Theocrats Defenestrated

Over the past couple of weeks, Pete at the Dark Window has been collecting the pensées of American Christian theocrats for our delectation. We’ve had Judge Roy Moore’s doggeral:

Our children wander aimlessly
poisoned by cocaine,
Choosing to indulge their lusts,
when God has said abstain.

We’ve also had Gary DeMar, whose book Myths, Lies, & Half-Truths: How Misreading the Bible Neutralizes Christians is described by WorldNetDaily as maybe “the most important book you will ever read”. One of the “lies” is that “There’s a separation between church and state.” De Mar runs American Vision™ (“Educating & Empowering Christians to Restore America’s Biblical Foundation”), and is a member of the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA), the same denomination as the Harvestwood Covenant Church dissected by World O’Crap (with a bit of help from Pete and myself). DeMar claims that he is not a Reconstructionist, but he has co-written materials with Gary North and appears to be very close to the movement.

Plus, there’s been CNP member John W. Chalfant, whose WND profile suggests a liberally-minded guy at heart:

He points out that while non-Christians in America certainly are not obligated to adopt or convert to the Christian faith, it is “the duty of every American citizen to defend the Constitution and the Judeo-Christian pillars of law and liberty which grant us such freedoms.”

Chalfant runs America – A Call to Greatness Inc.® According to his bio, his chief inspiration was Joe McCarthy’s Wormtongue Richard Arens:

While working at a missle research and development center, a senior collegue played a tape-recording for Chalfant of a speech by Richard Arens, Staff Director of the House Committee on Un-American Activities, entitled “Dangers to our Internal Security.” Arens began, “Two thousand years ago there was One who spoke these words: ‘No man can serve two masters’…” The first fifteen minutes were devoted to comparing Jesus Christ, the Author of freedom, to Karl Marx, the destroyer of freedom. That speech transformed Chalfant’s life, and he committed the rest of it to the service of Jesus Christ and America’s freedoms.

(Arens lost his HCUA position when it was discovered in 1960 that he was assisting racist Wycliffe Draper in giving grants to individuals who could prove that blacks were inferior and should be shipped off to Africa. One particular hate-figure for Arens was the World Council of Churches).

Chalfant’s book of the same name as his website contains sections with titles such as:

Can a Pacifist Truly Serve God?
What Would George Washington Do?
Democracy or Republic?
Evolution’s Cruel Legacy
Evolution in the Classroom, Satan’s Highway
Schools: Great Gates of Hell.
God’s Position on National Independence and the New World Order
Attack on Sodomy Laws
Conclusion: The Curse of Tolerance and Compromise

The book is endorsed by D. James Kennedy and Howard Phillips, among others.

But for the true connoisseur, none can compare with the ramblings of Debbie Daniel, who argues that Kerry is on the road to Hell for daring to debate Bush on TV:

What causes me to tremble is the behavior of a man who has shown disdain for a position God ordained. It is perilous to his own well-being…not to speak of what he’s done to bring the country down. Mr. Kerry…if you had an ounce of decency in your heart, you would change your course of action immediately…You may win the vote…but, sir, you will certainly lose your soul…There’s a scripture in Romans 13:1-5 that sums it up best. And please note: these are not the words of this columnist; check out the author yourself. “Everyone must submit himself to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except that which God has established.

Priceless. A profile for Daniel can be found on American Daily:

Debbie Daniel is a native of Louisiana, having graduated from Mississippi College, Jackson, Mississippi in the field of Psychology and Religious Education.

While serving for nearly ten years as a full-time Music and Youth Director for churches in Louisiana and Southern California, Debbie directed five major choir tours with college and high school students traveling across the continental United States, into Canada and Hawaii.

Governor Ronald Reagan commissioned one of her youth choirs as Ambassadors of Good Will on a singing tour up and down the great State of California.

She later became an advertising account executive for Harte-Hanks Communications in Los Angeles, California and worked there until her move to Texas in 1994 where she presently works with a Central Texas newspaper as an account executive.

She made a country gospel album in Calfornia entitled “The Old Country Church” and continues to sing in churches today.

