1759 lines
52 KiB
Plaintext
1759 lines
52 KiB
Plaintext
CultWatch Response
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Beltein 1988
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Volume I, No. 4
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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CWR, Cuhulain
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Announce Guide
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CultWatch Response is proud to
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announce that CWR, in conjunction
|
||
with the Wiccan Information
|
||
Network, will be publishing Kerr
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Cuhulain's A Law Enforcement Guide
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to Wicca, a W.I.N. project (with
|
||
input from many North American
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Pagans). The expected release date
|
||
is mid-May, 1989, and the cost will
|
||
be $10.00, ppd. Please let us know
|
||
if you want us to reserve a copy
|
||
for you as soon as possible, so
|
||
that we can get an idea of how many
|
||
to print in the first run.
|
||
Canadians should contact the
|
||
Wiccan Information Network at
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||
P.O. Box 2422, Main Post Office
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Vancouver, B.C. V6B 3W7 CANADA
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Information on W.I.N. can also be
|
||
obtained from this address.
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-----------------------------------
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In This Issue
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- Rowan Moonstone on "The Origins
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of Beltane";
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- Kerr Cuhulain continues his
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series on "The Plight of the Pagan
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Policeman";
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- Texas has proposed a law to
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deal with Ritual Child Abuse;
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- "A Your Type", a humorous Pagan
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response to some of the various
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charities who are refusing
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donations from Pagans;
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- Reviews of By Silence Betrayed
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by John Crewdson, "Die Mother
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Father Brother" (from the April
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Redbook Magazine), and "The
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Preliminary Report on Satanism in
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America" from the Committee for
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Scientific Examination of Religion;
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- "Tarot and Religious Freedom"
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from The Freedom Writer;
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- Finally! Letters to the
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Editor!
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... and more!
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From the Editor:
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My Heretic Heart
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by Gerald L. Bliss
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Another question I hear often is:
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"If I become a Witch, what's in it
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for me?" I can just see those
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Fundamentalist visions of wild
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orgies swimming before the eyes of
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some preachers. Sorry, but that's
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just not the way it is.
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I suppose that the greatest thing
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the Craft has to offer is the fact
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that no single person has more
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authority over one's belief than
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oneself. As Catharine Madsen put it
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in her song, "Heretic Heart":
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"Though law and scripture,
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priest and prayer
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Have all instructed me,
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My skin, my bones, my heretic
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heart
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Are my authority!"
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I was taught the fundamentals of
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a flexible set of ethics, and was
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encouraged to develop them further.
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I have been given some things
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(rituals, spells, history, etc.),
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and developed others on my own. I
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was taught the "Wiccan Rede" (which
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states that I may do anything within
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the dictates of my conscience, SO
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LONG AS IT HARMS NOBODY), the Three-
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fold Law (which states that any
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energy I put out into the world
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returns to me three times over, thus
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making it an act of stupidity to do
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"negative magick"), and the basic
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Laws of the Craft. I am sworn to
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the Rede, and am affected by the
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Threefold Law whether I like it or
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not; the other Laws were taught to
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me as guidelines, and so I apply
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them as need dictates.
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Another issue is the equality of
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men and women (indeed, the equality
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of all creation); in nearly every
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branch of the Craft, the few
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imbalances are in favor of honoring
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the feminine aspects of what is
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"human", and so the High Priestess
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is given ascendancy over her circle.
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Oh, yes. That silly little
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thing about "selling your soul to
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the Devil"... my soul is a gift
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from Goddess, which would make it
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redundant should She wish to "buy"
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it.
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My relationship with my God/dess
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is not defined in any book; it is
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far too personal to be covered with
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someone else's words. I feel
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His/Her hand in every facet of my
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life.
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My God/dess gave me a brain and
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feelings, sent me teachers who gave
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me the training and experience to
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enable me to discern for myself
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what is right/wrong for me, and
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gave me the right to decide my own
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life and path.
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For me, there is no more one
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"Right, True, and Only Way" in
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religion any more than there is
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only one "Right, True and Only Way"
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to drive to work.
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Please to not feel that I am
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criticizing your beliefs; these are
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merely statements of some of the
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things I believe. May you find
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peace in your path, as I have in
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mine.
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-----------------------------------
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Letters
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As a Wiccan minister, I have
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been actively engaged for a number
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of years in educating the general
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public on Witchcraft through talks
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with various social and law
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enforcement agencies. I cannot say
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that it has not been "interesting",
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but it certainly has been well
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worth it.
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What I have found talking to
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these various agencies is that, as
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a general rule, they prefer to
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schedule "experts" from within
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their own ranks rather than invite
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guest speakers that are both
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knowledgeable and active in the
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subject matter.
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A couple of years ago, a local
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police captain contacted me for
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assistance; it seemed that the
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North Carolina Police Academy had
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scheduled him to speak as an
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"expert" on the occult, and he had
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no knowledge in this area. I spent
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many hours teaching him various
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aspects of the occult as well as the
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differences between Witchcraft and
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Satanism (not to mention the Satanic
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dabblers). Since that time, I have
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met with many detectives from all
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over North Carolina for conference
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on the "occult" and matters of some
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crime activities of an "occult"
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nature.
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But this is only a handful of the
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people within these agencies. The
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general feelings I meet are that it
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is all "bull" or comments to the
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effect that I "should be institu-
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tionalized". This seems to run at
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about a 9-to-1 ratio, with the 1
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representing the proportion of the
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staff who is genuinely interested in
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the topics I present.
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Within the social structure of
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these agencies I have met much
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opposition. It seems that most (if
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not all) of these people subscribe
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to misinformed publications such as
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File 18 and seem to believe the
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viewpoints presented there as if
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they were gospel; this is going on
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from the level of the staff
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psychologist on down, and they all
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think they know more about the
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"occult" than someone who has spent
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their whole life as an active
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participant.
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Most of the seminars held by
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local agencies on the "occult" are
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either given by a local officer
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(serving as an expert) or are
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presented totally from the Christian
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viewpoint with a minister as the
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guest speaker. These so-called
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"experts" generally lack any
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knowledge of the subject matter, yet
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they are "teaching" important
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segments of society as to what we
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are and what we do!
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These agencies must come to
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realize that you only discover the
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truth about a group by talking to
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active participants. One does not
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contact a plumber to do electrical
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wiring, yet this type of thing is
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exactly what is taking place in the
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majority of these agencies.
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I even overheard a conversation
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between two social workers about
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Witchcraft and its practitioners,
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during which one of them stated that
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"there are not enough foster homes
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to hold all the kids that would be
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taken away from these Devil
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worshippers"!
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Until our law enforcement
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agencies discover that they are not
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getting the facts about Witchcraft,
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until they schedule the real
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experts, this kind of attitude will
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continue to exist. There are, of
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||
course, those who either do not
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know the facts or would rather not
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recognize them. The vast majority
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of law enforcement officials I have
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met with are still very much in the
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Dark Ages when it comes to
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understanding us.
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I intend to spend more time
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getting media coverage, hoping that
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my exposure will bring more of
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these people to listen, and hoping
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that someday some of these people
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will not sit still while Witches
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are being slandered in public.
