545 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
545 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
CultWatch Response
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Vol. I, Issue 1
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Samhain, 1988
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WHY CULTWATCH RESPONSE?
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It seems like anyone can get away with saying anything these days, so long
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as they hate something enough. We at CultWatch Response have seen article
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after article hating paganism and witchcraft, with no facts and not even
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very good fantasies, merely because pagans are a convenient group to hate.
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Many of these articles were directed straight at police, others were for
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various fundamentalist groups.
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Why? Because hate is an offspring of fear, and people always fear what
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they do not know -- and they do not usually know much about paganism.
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Further, their hatred drives pagans into hiding, for fear of a return of
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the Burning Times of the Inquisition.
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It is the primary goal of CultWatch Response to supply at least one
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reasonable, well-thought-out, and FULLY RESEARCHED article per issue, in
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order to promote understanding, because we do not believe that the
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followers of a God of Love should spend so much time hating something that
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they know nothing about. This first issue includes an excellent article on
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Samhain (Halloween) by Rowan Moonstone, and a set of "the laws of the
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Craft" that show how much different we pagans are than most Christians
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believe us to be.
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WE ARE NOT SATANISTS!
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Basically, Satan did not reach Europe until the coming of Christianity in
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the 3rd to 5th Centuries C.E. Paganism is a wide group of religions that
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existed in Europe prior to the Christianization of Europe; the fact that it
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was an extremely viable religion caused the Church to decide it needed to
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be eliminated, and so one major deity was singled out as being the
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equivalent of Satan and the persecutions went forth. This is not an act of
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God, but rather one of very greedy men who were pursuing temporal power in
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the guise of ecclesiastical power.
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There ARE Satanists in the world. Most of them are harmless, and most of
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them do NOT consider themselves pagans. As pagans, we abhor criminal acts
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such as murder, child abuse, and the torturing or slaughtering of animals
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(not including feedlots, of course, although many of us are vegetarians and
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others have worked for more humane treatment of animals AT feedlots). We
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regard people who do these types of things as sick. Prosecute them, get
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them help, do something to stop "ritual crime". Most of us are willing to
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do our part to help find and prosecute these people, and it is evident to
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most police officers around the country that ritual crime does not involve
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pagans. It is usually found in gangs of children, led by other children or
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by sick adults.
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WHAT DOES "GOD" MEAN TO WITCHES?
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Nearly all Witches and pagans in America believe in one God. However, that
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God is usually felt to be totally beyond our understanding, and can only be
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understood by humans by looking at "parts" of God that we CAN understand.
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The first division is obvious; Masculine and Feminine. We call these God
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and Goddess, and sometimes attach names from our heritage or from mythology
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to these aspects. (Indeed, most pagans prefer the Mother aspect of God to
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that of the Father, and use the term Goddess for the highest understandable
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form of God.)
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We also look at what the highest attributes of ourselves are, and
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sometimes separate these into masculine and feminine (Hunter Aspect might
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be Herne for the masculine or Diana for the feminine). While we call these
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aspects and attributes "gods", most of us never lose sight of the fact that
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they are merely small parts of the one God. (C.G. Jung called these aspects
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"archetypes", and his theories have blazed new territory in understanding
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what it means to be human.) We also consider everybody (not just witches)
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to be a part of God. Our God is not merely everywhere, but even everyTHING.
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A common greeting in one branch of paganism is "Thou art God". This does
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not mean that we believe that every person is a god, but rather that all
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things are a part of God.
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We even have our trinities. The Triple Goddess consists of Maiden,
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Mother, and Crone aspects; the Triple God might consist of Lover, Hunter,
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and Grandfather. Each group or individual might use different names for
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these individual aspects of God.
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WITCHRAFT IS NOT AN ORGANIZED RELIGION.
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Each individual is trained in the "Tradition" he or she finds access to,
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and upon completion of training is usually initiated into that "Tradition".
