Spaghetti Monster attracted the attention of book publishers; he said that at one point, there were six publishers interested in the Flying Spaghetti Monster.[25] In November 2005, Henderson received an advance from Villard to write The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.[35]

In November 2005, the Kansas State Board of Education voted to allow criticisms of evolution, including language about intelligent design, as part of testing standards.[36] On February 13, 2007, the board voted 6–4 to reject the amended science standards enacted in 2005. This was the fifth time in eight years that the board had rewritten the standards on evolution.[37]

Tenets

With millions, if not thousands, of devout worshipers, the Church of the FSM is widely considered a legitimate religion, even by its opponents—mostly fundamentalist Christians, who have accepted that our God has larger balls than theirs.

Bobby Henderson[4]

Although Henderson has stated that "the only dogma allowed in the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster is the rejection of dogma", some general beliefs are held by Pastafarians.[4] Henderson proposed many Pastafarian tenets in reaction to common arguments by proponents of intelligent design.[38] These "canonical beliefs" are presented by Henderson in his letter to the Kansas State Board of Education,[11] The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, and on Henderson's website, where he is described as a "prophet".[39] They tend to satirize creationism.[19]

Creation

The central creation myth is that an invisible and undetectable Flying Spaghetti Monster created the universe "after drinking heavily". According to these beliefs, the Monster's intoxication was the cause for a flawed Earth. Furthermore, according to Pastafarianism, all evidence for evolution was planted by the Flying Spaghetti Monster in an effort to test the faith of Pastafarians—parodying certain biblical literalists.[40] When scientific measurements such as radiocarbon dating are taken, the Flying Spaghetti Monster "is there changing the results with His Noodly Appendage".[11]

Afterlife

The Pastafarian conception of Heaven includes a beer volcano and a stripper (or sometimes prostitute or paint stripper) factory.[39][41] The Pastafarian Hell is similar, except that the beer is stale and the strippers have sexually transmitted diseases.[42]

Pirates and global warming

 
A misleading graph that is claimed to correlate the number of pirates with global temperature

According to Pastafarian beliefs, pirates are "absolute divine beings" and the original Pastafarians.[11] Furthermore, Pastafarians believe that the concept of pirates as "thieves and outcasts" is misinformation spread by Christian theologians in the Middle Ages. Instead, Pastafarians believe that they were "peace-loving explorers and spreaders of good will" who distributed candy to small children, adding that modern pirates are in no way similar to "the fun-loving buccaneers from history". In addition, Pastafarians believe that ghost pirates are responsible for all of the mysteriously lost ships and planes of the Bermuda Triangle. Pastafarians are among those who celebrate International Talk Like a Pirate Day on September 19.[43]

The inclusion of pirates in Pastafarianism was part of Henderson's original letter to the Kansas State Board of Education, in an effort to illustrate that correlation does not imply causation.[44] Henderson presented the argument that "global warming, earthquakes, hurricanes, and other natural disasters are a direct effect of the shrinking numbers of pirates since the 1800s".[11] A deliberately misleading graph accompanying the letter (with numbers humorously disordered on the x-axis) shows that as the number of pirates decreased, global temperatures increased. This parodies the suggestion from some religious groups that the high numbers of disasters, famines, and wars in the world is due to the lack of respect and worship toward their deity. In 2008, Henderson interpreted the growing pirate activities at the Gulf of Aden as additional support, pointing out that Somalia has "the highest number of pirates and the lowest carbon emissions of any country".[45]

Holidays

 
An alternative tree-topper for Pastafarians, handmade from pipe cleaners and pom poms

Pastafarian beliefs extend into lighthearted religious ceremony. Pastafarians celebrate every Friday as a holy day.[19] Prayers are concluded with a final declaration of affirmation, "R'amen" (or "rAmen"); the term is a parodic portmanteau of the terms "Amen" and "Ramen", referring to a Japanese noodle dish and to the "noodly appendages" of their deity.[10] The celebration of "Pastover" requires consuming large amounts of pasta, and during "Ramendan", only Ramen noodles are consumed; International Talk Like a Pirate Day is observed as a holiday.[46][47]

Holiday

Around the time of Christmas, Hanukkah, and Kwanzaa, Pastafarians celebrate a vaguely defined holiday named "Holiday". Holiday does not take place on "a specific date so much as it is the Holiday season, itself". According to Henderson, as Pastafarians "reject dogma and formalism", there are no specific requirements for Holiday. Pastafarians celebrate Holiday in any manner they please.[48] Pastafarians interpret the increasing usage of "Happy Holidays", rather than more traditional greetings (such as "Merry Christmas"), as support for Pastafarianism.[48] In December 2005, George W. Bush's White House Christmas greeting cards wished people a happy "holiday season",[49] leading Henderson to write the President a note of thanks, including a "fish" emblem depicting the Flying Spaghetti Monster for his limousine or plane.[50] Henderson also thanked Walmart for its use of the phrase.[51]

Books

The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

 
The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

In December 2005 Bobby Henderson received a reported US$80,000 advance from Villard to write The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Henderson said he planned to use proceeds from the book to build a pirate ship, with which he would spread the Pastafarian religion.[35][52] The book was released on March 28, 2006,[53] and elaborates on Pastafarian beliefs established in the open letter.[54] Henderson employs satire to present perceived flaws with evolutionary biology and discusses history and lifestyle from a Pastafarian perspective. The gospel urges readers to try Pastafarianism for thirty days, saying, "If you don't like us, your old religion will most likely take you back".[32][55] Henderson states on his website that more than 100,000 copies of the book have been sold.[56]

Scientific American described the gospel as "an elaborate spoof on Intelligent Design" and "very funny". In 2006, it was nominated for the Quill Award in Humor, but was not selected as the winner.[56] Wayne Allen Brenner of The Austin Chronicle characterized the book as "a necessary bit of comic relief in the overly serious battle between science and superstition".[54] Simon Singh of The Daily Telegraph wrote that the gospel "might be slightly repetitive...but overall it is a brilliant, provocative, witty and important gem of a book".[32]

Casey Luskin of the Discovery Institute, which advocates intelligent design, labeled the gospel "a mockery of the Christian New Testament".[57]

The Loose Canon

In September 2005, before Henderson had received an advance to write the Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, a Pastafarian member of the Venganza forums known as Solipsy, announced the beginning of a project to collect texts from fellow Pastafarians to compile into The Loose Canon, the Holy Book of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, essentially analogous to the Bible.[58] The book was completed in 2010 and was made available for download.[59]

Some excerpts from The Loose Canon include:

I am the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Thou shalt have no other monsters before Me (Afterwards is OK; just use protection). The only Monster who deserves capitalization is Me! Other monsters are false monsters, undeserving of capitalization.

— Suggestions 1:1

"Since you have done a half-ass job, you will receive half an ass!" The Great Pirate Solomon grabbed his ceremonial scimitar and struck his remaining donkey, cleaving it in two.

— Slackers 1:51–52

The New Testament of The Flying Spaghetti Monster; Dinner 2.0: The New and Improved Recipe!

