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The Harry Potter Debate

The Harry Potter Debate

AP, Nov. 9, 2001
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/ Off-site Link
[Story no longer online? Read this]

connie neal, rich abanes, harry potter, witchcraft, wicca, occult, religion news report provides news of interest to those who work in Christian apologetics and countercult ministries.  It includes information about religious cults, sects, new religious movements, and related issues, such as religious freedom, religious tolerance, and cult crimes.


LOS ANGELES (AP) - The new Harry Potter movie heading to theaters next week has enflamed a small legion of conservative Christian critics who claim the boy wizard is a tool leading children to witchcraft and sin.

But as anticipation grows for ''Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone,'' other Christians insist the stories are harmless fantasies about magic and morals.

''I'm so tired of people saying he's evil,'' says Connie Neal, a Christian author who has investigated the Potter claims. ''They're choosing to interpret the books in a very selective way.''

Neal - a mother of three and author of ''What's a Christian to do with Harry Potter?''Off-site Link - characterized herself as a ''discreet fan.''

Yet other authors maintain reservations about the mysticism of Harry's world, in which magical people predict the future, change shapes and communicate with ghosts.

''Although the story is fictional, Harry Potter has real-world occult parallels,'' said Richard Abanes, author of ''Harry Potter and the Bible: The Menace Behind the Magick.''Off-site Link

''The books present astrology, numerology mediumship, crystal gazing,'' he said. ''Kids are enthralled with it. And kids like to copy.''
[...]

''There's a real religious concern,'' observes Jana Riess of Publishers Weekly, who moderated an Abanes-Neal debate at a July convention of Christian retailers. ''Evangelical Christians believe that witchcraft is real.''

But, she said, witchcraft in the Potter novels ''is not a worldview in the way evangelicals would think of it.'' She likens the fuss to parallel complaints when ''The Wizard of Oz'' was published a century ago.

Scottish author J.K. Rowling calls the accusations ''absurd,'' saying Harry Potter's world is entirely imaginary.

''I have met thousands of children now, and not even one time has a child come up to me and said, 'Ms. Rowling, I'm so glad I've read these books because now I want to be a witch,''' the author has said.

Though more than 50 million copies are in print worldwide, there has been no evidence of widespread conversions to paganism or witchcraft.

Andy Norfolk of the London-based Pagan FederationOff-site Link, said the youth-aimed Potter books have created no serious interest in his movement because the don't appeal to older people seeking spiritual options who ''see them as rather uncool.''

Enemies of Pottermania abound, nonetheless.

The Potter books top the banned book listing for 2000, compiled by the American Library Association.
[...]

Neal fears churchgoing parents will prejudge the books without reading them. She thinks most children won't be harmed so long as parents help them understand the difference between fantasy and reality.

Christians ''should use the help of God and our own common sense to do our best to be light in the world, not a laughing stock,'' she says.
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On the Net:
''Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone'' movie:
http://www.harrypotter.com/Off-site Link
Connie Neal official site: http://www.connieneal.com/Off-site Link
Richard Abanes official site: http://www.abanes.com/Off-site Link
[...more...]   [Need the full story? Read this]
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