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Yes, my activites may bring on a
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confrontation, but I believe that,
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before it is over, there will still
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be a few questions remaining in
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enough minds that will require
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answers.
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Blessings,
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Jim Sutton
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New Earth Church
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P.O. Box 5461
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New Bern, NC 28561
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-*-*-*-*-*-
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I want to share with you some
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activities and information from the
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Pagan Alliance of Central Texas
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(P.A.C.T.). Our first organiza-
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tional meeting was in mid-December
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1988 with a good turnout. Our
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statement of purpose (below) was
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drafted during the January 1989
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meeting, and since then we have
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worked on setting short- and long-
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term goals.
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In January, two other P.A.C.T.
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members and I attended a
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conference, entitled "Destructive
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Cults and Mind Control", sponsored
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by a local psychiatric hospital and
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Austin Independent School District.
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During the lunch break, two of us
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confronted Investigator Dan LeMay
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about grouping Pagans, Wiccans,
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Satanists, and "other cult law-
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breakers" together in a couple of
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||
his statements. He admitted that he
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didn't know much about Wicca, but
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would be open to learning after we
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identified ourselves and our
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purpose.
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A few days later, in an hour-long
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phone conversation with Mr. LeMay, I
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presented an overall view of
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Paganism, Witchcraft, rituals, and
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magick, stressing the religious
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focus of these things. I told him
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that the national and local
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motivation for Witches uniting and
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networking is to support and protect
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our religious freedom. He was
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interested in in how many Witches
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there were, whether we performed
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blood rituals, animal sacrifices,
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nude ceremonies, and if we wanted to
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become a mainstream American
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religion.
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I answered these and many other
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questions to the best of my ability
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and ended by recommending a suitable
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reading list for his further use. I
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also sent him our educational
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packet, including our statement of
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||
purpose, a general her/history of
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Witchcraft, occult symbols and
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definitions, and excerpts from
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CultWatch Response, Circle Network
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Pagan Strength Web, Witches' Anti-
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Defamation League, and the Witches'
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League for Public Awareness
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publications.
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Mr. LeMay shared with me police
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attitudes toward Pagans and Witches
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based on dubious information
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distributed at in-service cult crime
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seminars. Enclosed is one very
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disturbing paper he shared with me,
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developed by a Deputy Dave Gaerin of
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the San Diego Sheriff's Office about
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a group called the Witches Inter-
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national Coven Council Association
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(conveniently W.I.C.C.A.).
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You can see from this paper that
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it gives an incriminating account of
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Witchcraft that is being accepted as
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truth by less well-informed police
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officials. I wrote a letter to Dep.
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Gaerin, objecting to the distri-
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bution of this material and asking
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for documentation. No one I have
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asked has ever heard of this group,
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so I am passing the ball to you...
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Per subsequent phone conver-
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sations with Mr. LeMay, he informed
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me that he found our educational
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packet very interesting and
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helpful, and (he has been) sharing
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it with other police (officers) in
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the Organized Crime Unit. His
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"cult crime" presentations have
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changed also, now differentiating
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between Wicca and Satanism. Mr.
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LeMay now describes Wicca as a
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legitimate religion being practiced
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by a growing number of responsible
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citizens. We are making progress
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here in the "heart of Texas" and
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hope that by all working together
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we can prevent things like this
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"W.I.C.C.A. Papers" an other
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misinformation about Witches from
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being circulated, perpetuating
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harmful stereotypes!
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Blessed Be,
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Lady Magdalena - Grove of Phoenix
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Rising
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B.J. Barrett - P.A.C.T.
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[Editor's Note: The so-called
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"W.I.C.C.A. Papers" are a forgery
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being a re-write of an equally-
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fictitious document first published
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in the early 1900s in Russia as a
|
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document called "The Protocols of
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the Elders of Zion", claiming an
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international Jewish Satanic (sic)
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conspiracy.]
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-*-*-*-*-*-
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Pagan Alliance of Central Texas
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Statement of Purpose
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P.A.C.T. is an alliance of
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Wiccans and Pagans from different
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cultural traditions. As
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practitioners of pagan and Neo-
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Pagan religions, including Wicca
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(also known as Witchcraft), we
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employ a positive, life-affirming
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faith that is dedicated to healing,
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both of ourselves and others, and
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of the Earth. We recognize the
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divinity of Nature in our Home, the
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Earth.
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We exist to defend, protect and
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support the Wiccan Craft and Pagan
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compatriots in Central Texas by
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putting a stop to the defamation and
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persecution of the Craft, Paganism
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and its individual practitioners.
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We do this by actively opposing
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slander or libel against our
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churches, clergy and congregations,
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and act as a media and government
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watch group. A primary goal of
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P.A.C.T. is to protect the religious
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freedom of its members.
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We also exist to educate the
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general public about the nature of
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the Craft and Paganism, and to make
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clear the distinction between our
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beliefs and common misconceptions.
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We function as a network among Pagan
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groups. While doing this, P.A.C.T.
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is open and in the public eye as an
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organization, but guarantees the
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right of privacy and anonymity to
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those members who desire it.
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We live by the Wiccan "Golden
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Rule": As long as you harm none, do
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as you will.
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------------------------------------
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[Preface: The confusion between
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Satanism and Witchcraft in the
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public mind came to a head a few
|
||
months back when an animal rights
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group returned a donation from a
|
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Craft group and forbade them from
|
||
any further fund-raising activities
|
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on their behalf. Rather than get
|
||
angry, I thought a little humor on
|
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the subject would do the job best.]
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A "Your Type"
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by Lint Dagger
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I peered through the dirty
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window, trying to gauge what awaited
|
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me inside. The summons mentioned
|
||
something about a "refund" and gave
|
||
an address on the lower end of 17th
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street, Falwellville. I'd been
|
||
eating canned soup for dinner the
|
||
past few months, and could not
|
||
afford to pass up any offer which
|
||
would help me make it from one pay
|
||
check to the next. My intent gaze
|
||
could not penetrate the foggy haze
|
||
which covered the plane glass; my
|
||
trepidation grew. I glanced again
|
||
at my watch, and discovered I was
|
||
over a minute late. Clutching my
|
||
courage with one hand, and
|
||
tightening my resolve with the
|
||
other, I opened the door and went
|
||
in.
|
||
The waiting room was small.
|
||
Perhaps fifteen feet square, with
|
||
four dirty chairs placed
|
||
contumeliously around an equally
|
||
filthy card table. The closed door
|
||
against the far wall had no knob
|
||
that I could discover with my
|
||
cursory glance. The thick window,
|
||
imbedded in the plaster next to the
|
||
door like a cyst on an old man's
|
||
butt, appeared bullet proof; a
|
||
young, harried, tight-lipped woman
|
||
stared fearfully through it's wavy
|
||
entrails, no doubt making me look
|
||
as innocuous, as shapeless as she.