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Once that process is complete, it is expected of each person to think for
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and be responsible for themselves. There are no mind control games, no
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brainwashing techniques, no death threats, and, in most cases, no authority
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figures. There is usually a couple named High Priest and High Priestess for
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a ritual, but in MOST groups, this function is rotated among the members of
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the group.
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American paganism has its roots mainly in English and Welsh forms of
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paganism, but we seem to have picked up extra material from a variety of
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sources (including American Indians), as well as pruning some of the things
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we found to be unnecessary and adding new material as it strikes us. Some
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American traditions sprang from the imaginations of people from seemingly
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nowhere, and other follow the "Old Ways" fairly strictly.
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WE ARE NOT AFTER YOUR CHILDREN...
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It is against our religion to proseletize (recruit). We do have bookstores
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open to the public, and we may be involved in open religious debates, but
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our gods do not need your souls.
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BUT PAGANS ARE DANGEROUS, AREN'T THEY?
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No. We believe different things than most Christians, but the differences
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are not great enough to cause the misunderstandings that exist. In fact, we
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are not very much different from the Unitarian Universalist Church or the
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Society of Friends (Quakers). We believe in going where our own conscience
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takes us, and each Tradition teaches ethics at a level not usually found in
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Christian denominations.
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We hope that you enjoy CultWatch Response. Please let us know how you feel;
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you may wish to fill out and return the questionnaire in this issue. Please
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also read the Editorial Policy listed elsewhere in this issue.
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Subscriptions are free to police departments and organizations; this will
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make for limited free distribution in some areas. Others are welcome to
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write for the current subscription price or to make arrangements to help
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with distribution.
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Gerald Bliss, Editor and Co-Founder
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CultWatch Response
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---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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The Origins of Halloween
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by Rowan Moonstone
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In recent years, there have been a number of pamphlets put out by various
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Christian organizations dealing with the origins of modern day Halloween
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customs. Being a Witch myself, and a student of the ancient Celts, from
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whom we get this holiday, I have found these pamphlets woefully inaccurate
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and poorly researched. In an effort to correct some of this erroneous
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information, I have spent several months researching the religious life of
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the ancient Celtic peoples and the survivals of that religious life in
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modern day times. Listed below are some of the most commonly asked
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questions concerning the origins and customs of Halloween. Following the
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questions is a lengthy bibliography where the curious reader can go to
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learn more about this holiday than space in this small pamphlet permits.
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1. Where does Halloween come from?
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Our modern celebration of Halloween is a descendant of the ancient
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Celtic fire festival called "Samhain". The word is pronounced "sow-
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in", with "sow" rhyming with cow.
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2. What does "Samhain" mean?
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The Irish English dictionary published by the Irish Texts Society
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defines the word as follows: "Samhain, All Hallowtide, the feast of the
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dead in Pagan and Christian times, signalizing the close of harvest and
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the initiation of the winter season, lasting till May, during which
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troops (esp. the Fiann) were quartered. Faeries were imagined as
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particularly active at this season. From it the half year is reckoned.
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also called Feile Moingfinne (Snow Goddess).(1) The Scottish Gaelic
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Dictionary defines it as "Hallowtide. The Feast of All Souls. Sam +
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Fuin = end of summer."(2) Contrary to the information published by many
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organizations, there is no archaeological or literary evidence to
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indicate that Samhain was a deity. The Celtic Gods of the dead were
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Gwynn ap Nudd for the British, and Arawn for the Welsh. The Irish did
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not have a "lord of death" as such.
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3. Why was the end of summer of significance to the Celts?
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The Celts were a pastoral people as opposed to an agricultural people.
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The end of summer was significant to them because it meant the time of
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year when the structure of their lives changed radically. The cattle
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were brought down from the summer pastures in the hills and the people
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were gathered into the houses for the long winter nights of
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story-telling and handicrafts.
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4. What does it have to do with a festival of the dead?