Great stuff, Pete, keep it coming…

Baalocks

Joseph Farah is none too pleased with the American Academy of Religion, whose Gay Men’s Issues in Religion Group has been brought to his attention by Presbyterian New Testament scholar Robert A. J. Gagnon. Farah describes Gagnon as a “whistleblower”, and reveals the shocking existence of this group a mere fourteen years after it published its first collection of papers. Farah, cutting and pasting at length from Gagnon’s website, describes some of the papers on offer at the latest AAR conference (paragraphs run together to save space):

Workshops will include a session with the theme “Power and Submission, Pain and Pleasure: The Religious Dynamics of Sadomasochism.” Another session presents arguments for transvestism and transsexualism in Christian theology…An abstract on the “Power and Submission” session says “sadomasochistic or bondage/dominance practice (sometimes also referred to as ‘leather sexuality’)…offers a particularly potent location for reflecting on gay men’s issues in religion.”…Ken Stone of Chicago Theological Seminary says a passage from the book of Jeremiah, chapter 20, verses 7-18, “can be construed more usefully as a kind of ritual S/M encounter between the male deity Yahweh and his male devotee.”… The Sunday session of the Gay Men’s Issues in Religion Group devotes time to transvestitism.

The outrage goes on and on, and even spills into a second article, where Farah christens the scholars Prophets of Baal. Apparently Christianity is completely straight, so the AAR should have no business considering any kind of religious discourse that says otherwise. Gagnon himself inokes the brilliantly original image of a “slippery slope”, and suggests the group really wants to indulge in paedophilia.

Curse from the King

Staying with the alleged “Holy Land”, news from the Jerusalem Post (linked snagged from Paleojudaica):

A group of right-wing Jewish activists reenacted a religious ritual from the First Temple period at the Shiloah Spring in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan Tuesday night, with the goal of removing Prime Minister Ariel Sharon from power and instituting a Jewish monarchy.

With shofars blasting in the background, the group – led by Prof. Hillel Weiss, a well-known Temple Mount activist and a lecturer on literature at Bar-Ilan University, and Rabbi Yosef Dayan, who recently threatened to instigate a death curse against Sharon – conducted the nisuah hamayim ritual, which they said “will begin the process of removing the secular Israeli government.”

“This ceremony will lay the foundations for instituting a Jewish king, a Jewish court, and the Third Temple,” Weiss told the 40 participants sitting near the Shiloah Spring.

The Post describes Dayan as “rabbi of the settlement of Psagot”, which is a rather incomplete description, as a profile for the Lishkat HaGazit School of Government notes that “he was for many years Rabbi Meir Kahane’s right hand man.” And, as the Dayans of Allepo apparently claim descent from King David, perhaps he considers himself as a good bet for the vacancy of Monarch of the State of Israel. Weiss is also involved with the School of Government, which is an openly Kahanist outfit. The Dean is Yoel Lerner, the terrorist who spent several years in prison after plotting to blow up the Al-Asqa Mosque. That particular achievement is not listed on his profile, although this one is:

in 1987 he published an article supporting the White Regime in South Africa

As for the “death curse”, a previous Post article names it as a “Pulsa Denura”. It is not illegal to perform, although back in 2000 the Chief Rabbi of Safed was detained by police after issuing such a curse on the Pope. No results so far, although a prior curse on Yitzchak Rabin had more success. According to a 1995 Jerusalem Report article reposted on Mystical Politics (written just months before the assassination):

Invoking the pulsa denura is a perilous undertaking, for if the ceremony is not performed in a strictly prescribed fashion, it can strike the conjurers themselves.

Before Rabin, the last person so cursed was Saddam Hussein. One day during the 1991 Gulf War, as Scuds rained down on Israel, a minyan of fasting kabbalists gathered at the tomb of the prophet Samuel just outside Jerusalem. There they entered a dark cave, where one of the holy men placed a copper tray on a rock and lit the 24 black candles he’d placed on it. As the mystics circled the candles, they chanted the curse seven times, calling on the angels not merely to visit death upon “Saddam the son of Sabha,” but to ensure that his wife was given to another man.

Nothing in Hello! magazine yet about a new love for Mrs Hussein…

But does Sharon need to fear? According to a Talmudic discussion posted on Mesora:

If man did in fact have the ability to curse another person, this would mean that man has more power than God. It would also suggest that the world does not run by strict justice, as a foolish man may curse a wise sage, and the sage would be unjustly ruined. This however is not the case as God runs the world in accordance with justice and alone, while man is powerless.

Not sure how far Sharon can be confident that “strict justice” will save him. If he’s really worried, he could try a bendel bracelet, as recently popularised by Brittany Spears and Madonna. According to one advert for this kabbalistic amulet:

When the Bendel is placed on the left hand by a loved one, it protects one from harm, wards off evil wishers and brings good luck.

UPDATE: The cursers celebrate Sharon’s stroke.