|
||
"Name!" the shape demanded
|
||
through the three-inch diameter
|
||
wire mesh placed squarely in the
|
||
center of the vacuous surface. The
|
||
sound might have reminded one of a
|
||
stifled fart. I leaned forward to
|
||
the wire port hole to speak my
|
||
name; Ms. Shapeless jerked back
|
||
sharply, as if I had attempted to
|
||
bite her. "Dagger, Lint M.," I
|
||
screamed into the orifice, artic-
|
||
ulating precisely. She took
|
||
another step back, paused to digest
|
||
this new information, stepped
|
||
forward. With a long stretching
|
||
reach, loathing to get any closer
|
||
to me despite the barrier between
|
||
us, she pressed a button under the
|
||
window. A loud buzzing issued from
|
||
the door. "Go in!" the shapeless
|
||
shape demanded.
|
||
I pressed against the door,
|
||
opening it slowly, wondering if
|
||
whatever Ms. Shapeless was afraid
|
||
of might get me, too. The door
|
||
opened into a short, empty,
|
||
expressionless, blank hall, with
|
||
yet another door at the very end.
|
||
How Ms. Shapeless got into her cage
|
||
was a mystery, as there seemed to
|
||
be no door leading her way.
|
||
Cautiously I walked down the hall
|
||
and opened the door. This room
|
||
was slightly larger than the
|
||
waiting room. Furniture included
|
||
one desk, two chairs, a computer.
|
||
At the computer sat a man wearing
|
||
nylon pants (the legs came up
|
||
almost to his knees), nylon socks
|
||
(which were limp around his
|
||
ankles), and a nylon shirt (open at
|
||
the neck, buttoned tightly around
|
||
his paunch waist). His shoes were
|
||
missing.
|
||
He jumped to his feet, as if
|
||
caught at some misdemeanor.
|
||
Striding up to him with my hand out,
|
||
I smiled warmly at him. He
|
||
stared at my hand as if it were a
|
||
snake, snatching his behind his back
|
||
out of reach. Putting the desk
|
||
between us, he motioned to the far
|
||
chair. Shrugging to myself, I sat
|
||
down. Mr. Nylon sat as well. I
|
||
waited. I couldn't catch his eyes.
|
||
Mr. Nylon pushed a few papers
|
||
around his desk, twitched his right
|
||
cheek spasmodically a few time, and
|
||
shoved a paper over the desk's
|
||
surface at me like a threat. "Sign
|
||
at the bottom," he intoned, in a
|
||
stressed voice. I tried to catch
|
||
his eyes again, and failed.
|
||
Having nothing to lose, I
|
||
assumed, I picked up the paper and
|
||
examined it.
|
||
|
||
United Farmers Of Ohio - $35.00
|
||
Childless Parents Of Utah - $25.00
|
||
Animal Liberation Organization -
|
||
$175.00
|
||
Save The Parrots League - $16.00
|
||
... the list began.
|
||
|
||
"What?" I muttered more to myself
|
||
than to the "gentleman" across the
|
||
desk.
|
||
"Just sign it," he groaned, his
|
||
tone sounding like, "Are you gonna
|
||
give us trouble too?!" His
|
||
tonicity, intending to demean,
|
||
humiliate, and shame, ground into my
|
||
nerves, causing rebellion to swell
|
||
up in my veins. I started to scan
|
||
the list from the top again, reading
|
||
as slowly as possible, determined to
|
||
look for any reason at all not to
|
||
sign.
|
||
|
||
Black Hockey Players Dental
|
||
Alliance - $83.00
|
||
Republican Party - $0.23
|
||
Richard Nixon Acquittal
|
||
Confederacy - $10.00
|
||
Horseless Carriage Restoration
|
||
Coalition - $15.00
|
||
...the list continued.
|
||
|
||
"What?" I muttered again.
|
||
"It's your refund!" Mr. Nylon
|
||
snarled. "Every damn penny! And 8
|
||
percent interest. Just sign there
|
||
at the bottom."
|
||
Making as if to lean across the
|
||
desk to point to where I should
|
||
sign, he jerked to a stop half out
|
||
of his chair. The action was
|
||
curiously like a person who dropped
|
||
a quarter in the outhouse and
|
||
decided he didn't want to retrieve
|
||
it that badly. The thought that he
|
||
could have gotten close enough to
|
||
touch me seemed to make him shiver
|
||
ever so slightly.
|
||
|
||
Clown Union March For
|
||
Independence - $65.80
|
||
Tammy Bakker Plastic Surgery Fund
|
||
- $0.02
|
||
Second House Neptune Endowment -
|
||
$32.00
|
||
Dolly Parton Back Brace Support
|
||
Group - $45.00
|
||
...the list yet continued.
|
||
|
||
At the bottom of the paper was a
|
||
sub-total, what I had to assume was
|
||
8 percent of it (being somewhat
|
||
poor in the art of mathematics),
|
||
and a grand total.
|
||
"My refund?" I asked. "Refund?
|
||
This is a list of every charity
|
||
I've ever given time or money to in
|
||
the past 25 years. Why a refund?"
|
||
The paunchy pile of nylon
|
||
snorted angrily. "You know why!"
|
||
His piggie, watery eyes flitted
|
||
across my forehead, and scurried
|
||
away again, not quite making eye
|
||
contact. His hands made wringing
|
||
motions. I took a deep breath.
|
||
"No. Why?" I demanded. I
|
||
considered the possibility of
|
||
leaving, but curiosity sometimes
|
||
pays for the cat food. Mr. Nylon
|
||
grimaced, winced his eyes
|
||
insolently.
|
||
"Because your a Your Type!" he
|
||
snapped. This time he did manage
|
||
to look at my eyes, defiantly,
|
||
hostilely, just a second, before
|
||
snatching his gaze away again.
|
||
"It's obvious!" Another deep
|
||
breath. "A what type? I'm a
|
||
what?" I wanted to get to the
|
||
bottom of the issue quickly. I'm
|
||
not one to call a harlot a "social
|
||
worker" if "whore" would suffice.
|
||
"A Your Type! You and Your Kind!
|
||
The gall you've got, giving money to
|
||
these fine, lawful, NORMAL people!
|
||
How dare you?!" This time he stared
|
||
directly into my eyes, hotly, with a
|
||
gaze full of blistering hate and
|
||
detestation, demanding with
|
||
speechless violence an answer to why
|
||
I choose to be a "Your Type,"
|
||
whatever that was. I was still
|
||
ignorant to what we were talking
|
||
about.
|
||
"What do you mean about being `My
|
||
Type'?" I wanted to leave now, but
|
||
anger started to replace the
|
||
rebellion in my blood.
|
||
"You're a ..." he paused.
|
||
"You're a =Witch=!" he ejaculated
|
||
finally, defiantly, accusingly.
|
||
"You ride a motorcycle! You live in
|
||
a house full of subversive books!
|
||
You've been seen talking to ..." he
|
||
shuddered "... lesbians!" His
|
||
pallid, flaccid, doughy face was
|
||
turning red. "You sleep in your
|
||
back yard instead of inside! Like
|
||
an animal! You drive an MG, for
|
||
God's sake! What the hell do you
|
||
mean, 'What do you mean "My
|
||
Type"'?!"
|
||
"Auhh ..." I began, mind reeling.
|
||
But he wasn't through.