The New Testament of The Flying Spaghetti Monster: Dinner 2.0 (also known as the New and Improved Recipe) was published on June 1, 2018. It is the Holy Book of The Unitarian Church of Pasta[60] and The FSM Revival Church of Ziti.[61]

Some excerpts from The New Testament of The Flying Spaghetti Monster: Dinner 2.0 include:

We need never doubt our Divine Carbohydrate, for even our DNA is shaped like a noodle so we know that pasta is holy

— Book One: The Holy Book of Lasagna

It's Better If You Do's

  1. . It's Better If You Find A Thing You Are Good At
  2. . It's Better If You Live in Harmony With the World
  3. . It's Better If You Make Art
  4. . It's Better If You Lead An Untethered Life
  5. . It's Better If You Work Together

It's Better If You Don't's

  1. . It's Better If You Don't Put People In Cages
  2. . It's Better If You Don't Work Too Much
  3. . It's Better If You Don't Value Possessions
  4. . It's Better If You Don't Hurt Others
  5. . It's Better If You Don't Censor Things
    — Book Four: The Holy Book of Tortellini

Influence

 
Flying Spaghetti Monster contingent preparing for the 2009 Summer Solstice Parade and Pageant in Fremont, Seattle, Washington

As a cultural phenomenon

 
A bottle of Flying Spaghetti Monster red wine

The Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster consisted of thousands of followers,[44] primarily concentrated on college campuses in North America and Europe.[62] According to the Associated Press, Henderson's website has become "a kind of cyber-watercooler for opponents of intelligent design". On it, visitors track meetings of pirate-clad Pastafarians, sell trinkets and bumper stickers, and sample photographs that show "visions" of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.[63]

In August 2005,[failed verification] the Swedish concept designer Niklas Jansson created an adaptation of Michelangelo's The Creation of Adam, superimposing the Flying Spaghetti Monster over God. This became and remains the Flying Spaghetti Monster's de facto brand image.[29] The Hunger Artists Theatre Company produced a comedy called The Flying Spaghetti Monster Holiday Pageant in December 2006, detailing the history of Pastafarianism.[64] The production has spawned a sequel called Flying Spaghetti Monster Holy Mug of Grog, performed in December 2008.[65] This communal activity attracted the attention of three University of Florida religious scholars, who assembled a panel at the 2007 American Academy of Religion meeting to discuss the Flying Spaghetti Monster.[62]

 
Handmade knitted and felted Flying Spaghetti Monster

In November 2007, four talks about the Flying Spaghetti Monster were delivered at the American Academy of Religion's annual meeting in San Diego.[66] The talks, with titles such as Holy Pasta and Authentic Sauce: The Flying Spaghetti Monster's Messy Implications for Theorizing Religion, examined the elements necessary for a group to constitute a religion. Speakers inquired whether "an anti-religion like Flying Spaghetti Monsterism [is] actually a religion".[62] The talks were based on the paper, Evolutionary Controversy and a Side of Pasta: The Flying Spaghetti Monster and the Subversive Function of Religious Parody,[20] published in the GOLEM Journal of Religion and Monsters.[40] The panel garnered an audience of one hundred of the more than 9,000 conference attendees, and conference organizers received critical e-mails from Christians offended by it.[67]

Since October 2008, the local chapter of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster has sponsored an annual convention called Skepticon on the campus of Missouri State University.[68] Atheists and skeptics give speeches on various topics, and a debate with Christian experts is held. Organizers tout the event as the "largest gathering of atheists in the Midwest".[69]

The Moldovan-born poet, fiction writer, and culturologist Igor Ursenco entitled his 2012 poetry book The Flying Spaghetti Monster (thriller poems).

On the nonprofit microfinancing site, Kiva, the Flying Spaghetti Monster group is in an ongoing competition to top all other "religious congregations" in the number of loans issued via their team. The group's motto is "Thou shalt share, that none may seek without funding",[70] an allusion to the Loose Canon which states "Thou shalt share, that none may seek without finding".[71][72] As of October 2018 it reported to have funded US$4,002,350 in loans.[73]

Bathyphysa conifera, a siphonophorae, has been called "Flying Spaghetti Monster" in reference to the FSM.[74][75]

The 2019 documentary I, Pastafari examines the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster and its fight for legal recognition.[76][77][78]

In September 2019, the Pastafarian pastor Barrett Fletcher offered an opening prayer on behalf of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster at an Assembly meeting of the local government in Kenai Peninsula Borough, Alaska.[79]

In April 2023, a Children's Bible of the Flying Spaghetti Monster was published in Germany.[80][81]

Use in religious disputes

Owing to its popularity and media exposure, the Flying Spaghetti Monster is often used as a modern version of Russell's teapot.[82][83] Proponents argue that, since the existence of the invisible and undetectable Flying Spaghetti Monster—similar to other proposed supernatural beings—cannot be falsified, it demonstrates that the burden of proof rests on those who affirm the existence of such beings. Richard Dawkins explains, "The onus is on somebody who says, I want to believe in God, Flying Spaghetti Monster, fairies, or whatever it is. It is not up to us to disprove it".[82] Furthermore, according to Lance Gharavi, an editor of The Journal of Religion and Theater, the Flying Spaghetti Monster is "ultimately...an argument about the arbitrariness of holding any one view of creation", since any one view is as plausible as the Flying Spaghetti Monster.[19] A similar argument was discussed in the books The God Delusion and The Atheist Delusion.[84][85]

In December 2007 the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster was credited with spearheading successful efforts in Polk County, Florida, to dissuade the Polk County School Board from adopting new science standards on evolution. The issue was raised after five of the seven board members declared a personal belief in intelligent design. Opponents describing themselves as Pastafarians e-mailed members of the Polk County School Board demanding equal instruction time for the Flying Spaghetti Monster.[86] Board member Margaret Lofton, who supported intelligent design, dismissed the e-mail as ridiculous and insulting, stating, "they've made us the laughing stock of the world". Lofton later stated that she had no interest in engaging with the Pastafarians or anyone else seeking to discredit intelligent design. As the controversy developed, scientists expressed opposition to intelligent design. In response to hopes for a new "applied science" campus at the University of South Florida in Lakeland, university vice president Marshall Goodman expressed surprise, stating, "[intelligent design is] not science. You can't even call it pseudo-science". While unhappy with the outcome, Lofton chose not to resign over the issue. She and the other board members expressed a desire to return to the day-to-day work of running the school district.[14]

Legal status

National branches of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster have been striving in many countries to have Pastafarianism become an officially (legally) recognized religion, with varying degrees of success. In New Zealand, Pastafarian representatives have been authorized as marriage celebrants, as the movement satisfies criteria laid down for organisations that primarily promote religious, philosophical, or humanitarian convictions.[5][6]

A federal court in the US state of Nebraska ruled that Flying Spaghetti Monster is a satirical parody religion, rather than an actual religion, and as a result, Pastafarians are not entitled to religious accommodation under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act:

"This is not a question of theology", the ruling reads in part. "The FSM Gospel is plainly a work of satire, meant to entertain while making a pointed political statement. To read it as religious doctrine would be little different from grounding a 'religious exercise' on any other work of fiction."[87]

Pastafarians have used their claimed faith as a test case to argue for freedom of religion, and to oppose government discrimination against people who do not follow a recognized religion.

Marriage

The Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster operates an ordination mill on their website which enables officiates in jurisdictions where credentials are needed to officiate weddings.[88] Pastafarians say that in jurisdictions where church and state are separated the government is precluded from arbitrarily labelling one denomination religiously valid but another an ordination mill. In November 2014, Rodney Michael Rogers and Minneapolis-based Atheists for Human Rights sued Washington County, Minnesota under the Fourteenth Amendment equal protection clause and the First Amendment free speech clause, with their attorney claiming discrimination against atheists: "When the statute clearly permits recognition of a marriage celebrant whose religious credentials consist of nothing more than a $20 'ordination' obtained from the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster... the requirement is absolutely meaningless in terms of ensuring the qualifications of a marriage celebrant".[89] A few days before a hearing on the matter, Washington County changed its policy to authorize Rogers to officiate weddings. This action was done in an effort to deny the court jurisdiction on the underlying claim. On May 13, 2015, the Federal Court held that the issue had become moot, and dismissed the case.[90] The first legally recognized Pastafarian wedding was celebrated in New Zealand on April 16, 2016.[6]

Free speech

In March 2007, Bryan Killian, a high school student in Buncombe County, North Carolina, was suspended for wearing "pirate regalia" which he said was part of his Pastafarian faith. Killian protested the suspension, saying it violated his First Amendment rights to religious freedom and freedom of expression.[91] "If this is what I believe in, no matter how stupid it might sound, I should be able to express myself however I want to", he said.[20][92]

 
Two Pastafarians dressed as the Flying Spaghetti Monster and a pirate respectively
 