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The Celts believed that when people died, they went to a land of
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eternal youth and happiness called Tir nan Og. They did not have the
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concept of heaven and hell that the Christian church later brought into
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the land. The dead were sometimes believed to be dwelling with the
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Fairy Folk, who lived in the numerous mounds or sidhe (pron. "shee")
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that dotted the Irish and Scottish countryside. Samhain was the new
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year to the Celts. In the Celtic belief system, turning points, such as
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the time between one day and the next, the meeting of sea and shore, or
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the turning of one year into the next were seen as magickal times. The
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turning of the year was the most potent of these times. This was the
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time when the "veil between the worlds" was at its thinnest, and the
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living could communicate with their beloved dead in Tir nan Og.
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5. What about the aspects of "evil" that we associate with the night
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today?
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The Celts did not have demons and devils in their belief system. The
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fairies, however, were often considered hostile and dangerous to humans
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because they were seen as being resentful of men taking over their
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lands. On this night, they would sometimes trick humans into becoming
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lost in the fairy mounds, where they would be trapped forever. After
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the coming of the Christians to the Celtic lands, certain of the folk
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saw the fairies as those angels who had sided neither with God nor with
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Lucifer in their dispute, and thus, were condemned to walk the earth
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until judgment day.(3) In addition to the fairies, many humans were
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abroad on this night, causing mischief. since this night belonged
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neither to one year or the other, Celtic folk believed that chaos
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reigned and the people would engage in "horseplay and practical
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jokes".(4) This served also as a final outlet for high spirits before
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the gloom of winter set in.
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6. What about "trick or treat"?
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During the course of these hijinks, many of the people would imitate
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the fairies and go from house to house begging for treats. Failure to
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supply the treats would usually result in practical jokes being visited
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on the owner of the house. Since the fairies were abroad on this night,
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an offering of food or milk was frequently left for them on the steps
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of the house, so the homeowner could gain the blessings of the "good
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folk" for the coming year. Many of the households would also leave out
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a "dumb supper" for the spirits of the departed.(5) The folks who were
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abroad in the night imitating the fairies would some- times carry
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turnips carved to represent faces. This is the origin of our modern
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Jack-o-lantern.
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7. Was this also a religious festival?
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Yes. Celtic religion was very closely tied to the Earth. Their great
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legends are concerned with momentous happenings which took place around
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the time of Samhain. Many of the great battles and legends of kings and
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heroes center on this night. Many of the legends concern the promotion
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of fertility of the earth and the insurance of the continuance of the
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lives of the people through the dark winter season.
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8. How was the religious festival observed?
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Unfortunately, we know very little about that. W.G. Wood-Martin, in his
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book, "Traces of the Elder Faiths of Ireland" states, "There is
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comparitively little trace of the religion of the Druids now
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discoverable , save in the folklore of the peasantry, and the
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references relative to it that occur in ancient and authentic Irish
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manuscripts are, as far as present appearances go, meager and
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insufficient to support anything like a sound theory for full
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development of the ancient religion."(6) The Druids were the priests of
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the Celtic peoples. They passed on their teachings by oral tradition
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instead of committing them to writing, so when they perished, most of
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their religious teachings were lost. We DO know that this festival was
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characterized as one of the four great "Fire Festivals" of the Celts.
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Legends tell us that on this night, all the hearth fires in Ireland
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were extinguished, and then re-lit from the central fire of the Druids
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at Tlachtga, 12 miles from the royal hill of Tara. This fire was
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kindled from "need fire" which had been generated by the friction of
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rubbing two sticks together as opposed to more conventional methods
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common in those days.(7) The extinguishing of the fires symbolized the
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"dark half" of the year, and the re-kindling from the Druidic fires was
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symbolic of the returning life hoped for, and brought about through the
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ministrations of the priesthood.
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9. What about sacrifices?
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Animals were certainly killed at this time of year. This was the time
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to "cull" from the herds those animals which were not desired for
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breeding purposes for the next year. Most certainly, some of these
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would have been done in a ritualistic manner for the use of the
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priesthood.
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10. Were humans sacrificed?