|
||
"You voted against Brother
|
||
Robertson! You don't eat meat! You
|
||
and Your Type don't conform! You're
|
||
an Anarchist, a throwback to
|
||
evolution! You don't belong here,
|
||
we don't want you here, and we sure
|
||
as hell don't want your money!" I
|
||
was beginning to get the picture,
|
||
slowly. "You're an Astrologer! A
|
||
godless heathen! You protested the
|
||
draft! You listen to Country and
|
||
Western music! You talk to your
|
||
vegetables before you eat them! God
|
||
only knows what else you do to your
|
||
vegetables!
|
||
"You don't want my money? These
|
||
charities don't want my money?
|
||
Because I'm a Pagan? Because I'm a
|
||
vegetarian? Because I like the
|
||
stars? Because Falwellian Politics
|
||
makes me throw up?"
|
||
"Yess!" he hissed through
|
||
clenched cuspids. "These fine,
|
||
respectable, normal, =conforming=
|
||
charities don't want to be connected
|
||
to a Your Type in any way, shape,
|
||
or form. They don't want any kind
|
||
of support from a Your Type at all!
|
||
How dare you offer them your money
|
||
and time?! YOUR money! YOURS!?"
|
||
"So they're sending me back my
|
||
contributions..." This I couldn't
|
||
conceive. "With interest..."
|
||
"Yesssss!" he hissed again.
|
||
"Because my girl friends are
|
||
gay? Because I like British cars?"
|
||
"Yesss, yesss!"
|
||
"Because I apologize to apples
|
||
for biting them, telling them to
|
||
take a deep breath and close their
|
||
eyes first..." He flinched and
|
||
seethed at this, blowing hot air
|
||
through his flaccid lips. "... and
|
||
yell at people who deliberately
|
||
stomp on snails?"
|
||
"Yesss, yesss, all that! A
|
||
freak! An insult against God and
|
||
nature! You haven't been to
|
||
church, a =real=, =normal= church
|
||
=ever=! Not only that, you've
|
||
started your OWN church! You
|
||
worship a Supervisor at your work,
|
||
for god's sake, as a goddess!"
|
||
My eyes narrowed dangerously.
|
||
That was going too far. "You leave
|
||
Cezanne out of this! She's perfec-
|
||
tion personified, and worthy of
|
||
worship..."
|
||
"See?! You admit to being a
|
||
Your Type!" He threw his weight
|
||
into his chair, leaned back, and
|
||
glared at me. I stared at him
|
||
speechlessly. "Sign the paper,
|
||
take the money, and get out!" he
|
||
demanded.
|
||
I didn't even hesitate. "No."
|
||
"What!"
|
||
"I said, `No'." I got up to
|
||
leave.
|
||
"You have to! You will! It's
|
||
yours! We won't take it! Give it
|
||
to some damn perverted Your Type
|
||
group!"
|
||
I walked to the door. A poster
|
||
was taped to the back, which I had
|
||
missed when entering the room.
|
||
"America: Love It Or F*ck You!" it
|
||
said, with the Statue Of Liberty
|
||
standing proudly in it. Her middle
|
||
finger was raised in traditional
|
||
"Giving Them The Bird" posture.
|
||
They had gotten to her, too.
|
||
"Use the money to buy yourself
|
||
some shoes," I said, closing the
|
||
door after stepping through. As I
|
||
passed Ms. Shapeless she glared at
|
||
me hatefully, but I hardly noticed.
|
||
"Sad fools," I added, stepping out
|
||
into the street. I felt dirtied, in
|
||
need of a shower.
|
||
------------------------------------
|
||
BELTANE:Its History and Modern
|
||
Celebration in Wicca in America
|
||
by Rowan Moonstone
|
||
|
||
The celebration of May 1st, or
|
||
Beltane as it is known in Wicca
|
||
circles, is one of the most
|
||
important festivals of our religious
|
||
year. As I did in the Samhain
|
||
article, I will attempt here to
|
||
answer some of the most often asked
|
||
questions about this holiday. An
|
||
extensive bibliography follows the
|
||
article so that the interested
|
||
reader can do further research.
|
||
|
||
1. Where does the festival of
|
||
Beltane originate?
|
||
|
||
Beltane, as practiced by modern
|
||
day Witches and Pagans, has its
|
||
origins among the Celtic peoples of
|
||
Western Europe and the British
|
||
Isles, particularly Ireland,
|
||
Scotland, and Wales.
|
||
|
||
2. What does the word Beltane mean?
|
||
|
||
Dr. Proinsias MacCana defines the
|
||
word as follows: "... the Irish name
|
||
for May Day is Beltane, of which the
|
||
second element, `tene', is the word
|
||
for fire, and the first, `bel',
|
||
probably means `shining or
|
||
brilliant'."(1) The festival was
|
||
known by other names in other Celtic
|
||
countries. Beltaine in Ireland,
|
||
Bealtunn in Scotland, Shenn do
|
||
Boaldyn on the Isle of Mann, and
|
||
Galan Mae in Wales.(2) [Editor's
|
||
Note: The concept of `correct
|
||
spelling' is a relatively modern
|
||
one, and there are many other
|
||
spellings, including the one used in
|
||
the banner of this issue of CWR.]
|
||
|
||
3. What was the significance of this
|
||
holiday to the ancients?
|
||
|
||
To the ancient Celts, it
|
||
symbolized the coming of spring.
|
||
It was the time of year when the
|
||
crops began to sprout, the animals
|
||
bore their young, and the people
|
||
could begin to get out of the
|
||
houses where they had been cooped
|
||
up during the long dark cold winter
|
||
months. Keep in mind that the
|
||
people in those days had no
|
||
electric lights or heat, and that
|
||
the Celtic counties are at a much
|
||
more northernly latitude than many
|
||
of us are used to. At that
|
||
latitude, spring comes much later,
|
||
and winter lasts much longer than
|
||
in most of the US. The coming of
|
||
fair weather and longer daylight
|
||
hours would be most welcome after a
|
||
long cold and dark winter.
|
||
|
||
4. How did the ancient Celts
|
||
celebrate this festival?
|
||
|
||
The most ancient way of
|
||
observing this day is with fire.
|
||
Beltane, along with Samhain (Nov.
|
||
1), Imbolc (Feb. 1), and
|
||
Lughnassadh (Aug. 1), was one of
|
||
the four great "fire festivals"
|
||
which marked the turning points of
|
||
the Celtic year. The most ancient
|
||
records tell us that the people
|
||
would extinguish all the hearth
|
||
fires in the country and then
|
||
relight them from the "need fires"
|
||
lit by the druids (who used
|
||
friction as a means of ignition).
|
||
In many areas, the cattle were
|
||
driven between two great bonfires
|
||
to protect them from disease during
|
||
the coming year. It is my personal
|
||
belief, although I have no documen-
|
||
tation to back up the assumption,
|
||
that certain herbs would have been
|
||
burnt in the fires, thus producing
|
||
smoke which would help destroy
|
||
parasites which might make cattle
|
||
and other livestock ill.
|
||
|
||
5. In what other ways was this
|
||
festival celebrated?
|
||
|
||
One of the most beautiful
|
||
customs associated with this
|
||
festival was "bringing in the May."