Pat’s Message of Compassion to Refugees: Go to Saudi

I suppose that reporting on Pat Robertson for making a speech that dehumanises Palestinians and rejects any Israeli plan which would put people’s lives before his apocalyptic vision is a bit like announcing that a bear has crapped in the woods, but his latest pronouncement, made in Jerusalem, is his clearest statement yet in support of the idea that those whose DNA does not belong to the chosen race should be cleansed from God’s Land. According to the Jerusalem Post:

He said that Jordan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia should take in Palestinian refugees, adding that “the Arab nations” are instead interested in preserving the conflict with Israel…

In the press conference, Robertson also said that the UN agency that deals with Palestinian refugees should be dismantled. “UNRWA should be abolished. It has perpetuated intolerable situation for refugees and kept them in perpetual bondage,” he said.

According to UNRWA, there are 1,316,710 refugees in the camps it runs, out of a registered refugee total of 4,136,449. That figure does not include Palestinians living elsewhere or internally displaced within Israel proper. Pat’s proposal to dismantle UNWRA would make therefore make 1,316,710 people homeless as well as stateless. He must know that there is no law that can force the other countries to absorb the refugees, even if those refugees wished to give up their individually-held rights under international law to return to their homes in Israel proper (and I can’t see Pat welcoming those whom he sees as worshippers of Satan to Virginia Beach as an alternative).

But that is only part of Pat’s anti-humanitarianism. There are 665,246 refugees overall in the West Bank, and 922,674 in Gaza. According to the CIA World Factbook, the total Palestinian population of the West Bank is 2,311,204, while Gaza (which Pat is also keen for Israel to hang on to) has a population of 1,324,991. In other words, refugees make up around 28% of the population of the West Bank, and around 70% of Gaza. That means that Pat wants to expel about 49% of the Palestinians living in the Occupied Territories. On top of that, according to sources cited by the Norwegian Refugee Council’s Global IDP (Internally Displaced Person) Project, there are around 250,000 internally displaced persons in Israel proper, whose continued presence Pat may or may not see as a block on the return of Jesus.

Of course, that’s just an analysis of this particular statement. It’s in fact more likely that Pat is favour of complete ethnic cleansing, as my entry here suggests.

Christianity Today has a round-up of the various news sources for Robertson’s latest tour, but none of them mention the reason that brought him to Jerusalem, Robert Stearns and Jack Hayford’s “Day to Pray”, which I have covered before. Instead, they focus on his links with the Festival of Tabernacles and the International Christian Embassy.

(PS: The Revealer links to a report that the Simon Wiesenthal Center wants payments to UNWRA suspended over its failure to block the employment of Hamas members)

IRD Gets “Whiff” from from Critics of Israel

As Pat Robertson rebukes the idea of Palestinian statehood as “Satan’s Plan”, the Institute on Religion and Democracy has produced a report titled Human Rights Advocacy in the Mainline Protestant Churches (2000-2003): A Critical Analysis. The tone is, on the surface, balanced, and the authors include discursive considerations of what their data means, but the report reaches harsh conclusions:

The mainline churches are not adequately addressing the wide range of human rights abuses taking place around the world. The greatest energy is spent in criticizing the United States and Israel, while far less energy is spent in criticizing other nations with human rights abuses that are greater in both number and severity. Some areas of the globe are ignored by the church, despite being the home of some of the worst human rights abusers.

The authors, Erik A Nelson and Alan FH Wisdom, charge that:

One cannot help but recognize that the pattern of church human rights activism shares the same contours as the anti-Americanism evident in other secular leftist movements such as the anti-globalization and anti-war movements. In many ways, the church elite shares the same basic anti-American sentiment common not only on the European Left, but the Islamic Right as well. This thinking could partially explain the reluctance on the part of these church bodies to actively criticize Arab or Muslim nations.

Plus:

But we do catch occasional whiffs of anti-Jewish animus in mainline circles. Most often it arises in private conversations. But we have heard occasional outbreaks of rhetoric borrowed from anti-Semitic sources. And we see alignments developing with movements elsewhere, in Europe and the Arab world, that are openly hostile to the Jewish people.

As evidence, the authors cite Methodist official Jim Winkler, who spoke of neoconservatives thus:

Their plans were not to remake the Middle East into a bunch of democracies—they really have no objection to several of the royal autocracies and dictatorships in the region—but to ensure Israel could continue to act with impunity against the Palestinian people.