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Scholars are sharply divided on this account, with about half believing
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that it took place and half doubting its veracity. Caesar and Tacitus
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certainly tell tales of the human sacrifices of the Celts, but Nora
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Chadwick points out in her book "The Celts" that "it is not without
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interest that the Romans themselves had abolished human sacrifices not
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long before Caesar's time, and references to the practice among various
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barbarian peoples have certain overtones of self-righteousness. There
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is little direct archaeological evidence relevant to Celtic
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sacrifice."(8) Indeed, there is little reference to this practice in
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Celtic literature either. The only surviving story echoes the story of
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the Minotaur in Greek legend. The Fomorians, a race of evil giants said
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to inhabit portions of Ireland before the coming of the Tuatha de
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Danaan, or "people of the Goddess Danu", demanded the sacrifice of 2/3
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of the corn, milk, and first born chil- dren of the Fir Bolg, or human
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inhabitants of Ireland. The De Danaan ended this practice in the second
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battle of Moy Tura, which incidentally took place on Samhain.
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11. What other practices were associated with this season?
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Folk tradition tells us of many divination practices associated with
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Samhain. Among the most common were divinations dealing with marriage,
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weather, and the coming fortunes for the year. These were performed via
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such methods as ducking for apples and apple peeling. Ducking for
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apples was a marriage divination. The first person to bite an apple
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would be the first to marry in the coming year. Apple peeling was a
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divination to see how long your life would be. The longer the umbroken
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apple peel, the longer your life was destined to be.(9) In Scotland,
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people would place stones in the ashes of the hearth before retiring
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for the night. Anyone whose stone had been disturbed during the night
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was said to be destined to die during the coming year.
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12. How did these ancient Celtic practices come to America?
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When the potato crop in Ireland failed, many of the Irish people,
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modern day descendents of the Celts, immigrated to America, bringing
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with them their folk practices, which are the remnants of the Celtic
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festival observances.
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13. We in America view this as a harvest festival. Did the Celts also view
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it as such?
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Yes. The Celts had 3 harvests: Aug 1, or Lammas, was the first harvest,
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when the first fruits were offered to the Gods in thanks. The Fall
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Equinox was the "true harvest". This was when the bulk of the crops
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would be brought in. Samhain was the final harvest of the year.
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Anything left on the vines or in the fields after this date was
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considered blasted by the fairies, or "pu'ka", and unfit for human
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consumption.
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14. Does anyone today celebrate Samhain as a religious observance?
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Yes. many followers of various pagan religions, such as Druids and
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Wiccans, observe this day as a religious festival. They view it as a
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memorial day for their dead friends, similar to the national holiday of
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Memorial Day in May. It is still a night to practice various forms of
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divination concerning future events. Also, it is considered a time to
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wrap up old projects, take stock of ones life, and initiate new
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projects for the coming year. As the winter season is approaching, it
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is a good time to do studying on research projects and also a good time
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to begin hand work such as sewing, leather working, woodworking, etc.
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for Yule gifts later in the year.
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15. Does this involve human or animal sacrifice?
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Absolutely NOT! Hollywood to the contrary, blood sacrifice is not
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practiced by modern day followers of Wicca or Druidism. There may be
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some people who THINK they are practicing Wicca by performing blood
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sacrifices, but this is NOT condoned by reputable practitioners of the
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modern day NeoPagan religions.
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-----
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FOOTNOTES:
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(1) Rev. Patrick Dineen, "An Irish English Dictionary" (Dublin, 1927), p.
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937
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(2) Malcolm MacLennan, "A Pronouncing and Etymological Dictionary of the
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Gaelic Language" (Aberdeen, 1979), p. 279
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(3) W.G. Wood-Martin,"Traces of the Elder Faiths of Ireland" (Port
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Washington, 1902), p. 5.