|
||
The young people of the villages
|
||
and towns would go out into the
|
||
fields and forests at Midnight on
|
||
April 30th and gather flowers with
|
||
which to bedeck themselves, their
|
||
families, and their homes. They
|
||
would process back into the
|
||
villages, stopping at each home to
|
||
leave flowers, and to receive the
|
||
best of food and drink that the home
|
||
had to offer. This custom is
|
||
somewhat similar to "trick or treat"
|
||
at Samhain and was very significant
|
||
to the ancients. John Williamson,
|
||
in his study, The Oak King, the
|
||
Holly King, and the Unicorn, writes,
|
||
"These revelers were messengers of
|
||
the renewal of vegetation, and they
|
||
assumed the right to punish the
|
||
niggardly, because avarice (as
|
||
opposed to generosity) was dangerous
|
||
to the community's hope for the
|
||
abundance of nature. At an
|
||
important time like the coming of
|
||
summer, food, the substance of life
|
||
must be ritually circulated
|
||
generously within the community in
|
||
order that the cosmic circuit of
|
||
life's substance may be kept in
|
||
motion (trees, flocks, harvests,
|
||
etc.)."(3) These revelers would
|
||
bless the fields and flocks of those
|
||
who were generous and wish ill
|
||
harvests on those who withheld their
|
||
bounty.
|
||
|
||
6. What about maypoles?
|
||
|
||
The maypole was an adjunct to the
|
||
festival of bringing in the May. In
|
||
olden days, the revelers who went
|
||
into the woods would cut a tree and
|
||
bring it into town, decking it with
|
||
flowers and greenery and dance
|
||
around it, clockwise (also called
|
||
deosil, meaning "sun-wise", the
|
||
direction of the sun's apparent
|
||
travel across the face of the Earth)
|
||
to bring fertility and good luck.
|
||
The ribbons which we associate with
|
||
the maypole today were a later
|
||
addition.
|
||
|
||
7. Why was fertility important?
|
||
|
||
The people who originated this
|
||
custom lived in close connection
|
||
with the land. If the flocks and
|
||
fields were fertile, they were able
|
||
to eat; if there was famine or
|
||
drought, they went hungry. It is
|
||
hard for us today to relate to this
|
||
concept, but to the ancients, it
|
||
was literally a life and death
|
||
matter. The Celts were a very
|
||
close tribal people, and fertility
|
||
of their women literally meant
|
||
continuity of the tribe.
|
||
|
||
8. How is the maypole connected
|
||
with fertility?
|
||
|
||
Many scholars see the maypole as
|
||
a phallic symbol. In this aspect,
|
||
it is a very powerful symbol of the
|
||
fertility of nature and spring.
|
||
|
||
9. How did these ancient customs
|
||
come down to us ?
|
||
|
||
When Christianity came to the
|
||
British Isles, many of the ancient
|
||
holy sites were taken over by the
|
||
new religion and converted to
|
||
Christian sites. Many of the old
|
||
Gods and Goddesses became Christian
|
||
saints, and many of the customs
|
||
were appropriated. Charles Squire
|
||
says," An ingenious theory was
|
||
invented after the introduction of
|
||
Christianity, with the purpose of
|
||
allowing such ancient rites to
|
||
continue with a changed meaning.
|
||
The passing of persons and cattle
|
||
through flame or smoke was
|
||
explained as a practice which
|
||
interposed a magic protection
|
||
between them and the powers of
|
||
evil." (4) This is precisely what
|
||
the original festival was intended
|
||
to do; only the definition of
|
||
"evil" had changed. These old
|
||
customs continued to be practiced
|
||
in many areas for centuries. "In
|
||
Scotland in 1282, John, the priest
|
||
in Iverkething, led the young girls
|
||
of his parish in a phallic dance of
|
||
decidedly obscene character during
|
||
Easter week. For this, penance was
|
||
laid upon him, but his punishment
|
||
was not severe, and he was allowed
|
||
to retain his benefice."(5)
|
||
|
||
10. Were sacrifices practiced
|
||
during this festival?
|
||
|
||
Scholars are divided in their
|
||
opinions of this. There is no
|
||
surviving account of sacrifices in
|
||
the legends and mythology which have
|
||
come down to us. As these were
|
||
originally set down on paper by
|
||
Christian monks, one would think
|
||
that if such a thing had been
|
||
regularly practiced, the good
|
||
brothers would most certainly have
|
||
recorded it, if for no other reason
|
||
than to make the pagans look more
|
||
depraved. There are, however, some
|
||
surviving folk customs which point
|
||
to a person representing the gloom
|
||
and ill fortune of winter being
|
||
ostracised and forced to jump
|
||
through the fires. Some scholars
|
||
see this as a survival of ancient
|
||
human sacrifical practices. The
|
||
notion that animals were sacrificed
|
||
during this time doesn't make sense
|
||
from a practical standpoint. The
|
||
animals which had been retained a
|
||
breeding stock through the winter
|
||
would either be lean and hungry from
|
||
winter feed, or would be mothers
|
||
nursing young, which could not be
|
||
spared.
|
||
|
||
11. How do modern day pagans observe
|
||
this day?
|
||
|
||
Modern day pagan observances of
|
||
Beltane include the maypole dances,
|
||
bringing in the May, and jumping the
|
||
cauldron for fertility. Many
|
||
couples wishing to conceive children
|
||
will jump the cauldron together at
|
||
this time. Fertility of imagination
|
||
and other varieties of fertility
|
||
are invoked along with sexual
|
||
fertility. In Wiccan and other
|
||
Pagan circles, this is a joyous day,
|
||
full of laughter and good times.
|
||
|
||
12. What about Walpurgisnacht? Is
|
||
this the same thing as Beltane?
|
||
|
||
Walpurgisnacht comes from an
|
||
Eastern European background, and has
|
||
little in common with the Celtic
|
||
practices. I have not studied the
|
||
folklore from that region and do not
|
||
consider myself qualified to write
|
||
about it. As the vast majority of
|
||
Wiccan traditions today stem from
|
||
Celtic roots, I have confined myself
|
||
to research in those areas.
|
||
|
||
|
||
FOOTNOTES
|
||
(1) MacCana, Proinsias, Celtic
|
||
Mythology, The Hamlyn Publishing
|
||
Group Limited, London, 1970, p.32.
|
||
|
||
(2) Squire, Charles, Celtic Myth
|
||
and Legend, Poetry and Romance,
|
||
Newcastle Publishing Co., Van Nuys,
|
||
CA, 1975, p.408.
|
||
|
||
(3) Williamson, John, The Oak King,
|
||
the Holly King, and the Unicorn,
|
||
Harper & Row, NY, 1986, p.126.
|
||
|
||
(4) Squire, p.411.
|
||
|
||
(5) Hole, Christina, Witchcraft In
|
||
England, Rowman & Littlefield,
|
||
Totowa, NJ, 1977, p.36.
|
||
|
||
|
||
BIBLIOGRAPHY
|
||
Bord, Janet & Colin, Earth Rites,
|
||
Fertility Practices in Pre-
|
||
Industrial Britain, Granada,
|
||
London, 1982.
|
||
|
||
Danaher, Kevin, The Year in
|
||
Ireland, The Mercier Press, Cork,
|
||
1972.
|
||
|
||
Hole, Christina, Witchcraft in
|
||
England, Rowman & Littlefield,
|
||
Totowa NJ, 1977.
