(This is the full text of a post previously published as three separate posts. - sm)
I've had a piece of writing brewing for a 
looong time -- for more than two years, when I go back and look at scraps and drafts of things -- about this 
fallacy in both American society, and the Religious Society of Friends, that equates 
naming or identifying something with actually 
creating it.  
I  witness, and experience, how this inhibits discussion in two areas in  particular: difference and discrimination.  With difference, the myth is  that differences don't exist until we name them -- and that when we do,  we threaten unity and cohesiveness, and therefore organizations or  communities themselves.  With discrimination, the myth is that prejudice  and discrimination don't exist until we name them -- and that when we  do, 
we're the ones who are prejudiced bigots. 
What bullshit.
What's  more, this attitude goes hand-in-hand with blame-the-victim mentality,  and it lets perpetrators of discrimination off the hook.
This  has come back up for me during my travels in ministry this summer, as  I've been confronted with things like Judeo-Christian religious and  theological 
ethnocentrism and 
privilege; 
racism; 
sexism and 
male privilege; 
classism; 
homophobia, 
biphobia, and 
heterosexism; and 
ableism.   (In my fatigue, I'm sure I'm forgetting something else.)  Yeah, at   least each and every one of those was dropped directly in my lap for me  to cope with at least one  time or another, and sometimes more than  once, in the the space of five consecutive weeks.  Aieeee.
Sometimes   I was able to open my mouth and do education, or advocate for   myself.  Sometimes I was just rubbed too tender or too raw, or was too  overwhelmed or exhausted.  Like when I tried, several times, then  finally gave up on the ADA-inaccessible workshop.  Even though the  facilitator 
pouted, saying, "But I want you here!"  (Ze  was willing to pout when I pointed out the room was inaccessible to me,  but ze wasn't willing to move the workshop so I could attend it.  Would  ze have pouted, even jokingly, if I'd been using a wheelchair I couldn't  have maneuvered into the building?)
I've  been deeply,  deeply grateful for spiritual community holding me while  I've done  this work, and for sometimes doing it with me.  Because while sometimes   I've experienced this on airplanes or street corners or grocery stores,   more often I've experienced it among Friends.  Sometimes, beloved   Friends.  
Ohh, the joys and frustrations of community.
Even so, I am just plain burned out.  
This  has come up yet again over the last few weeks, after my travels.  I've  been castigated and called "sexist" and "man-hating" for posting a link  to the 1848 
Declaration of Sentiments in another electronic forum.  (I had no idea the 
Declaration of Sentiments would still be controversial in quite this way, 162 years after the 
Seneca Falls Women's Rights Convention; but that would be another blog post.)  And for posting the news story that the death sentence of 
Gaile Owens, a (female) domestic violence survivor, has been commuted to life in prison, and for saying how glad I am she will live.   
This also came back up for me when the movie "Avatar" was released and I read this review -- "
When Will White People Stop Making Movies Like "Avatar?" -- followed shortly by reading 
an article in the Boston Globe about Black science fiction writers.  
In the article, 
Nalo Hopkinson is quoted as saying: 
"[The  black sci-fi community is] tiny... And it's happening in an environment  in which,  particularly in the US, to talk about race is to be seen as  racist. You  become the problem because you bring up the problem. So you  find people  who are hesitant to talk about it."
Bingo.
"To talk about race is to be seen as racist": sweeping race and racism under the Meetinghouse rug 
This happens among Quakers, too.
I  have a F/friend whose ministry includes helping the Religious Society  of Friends become more welcoming to people of color.  For some years, we  were part of the same Meeting.  While I was there, the Meeting  supported her ministry, but her ministry was nonetheless controversial: a  vocal minority in the Meeting was deeply concerned that supporting her  ministry would 
contribute to the divisions among Friends.  Simply  by virtue of acknowledging that the experience of Friends of color is  not always the same as that of white Friends, acknowledging that racism  exists in the Society of Friends today, and acknowledging that racism  has existed in the Society of Friends historically.  As if those  experiences, and those differences, and that racism, and that 
history,  don't exist until my F/friend's ministry, the ministry of other Friends  of color, including Friends of African descent, and the ministry of  anti-racist Friends of European descent, bring them to Light.  
 
Yeah, right.  