Nelson and Wisdom tell us that “neoconservative” is “widely used as a code word for Jews”, and that, besides:

Anyone at all familiar with the neoconservative movement knows that this characterization is simply wrong. The movement—which began when former leftists became aware of the abuses of Marxist-Leninist regimes and so became anti-communists—is marked by a deep concern to expand human freedom and democracy everywhere.

No doubt the authors have an explanation for Daniel Pipes’ statement that “Our goal is not a free Iraq…Our goal is an Iraq that does not endanger us. [We need a] democratic-minded strongman”, but they keep that to themselves. The other example given is an immoderate and bombastic letter posted on the website of the Witherspoon Society. Nelson and Wisdom then link the WCC with the European left and go on to cite Gabriel Schoenfeld’s book The Return of Anti-Semitism:

Today, a new chapter [in anti-Semitism] is being written. Among those burning the Star of David and chanting obscene slogans against the Jewish state in the streets of Europe, there are surely some neo-Nazis, but a greater host of environmentalists, pacifists, anarchists, anti-globalists and socialists. (Shoenfeld, 86).

I suppose I had better not add that Schoenfeld is senior editor at Commentary, a magazine that describes itself (in its web description) as “the home of neoconservatism”, in case that makes me an anti-Semite. But it’s odd that the authors rely on this very partisan and qualitative book, when their own report is so heavy on the number-crunching. According to this critical review from someone sympathetic to Israel reposted from American Outlook:

The book is virtually bereft of hard data. Readers will find no polling results, no crime or employment statistics, no evidence of discrimination, and little history. Moreover, the conclusion acknowledges that what the author describes as anti-Semitism accelerated at the time of the Palestinian intifada in 2000 and “does appear to be an epiphenomenon of the Arab-Israeli conflict.” A book with such an ill-founded premise is unlikely to yield much light, though this one does generate a good deal of heat.

Nelson and Wisdom recommend that:

Rather than pass resolutions critical of Israel at nearly every church meeting or at every mention of the Middle East crisis—resolutions which often offer no new insight into the conflict—it might benefit oppressed and persecuted minorities around the world more if the churches spread their human rights advocacy more broadly. In places like Central Asia and the Middle East, where church attention has been particularly lacking, progress can be made. A broader human rights advocacy which encompasses a more diverse set of nations and concerns would not only help those who are oppressed, but make the mainline churches’ witness more credible.

What the report lacks (to start with), is any sort of wider context. How, for example, does the breadth of human rights advocacy in the mainline churches compare with that of the conservative groups? And how do the two interact? Is it surprising that mainline churches are pro-Palestinian, when conservative leaders continually assert that Israeli policy is guided by God? Or that they criticize their own government when conservatives reject any real substantial self-criticism, complacent that their might means they must be right? The authors also accuse the mainline churches of having supported “Marxist-Leninists” in South America and elsewhere. But is that a surprise, when the conservatives have supported the likes of Riot Montt simply because he was a co-religionist, and were happy to advocate Rhodesia, apartheid South Africa and Chiang Kai-shek in the name of anti-Communism? A special concern about Israel hardly requires delving into unconscious motives, either. America is deeply involved with Israel, Israel is continually on the news, and solving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is the key to regional stability. Of course, then, Christians are going to have more to say about Ariel Sharon than about the Turkmenbashi.

And when it comes to Israel, Nelson and Wisdom are guilty of their own distortions:

We do not assert that it is inherently anti-Semitic to criticize actions or policies of the state of Israel. Many of Israel’s own citizens do so on occasion.

Their argument seems to be that is not anti-Semitic to criticize Israel, just that one should not do it too often, and one should only do it after having ticked off a list of far worse countries. But what does this “on occasion” mean? Are they talking about the long-standing and continuing work of Israeli human rights and dissident groups such as B’Tselem, the Israeli Committee against House Demolitions, Gush Shalom, not to mention the Refusniks? But there’s more:

It is true that many Arab Christians share the grievances of their Muslim compatriots against Israel. But there are also other Christians in Israel and the West Bank who have made their peace with the Jewish state, and who have no appetite for further attacks on it. Here in the Middle East, as elsewhere, the church is not monolithic. In a situation of human rights abuses, different groups of Christians have different responses.

So there are two kinds of Palestinian Christian: those happy with the occupation, and those who wish to “attack” Israel. But the MECC and Sabeel hardly seem to represent either pole. There’s also a double standard (an accusation made throughout the report, as it happens). The authors accuse the mainstream churches of prevarication when it comes to situations like Cuba or the Muslim world, when

we would expect churches to pay particular attention to nations with large or historic Christian communities. The ties of solidarity with fellow believers abroad ought to make U.S. Christians more conscious of their sufferings and more strongly obligated to speak about those sufferings.