Nudelmesse sign in Templin

In March 2008, Pastafarians in Crossville, Tennessee, were permitted to place a Flying Spaghetti Monster statue in a free speech zone on the courthouse lawn, and proceeded to do so.[93][94][95] The display gained national interest on blogs and online news sites and was even covered by Rolling Stone magazine. It was later removed from the premises, along with all the other long-term statues, as a result of the controversy over the statue.[96] In December 2011, Pastafarianism was one of the multiple denominations given equal access to placing holiday displays on the Loudoun County courthouse lawn, in Leesburg, Virginia.[97]

In 2012, Tracy McPherson of the Pennsylvanian Pastafarians petitioned the Chester County, Pennsylvania Commissioners to allow representation of the FSM at the county courthouse, equally with a Jewish menorah and a Christian nativity scene. One commissioner stated that either all religions should be allowed or no religion should be represented, but without support from the other commissioners the motion was rejected. Another commissioner stated that this petition garnered more attention than any he had seen before.[98][99]

On September 21, 2012, Pastafarian Giorgos Loizos was arrested in Greece on charges of malicious blasphemy and offense of religion for the creation of a satirical Facebook page called "Elder Pastitsios", based on a well-known deceased Greek Orthodox monk, Elder Paisios, where his name and face were substituted with pastitsio – a local pasta and béchamel sauce dish. The case, which started as a Facebook flame, reached the Greek Parliament and created a strong political reaction to the arrest.[100][101][102][103][104][105][106]

In August 2013, Christian Orthodox religious activists from an unregistered group known as "God's Will" attacked a peaceful rally that Russian Pastafarians had organized. Activists as well as police knocked some rally participants to the ground. Police arrested and charged eight of the Pastafarians with attempting to hold an unsanctioned rally.[107][108] One of the Pastafarians later complained that they were arrested "just for walking".[109]

In February 2014, student union officials at London South Bank University forbade an atheist group from displaying posters of the Flying Spaghetti Monster at a student orientation conference, and later banned the group from the conference, leading to complaints about interference with free speech.[110][111] The students' union subsequently apologized.[112]

In November 2014, the Church of the FSM obtained city signage in Templin, Germany, announcing the time of Friday's weekly Nudelmesse ("pasta mass"), alongside signage for various Catholic and Protestant Sunday services.[113] However, a decision by the regional court in Frankfurt (Oder) forced the Pastafarians to take down their signs. The Church appealed unsuccessfully to the Federal Constitutional Court and the European Court of Human Rights. In October 2021, the Templin City Council took a majority decision that the Church of the FSM would be permanently authorized to install their signs.[114]

Headgear in identity photos

 
A woman wearing a colander as Pastafarian headgear
 
Pastafarian protester wears a colander while showing an icon of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

Origins and overview

In July 2011, Austrian pastafarian Niko Alm won the legal right to be shown in his driving license photo wearing a pasta strainer on his head, after three years spent pursuing permission and obtaining an examination certifying that he was psychologically fit to drive. He got the idea after reading that Austrian regulations allow headgear in official photos only when it is worn for religious reasons.[13][115][116] Some sources report that the colander in the form of pasta strainer, was recognized by Austrian authorities as a religious headgear of Pastafarianism in 2011.[115][117] This was denied by Austrian authorities, saying that religious motives were not the reason to grant the permission of wearing the headgear in a passport.[118]

Alm's initiative has since been replicated in several (mostly Western) countries around the world, with mixed successes.[119] Many national or subnational authorities (such as U.S. states) granted driver's licenses, identity cards or passports featuring photos of citizens wearing a colander, while other authorities rejected applications on grounds that either Pastafarianism was "not a (real) religion" and reflected satire rather than sincerity or seriousness,[119][120][121] or that wearing a colander could not be demonstrated to be a religious obligation as other head-covering items were claimed to be in other religions, such as the hijab in Islam and the kippah/yarmulke in Judaism.[120][122][121] Applicants and their attorneys retorted by arguing – also with mixed successes – that Pastafarianism did constitute a real religion, or that it was not up to the government to decide what qualifies as a religion, nor whether certain religious beliefs are valid or invalid, nor whether certain practices within religions had the status of obligation, established doctrine, recommendation, or personal choice.[120][123][121] Moreover, some Pastafarians argued, satire and parody themselves are or could be a religious practice or an integral part of a religion such as Pastafarianism, and the government has no right to decide which beliefs should be taken seriously and which should not, and that it is only up to the individual believers themselves to decide which elements of their religion to take seriously, and to what degree.[120][121]

Europe

On August 9, 2011, the chairman of the church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster Germany, Rüdiger Weida, obtained a driver's license with a picture of him wearing a pirate bandana. In contrast with the reasons given by the Austrian officials in the case of Niko Alm, the German officials allowed the headgear as a religious exception.[124][125]

Some anti-clerical protesters wore colanders to Piazza XXIV Maggio square in Milan, Italy, on June 2, 2012, in mock obedience to the Flying Spaghetti Monster.[126][better source needed]

In March 2013 a Belgian's identity photos were refused by the local and national administrations because he wore a pasta strainer on his head.[127]

The Czech Republic recognized Pastafarian religious headgear in 2013. In July that year, Lukáš Nový, a member of the Czech Pirate Party from Brno was given permission to wear a pasta strainer on his head for the photograph on his official Czech Republic ID card.[128][129]

A man's Irish driving license photograph including a colander was rejected by the Road Safety Authority (RSA) in December 2013.[130] In March 2016, an Equality Officer of the Workplace Relations Commission reviewed the RSA's decision under the Equal Rights Acts and upheld it, on the basis that the complaint did "not come within the definition of religion and/or religious belief".[130]

In January 2016 Russian Pastafarian Andrei Filin got a driver's license with his photo in a colander.[131]

In the Netherlands, Dirk Jan Dijkstra applied for a Dutch passport c. 2015 using a colander on his identity photo, which was rejected by the municipality of Emmen, after which Dijkstra successfully registered the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster as a church association (kerkgenootschap) at the – initially hesitant – Dutch Chamber of Commerce in January 2016.[132] However, the municipality continued rejecting his application, arguing that registering as a church association did not mean that Pastafarianism was now a (recognized) religion, leading Dijkstra to sue the municipality for discrimination, and gathering dozens of colander-wearing FSM Church members and sympathizers at the trial in Groningen on July 7, 2016.[133] Meanwhile, other Pastafarians succeeded in obtaining colander-featuring passports and driver's licenses from the municipalities of Leiden and The Hague.[134] On August 1, 2016, the Groningen court ruled that, although Pastafarianism is a life stance, it is not a religion, nor is there a duty in Pastafarianism to wear the colander, and therefore the religious exemption to the prohibition on wearing headgear in identity photos did not apply to Pastafarians.[135] In January 2017, Nijmegen Pastafarian and law student Mienke de Wilde petitioned the Arnhem court to be allowed to wear a colander in her driver's license photo.[136] She lost the petition, both at first instance in February 2017[137] and on appeal at the Council of State in August 2018.[9][121]

United States

In February 2013, a Pastafarian was denied the right to wear a spaghetti strainer on his head for his driver's license photo by the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission, which stated that a pasta strainer was not on a list of approved religious headwear.[138]

In August 2013 Eddie Castillo, a student at Texas Tech University, got approval to wear a pasta strainer on his head in his driver's license photo. He said, "You might think this is some sort of a gag or prank by a college student, but thousands, including myself, see it as a political and religious milestone for all atheists everywhere".[139]

In January 2014 a member of the Pomfret, New York Town Council wore a colander while taking the oath of office.[140][141][142]

In November 2014 former adult film star Asia Carrera obtained an identity photo with the traditional Pastafarian headgear from a Department of Motor Vehicles office in Hurricane, Utah. The director of Utah's Driver License Division says that about a dozen Pastafarians have had their state driver's license photos taken with a similar pasta strainer over the years.[143]