Just  as in the larger society, it's as if, as long as we pretend it doesn't  exist, then somehow it doesn't; and as if, when we acknowledge it  exists, then somehow we've created it, brought it into existence.
It disturbs me deeply when Friends buy into this lie.  
Sweeping Pagan Friends and discrimination against Pagan Friends under the Meetinghouse rug
  No   one has actually sat down to have a real conversation with me about    this next issue, which I find interesting.  And I have had lots, and I    do means lots, of long and chewy conversations with other people -- in    person, over email, on blogs, on Facebook, and on email list-servs --    about theaology, Paganisms, Quakerisms, where different Paganisms and    Quakerisms intersect, where they don't, and more.  In July, I had two    weeks of travel in ministry where sometimes eating was a challenge    because in-depth or far-ranging conversations over meals didn't leave    much time for actual eating.
So even though I "do"   conversations, people don't generally have this  conversation with me;   but some Friends are happy to report to me that 
other people have this concern:
If I, S
taśa:    [insert here: am a Pagan Quaker; am publicly identifiable as a Pagan    Friend; am a member of a Meeting; am not a member of a Meeting; have a    ministry; have a ministry that 
is under the care of a Meeting; have a ministry that 
isn't under the care of a Meeting; and so forth];
Then that 
creates... Pagan Friends.  Who 
don't exist until I name them.
What's more... that, 
by definition, creates Pagan Quakerism.  Which is a whole new "-ism."  A whole new kind of Quakerism. 
And those 
create... divisions and differences among Friends.  That 
don't exist otherwise.
That don't exist until I, S
taśa,    [insert here: am a Pagan Quaker; am publicly identifiable as a Pagan    Friend; am a member of a Meeting; am not a member of a Meeting; have  a    ministry; have a ministry that 
is under the care of a Meeting; have a ministry that 
isn't under the care of a Meeting; and so forth].
Hmmmm. 
You   might notice that no one seems concerned about other facets of my    ministry.  In fact, much of the time, when someone talks about my    ministry, there's  only one aspect of my ministry that even registers    for them.  Not my music ministry.  Or my healing ministry.  Or my    spiritual counseling ministry.  Or my LGBTQ ministry.  Or my crochet    ministry.  Or my other interfaith ministry.  Nobody seems concerned    about my identification as a lesbian Friend, or a non-theist Friend, or a    Jewish Friend, or any of my ministry there, either.  
The "P word" is the one everybody gets their knickers in a twist over.  
Okay, folks:
First of all, Pagan Friends exist. 
In   fact, the first time I attended Quaker worship as visiting Priestess    and Witch, and introduced  myself that way at the rise of  worship,    folks 
from that Meeting came up to me and 
introduced themselves to me as Quaker Witches.  They existed before I even knew they existed -- I sure didn't invent them.
Pagan   Friends existed long before I become active in the Religious  Society  of  Friends, and they'll exist long after I die.  They would  have  existed  even if I'd never been born, even if I'd never gone to  Meeting  once in  my entire life, even if I'd never become deeply  involved with  the  Religious Society of Friends, even if I'd never seen,  and been  led to  respond to -- minister to -- a spiritual need among  Pagan  Friends. 
Pagan  Friends have been members and  attenders in all three Monthly  Meetings  (in three different Yearly  Meetings) I've been actively part  of, before I  ever arrived  there.  Since I've moved most recently, I've  become  involved with a  fourth Monthly Meeting (in a fourth Yearly  Meeting),  where there are  several intensely Earth-focused people who  give  passionate vocal  ministry in Meeting for Worship, and in Meeting  for  Worship with  Attention to Business, about trees and other plants as   living beings.
What's  more, everywhere I travel among Friends, Pagan Friends come out  to  me.  And increasingly often, when I visit among Pagans, Pagans with   connections to Quakerism come out to me, too.  
But there's more you need to understand.
Secondly, Pagan Friends experience discrimination in the US as a whole, and within the Religious Society of Friends as well.
We experience that discrimination 
whether or not we talk about it, whether or not we name it.
 
When   we don't name it, when we are silent in the face of that    discrimination, all our silence does is compound our oppression.  It    doesn't protect us (
Lorde);    it does not make our oppression go away.  Silence does not make    discrimination cease to exist.  All silence does is allow    discrimination, prejudice, bigotry, and oppression to flourish.  
Yes, sometimes Christian Friends are asked to keep silent about their experience of the Divine.  
