‘Pastafarian' refuses to take spaghetti strainer off his
head for license photo, South Brunswick cops say
on
SOUTH BRUNSWICK –
Motor vehicle workers in Dayton
called police on a man who insisted on wearing a pasta strainer on his head
during the taking of his driver’s license photo, according to a police report.
The man, Aaron Williams, 25, who gave an Egg Harbor Township address, told
motor vehicle workers the strainer was a religious head covering and he had a
right to wear it in his driver’s license photo.
Williams said he practices Pastafarianism.
Pastafarianism, or the Church of the Flying Spaghettic
Monster, is a movement opposing teaching in schools of intelligent design and
creationism.
Reached by phone on Wednesday, Williams said he is serious
about the movement.
“I take it as seriously as anybody else when it comes to
religious beliefs,” he said.
According to a police report, an motor vehicle employee told
Williams head coverings can’t be worn in license photos unless it’s for
religious reasons.
Williams then pulled out his cell phone and began taking
video of the worker – another violation of motor vehicle policy, according to
the report.
Police advised Williams that the pasta strainer was not
approved by the MVC and he would have to apply to the state to wear it in his
license photo.
Williams reluctantly agreed to have his picture taken
without the strainer, according to police.
He also agreed to delete the video he had taken of the motor
vehicle worker, according to the report.
Asked why he’d left his home in Atlantic
County to have his photo taken at
the South Brunswick motor vehicle office, Williams said:
“I like it. It’s a nice, new office.”
In Austria ,
self-described Pastafarian Niko Alm fought for three years for the right to
wear a pasta strainer on his head in his driver's license photo. He won his
fight after officials performed a mental-health check, according
to NPR.
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