In November 2015 Massachusetts resident Lindsay Miller was allowed to wear a colander on her head in her driver's license photo after she cited her religious beliefs. Miller (who resides in Lowell) said on Friday, November 13 that she "absolutely loves the history and the story" of Pastafarians, whose website says has existed in secrecy for hundreds of years and entered the mainstream in 2005.[144] Ms. Miller was represented in her quest by The American Humanist Association's Appignani Humanist Legal Center.[145]

In February 2016, a man from Madison, Wisconsin won a legal struggle against the state, which, reasoning that Pastafarianism was not a religion, had initially refused him a colander photo on his driver's license. The man's attorney successfully defended his request on the basis of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, arguing that it was 'not up to the government to decide what qualifies as a religion'.[123]

After the Drivers Services of Schaumburg, Illinois initially granted Rachel Hoover, a student at Northern Illinois University, a colander-featuring photo in her driver's license in June 2016, the Illinois Secretary of State's office overturned the decision in July 2016, stating that such a photo was 'incorrect' and a new one had to be taken before her old license expired on July 29. The office did not recognize Pastafarianism as a religion, with a spokesperson saying 'If you look into their history, it's more of a mockery of religion than a practice itself'. Hoover lodged a religious discrimination complaint with the American Civil Liberties Union, but was unsure to pursue further legal action since it did not fit into her college budget.[146] Previously, Pastafarian David Hoover from Pekin, Illinois had his request for a driving license featuring a colander picture rejected in May 2013.[120]

In June 2017, Sean Corbett from Chandler, Arizona succeeded in obtaining a driver's license with a colander picture after trying several Arizona motor vehicle locations for two years.[147]

In October 2019, the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles rejected a Cincinnati man's driver's license colander photo, saying its policy allows people to wear religious head coverings in driver's license photos only if they wear them in public in daily life.[148]

Commonwealth of Nations

In June 2014 a New Zealand man called Russell, an ordained minister obtained a driver's license with a photograph of himself wearing a blue spaghetti strainer on his head. This was granted under a law allowing the wearing of religious headgear in official photos.[149][150]

In October 2014, Obi Canuel, an ordained minister in the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster residing in Surrey, British Columbia, Canada, effectively lost his right to drive. After initially refusing Canuel's request for a license renewal in autumn 2013 because he insisted on wearing a colander on the photo, the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia granted him temporary driving permits while it was considering whether to definitively reject or grant his request. ICBC claimed their October 2014 definitive refusal was based on the fact that it would only 'accommodate customers with head coverings where their faith prohibits them from removing it', and that 'Mr. Canuel was not able to provide us with any evidence that he cannot remove his head covering for his photo'.[122]

The states of Australia have differed in dealing with applications for official documents featuring colander photos. Sydney science student Preshalin Moodley got a provisional driver's license from New South Wales in September 2014, while Brisbane tradesman Simon Leadbetter was denied a license renewal by Queensland's Department of Transport and Main Roads the same month.[151] Earlier in 2014, South Australia refused Adelaide resident Guy Ablon a gun license with a photo of him wearing a colander; the authorities even seized his legally obtained guns, questioned his religion and forced him to undergo a psychiatric evaluation before his weapons were returned.[151] State of Victoria issued the first strainer-featuring driver's license in November 2016.[152]

Critical reception

With regard to Henderson's 2005 open letter, according to Justin Pope of the Associated Press:

Between the lines, the point of the letter was this: there's no more scientific basis for intelligent design than there is for the idea an omniscient creature made of pasta created the universe. If intelligent design supporters could demand equal time in a science class, why not anyone else? The only reasonable solution is to put nothing into sciences classes but the best available science.[62]

 
US Army ID tag (dog tag) listing "Atheist/FSM" as the religious/belief system preference

Pope praised the Flying Spaghetti Monster as "a clever and effective argument".[63] Simon Singh reviewing The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster for The Daily Telegraph described the Flying Spaghetti Monster as "a masterstroke, which underlined the absurdity of Intelligent Design", and applauded Henderson for "galvanis[ing] a defence of science and rationality".[32] Sarah Boxer of The New York Times said that Henderson "has wit on his side".[12] In addition, the Flying Spaghetti Monster was mentioned in an article footnote of the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review as an example of evolution "enter[ing] the fray in popular culture", which the author deemed necessary for evolution to prevail over intelligent design.[153] The abstract of the paper, Evolutionary Controversy and a Side of Pasta: The Flying Spaghetti Monster and the Subversive Function of Religious Parody, describes the Flying Spaghetti Monster as "a potent example of how monstrous humor can be used as a popular tool of carnivalesque subversion".[40] Its author praised Pastafarianism for its "epistemological humility".[20] Moreover, Henderson's website contains numerous endorsements from the scientific community.[154] As Jack Schofield of The Guardian noted, "The joke, of course, is that it's arguably more rational than Intelligent Design".[155]

Conservative columnist Jeff Jacoby wrote in The Boston Globe that intelligent design "isn't primitivism or Bible-thumping or flying spaghetti. It's science".[156] This view of science, however, was rejected by the United States National Academy of Sciences.[157] Peter Gallings of Answers in Genesis, a Young Earth Creationist ministry said, "Ironically enough, Pastafarians, in addition to mocking God himself, are lampooning the Intelligent Design Movement for not identifying a specific deity—that is, leaving open the possibility that a spaghetti monster could be the intelligent designer... Thus, the satire is possible because the Intelligent Design Movement hasn't affiliated with a particular religion, exactly the opposite of what its other critics claim!"[158]

See also

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Further reading

  • Henderson, Bobby (2006). The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Villard Books. ISBN 0-8129-7656-8.