No, that's not the same.  And yes, that is wrong, too.  
I have written about that,    I have given vocal ministry about that, and if you know me, you know I    am a staunch advocate in the Testimony of Integrity for speaking the    truth of our experience of the Divine.  Even though I'm not always  very good   at it myself.  
But part of the truth is  that if you  are Christian -- as when you are  straight, of European  descent, male,  middle-class, temporarily  able-bodied, 
cisgender    -- you are part of the majority, dominant culture in the US.  There   are  Christians all around you.  They may not be your particular flavor   of  Christian, but there are still Christians all around you.  Your   god's  birth day is a national holiday, unless you're Orthodox, for  example.  When people  around you,  even non-Quakers, say "God" or  "religion," they usually  mean 
your God and 
your religion, or something pretty close to it.
Those experiences are almost never true for Pagans.
It's   extremely unlikely that you will have to use personal or vacation   days  for your ordinary religious holidays.  Or that your boss will roll   their  eyes or protest the difficulty to the department when you   request those  days off, question you closely about 
why you want  them  off, or give you  a sermon for taking them off.  It's also  extremely  unlikely that you  will lose your housing, your job, a  promotion,  custody of your kids,  your business, your livelihood, your  family, a  court case, a disability  claim, the ability to work as a  chaplain, or  something else equally  vital or basic, for being  Christian.
But those things happen to Pagans in the US every day, simply for being Pagan.  
No, I'm not making that up, and no, I'm not exaggerating. The facts are well-documented.
So when we experience discrimination in our Meetings or other Quaker communities, 
in our own spiritual homes and spiritual communities, you bet we get angry:
- When   we're asked not to give vocal ministry about our  experience of the   Light, the seasons or the Goddess or Herne or  Cerridwen or Beltane  or  Samhain or Solstice, at the same time that  other people give vocal   ministry about the seasons or Christ or Jesus or Advent or  Lent...  
- When we're told "You have to give up your prior religion"    or "You have to give up your former Gods," but other Friends --    especially Christian Friends -- aren't told that...  
- When we're told that retaining certain cultural trappings,    such as Feasts for the Beloved Dead at Halloween or May Poles on May    Day, isn't appropriate for us as Quakers, at the same time that our    Meetings host dinners for Christmas or Easter or the Day of the Dead, or  when we   can dance around a May Pole at a Quaker college on May Day;  or when we can't   have committee meetings or Meeting events on certain  days because other   people have Christmas or Easter dinners with their  families, and nobody   else in our Meeting seems to see a problem with  that...  
- When our memberships are blocked, in spite of our clearness    committees being in unity, simply because of our theaologies; or when    our memberships are revisited in our Meetings, or are called into    question by Friends outside our Meetings, in ways they aren't for other    Friends... 
- When we're denied ministry support or oversight committees,    or minutes of religious service, where if you swapped in the word    "Christ" or "Spirit," there would be no discomfort; or when we can have a    minute of religious service or letter of introduction, but only if it    includes the names of Gods we don't experience or theologies with  which  we don't identify -- ie, if we violate the Testimony of  Integrity...      
- When we get asked, over and over, "Why do you have to use that word?"...
- When Gatherings of Christian Friends or Young Friends or    LGBTQ Friends are allowed free or reduced-fee use of Meetinghouse space,    but our Meeting community has a months-long conflict over whether or    not a Gathering of Pagan Friends can use the Meeting's space at all,    even if that Gathering pays full market price... 
- When a Meeting has comfortably welcomed other    non-Christians into membership, including Buddhist, Non-Theist, and    Jewish Friends, or non-Christian Friends without other labels, but  suddenly insists Christianity is a membership   requirement when there  are a number of openly Pagan Friends attending   the Meeting, or  sojourning, transferring, or requesting membership...   
...then yes, of course some of us get angry.
And  when  other Friends are asked not to give vocal ministry about Jesus   or  Christ, from our pain we might agree, or from our pain we might get    angry on their behalf.
Pagans don't create the   discrimination and second-class citizenship we  face by coming out of  the  "broom closet," any more than lesbians, gay  men, bisexual people,  or  transgendered people create the discrimination  and second-class   citizenship we face by coming out of that closet.  We  don't create the   discrimination and second-class citizenship we face  by 
naming it, any more than LGBTQ people do, than women do, than people of color do, than poor people do, than disabled people do.  