|
||
|
||
MacCana, Proinsias, Celtic
|
||
Mythology, The Hamlyn Publishing
|
||
Group, Ltd., London, 1970.
|
||
|
||
MacCulloch, J.A. Religion of the
|
||
Ancient Celts, Folcroft Library
|
||
Editions, London, 1977.
|
||
|
||
Powell, T.G.E. The Celts, Thames &
|
||
Hudson, New York, 1980.
|
||
|
||
Sharkey, John, Celtic Mysteries,
|
||
the Ancient Religion, Thames &
|
||
Hudson, New York, 1979.
|
||
|
||
Squire, Charles, Celtic Myth,
|
||
Legend, Poetry, and Romance,
|
||
Newcastle Publishing Co., Van Nuys,
|
||
CA, 1975.
|
||
|
||
Williamson, John, The Oak King, The
|
||
Holly King, and the Unicorn, Harper
|
||
& Row, New York, 1986.
|
||
|
||
Wood-Martin, W.G., Traces of the
|
||
Elder Faiths of Ireland, Kennikat
|
||
Press, Port Washington, NY, 1902.
|
||
------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Tarot and Religious
|
||
Freedom
|
||
reprinted by permission from
|
||
The Freedom Writer
|
||
|
||
As the result of a December 1988
|
||
jury trial in West Hartford, CT, a
|
||
precedent was set in defense of New
|
||
Age beliefs. A woman, arrested in
|
||
her home for tarot card reading, was
|
||
acquitted after she challenged a
|
||
Connecticut law which prohibits
|
||
fortune-telling for money. She
|
||
maintained that the law violated her
|
||
New Age beliefs.
|
||
The woman, Mary Joan Williams, a
|
||
full-time accountant and part-time
|
||
tarot card reader, was arrested last
|
||
year when a couple, both undercover
|
||
West Hartford police officers, came
|
||
to her home for a $35 reading.
|
||
During the secretly-taped
|
||
reading, the fortune-teller
|
||
predicted, "You will receive money
|
||
for work done in the past." The
|
||
tape was used as evidence against
|
||
her in court. On the day the "not
|
||
guilty" verdict was announced, West
|
||
Hartford police officers learned
|
||
that they would be receiving a
|
||
retroactive pay raise.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Note:
|
||
|
||
We skipped the Spring Equinox
|
||
issue because we had all the irons
|
||
in the fire that brought you this
|
||
issue. All subscriptions effective
|
||
with Issue #3 will still run through
|
||
Issue #10.
|
||
Have you subscribed to CWR yet?
|
||
CultWatch Response, Inc., is fully
|
||
funded by your subscriptions; all
|
||
other funds come from my pocket or
|
||
Vicki's (and we both are holding
|
||
down jobs as clerical workers).
|
||
Your subscription will help us keep
|
||
going.
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE PLIGHT OF THE
|
||
PAGAN POLICEMAN
|
||
PART 3
|
||
|
||
Samhain was fast approaching.
|
||
Anticipating the usual stories
|
||
which appear in the newspapers and
|
||
on the air around this time of
|
||
year, I had made some preparation.
|
||
To each newsroom in my area I sent
|
||
out an excellent article by Rowan
|
||
Moonstone on the origins of
|
||
Halloween and a covering WLPA
|
||
letter. I then sat back to see
|
||
what would happen.
|
||
Nothing...with one exception.
|
||
One of the two major television
|
||
stations in the area, CKVU,
|
||
contacted me just days before
|
||
Samhain. They wanted a Witch to
|
||
interview on the noon news October
|
||
31st. They wanted someone who
|
||
could appear publicly without any
|
||
disguising. A tall order.
|
||
Unfortunately it proved
|
||
impossible to find anyone that both
|
||
filled these requirements and was
|
||
available on such short notice.
|
||
So they asked me.
|
||
This was a very difficult
|
||
decision for me to make. I finally
|
||
agreed with some misgivings, on the
|
||
condition that they distort the
|
||
image of my face and my voice. They
|
||
agreed to do this, pre-taping the
|
||
interview to avoid mistakes.
|
||
So on Samhain, I found myself
|
||
walking into CKVU wearing my
|
||
Witches' League for Public
|
||
Awareness T-shirt and wondering if
|
||
I knew what I was doing. It turned
|
||
out that my concerns were
|
||
unfounded. I had a brief talk with
|
||
the production assistant and the
|
||
newsreader who was to interview me.
|
||
We got along just fine. We then
|
||
trooped into the studio where the
|
||
staff were very helpful and
|
||
friendly. They took great care to
|
||
get the taping done right. They
|
||
did my voice twice as, in the words
|
||
of one of the technicians, "It
|
||
sounded like Darth Vader the first
|
||
time through". The interview was
|
||
short but it went well. The CKVU
|
||
staff seemed pleased with the
|
||
result. It was scheduled to follow
|
||
a taped interview of a Wiccan high
|
||
priestess from Wichita, Kansas.
|
||
Immediately following this taping
|
||
session I just had time to drive
|
||
down to my police station. I hurried
|
||
to the lounge where I sat amongst 2
|
||
dozen unsuspecting detectives as
|
||
they watched the CKVU noon news.
|
||
When the Kansas clip came on, one
|
||
detective loudly remarked to the
|
||
detective munching next to him that
|
||
he wanted to see "real news". Then
|
||
the anchor man came on and
|
||
introduced police officer Kerr
|
||
Cuhulain. The same detectives sat
|
||
bolt upright and elbowed the guy
|
||
next to him nearly off of his chair.
|
||
"This guy's a cop!!!"
|
||
Everyone sat open mouthed
|
||
watching the interview. No one had
|
||
any idea that Kerr (not my real
|
||
name) was sitting amongst them. You
|
||
could have heard the proverbial pin
|
||
drop. Once it was over there was a
|
||
moment's silence. Then they all
|
||
started talking at once.
|
||
"Can you beat that!" "Far out!"
|
||
"Who would have believed it?!"
|
||
A few moments later, a relieved
|
||
Kerr Cuhulain slipped quietly away.
|
||
I hope that one day soon the
|
||
disguises will no longer be
|
||
necessary. It would be wonderful
|
||
to be treated just like anyone else
|
||
in my department even though my
|
||
beliefs were public knowledge. This
|
||
incident has given me some hope, but
|
||
there is a ways for us to go yet
|
||
before this happens. Some Pagan
|
||
officers out there have much further
|
||
to go than I since they live in less
|
||
tolerant communities. And there are
|
||
some Fundy officers out there who
|
||
aren't going to make it easy for
|
||
any of us. But we're going to make
|
||
it...some day soon.
|
||
|
||
Kerr Cuhulain
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------
|
||
Texas Wants "Ritual
|
||
Child Abuse" Law
|
||
|
||
The State Senate of the State of
|
||
Texas has proposed a law adding
|
||
additional penalties to current
|
||
offenses for "Ritual Child Abuse";
|
||
we are publishing the text in full
|
||
for your information.
|
||
SB 803
|
||
|
||
A BILL
|
||
TO BE ENTITLED
|
||
AN ACT
|
||
|
||
relating to the punishment for
|
||
certain offenses committed against
|
||
a child during a ritual or
|
||
ceremony.