Unless, it seems, those Christians are Palestinian Christians, in which case one should try to find the voices most compliant with Israel.

Of course, Nelson and Wisdom raise some valid points. Anyone who has been to an antiwar or pro-Palestinian meeting will wince at some of the oversimplifications and conspiracy theories sometimes expounded. But I’ve always found (in London) anti-Semitism to be rare, if you discount the rantings of the unwelcome Islamic fundies who always show up. Other instances are more often than not silly comments by people who have failed to think things through. And in nearly all cases, such comments are challenged vigorously – not least by the many Jews committed to justice for Palestinians.

The IRD itself was profiled by the New York Times back in May:

With financing from a handful of conservative donors, including the Scaife family foundations, the Bradley and Olin Foundations and Howard and Roberta Ahmanson’s Fieldstead & Company, the 23-year-old institute is now playing a pivotal role in the biggest battle over the future of American Protestantism since churches split over slavery at the time of the Civil War.

[Institute President Diane] Knippers…and Mrs. [Roberta] Ahmanson both noted that the impetus for the founding of the institute came from a labor union activist, not right-wing financiers. Mrs. Knippers said the initial idea came from David Jessup, a staunchly anti-communist union activist and Methodist who objected to church aid to Vietnam and Nicaragua under their leftist regimes.

The Rev. Richard John Neuhaus, a Roman Catholic priest and former Lutheran minister, wrote its founding statement and other neoconservatives joined an advisory board. (In addition to Father Neuhaus, the institute’s board of directors currently includes Mary Ellen Bork, wife of Judge Robert H. Bork, Fred Barnes of the Weekly Standard and Fox News, and Michael Novak of the American Enterprise Institute.)

Also:

More liberal Protestants argue that the institute’s financial backers are interfering with the theological disputes mainly for broader, secular political reasons. “The mainline denominations are a strategic piece on the chess board that the right wing is trying to dominate,” said Alfred F. Ross, president and founder of the Institute for Democracy Studies, a liberal New York-based think tank which produced a research report in 2000 on the Institute’s influence in the Presbyterian Church.

UPDATE (14 Oct): Pundits weigh in.

Safety Warning: Keep Away from the Dalai Lama

While we’re on the subject of Florida, Pastor Mariano Yeo has an explanation for the hurricane. It’s all the fault of the Dalai Lama and the University of Miami:

Yeo believes the Dalai Lama is the world’s foremost proponent of idolatry. “Everywhere he goes disaster follows him,” Yeo observes. “The University of Miami conferred an honorary doctorate on him right before the hurricanes hit,” he notes. Yeo also correlated the unusual timing of earthquakes following Dalai Lama visits to India and Southern California.

Erm…”visits” to India? He actually lives there…

Speaking to ASSIST, Yeo also warns against Buddhist statues:

“Most Western Christians think idols are harmless,” he says. “But idols defile the land and attract demons to come into the area.”

As someone raised in the Philippines, Yeo is also able to pronounce that Buddhism and Islam are the “twin towers of evil”.

Alas, Pastor Yeo has a very low internet profile, although Focus on the Family once covered a zoning dispute he had over his storefront Shalom Alliance Fellowship in California. His current church is the websiteless Little Saigon Community Outreach.

Pastor Yeo’s warning comes two years after pastors in Austria prayed against the Kalachakra for World Peace, a Dalai Lama plot in Europe. As Charisma reported:

Pastors in Austria have been rallying international prayer over a major 12-day Buddhist celebration they fear could weaken the gospel’s impact in Europe and see the region slip deeper into spiritual bondage…

They say that similar rituals have been staged in other key European cities as part of “what seems to be a clear strategy aimed at bringing Europe under the influence of the spirits of Tibetan Buddhism,” and urge Christians to pray that official support for the event will be withdrawn.

Jeb, Katherine and Doug: A Happy Theocratic Family

Amendment (29 October): This post discusses a Katherine Harris/David Barton panel and the presence of Jeb Bush at a conference organised by Doug Giles back in April. However, the pdf agenda I found and commented on below does not tally with another agenda, from Giles’s old cached website. No sign of Jeb Bush, either. So at least some of the events discussed below, it appears, never came to pass.