However,   by naming that discrimination, particularly in our Meetings  and in   other Quaker organizations, we do a number of things:
- We help create social justice.
- We help create spiritual growth.
- We walk the Testimony of Integrity and the Testimony of Equality.
- We help our Meetings walk the Testimonies of Integrity and    Equality.  Indeed, we demand that other Friends walk those Testimonies    with us.  
Most of all:- We help our Meetings grow in the Spirit.   
- We help create vibrant spiritual community where we    can participate in Quaker worship joyfully and truly be in spiritual    communion together.
So,   we've talked about whether or not I, by myself, bring Pagan Quakers   into existence.  Now, let's talk about Pagan Quakerism.
I could be wrong, but I don't think it exists.  
Except maybe in "The Princess Bride" alternate universe.
In    all seriousness, I have no idea what anybody  is talking about when    they fume over and worry about Pagan Quakerism.   (And you'd think I    would know, especially if I'm the vanguard of the  movement.) 
So, first, define Pagan Quakerism for me: tell me exactly what Pagan Quakerism is. 
And second, explain to me exactly how it's a threat to unprogrammed liberal Quakerism -- 
but, do it using logic and facts, and 
not using stereotypes or fear-mongering. 
Nobody's been able to do this for me, except with recourse to 
Christian exclusivism     -- which includes identifying the very existence of non-Christian     Friends as a threat to, and a fundamental change to, Quakerism.  Which     is plainly not the universal experience of Friends.  That argument    also   often then goes on to equate the existence of Pagan Friends with   the    existence of Pagan Quakerism.  Which doesn't wash -- not   logically, and   not  in real life.  
In my opinion,   there is no room   for any form of theaological exclusivism in   unprogrammed liberal   Quakerism.  Theoretically, either Quakerism is   exclusively Christian and   some form of 
Christian exlcusivist,     or Quakerism includes multiple theaologies and is open to different     ways of experiencing the Divine / the Spirit / That-Which-Is-Sacred.      However, in real life, Quakerism includes Friends of many  theaologies, 
and    not all liberal, unprogrammed Friends are  comfortable with this  fact.    I'd like to write a more in-depth  analysis of this issue of  some  point,  because I don't have room to go  further into it here.
Does the 
existence of minority Friends 
create minority Quakerisms?  Do minority Quakerisms exist?
Does     lesbian Quakerism exist?  And/or gay, bisexual, transgender,    and/or    queer Quakerism?  How about women's Quakerism?   African-American      Quakerism?  Jewish Quakerism?  Buddhist  Quakerism?  Non-Theist      Quakerism?  Working-class Quakerism?  Poor  Quakerism?  Disabled      Quakerism?  Ethnic Quakerism?
Claiming   that  the   existence of minority Friends creates  minority Quakerisms  is  part   of  that fallacy that hides and perpetuates discrimination  against    minority Friends within Quakerism.
There are also 
organizations for/of LGBTQ Friends, Quaker women, Friends of color, and Non-Theist Friends in the US.  In addition, there are 
Gatherings of LGBTQ Friends, Quaker women, Friends of color, and Non-Theist Friends in the US.
Do the existence of 
organizations and 
Gatherings of minority Friends 
create minority Quakerisms? 
When     Friends who are of minority status within the larger society and    within  the Society of Friends have space that is minority-focused --    space to  come together, build community, share the truth of our    experience, and  build strength, then bring our gifts and the truth of    our experience  back to our larger Quaker family -- the larger  Religious   Society of  Friends benefits and grows stronger.  
Minority Quaker experience and perspectives 
 
Let me ask an alternative, related question, though: do minority Quaker 
sensibilities or perspectives exist?
In my experience, definitely.
What    happens when you bring together the experience, or maybe the lens    through which you see the world, of being lesbian, gay, bisexual,    transgender, and/or queer, and the experience, or the lens through which    you see the world, of being Quaker?
The experience and lenses of being Jewish and being Quaker?
The experience and lenses of being Pagan and being Quaker?
There    is a unique way of experiencing and of looking at the world that  comes   from bringing together these two realities and lenses into a  whole.
And   just as LGBTQ Friends do not shed being  LGBTQ for being Quaker,  neither  do Jewish or Pagan Friends shed being  Jewish or Pagan for being  Quaker:  we live our lives as an integrated  whole.