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(4) Kevin Danaher,"The Year in Ireland", (Cork,1972), p. 214
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(5) Alwyn & Brinley Rees,"Celtic Heritage" (New York,1961), p. 90
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(6) Wood-Martin, p. 249
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(7) Rees & Rees, p. 90
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(8) Nora Chadwick, "The Celts" (Harmondsworth,1982), p. 151
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(9) Madeleine Pelner Cosman, "Medieval Holidays and Festivals," (New
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York, 1981), p. 81
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-----
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BIBLIOGRAPHY:
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Bord, Janet & Colin, "The Secret Country", London: Paladin Books, 1978
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Chadwick, Nora, "The Celts", Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1982
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Coglan, Ronan, "A Dictionary of Irish Myth and Legend", Dublin, 1979
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Cosman, Madeleine Pelner, "Medieval Holidays and Festivals", New York:
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Charles Scribner's Sons, 1981
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Danaher, Kevin, "The Year in Ireland", Cork: The Mercier Press, 1972
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Dineen, Rev. Patrick S.,M.A, "An Irish English Dictionary", Dublin: The
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Irish Texts Society, 1927
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MacCana, Proinsias, "Celtic Mythology", London: The Hamlyn Publishing
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Group Limited, 1970
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MacLennan, Malcolm, "A Pronouncing and Etymological Dictionary of the
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Gaelic Language", Aberdeen: Acair and Aberdeen University Press,
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1979
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MacNeill, Maire', "The Festival of Lughnasa", Dublin: Comhairle
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Bhealoideas Eireann,1982
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Powell, T.G.E., "The Celts", New York: Thanes & Hudson,1980
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Rees, Alwyn and Brinley, "Celtic Heritage, Ancient Traditions in Ireland
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and Wales", New York: Thanes & Hudson, 1961
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Sharkey, John, "Celtic Mysteries", New York: Thanes and Hudson, 1975
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Spence, Lewis, "British Fairy Origins", Wellingborough: Aquarian Press,
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1946
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Squire, Charles, "Celtic Myth & Legend, Poetry & Romance", New York:
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Newcastle Publishing Co, Inc. 1975
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Toulson, Shirley, "The Winter Solstice", London: Jill Norman & Hobhouse,
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Ltd, 1981
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Wood-Martin, W.G., "Traces of the Elder Faiths of Ireland, Vols I & II,
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Port Washington: Kennikat Press, 1902
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ALTERNATIVE CRAFT LAWS
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Introduction:
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1. These laws are guides and aides to a better understanding of
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ourselves and the Craft.
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2. The Craft is made of the interaction of people and divinity.
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3. This interaction must be in perfect love and perfect trust.
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4. The foundation of perfect love and perfect trust is found in
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balance.
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5. Balance is achieved through understanding of the cycles of life and
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death.
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Organization:
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6. A coven is a group of two or more people who have joined together
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for the purpose of interacting with one another and divinity.
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7. There shall be no limit to the number of members a coven has, but
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balance becomes more difficult to achieve as the number of members
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increases.
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8. The final arbitrator of the membership of a coven is the membership.
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Authority:
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9. The authority of a coven comes from the interaction of its
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membership with one another and divinity.
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10. Authority must be balanced by the total membership of the coven.
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11. Imbalance of authority will corrupt individuals and destroy the
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effectiveness of the coven.
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12. Balance is achieved through taking responsibility for your actions
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and the actions of the coven.
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13. Because each member of a coven is responsible for self and coven,
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the only authority the coven can exercize is authoritative authority.
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14. No one can assume the leadership of a coven without the approval of
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the membership.
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15. The membership is the final authority of a coven.
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16. A coven which is in balance has little need of perpetual leadership
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from one person or couple.
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17. Each full member of a coven must facilitate some aspect of the
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coven.