External links

  • Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

flying, spaghetti, monster, marine, organism, bathyphysa, conifera, pastafarianism, redirects, here, confused, with, rastafarianism, deity, church, pastafarianism, parodic, religious, movement, that, promotes, light, hearted, view, religion, originated, opposi. For the marine organism see Bathyphysa conifera Pastafarianism redirects here Not to be confused with Rastafarianism The Flying Spaghetti Monster FSM is the deity of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster or Pastafarianism a parodic new religious movement that promotes a light hearted view of religion 3 It originated in opposition to the teaching of intelligent design in public schools in the United States According to adherents Pastafarianism a portmanteau of pasta and Rastafarianism is a real legitimate religion as much as any other 4 It has received some limited recognition as such 5 6 7 8 9 Flying Spaghetti MonsterPastafarianismTouched by His Noodly Appendage a parody of Michelangelo s The Creation of Adam is an iconic image of the Flying Spaghetti Monster 1 by Arne Niklas Jansson 2 Abodespaghettimonster orgSymbolTextsThe Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster The Loose Canon the Holy Book of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti MonsterFestivals Holiday The Flying Spaghetti Monster was first described in a satirical open letter written by Bobby Henderson in 2005 to protest the Kansas State Board of Education decision to permit teaching intelligent design as an alternative to evolution in state school science classes 10 In the letter Henderson demanded equal time in science classrooms for Flying Spaghetti Monsterism alongside intelligent design and evolution 11 After Henderson published the letter on his website the Flying Spaghetti Monster rapidly became an Internet phenomenon and a symbol of opposition to the teaching of intelligent design in state schools 12 Pastafarian tenets generally satires of creationism are presented on Henderson s Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster website where he is described as prophet and are also elucidated in The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster written by Henderson in 2006 and in The Loose Canon the Holy Book of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster The central creation myth is that an invisible and undetectable Flying Spaghetti Monster created the universe after drinking heavily Pirates are revered as the original Pastafarians 13 The FSM community congregates at Henderson s website to share ideas about and sightings of the Flying Spaghetti Monster and display crafts representing images of it 4 Because of its popularity and exposure the Flying Spaghetti Monster is often used as a more modern version of Russell s teapot an argument that the philosophic burden of proof lies upon those who make unfalsifiable claims not on those who reject them Pastafarians have engaged in disputes with creationists including in Polk County Florida where they played a role in dissuading the local school board from adopting new rules on teaching evolution 14 Pastafarianism has received praise from the scientific community and criticism from proponents of intelligent design Contents 1 History 1 1 Internet phenomenon 2 Tenets 2 1 Creation 2 2 Afterlife 2 3 Pirates and global warming 2 4 Holidays 2 4 1 Holiday 3 Books 3 1 The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster 3 2 The Loose Canon 3 3 The New Testament of The Flying Spaghetti Monster Dinner 2 0 The New and Improved Recipe 4 Influence 4 1 As a cultural phenomenon 4 2 Use in religious disputes 5 Legal status 5 1 Marriage 5 2 Free speech 5 3 Headgear in identity photos 5 3 1 Origins and overview 5 3 2 United States 5 3 3 Commonwealth of Nations 6 Critical reception 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistoryIn January 2005 15 Bobby Henderson a 24 year old 16 Oregon State University physics graduate sent an open letter regarding the Flying Spaghetti Monster to the Kansas State Board of Education 12 17 18 In that letter Henderson satirized creationism by professing his belief that whenever a scientist carbon dates an object a supernatural creator that closely resembles spaghetti and meatballs is there changing the results with His Noodly Appendage Henderson argued that his beliefs were just as valid as intelligent design and called for equal time in science classrooms alongside intelligent design and evolution 11 The letter was sent prior to the Kansas evolution hearings as an argument against the teaching of intelligent design in biology classes 12 Henderson describing himself as a concerned citizen representing more than ten million others argued that intelligent design and his belief that the universe was created by a Flying Spaghetti Monster were equally valid 12 In his letter he noted I think we can all look forward to the time when these three theories are given equal time in our science classrooms across the country and eventually the world one third time for Intelligent Design one third time for Flying Spaghetti Monsterism and one third time for logical conjecture based on overwhelming observable evidence Bobby Henderson 11 According to Henderson since the intelligent design movement uses ambiguous references to a designer any conceivable entity may fulfill that role including a Flying Spaghetti Monster 19 Henderson explained I don t have a problem with religion What I have a problem with is religion posing as science If there is a god and he s intelligent then I would guess he has a sense of humor 10 20 In May 2005 having received no reply from the Kansas State Board of Education Henderson posted the letter on his website gaining significant public interest 4 15 Shortly thereafter Pastafarianism became an Internet phenomenon 10 19 Henderson published the responses he then received from board members 21 Three board members all of whom opposed the curriculum amendments responded positively a fourth board member responded with the comment It is a serious offense to mock God 22 Henderson has also published the significant amount of hate mail including death threats that he has received 23 24 Within one year of sending the open letter Henderson received thousands of emails on the Flying Spaghetti Monster eventually totaling over 60 000 25 of which he has said that about 95 percent have been supportive while the other five percent have said I am going to hell 10 During that time his site garnered tens of millions of hits 25 Internet phenomenon nbsp The FSM version of the Jesus fish emblem has become accepted as the symbol of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster The symbol was originally created by readers of the Boing Boing web site in 2005 26 27 As word of Henderson s challenge to the board spread his website and cause received more attention and support The satirical nature of Henderson s argument made the Flying Spaghetti Monster popular with bloggers as well as humor and Internet culture websites 28 The Flying Spaghetti Monster was featured on websites such as Boing Boing Something Awful Uncyclopedia and Fark Moreover an International Society for Flying Spaghetti Monster Awareness and other fan sites emerged 29 As public awareness grew the mainstream media picked up on the phenomenon The Flying Spaghetti Monster became a symbol for the case against intelligent design in public education 12 30 31 The open letter was printed in several major newspapers including The New York Times The Washington Post and Chicago Sun Times 25 and received worldwide press attention 32 Henderson himself was surprised by its success stating that he wrote the letter for his own amusement as much as anything 19 In August 2005 in response to a challenge from a reader Boing Boing announced a 250 000 prize later raised to 1 000 000 of Intelligently Designed currency payable to any individual who could produce empirical evidence proving that Jesus is not the son of the Flying Spaghetti Monster 33 It was modeled as a parody of a similar challenge issued by young earth creationist Kent Hovind 19 34 According to Henderson newspaper articles on the Flying Spaghetti Monster attracted the attention of book publishers he said that at one point there were six publishers interested in the Flying Spaghetti Monster 25 In November 2005 Henderson received an advance from Villard to write The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster 35 In November 2005 the Kansas State Board of Education voted to allow criticisms of evolution including language about intelligent design as part of testing standards 36 On February 13 2007 the board voted 6 4 to reject the amended science standards enacted in 2005 This was the fifth time in eight years that the board had rewritten the standards on evolution 37 TenetsWith millions if not thousands of devout worshipers the Church of the FSM is widely considered a legitimate religion even by its opponents mostly fundamentalist Christians who have accepted that our God has larger balls than theirs Bobby Henderson 4 Although Henderson has stated that the only dogma allowed in the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster is the rejection of dogma some general beliefs are held by Pastafarians 4 Henderson proposed many Pastafarian tenets in reaction to common arguments by proponents of intelligent design 38 These canonical beliefs are presented by Henderson in his letter to the Kansas State Board of Education 11 The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster and on Henderson s website where he is described as a prophet 39 They tend to satirize creationism 19 Creation See also Omphalos hypothesis The central creation myth is that an invisible and undetectable Flying Spaghetti Monster created the universe after drinking heavily According to these beliefs the Monster s intoxication was the cause for a flawed Earth Furthermore according to Pastafarianism all evidence for evolution was planted by the Flying Spaghetti Monster in an effort to test the faith of Pastafarians parodying certain biblical literalists 40 When scientific measurements such as radiocarbon dating are taken the Flying Spaghetti Monster is there changing the results with His Noodly Appendage 11 Afterlife The Pastafarian conception of Heaven includes a beer volcano and a stripper or sometimes prostitute or paint stripper factory 39 41 The Pastafarian Hell is similar except that the beer is stale and the strippers have sexually transmitted diseases 42 Pirates and global warming nbsp A misleading graph that is claimed to correlate the number of pirates with global temperature According to Pastafarian beliefs pirates are absolute divine beings and the original Pastafarians 11 Furthermore Pastafarians believe that the concept of pirates as thieves and outcasts is misinformation spread by Christian