So what happens when we bring that whole perspective to our lives as Friends? 
When     we bring our perspectives as members of minorities to our lives as     Friends, and to our Quaker family, we bring perspectives our Quaker     families would not otherwise have.
We bring opportunity.  We bring truth.  We bring integrity.  We bring possibility.   
Oh, wait.  Maybe here is where the threat is.  
I    can tell you, as a cisgender person, that it's not always easy  hearing   the truth of the experience of my transgender F/friends.  I  can tell  you  I'm not always good at it.  No, I am not to blame for  being born  into a  cisgender body.  I am not to blame for having  unearned cisgender   privilege handed to me by society.  But I can  choose what to do with   it.  I am not to blame for the vitriol in the  feminist and LGBTQ   communities against transgender women during  controversies I haven't   been part of, but I can choose to be an ally  in those communities now   and in controversies I'm part of now.  I can  own that I have had a path   and a process that I have walked towards  acceptance of my transgender   brothers and sisters, that there are  times when I still don't have the   inside of my head all sorted out,  and that that's my problem, not that   of any transgender person.
I  can choose how to listen   to the experiences and perspectives of  transgender people, particularly   within my Meeting and other Quaker  organizations.  Even when I am   uncomfortable.  
I  have been enriched immeasurably by   doing so.  So have the    organizations I am part of.  So has my   ministry.  So has my life.  So    has my experience of the Divine.   
I   can tell you,  as a white person, that it's not always easy hearing the   truth of the  experience of my F/friends and family members of color --    African-American, multi-racial, Korean-American, unknown,    Japanese-American, Native-Chinese-Irish-Black, more.  I can tell you I'm    not always good at it.  No, I am not to blame for being born into a    white body.  I am not to blame for having unearned white-skin privilege    handed to me by society.  But I can choose what to do with it.  No, I   am  not to blame for being raised racist in a racist society, but I  can  own  my path and my process, that there are times when I don't have  it  all  sorted out, and when I don't, I can own that as a white  person.  
I   can choose how to listen to the  experiences and perspectives of people   of color, particularly within  my family, my Meeting, and other Quaker   organizations.  Even when I am  uncomfortable.
I have   been enriched immeasurably by  doing so.  So have the   organizations I   am part of.  So has my  ministry.  So has my life.  So   has my   experience of the Divine.   
What  discomfort are   non-Pagan Friends afraid of, if the truth of Pagan  Quakers' lives and   experiences are brought fully into the Light?   
Are    we, as Friends, willing to brave the discomfort -- and yes, it can be    excruciatingly painful sometimes -- for deeper spiritual communion  and   deeper worship?  For deeper direct experience of the Divine?   
If    we are, we have to be truly willing, and we have to let go and trust    Quaker process, all the way.  We have to be willing to be personally    transformed.  I've been part of Meetings that have done both -- found    this a horrible labor, and found this a worthwhile one.  Neither is    easy.  But true Quaker process brings deep, sweet rewards of the    Spirit.  
This is really about all of us
Do    we as Quaker organizations want to walk our talk better?  Make our    Meetings, our Gatherings, and our events more welcoming to minorities in    general?  To people of color?  To poor people?  To people with    disabilities?  LGBTQ folks?  Do we want to serve homeless people in our    communities better?  Do we want to be more welcoming of people who    aren't rich or middle class?  Families with kids?
Do we want to fill our Committee rosters??
Most    importantly, if everything we do springs from worship, do we want our    Meetings and organizations to have rich spiritual lives, deep  spiritual   communion, and deep worship?  
Then  we can't   keep sweeping the ways we're different from each other, and  the   discrimination people in our worshiping communities experience -- 
not just in the outside world, but within our own Quaker communities    -- under the rug.  And we can't keep insisting people who experience    discrimination are bigots for standing in their integrity and talking    about the truth of their lives.
As Friends, we have a    reputation for social justice in the wider world.  We're willing to  look   squarely at the inequities in the larger societies in which  Friends   live, and we're willing to do the work to create change. 
Why aren't we willing to do this work within our own Religious Society?
Why    are we willing to confront racism, sexism, homophobia, classism,    ableism, ethnocentrism, and theaological and religious discrimination in    our cities, towns, and nations, and even our families, but not in our    own Meetinghouses?