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18. If only a small percentage of a coven's membership is actively
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responsible and facilitating within the coven, there is little chance
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of balance. (NOTE: A coven may choose to maintain a hierarchy,
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priesthood, system of initiation grades or other similar devices to
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encourage individual development. These trappings often cause imbalance
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in a coven through the combination of unnecessary authoritarianism and
|
||
the relinquishing of personal responsibility.)
|
||
19. A coven has need of only two ranks: Probationer, a member who is
|
||
still in training, and Initiate, a member whose training is complete.
|
||
(NOTE: This should not be construed as having ended studies, but rather
|
||
as having begun them by virtue of having gained basic information.)
|
||
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
EDITORIAL POLICIES
|
||
|
||
Each issue of CultWatch Response is published by CultWatch Response, Inc.
|
||
(a non-profit Corporation organized under the laws of the State of
|
||
Colorado), under a Public Domain Copyright, which entitles any person or
|
||
group of persons to reproduce, in any form whatsoever, any material
|
||
contained therein, so long as articles are not condensed, abbreviated, nor
|
||
excerpted in any fashion and credit is given the original author. In
|
||
addition to these provisions, we encourage groups to republish each issue
|
||
for the purpose of distribution to police and community organizations and
|
||
the media, but would ask that you coordinate with us before doing so to
|
||
prevent over-saturation of an area. We welcome articles, reviews, etc. We
|
||
reserve the right to correct obvious mistakes in spelling, syntax, and
|
||
grammar, and to edit where necessary to fit available space; any edited
|
||
material will be returned for the author's approval prior to publication.
|
||
We do ask that you not UNFAIRLY promote any race, cultural group, either
|
||
sex, or any magickal group or tradition above another. Articles with
|
||
careful research and a positive emphasis will be considered ahead of all
|
||
others. We would prefer that you use your real name if you feel comfortable
|
||
doing so, but this preference will never be a major factor in deciding
|
||
whether or not to publish your article. The above policies have been agreed
|
||
to by the current staff of CultWatch Response, although much of the wording
|
||
was borrowed from Rocky Mountain Pagan Journal. We are not affiliated with
|
||
either the Rocky Mountain Pagan Journal nor its parent corporation, High
|
||
Plains Arts and Sciences, but we are grateful for whatever groundwork they
|
||
have provided us in the fields of Public Domain Copyright and editorial
|
||
policies.
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
The staff at CultWatch Response would like to know what we can do to help
|
||
you in dealing with the issues we are faced with; if you would please
|
||
fill out the following questionnaire and return it to us, it will be a
|
||
great help. You need not include your name or address; of course we would
|
||
like to have it if you feel comfortable giving it to us.
|
||
|
||
1. Did you find this material informative?
|
||
|
||
2. Are you interested in receiving more material such as this?
|
||
|
||
3. What type of information would you like to receive regarding Witches
|
||
and their religion?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
4. Have you ever met a Witch?
|
||
|
||
5. Have you read any books or other literature dealing with Witchcraft or
|
||
other aspects of the "occult"? Please list as many titles as you
|
||
feel comfortable mentioning.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
6. Who (speaker, minister, colleague, etc.) or what (book, movie,
|
||
article, etc.) has most influenced your personal views regarding
|
||
Witches and their religion?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
7. Do you believe that Witchcraft encourages or incorporates unlawful
|
||
activities in its belief structure? If yes, please specify
|
||
which types of problems you have in this area.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
8. Do you feel that "occult-influenced" crimes should be of major concern
|
||
in law enforcement?
|
||
|
||
9. Has there been evidence of "occult-influenced" crime in your area?
|
||
|
||
|
||
10. Have you personally been involved in the investigation of an "occult-
|
||
influenced" crime?
|
||
|
||
11. Does your agency sponsor, or encourage attendance of, "occult crime"
|
||
seminars? Have you ever attended one of such seminars? If you
|
||
feel comfortable, please list which seminars you have attended.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
12. Does your agency receive assistance in "occult-influenced" crime
|
||
investigations from Witches in your area?
|
||
|
||
13. Would your agency welcome contact and/or assistance from legitimate
|
||
Witches in your area? If yes, who should they contact (please give
|
||
name and address, or office phone)?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Additional comments or questions:
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Thank you for helping us make an impact. If you have further questions,
|
||
feel free to contact us. Please return this questionnaire to: CultWatch
|
||
Response, P.O. Box 1842, Colorado Springs, CO 80901-1842.
|
||
|