|
||
|
||
BE IT ENACTED BY THE
|
||
LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
|
||
|
||
SECTION 1.
|
||
|
||
Subchapter D, Chapter 12, Penal
|
||
Code, is amended by adding Section
|
||
12.47 to read as follows:
|
||
|
||
Sec. 12.47. PENALTY IF CRIME
|
||
COMMITTED AGAINST CHILD DURING
|
||
RITUAL OR CEREMONY.
|
||
|
||
(a) The punishment prescribed for
|
||
an offense listed in Subsection (b)
|
||
of this section is increased to the
|
||
punishment prescribed for the next
|
||
highest category of offense if it
|
||
is shown on the trial of that
|
||
offense that:
|
||
(1) the victim of the offense
|
||
was younger than 17 years of age at
|
||
the time of the offense;
|
||
(2) the offense was committed
|
||
as part of a ritual or ceremony;
|
||
(3) the participants in the
|
||
ritual or ceremony shared a common
|
||
belief;
|
||
(4) the victimization of the
|
||
child was considered by the parti-
|
||
cipants to be in obedience to or in
|
||
furtherance of the commonly shared
|
||
belief.
|
||
|
||
(b) This section applies to an
|
||
offense under the following
|
||
sections of the Penal Code:
|
||
(1) Section 21.11 (Indecency
|
||
with a Child);
|
||
(2) Section 22.01 (Assault);
|
||
(3) Section 22.011 (Sexual
|
||
Assault);
|
||
(4) Section 22.02 (Aggravated
|
||
Assault);
|
||
(5) Section 22.021
|
||
(Aggravated Sexual Assault);
|
||
(6) Section 22.04 (Injury to
|
||
a Child or to an Elderly Indivi-
|
||
dual);
|
||
(7) Section 22.041 (Abandoning
|
||
or Endangering Child);
|
||
(8) Section 25.02 (Incest);
|
||
(9) Section 25.06 (Solici-
|
||
tation of a Child);
|
||
(10) Section 25.11 (Sale or
|
||
Purchase of a Child);
|
||
(11) Section 43.24 (Sale,
|
||
Distribution, or Display of Harmful
|
||
Material to a Minor);
|
||
(12) Section 43.25 (Sexual
|
||
Performance by a Child).
|
||
|
||
(c) This section does not apply to
|
||
any offense for which the punishment
|
||
otherwise proscribed is the
|
||
punishment for a first-degree felony
|
||
or a capital felony.
|
||
|
||
SECTION 2.
|
||
|
||
(a) The change in law made by this
|
||
Act applies to only to an offense
|
||
committed after the effective date
|
||
of this Act. For purposes of this
|
||
section, an offense is committed
|
||
before the effective data of this
|
||
ACT if any element of the offense
|
||
occurs before the effective date.
|
||
|
||
(b) An offense committed before the
|
||
effective date of this Act is
|
||
covered by the law in effect when
|
||
the offense was committed and the
|
||
former law is continued in effect
|
||
for this purpose.
|
||
|
||
SECTION 3.
|
||
|
||
This Act takes effect September 1,
|
||
1989.
|
||
|
||
SECTION 4:
|
||
|
||
The importance of this legislation
|
||
and the crowded conditions of the
|
||
calendars in both houses create an
|
||
emergency and imperative public
|
||
necessity that the constitutional
|
||
rule requiring bills to be read on
|
||
three separate days in each house be
|
||
suspended, and this rule is hereby
|
||
suspended.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
REVIEWS
|
||
by Rowan Moonstone
|
||
|
||
BY SILENCE BETRAYED; Sexual Abuse
|
||
of Children in America by John
|
||
Crewdson, Harper & Row, New York,
|
||
1988
|
||
|
||
This hard-hitting book begins
|
||
with a narrative of the massive
|
||
child abuse case which came to
|
||
light in Jordan, Minnesota in Sept.
|
||
1983. Pulitzer prize-winning
|
||
reporter John Crewdson uses this
|
||
example as a springboard to
|
||
investigate the phenomenon of
|
||
sexual child abuse in America.
|
||
What makes this book valuable to
|
||
CWR readers is the treatment
|
||
Crewdson gives to the subject of
|
||
ritualistic child abuse. He treats
|
||
extensively with McMartin and other
|
||
cases in which ritualistic abuse
|
||
has been alleged, and some cases in
|
||
which convictions have been
|
||
obtained.
|
||
Crewdson also notes that in the
|
||
Jordan case, the story progressed
|
||
from child sexual abuse to stories
|
||
of rituals and murder. Later the
|
||
children admitted to lying about
|
||
the murder. According to Crewdson,
|
||
"A second boy...admitted that he
|
||
had gotten the idea of ritualistic
|
||
torture from a television program
|
||
he had seen. He had lied about the
|
||
murder because he wanted to please
|
||
the investigators, whom he had come
|
||
to think of as his friends and who
|
||
seemed always to want something
|
||
more from him."
|
||
I would recommend this book
|
||
highly to anyone interested in the
|
||
problems of child abuse and
|
||
especially anyone who is interested
|
||
in the problems of ritualistic
|
||
child abuse. Crewdson has done
|
||
excellent research into just what
|
||
IS...and what is NOT a valid
|
||
problem in America today.
|
||
|
||
-*-*-*-
|
||
|
||
"Satanism in America" (an interim
|
||
report) by the Committee for
|
||
Scientific Examination of Religion
|
||
(CSER), Shawn Carlson & Gerald
|
||
Larue, Oct. 31, 1988.
|
||
CWR has obtained a copy of this
|
||
report from one of our correspon-
|
||
dents and I have found its content
|
||
to be excellent. CSER has taken a
|
||
hard critical look at the problem of
|
||
Satanism in our modern culture and
|
||
come up with some sound and well-
|
||
founded conclusions, which, inciden-
|
||
tally, match the conclusions that I
|
||
have drawn from my own private
|
||
research.
|
||
Among the topics looked at by
|
||
this report are: Heavy Metal Music,
|
||
Murder, Child Abductions, Ritual
|
||
Child Abuse, the McMartin Daycare
|
||
Case, Cattle Mutilations, Breeders,
|
||
and Threats Received by Therapists.
|
||
The report includes an excellent
|
||
appendix by Rev. D. Hudson Frew on a
|
||
Brief History of Satanism, and also
|
||
makes some excellent suggestions for
|
||
combatting the problem of Satanism
|
||
in America. The final report is due
|
||
out in April of 1989, and I look
|
||
forward to its publication. Copies
|
||
of this report should be available
|
||
from Shawn Carlson, University of
|
||
California, Los Angeles.
|
||
|
||
-*-*-*-
|
||
|
||
"Die Mother Father Brother; The true
|
||
story of a boy who vowed to do the
|
||
devil's dirty work" by Ester
|
||
Davidowitz, Redbook, April, 1989,
|
||
pp.132-134 & 168-171.
|
||
|
||
When I first saw this article I
|
||
thought, "Oh no, not another sensa-
|
||
tionalist Teen Satanism article!" I
|
||
was pleasantly surprised, however,
|
||
when I read the text. Ms. Davidowitz
|
||
goes into great detail on the
|
||
background of the Thomas Sullivan
|
||
case from Jefferson Township in Jan.