Very old news, I know, but I’ve just stumbled across the agenda of the theocratic “Returning Christ to the Public Square2 conference held in the Biltmore, Coral Gables, back in April under the auspices of Doug Giles (Unfortunately, only a cached version is available). Doug’s new website makes no mention of the conference (which is curious: did no-one say anything worth recording?), although his old site made much of the presence of David Barton and David Limbaugh. But only the modest agenda page, which I overlooked at the time, noted a couple of other prominent speakers:

Friday 23 April…

18h40: Welcome — Doug Giles…

19h30: Introduction of Governor Bush – Doug Giles

19h35: Welcome & Godspeed – The Hon. Jeb Bush…

Of course, this was probably a brief courtesy appearance, or even a taped message, but it fits well with Jeb’s “faith-based” enthusiasms and reminds us why tax law is not a worry for Doug and his heavily-politicised ministry. And if Jeb wasn’t enough:

20h00: “Why We Are Here” – The Hon. Katherine Harris…

Saturday 24 April

10h20: Panel: “God in Government” – Katherine Harris & David Barton…

David Barton, VP of the Republican Party of Texas, is well-known. But this 1999 report from The Texas Observer is not, which is why I post it for the second time:

Barton’s lecture-cum-sermon on Christian-American history is much in demand among the fringe groups of the far right. In 1991, he spoke at a retreat in Colorado sponsored by Pastor Pete Peters, whose Scriptures for America ministry is affiliated with the racist and anti-Semitic Christian Identity movement. (According to a report by Rob Boston in the journal Church and State, Peters’ congregation at one time included members of a neo-Nazi group called The Order, the same local neo-Nazi group implicated in the 1984 murder of Denver talk-radio host Alan Berg.)

Harris’s support for theocracy is absent from her election website. But here’s the biggest shocker of all:

Sunday 25 Apri

08h30: Continental Breakfast…

Surely not? The macho Doug, nibbling on a croissant?

Kamikazes Resent Islamist Link

The Los Angeles Times reports that kamikaze survivors are keen to explain why those who volunteered to become “divine winds” should not be compared with the suicide bombers of today:

They were ready to die out of love for their country, they say; suicide bombers are driven by hatred and revenge.

The Shinto religion offers no reward of life after death. Islamic suicide bombers are promised a place in an afterlife.

They were volunteers, motivated solely by patriotism. Suicide bombers often are recruited by militia leaders who offer money to their families.

Plus, adds former kamikaze instructor Takeo Tagata:

No matter what supreme ideas they talk about, suicide bombers are just killing innocent civilians, people who don’t have anything to do with their war.

Kamikaze survivors, reports the LA Times, are a small group of veterans whose missions were either aborted or failed. For years ashamed and stigmatised, today the veterans are sought after for their reminiscences and are respected in Japan. However, there is some foreign admiration for the kamikazes that they are keen to shun:

Naoto Amaki, Japan’s former ambassador to Lebanon, recalled delivering a polite lecture to Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, leader of the Shiite Islamist militia Hezbollah, in 2001. Amaki said he told Nasrallah that Japan’s experience was a lesson in the ultimate futility of violence.

Not so, replied the sheik.

“He told me: ‘We learned how to do suicide missions from the kamikazes,’ ” Amaki recalled. “Nasrallah said the Shiites all commend the Japanese samurai spirit.”

(Actually, it should be remembered that aside from the 1983 Lebanon US Embassy bombing Hezbollah has stuck to military targets for its suicide missions, whatever else the organisation or Nasrallah could be accused of)

The explanation about life after death is over-simplified. J-Aircraft.com reproduces some quotes from kamikaze pilots, and one of these does reflect the haziness of the afterlife in Shinto:

Some vague thoughts about my soul being enshrined in Yasukuni Shrine, about the incomprehensive world of death, and other thoughts came and went.

However, another is more optimistic (although written to comfort children):

Your father cannot be seen to your eyes, but he is always watching over you…Your Daddy, Masanori and Kiyoko, has become a god and is always watching you.

A handy (anonymous) student essay on the subject posted here has further details, including this rather surprising quote from Ichizo Hayashi of Fukuoka:

We live in the spirit of Jesus Christ, and we die in that spirit…I will precede you now, mother, in the approach to Heaven. Please pray for my admittance. I should regret being barred from the Heaven to which you will surely be admitted.

Of course, Buddhist ideas would also have informed some kamikazes, despite the state ideology of Shinto.

Meanwhile, for one kamikaze veteran at least, the cogs are starting to turn:

“I still don’t think it was a mistake to send kamikazes,” Hamazono says, though he wonders why, if they thought suicide attacks were such a good idea, none of the officers volunteered.