theologians in the Middle Ages Instead Pastafarians believe that they were peace loving explorers and spreaders of good will who distributed candy to small children adding that modern pirates are in no way similar to the fun loving buccaneers from history In addition Pastafarians believe that ghost pirates are responsible for all of the mysteriously lost ships and planes of the Bermuda Triangle Pastafarians are among those who celebrate International Talk Like a Pirate Day on September 19 43 The inclusion of pirates in Pastafarianism was part of Henderson s original letter to the Kansas State Board of Education in an effort to illustrate that correlation does not imply causation 44 Henderson presented the argument that global warming earthquakes hurricanes and other natural disasters are a direct effect of the shrinking numbers of pirates since the 1800s 11 A deliberately misleading graph accompanying the letter with numbers humorously disordered on the x axis shows that as the number of pirates decreased global temperatures increased This parodies the suggestion from some religious groups that the high numbers of disasters famines and wars in the world is due to the lack of respect and worship toward their deity In 2008 Henderson interpreted the growing pirate activities at the Gulf of Aden as additional support pointing out that Somalia has the highest number of pirates and the lowest carbon emissions of any country 45 Holidays nbsp An alternative tree topper for Pastafarians handmade from pipe cleaners and pom poms Pastafarian beliefs extend into lighthearted religious ceremony Pastafarians celebrate every Friday as a holy day 19 Prayers are concluded with a final declaration of affirmation R amen or rAmen the term is a parodic portmanteau of the terms Amen and Ramen referring to a Japanese noodle dish and to the noodly appendages of their deity 10 The celebration of Pastover requires consuming large amounts of pasta and during Ramendan only Ramen noodles are consumed International Talk Like a Pirate Day is observed as a holiday 46 47 Holiday Around the time of Christmas Hanukkah and Kwanzaa Pastafarians celebrate a vaguely defined holiday named Holiday Holiday does not take place on a specific date so much as it is the Holiday season itself According to Henderson as Pastafarians reject dogma and formalism there are no specific requirements for Holiday Pastafarians celebrate Holiday in any manner they please 48 Pastafarians interpret the increasing usage of Happy Holidays rather than more traditional greetings such as Merry Christmas as support for Pastafarianism 48 In December 2005 George W Bush s White House Christmas greeting cards wished people a happy holiday season 49 leading Henderson to write the President a note of thanks including a fish emblem depicting the Flying Spaghetti Monster for his limousine or plane 50 Henderson also thanked Walmart for its use of the phrase 51 BooksThe Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster Main article The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster nbsp The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster In December 2005 Bobby Henderson received a reported US 80 000 advance from Villard to write The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster Henderson said he planned to use proceeds from the book to build a pirate ship with which he would spread the Pastafarian religion 35 52 The book was released on March 28 2006 53 and elaborates on Pastafarian beliefs established in the open letter 54 Henderson employs satire to present perceived flaws with evolutionary biology and discusses history and lifestyle from a Pastafarian perspective The gospel urges readers to try Pastafarianism for thirty days saying If you don t like us your old religion will most likely take you back 32 55 Henderson states on his website that more than 100 000 copies of the book have been sold 56 Scientific American described the gospel as an elaborate spoof on Intelligent Design and very funny In 2006 it was nominated for the Quill Award in Humor but was not selected as the winner 56 Wayne Allen Brenner of The Austin Chronicle characterized the book as a necessary bit of comic relief in the overly serious battle between science and superstition 54 Simon Singh of The Daily Telegraph wrote that the gospel might be slightly repetitive but overall it is a brilliant provocative witty and important gem of a book 32 Casey Luskin of the Discovery Institute which advocates intelligent design labeled the gospel a mockery of the Christian New Testament 57 The Loose Canon In September 2005 before Henderson had received an advance to write the Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster a Pastafarian member of the Venganza forums known as Solipsy announced the beginning of a project to collect texts from fellow Pastafarians to compile into The Loose Canon the Holy Book of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster essentially analogous to the Bible 58 The book was completed in 2010 and was made available for download 59 Some excerpts from The Loose Canon include I am the Flying Spaghetti Monster Thou shalt have no other monsters before Me Afterwards is OK just use protection The only Monster who deserves capitalization is Me Other monsters are false monsters undeserving of capitalization Suggestions 1 1 Since you have done a half ass job you will receive half an ass The Great Pirate Solomon grabbed his ceremonial scimitar and struck his remaining donkey cleaving it in two Slackers 1 51 52 The New Testament of The Flying Spaghetti Monster Dinner 2 0 The New and Improved Recipe The New Testament of The Flying Spaghetti Monster Dinner 2 0 also known as the New and Improved Recipe was published on June 1 2018 It is the Holy Book of The Unitarian Church of Pasta 60 and The FSM Revival Church of Ziti 61 Some excerpts from The New Testament of The Flying Spaghetti Monster Dinner 2 0 include We need never doubt our Divine Carbohydrate for even our DNA is shaped like a noodle so we know that pasta is holy Book One The Holy Book of Lasagna It s Better If You Do s It s Better If You Find A Thing You Are Good At It s Better If You Live in Harmony With the World It s Better If You Make Art It s Better If You Lead An Untethered Life It s Better If You Work Together It s Better If You Don t s It s Better If You Don t Put People In Cages It s Better If You Don t Work Too Much It s Better If You Don t Value Possessions It s Better If You Don t Hurt Others It s Better If You Don t Censor Things Book Four The Holy Book of TortelliniInfluence nbsp Flying Spaghetti Monster contingent preparing for the 2009 Summer Solstice Parade and Pageant in Fremont Seattle Washington As a cultural phenomenon nbsp A bottle of Flying Spaghetti Monster red wine The Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster consisted of thousands of followers 44 primarily concentrated on college campuses in North America and Europe 62 According to the Associated Press Henderson s website has become a kind of cyber watercooler for opponents of intelligent design On it visitors track meetings of pirate clad Pastafarians sell trinkets and bumper stickers and sample photographs that show visions of the Flying Spaghetti Monster 63 In August 2005 failed verification the Swedish concept designer Niklas Jansson created an adaptation of Michelangelo s The Creation of Adam superimposing the Flying Spaghetti Monster over God This became and remains the Flying Spaghetti Monster s de facto brand image 29 The Hunger Artists Theatre Company produced a comedy called The Flying Spaghetti Monster Holiday Pageant in December 2006 detailing the history of Pastafarianism 64 The production has spawned a sequel called Flying Spaghetti Monster Holy Mug of Grog performed in December 2008 65 This communal activity attracted the attention of three University of Florida religious scholars who assembled a panel at the 2007 American Academy of Religion meeting to discuss the Flying Spaghetti Monster 62 nbsp Handmade knitted and felted Flying Spaghetti Monster In November 2007 four talks about the Flying Spaghetti Monster were delivered at the American Academy of Religion s annual meeting in San Diego 66 The talks with titles such as Holy Pasta and Authentic Sauce The Flying Spaghetti Monster s Messy Implications for Theorizing Religion examined the elements necessary for a group to constitute a religion Speakers inquired whether an anti religion like Flying Spaghetti Monsterism is actually a religion 62 The talks were based on the paper Evolutionary Controversy and a Side of Pasta The Flying Spaghetti Monster and the Subversive Function of Religious Parody 20 published in the GOLEM Journal of Religion and Monsters 40 The panel garnered an audience of one hundred of the more than 9 000 conference attendees and conference organizers received critical e mails from Christians offended by it 67 Since October 2008 the local chapter of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster has sponsored an annual convention called Skepticon on the campus of Missouri State University 68 Atheists and skeptics give speeches on various topics and a debate with Christian experts is held Organizers tout the event as the largest gathering of atheists in the Midwest 69 The Moldovan born poet fiction writer and culturologist Igor Ursenco entitled his 2012 poetry book The Flying Spaghetti Monster thriller poems On the nonprofit microfinancing site Kiva the Flying Spaghetti Monster group is in an ongoing competition to top all other religious congregations in the number of loans issued via their team The group s motto is Thou shalt share that none may seek without funding 70 an allusion to the Loose Canon which states Thou shalt share that none may seek without finding 71 72 As of October 2018 update it reported to have funded US 4 002 350 in loans 73 Bathyphysa conifera a siphonophorae has been called Flying Spaghetti Monster in reference to the FSM 74 75 The 2019 documentary I Pastafari examines the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster and its fight for legal recognition 76 77 78 In September 2019 the Pastafarian pastor Barrett Fletcher offered an opening prayer on behalf of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster at an Assembly meeting of the local government in Kenai Peninsula Borough Alaska 79 In April 2023 a Children s Bible of the Flying Spaghetti Monster was published in Germany 80 81 Use in religious disputes Owing to its popularity and media exposure the Flying Spaghetti Monster is often used as a modern version of Russell s teapot 82 83 Proponents argue that since the existence of the invisible and undetectable Flying Spaghetti Monster similar to other proposed supernatural beings cannot be falsified it demonstrates that the burden of proof rests on those who affirm the existence of such beings Richard Dawkins explains