|
||
of 1988. She informs the reader of
|
||
the already existing problems within
|
||
the family structure before Tommy
|
||
ever turned to Satanism.
|
||
In addition to the Sullivan case,
|
||
she briefly outlines several other
|
||
instances of antisocial behavior
|
||
among teens which carry "occult"
|
||
overtones. Following this section,
|
||
the article deals with the agencies
|
||
and individuals which work with
|
||
these troubled teens. Steering
|
||
clear of sensationalist groups which
|
||
seem to be concentrating on
|
||
"bashing" any group which isn't
|
||
Judeo-Christian in nature, it
|
||
focuses instead on those people
|
||
who have a calm and reasonable
|
||
approach to the subject. For
|
||
instance, Sandi Gallant is quoted
|
||
as referring to the cases of murder
|
||
and other violent acts saying," If
|
||
the kid did not grow into Satanism,
|
||
he would have found drugs, alcohol,
|
||
or some other kind of external
|
||
excuse for his bad behavior."
|
||
The final section of the article
|
||
offers perhaps the best advice I
|
||
have ever seen in a magazine
|
||
dealing with this topic. The
|
||
writer urges parents to keep in
|
||
close touch with their children and
|
||
be involved with their lives. As
|
||
Ms. Davidowitz says, "The child who
|
||
does feel loved and recognized in
|
||
this special way is much more
|
||
likely to turn to his parents when
|
||
he is confused or hurting than to
|
||
seek solace in the Devil."
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------
|
||
[Editor's Note: The following
|
||
Frame should be found extremely
|
||
useful in determining the potential
|
||
hazard of any religious group, not
|
||
just those that are non-Christian.
|
||
Score each category from 1 (Low)
|
||
through 10 (High). The author
|
||
makes no assumptions as to how high
|
||
a group can be and still be "safe";
|
||
however, one should be extremely
|
||
concerned when a score exceeds
|
||
100.]
|
||
|
||
Cult Danger
|
||
Evaluation Frame
|
||
c. 1979 by P.E.I. Bonewits
|
||
|
||
1. INTERNAL CONTROL, amount of
|
||
internal political power exercised
|
||
by leader(s) over members.
|
||
|
||
2. WISDOM CLAIMED by leader(s);
|
||
amount of infallibility declared
|
||
about decisions.
|
||
|
||
3. WISDOM CREDITED to leader(s) by
|
||
members; amount of trust in
|
||
decisions made by leader(s).
|
||
|
||
4. DOGMA, rigidity of reality
|
||
concepts taught; amount of doctrinal
|
||
inflexibility.
|
||
|
||
5. RECRUITING, emphasis put on
|
||
attracting new members, amount of
|
||
proseletyzing.
|
||
|
||
6. FRONT GROUPS, number of
|
||
subsidiary groups using different
|
||
names from that of the main group.
|
||
|
||
7. WEALTH, amount of money and/or
|
||
property desired or obtained;
|
||
emphasis on members' donations.
|
||
|
||
8. POLITICAL POWER, amount of
|
||
external political influence desired
|
||
or obtained.
|
||
|
||
9. SEXUAL MANIPULATION of members by
|
||
leader(s); amount of control over
|
||
sex lives of members.
|
||
|
||
10. CENSORSHIP, amount of control
|
||
over members' access to outside
|
||
opinions on group, its doctrines or
|
||
leader(s).
|
||
|
||
11. DROPOUT CONTROL, intensity of
|
||
efforts directed at preventing or
|
||
returning dropouts.
|
||
|
||
12. ENDORSEMENT OF VIOLENCE when
|
||
used by or for the group or its
|
||
leader(s).
|
||
|
||
13. PARANOIA, amount of fear
|
||
concerning real or imagined enemies;
|
||
perceived power of opponents.
|
||
|
||
14. GRIMNESS, amount of disapproval
|
||
concerning jokes about the group,
|
||
its doctrines or leader(s).
|
||
|
||
15. SURRENDER OF WILL, emphasis on
|
||
members not having to be responsible
|
||
for personal decisions.
|
||
|
||
(from Real Magic, by P.E.I.
|
||
Bonewits, 2nd Edition, Samuel
|
||
Weiser, New York 1979. This article
|
||
is copyrighted material; you may not
|
||
republish it separately without
|
||
permission of the author.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Available Information
|
||
on Paganism
|
||
|
||
The Pagan Alliance of Central
|
||
Texas has a pamphlet available on
|
||
Witches and Pagans in Texas. For
|
||
information, write to:
|
||
|
||
Pagan Alliance of Central Texas
|
||
P.O. Box 90182
|
||
Austin, TX 78709
|
||
|
||
For a pamphlet outlining the
|
||
beliefs of NeoPagan Druidism, write
|
||
to:
|
||
|
||
Ar nDraiocht Fein: A Druid
|
||
Fellowship
|
||
P.O. Box 1022
|
||
Nyack, NY 10960
|
||
|
||
Please include a self-addressed,
|
||
stamped envelope.
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------
|
||
List of "Experts"
|
||
Developed by CWR
|
||
|
||
CultWatch Response is developing
|
||
a list of people whom we feel are
|
||
experts on the subject of Witch-
|
||
craft in America. This list will
|
||
be extended in subsequent issues.
|
||
It currently includes:
|
||
|
||
Hal Mansfield
|
||
United Campus Ministry
|
||
629 S. Howes
|
||
Ft. Collins, CO 80521
|
||
(General topics, emphasis on
|
||
dangerous cults);
|
||
|
||
Vicki Copeland
|
||
CultWatch Response
|
||
P.O. Box 1842
|
||
Colorado Springs, CO 80901
|
||
(History and Practices of the Craft
|
||
in America, the media's view of the
|
||
Craft, other related topics);
|
||
|
||
Kerr Cuhulain
|
||
P.O. Box 2422
|
||
Main Post Office
|
||
Vancouver, B.C. V6B 3W7
|
||
CANADA
|
||
(Law Enforcement, general topics).
|
||
|
||
|
||
Editorial Policies
|
||
|
||
Each issue of CultWatch Response
|
||
is published by CultWatch Response,
|
||
Inc., a non-profit Corporation under
|
||
the laws of the State of Colorado,
|
||
under a Public Domain Copyright.
|
||
This 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 excerp-
|
||
ted in any fashion and credit is
|
||
given the original author.
|
||
In some instances, our articles
|
||
may be republished material that is
|
||
already copyrighted. When this is
|
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the case, such articles will be
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clearly labeled and may not be
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lication includes the entirety of
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We encourage groups and indivi-
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duals to republish each issue for
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the purpose of distribution to
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police, media, and community
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to prevent over-saturation of a
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We welcome articles, reviews,
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correct obvious mistakes in
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do ask that you not UNFAIRLY promote
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sex, or any magickal group or
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tradition above another. Articles
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with careful research and a positive
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The preceding policies have been
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agreed to by the current staff of
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acknowledge the groundwork set by
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High Plains Arts and Sciences in the
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fields of Public Domain Copyright
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and editorial policies.
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