The Arizona Republic

Man wears colander in license photo:

‘Pastafaria­n’ says headgear is a symbol of religious freedom

- KAILA WHITE THE REPUBLIC | AZCENTRAL.COM

After years of trying and getting turned away, a Chandler man has finally received his official Arizona driver’s license bearing a photo of him wearing a spaghetti strainer on his head. He appears to be the first Arizonan to do so.

After years of trying and getting turned away, a Chandler man has finally received his official Arizona driver’s license bearing a photo of him wearing a spaghetti strainer on his head.

He appears to be the first Arizonan to successful­ly do so, though his victory is brief: State officials say they will void the license.

And while some may say it’s a joke, he says it’s an act of religious freedom.

Sean Corbett of Chandler has long believed in respecting and never judging others. Then, three years ago, he stumbled

across the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, also known as Pastafaria­nism.

The church promotes a lightheart­ed view of religion. It was created in 2005 to criticize schools teaching intelligen­t design alongside evolution, but has become a social movement for freedom of religion and expression.

“Some may view the religion as a satirical version of standard religion,” Corbett said. “I think it really drives in the point that if you’re going to include one, you have to include all. You have to respect everybody’s beliefs if you’re going to respect one.”

Corbett, 36, said he first tried to take a license photo wearing a colander in 2014.

“I tried a couple different locations and was met with a lot of pushback and resistance. I was scorned at every location I went to, and they put out a memo about me, so by the time I got to (the) fourth and fifth MVD, they stopped me at the door.

“They got angry at me and treated me with such disrespect.”

He recently tried again and, after talking with the location’s manager, was able to take the photo. He received his official ID in the mail on Tuesday.

“I was really excited,” Corbett said. “I felt, in that moment, that I won my battle. It was a huge victory for me.”

“Initially it may have started off as, ‘Hey, wouldn’t it be cool if I could get a spaghetti strainer in my picture? That would be boss,’ but if you look at what’s going on in the world today, people being persecuted for religious beliefs, maybe it’s time to take a step back and say, ‘You know what? You shouldn’t be persecuted for your religion.’ “

A spokesman for the Arizona Department of Transporta­tion, which oversees the Motor Vehicle Division, released a statement on the matter.

“MVD license and ID photos are meant to show a person’s typical daily appearance and allow for religious expression or medical needs. Photos are filtered through facial recognitio­n technology and if an error occurs, the photo can be recalled,” the statement said.

Spokesman Doug Nick later added that “we will go through the process to pull this credential.”

“I’m going to fight it,” Corbett said. “They have no valid reason to void it.”

Corbett said he hopes he can help pave the way for people of other religions to wear what they want in their license photos — a hijab or a turban, for example — without the same resistance he faced.

“It’s a terrible feeling. It’s nothing anybody should have to experience,” Corbett said. “They shouldn’t be bullied because their beliefs are different.”

 ??  ?? ADOT confirms ‘covfefe’ has been ordered as a custom Arizona license plate. 11A
ADOT confirms ‘covfefe’ has been ordered as a custom Arizona license plate. 11A

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States