The onus is on somebody who says I want to believe in God Flying Spaghetti Monster fairies or whatever it is It is not up to us to disprove it 82 Furthermore according to Lance Gharavi an editor of The Journal of Religion and Theater the Flying Spaghetti Monster is ultimately an argument about the arbitrariness of holding any one view of creation since any one view is as plausible as the Flying Spaghetti Monster 19 A similar argument was discussed in the books The God Delusion and The Atheist Delusion 84 85 In December 2007 the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster was credited with spearheading successful efforts in Polk County Florida to dissuade the Polk County School Board from adopting new science standards on evolution The issue was raised after five of the seven board members declared a personal belief in intelligent design Opponents describing themselves as Pastafarians e mailed members of the Polk County School Board demanding equal instruction time for the Flying Spaghetti Monster 86 Board member Margaret Lofton who supported intelligent design dismissed the e mail as ridiculous and insulting stating they ve made us the laughing stock of the world Lofton later stated that she had no interest in engaging with the Pastafarians or anyone else seeking to discredit intelligent design As the controversy developed scientists expressed opposition to intelligent design In response to hopes for a new applied science campus at the University of South Florida in Lakeland university vice president Marshall Goodman expressed surprise stating intelligent design is not science You can t even call it pseudo science While unhappy with the outcome Lofton chose not to resign over the issue She and the other board members expressed a desire to return to the day to day work of running the school district 14 Legal statusNational branches of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster have been striving in many countries to have Pastafarianism become an officially legally recognized religion with varying degrees of success In New Zealand Pastafarian representatives have been authorized as marriage celebrants as the movement satisfies criteria laid down for organisations that primarily promote religious philosophical or humanitarian convictions 5 6 A federal court in the US state of Nebraska ruled that Flying Spaghetti Monster is a satirical parody religion rather than an actual religion and as a result Pastafarians are not entitled to religious accommodation under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act This is not a question of theology the ruling reads in part The FSM Gospel is plainly a work of satire meant to entertain while making a pointed political statement To read it as religious doctrine would be little different from grounding a religious exercise on any other work of fiction 87 Pastafarians have used their claimed faith as a test case to argue for freedom of religion and to oppose government discrimination against people who do not follow a recognized religion Marriage The Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster operates an ordination mill on their website which enables officiates in jurisdictions where credentials are needed to officiate weddings 88 Pastafarians say that in jurisdictions where church and state are separated the government is precluded from arbitrarily labelling one denomination religiously valid but another an ordination mill In November 2014 Rodney Michael Rogers and Minneapolis based Atheists for Human Rights sued Washington County Minnesota under the Fourteenth Amendment equal protection clause and the First Amendment free speech clause with their attorney claiming discrimination against atheists When the statute clearly permits recognition of a marriage celebrant whose religious credentials consist of nothing more than a 20 ordination obtained from the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster the requirement is absolutely meaningless in terms of ensuring the qualifications of a marriage celebrant 89 A few days before a hearing on the matter Washington County changed its policy to authorize Rogers to officiate weddings This action was done in an effort to deny the court jurisdiction on the underlying claim On May 13 2015 the Federal Court held that the issue had become moot and dismissed the case 90 The first legally recognized Pastafarian wedding was celebrated in New Zealand on April 16 2016 6 Free speech In March 2007 Bryan Killian a high school student in Buncombe County North Carolina was suspended for wearing pirate regalia which he said was part of his Pastafarian faith Killian protested the suspension saying it violated his First Amendment rights to religious freedom and freedom of expression 91 If this is what I believe in no matter how stupid it might sound I should be able to express myself however I want to he said 20 92 nbsp Two Pastafarians dressed as the Flying Spaghetti Monster and a pirate respectively nbsp Nudelmesse sign in Templin In March 2008 Pastafarians in Crossville Tennessee were permitted to place a Flying Spaghetti Monster statue in a free speech zone on the courthouse lawn and proceeded to do so 93 94 95 The display gained national interest on blogs and online news sites and was even covered by Rolling Stone magazine It was later removed from the premises along with all the other long term statues as a result of the controversy over the statue 96 In December 2011 Pastafarianism was one of the multiple denominations given equal access to placing holiday displays on the Loudoun County courthouse lawn in Leesburg Virginia 97 In 2012 Tracy McPherson of the Pennsylvanian Pastafarians petitioned the Chester County Pennsylvania Commissioners to allow representation of the FSM at the county courthouse equally with a Jewish menorah and a Christian nativity scene One commissioner stated that either all religions should be allowed or no religion should be represented but without support from the other commissioners the motion was rejected Another commissioner stated that this petition garnered more attention than any he had seen before 98 99 On September 21 2012 Pastafarian Giorgos Loizos was arrested in Greece on charges of malicious blasphemy and offense of religion for the creation of a satirical Facebook page called Elder Pastitsios based on a well known deceased Greek Orthodox monk Elder Paisios where his name and face were substituted with pastitsio a local pasta and bechamel sauce dish The case which started as a Facebook flame reached the Greek Parliament and created a strong political reaction to the arrest 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 In August 2013 Christian Orthodox religious activists from an unregistered group known as God s Will attacked a peaceful rally that Russian Pastafarians had organized Activists as well as police knocked some rally participants to the ground Police arrested and charged eight of the Pastafarians with attempting to hold an unsanctioned rally 107 108 One of the Pastafarians later complained that they were arrested just for walking 109 In February 2014 student union officials at London South Bank University forbade an atheist group from displaying posters of the Flying Spaghetti Monster at a student orientation conference and later banned the group from the conference leading to complaints about interference with free speech 110 111 The students union subsequently apologized 112 In November 2014 the Church of the FSM obtained city signage in Templin Germany announcing the time of Friday s weekly Nudelmesse pasta mass alongside signage for various Catholic and Protestant Sunday services 113 However a decision by the regional court in Frankfurt Oder forced the Pastafarians to take down their signs The Church appealed unsuccessfully to the Federal Constitutional Court and the European Court of Human Rights In October 2021 the Templin City Council took a majority decision that the Church of the FSM would be permanently authorized to install their signs 114 Headgear in identity photos nbsp A woman wearing a colander as Pastafarian headgear nbsp Pastafarian protester wears a colander while showing an icon of the Flying Spaghetti Monster Origins and overview In July 2011 Austrian pastafarian Niko Alm won the legal right to be shown in his driving license photo wearing a pasta strainer on his head after three years spent pursuing permission and obtaining an examination certifying that he was psychologically fit to drive He got the idea after reading that Austrian regulations allow headgear in official photos only when it is worn for religious reasons 13 115 116 Some sources report that the colander in the form of pasta strainer was recognized by Austrian authorities as a religious headgear of Pastafarianism in 2011 115 117 This was denied by Austrian authorities saying that religious motives were not the reason to grant the permission of wearing the headgear in a passport 118 Alm s initiative has since been replicated in several mostly Western countries around the world with mixed successes 119 Many national or subnational authorities such as U S states granted driver s licenses identity cards or passports featuring photos of citizens wearing a colander while other authorities rejected applications on grounds that either Pastafarianism was not a real religion and reflected satire rather than sincerity or seriousness 119 120 121 or that wearing a colander could not be demonstrated to be a religious obligation as other head covering items were claimed to be in other religions such as the hijab in Islam and the kippah yarmulke in Judaism 120 122 121 Applicants and their attorneys retorted by arguing also with mixed successes that Pastafarianism did constitute a real religion or that it was not up to the government to decide what qualifies as a religion nor whether certain religious beliefs are valid or invalid nor whether certain practices within religions had the status of obligation established doctrine recommendation or personal choice 120 123 121 Moreover some Pastafarians argued satire and parody themselves are or could be a religious practice or an integral part of a religion such as Pastafarianism and the government has no right to decide which beliefs should be taken seriously and which should not and that it is only up to the individual believers themselves to decide which elements of their religion to take seriously and to what degree 120 121 Europe On August 9 2011 the chairman of the church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster Germany Rudiger Weida obtained a driver s license with a picture of him wearing a pirate bandana In contrast with the reasons given by the Austrian officials in the case of Niko Alm the German officials allowed the headgear as a religious exception 124 125 Some anti clerical protesters wore colanders to Piazza XXIV Maggio square in Milan