Pagan police get right to take festivals as holiday

Written by Super User 18 May 2010

Police officers have been given the right to take days off to dance naked on the solstices, celebrate fertility rituals and burn Yule logs if they profess pagan beliefs. The Pagan Police Association claimed yesterday that it had been recognised by the Home Office as a ‘diversity staff support association’ - a status also enjoyed by groups representing female, black, gay, Muslim and disabled officers. Endorsement would mean that chief constables could not refuse a pagan officer’s request to take feast days as part of his or her annual leave. The eight pagan festivals include Imbolc (the feast of lactating sheep), Lammas (the harvest festival) and the Summer Solstice (when mead drinking and naked dancing are the order of the day). Problematically, the pagan festivals also include Samhain (known to non-pagans as Hallowe’en), a day when police leave is often cancelled because of the high incidence of vandalism, violence and antisocial behaviour.

Pray: that the problems caused by all these diverse requests will not damage working relationships or effective policing.
(Pr.28:19)

More: http://www.theosthinktank.co.uk/Pagan_Police_Get_Right_To_Take_Festivals_As_Holiday.aspx?ArticleID=4062&PageID=12&RefPageID=5

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