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Was Rudolph’s religion a factor?
Religious sect may have
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THE QUESTION is not just whether Rudolph is a
terrorist, or whether he considers himself a Christian. It is whether he planted
bombs at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, two abortion clinics and a gay
nightclub to advance a religious ideology — and how numerous, organized and
violent others who share that ideology may be.
Federal investigators believe Rudolph has had a long association with the
radical Christian Identity movement, which asserts that North European whites
are the direct descendents of the lost tribes of Israel, God’s chosen people.
Some investigators also think he may have written letters that claimed
responsibility for the nightclub and abortion clinic bombings on behalf of the
Army of God, a violent offshoot of Christian Identity.
“We declare and will wage total war on the ungodly communist regime in
New York and your legaslative bureaucratic lackey’s in Washington. It is you who
are responsible and preside over the murder of children and issue the policy of
ungodly preversion thats destroying our people,” one of the letters said, in
childish penmanship riddled with errors.
“Religiously inspired terrorism is a worldwide
phenomenon, and every major world religion has people who have appropriated the
label of their religion in order to legitimize their violence,” Aho said.
Not only in Rudolph’s case, but also in the case of Oklahoma City bomber
Timothy J. McVeigh and Muslim suicide bombers, “there’s always the question of
what comes first, is it the religious belief or the violent personality?” Aho
said. “I’m inclined to believe that people who are violent in their inclinations
search out a religious home that justifies their violence.”
FOUND EXTREMISM EARLY
Rudolph, 36, appears to have found his religious home during his
impoverished family’s wanderings in his fatherless teenage years.
The FBI believes he was exposed to Christian Identity’s ideology in the
early 1980s when his mother brought him to live for four months with the Church
of Israel, a congregation in Schell City, Mo. Federal investigators have said
that after that experience, when he was about 14, Rudolph periodically made
contact with Christian Identity groups, including the Aryan Nations, an
Idaho-based group that has been influential in the militia movement.
But the Church of Israel’s pastor, Dan Gayman, strongly disassociated
himself from Rudolph in a telephone interview yesterday.
“We very clearly and emphatically teach that all Christians have a duty
and an obligation to respect all law enforcement authorities. If Eric Rudolph
had listened to his lessons here, he would have learned that acts of violence
were absolutely and completely out of order and something this church would
never have condoned,” Gayman said.
Gayman, 66, recalled that Rudolph’s mother arrived at the church in the
Missouri Ozarks in about 1981 or ’82 with Eric and Jamie, one of his four
brothers, and presented herself as a “widow in very destitute condition, with
two boys to feed and without money to buy food or gas.” He said his congregation
took them in “just long enough for them to get back on their feet.”
The Church of Israel does not call itself a Christian Identity
congregation. But its teachings echo the movement’s, which are generally traced
to two 19th-century British ministers, John Wilson and Edward Hine, who
justified colonialism on the grounds that the British nation was descended from
the 10 lost tribes of biblical Israel.
Asked to explain the Church of Israel’s racial views, Gayman said, “We
teach that God is the creator of all races, that He created them separately and
distinctly with their own unique talents and characteristics, and that every
race has a purpose in God’s plan.”
As to the purpose of whites, he said: “I would simply say that we believe
that the Caucasian people are the literal descendants of the lost 10 tribes of
Israel, and they would occupy a place of prominence in the plan of God.”
Because the Christian Identity movement is loosely organized and keeps no
membership rolls, its numbers have been estimated at anywhere from 2,000 to
100,000, including many informal chapters in prisons. Many adherents are
strongly anti-Semitic, considering themselves to be the true Israelites and Jews
to be impostors.
RUDOLPH STILL A MYSTERY
Barkun said the anti-gay and antiabortion positions that may have
motivated Rudolph’s alleged bombings “are a rather subordinate theme” in
Christian Identity. He noted, however, that members of Rudolph’s extended family
have said he viewed abortion not just as the taking of life, but as a threat to
the white race.
“The notion that there are significant numbers of white mothers having
abortions, and therefore the race is being endangered, is interesting, because
racial genocide is a major theme in Christian Identity,” Barkun said.
A deeper mystery, perhaps, is the motive for the Olympic bombing, which
took place at a rock concert in downtown Atlanta, killing a 44-year-old woman
and injuring more than 100 others. Barkun speculated that the Olympics “may have
symbolized for Rudolph the mixing of races and cultures.” Or, he said, the Games
may have triggered “pervasive fear of a global tyranny run from the United
Nations and destroying American independence and so on.”
But, he added, “anti-Olympic sentiment is not a motif in Christian
Identity, and it still strikes me as an odd target.”
© 2003 The Washington Post Company
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