Italy on June 2 2012 in mock obedience to the Flying Spaghetti Monster 126 better source needed In March 2013 a Belgian s identity photos were refused by the local and national administrations because he wore a pasta strainer on his head 127 The Czech Republic recognized Pastafarian religious headgear in 2013 In July that year Lukas Novy a member of the Czech Pirate Party from Brno was given permission to wear a pasta strainer on his head for the photograph on his official Czech Republic ID card 128 129 A man s Irish driving license photograph including a colander was rejected by the Road Safety Authority RSA in December 2013 130 In March 2016 an Equality Officer of the Workplace Relations Commission reviewed the RSA s decision under the Equal Rights Acts and upheld it on the basis that the complaint did not come within the definition of religion and or religious belief 130 In January 2016 Russian Pastafarian Andrei Filin got a driver s license with his photo in a colander 131 In the Netherlands Dirk Jan Dijkstra applied for a Dutch passport c 2015 using a colander on his identity photo which was rejected by the municipality of Emmen after which Dijkstra successfully registered the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster as a church association kerkgenootschap at the initially hesitant Dutch Chamber of Commerce in January 2016 132 However the municipality continued rejecting his application arguing that registering as a church association did not mean that Pastafarianism was now a recognized religion leading Dijkstra to sue the municipality for discrimination and gathering dozens of colander wearing FSM Church members and sympathizers at the trial in Groningen on July 7 2016 133 Meanwhile other Pastafarians succeeded in obtaining colander featuring passports and driver s licenses from the municipalities of Leiden and The Hague 134 On August 1 2016 the Groningen court ruled that although Pastafarianism is a life stance it is not a religion nor is there a duty in Pastafarianism to wear the colander and therefore the religious exemption to the prohibition on wearing headgear in identity photos did not apply to Pastafarians 135 In January 2017 Nijmegen Pastafarian and law student Mienke de Wilde petitioned the Arnhem court to be allowed to wear a colander in her driver s license photo 136 She lost the petition both at first instance in February 2017 137 and on appeal at the Council of State in August 2018 9 121 United States In February 2013 a Pastafarian was denied the right to wear a spaghetti strainer on his head for his driver s license photo by the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission which stated that a pasta strainer was not on a list of approved religious headwear 138 In August 2013 Eddie Castillo a student at Texas Tech University got approval to wear a pasta strainer on his head in his driver s license photo He said You might think this is some sort of a gag or prank by a college student but thousands including myself see it as a political and religious milestone for all atheists everywhere 139 In January 2014 a member of the Pomfret New York Town Council wore a colander while taking the oath of office 140 141 142 In November 2014 former adult film star Asia Carrera obtained an identity photo with the traditional Pastafarian headgear from a Department of Motor Vehicles office in Hurricane Utah The director of Utah s Driver License Division says that about a dozen Pastafarians have had their state driver s license photos taken with a similar pasta strainer over the years 143 In November 2015 Massachusetts resident Lindsay Miller was allowed to wear a colander on her head in her driver s license photo after she cited her religious beliefs Miller who resides in Lowell said on Friday November 13 that she absolutely loves the history and the story of Pastafarians whose website says has existed in secrecy for hundreds of years and entered the mainstream in 2005 144 Ms Miller was represented in her quest by The American Humanist Association s Appignani Humanist Legal Center 145 In February 2016 a man from Madison Wisconsin won a legal struggle against the state which reasoning that Pastafarianism was not a religion had initially refused him a colander photo on his driver s license The man s attorney successfully defended his request on the basis of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution arguing that it was not up to the government to decide what qualifies as a religion 123 After the Drivers Services of Schaumburg Illinois initially granted Rachel Hoover a student at Northern Illinois University a colander featuring photo in her driver s license in June 2016 the Illinois Secretary of State s office overturned the decision in July 2016 stating that such a photo was incorrect and a new one had to be taken before her old license expired on July 29 The office did not recognize Pastafarianism as a religion with a spokesperson saying If you look into their history it s more of a mockery of religion than a practice itself Hoover lodged a religious discrimination complaint with the American Civil Liberties Union but was unsure to pursue further legal action since it did not fit into her college budget 146 Previously Pastafarian David Hoover from Pekin Illinois had his request for a driving license featuring a colander picture rejected in May 2013 120 In June 2017 Sean Corbett from Chandler Arizona succeeded in obtaining a driver s license with a colander picture after trying several Arizona motor vehicle locations for two years 147 In October 2019 the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles rejected a Cincinnati man s driver s license colander photo saying its policy allows people to wear religious head coverings in driver s license photos only if they wear them in public in daily life 148 Commonwealth of Nations In June 2014 a New Zealand man called Russell an ordained minister obtained a driver s license with a photograph of himself wearing a blue spaghetti strainer on his head This was granted under a law allowing the wearing of religious headgear in official photos 149 150 In October 2014 Obi Canuel an ordained minister in the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster residing in Surrey British Columbia Canada effectively lost his right to drive After initially refusing Canuel s request for a license renewal in autumn 2013 because he insisted on wearing a colander on the photo the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia granted him temporary driving permits while it was considering whether to definitively reject or grant his request ICBC claimed their October 2014 definitive refusal was based on the fact that it would only accommodate customers with head coverings where their faith prohibits them from removing it and that Mr Canuel was not able to provide us with any evidence that he cannot remove his head covering for his photo 122 The states of Australia have differed in dealing with applications for official documents featuring colander photos Sydney science student Preshalin Moodley got a provisional driver s license from New South Wales in September 2014 while Brisbane tradesman Simon Leadbetter was denied a license renewal by Queensland s Department of Transport and Main Roads the same month 151 Earlier in 2014 South Australia refused Adelaide resident Guy Ablon a gun license with a photo of him wearing a colander the authorities even seized his legally obtained guns questioned his religion and forced him to undergo a psychiatric evaluation before his weapons were returned 151 State of Victoria issued the first strainer featuring driver s license in November 2016 152 Critical receptionWith regard to Henderson s 2005 open letter according to Justin Pope of the Associated Press Between the lines the point of the letter was this there s no more scientific basis for intelligent design than there is for the idea an omniscient creature made of pasta created the universe If intelligent design supporters could demand equal time in a science class why not anyone else The only reasonable solution is to put nothing into sciences classes but the best available science 62 nbsp US Army ID tag dog tag listing Atheist FSM as the religious belief system preference Pope praised the Flying Spaghetti Monster as a clever and effective argument 63 Simon Singh reviewing The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster for The Daily Telegraph described the Flying Spaghetti Monster as a masterstroke which underlined the absurdity of Intelligent Design and applauded Henderson for galvanis ing a defence of science and rationality 32 Sarah Boxer of The New York Times said that Henderson has wit on his side 12 In addition the Flying Spaghetti Monster was mentioned in an article footnote of the Harvard Civil Rights Civil Liberties Law Review as an example of evolution enter ing the fray in popular culture which the author deemed necessary for evolution to prevail over intelligent design 153 The abstract of the paper Evolutionary Controversy and a Side of Pasta The Flying Spaghetti Monster and the Subversive Function of Religious Parody describes the Flying Spaghetti Monster as a potent example of how monstrous humor can be used as a popular tool of carnivalesque subversion 40 Its author praised Pastafarianism for its epistemological humility 20 Moreover Henderson s website contains numerous endorsements from the scientific community 154 As Jack Schofield of The Guardian noted The joke of course is that it s arguably more rational than Intelligent Design 155 Conservative columnist Jeff Jacoby wrote in The Boston Globe that intelligent design isn t primitivism or Bible thumping or flying spaghetti It s science 156 This view of science however was rejected by the United States National Academy of Sciences 157 Peter Gallings of Answers in Genesis a Young Earth Creationist ministry said Ironically enough Pastafarians in addition to mocking God himself are lampooning the Intelligent Design Movement for not identifying a specific deity that is leaving open the possibility that a spaghetti monster could be the intelligent designer Thus the satire is possible because the Intelligent Design Movement hasn t affiliated with a particular religion exactly the opposite of what its other critics claim 158 See also nbsp Religion portal nbsp Comedy portal nbsp Evolutionary biology portal nbsp Science portal Bokononism Church of the SubGenius Creation and evolution in public education Dinkoism Discordianism Dudeism Evolution as fact and theory Falsifiability Intelligent falling Invisible Pink Unicorn Missionary Church of Kopimism Reductio ad absurdumReferences Jansson Arne Niklas Touched by His Noodly Appendage Android Arts Archived from the original on December 25 2018 Retrieved November 25 2012 Profile of Arne Niklas Jansson Android 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