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Grex Synthesis Item 101: from the washington post
Entered by void on Sat Nov 2 22:57:41 UTC 1996:

   this appeared in my e-mail this morning:

                                WITCHES' TRIALS
                                       
Real-Life Practitioners Say Halloween Doesn't Help Dispel a Frightful Image

   By Cindy Loose
   Washington Post Staff Writer
   Wednesday, October 30 1996; Page A01
   The Washington Post
   
   
   
   The seven members will gather tomorrow night in an ordinary living
   room -- a nanny, a human rights advocate, a real estate agent, an
   interpreter, an engineer, a student, and a computer programmer who
   died last year.
   
   "Paul is still a member," explained the nanny. "Just because someone
   dies doesn't take away their influence or membership."
   
   The nanny and the others call themselves witches, and they are members
   of the Washington-based Dark Flame coven. Tomorrow night -- Halloween
   to most people -- is to them Samhain, the most sacred night of the
   year. It is a solemn time to review the year's successes and failures,
   a time to remember those who have gone before and to honor them.
   
   On that night, said the nanny, "the veil between the living world and
   the departed world is thinnest."
   
   It is also the time of year they get the most attention and the most
   scorn. For centuries, witches have been considered evil purveyors of
   black magic. Even a modern dictionary terms them "malignant." These
   witches, however, say they are just misunderstood. Witches, they say,
   are part of a pagan tradition that reveres nature, ancestors and the
   good that is part of every living thing.
   
   There are so many misconceptions to deal with. Cauldrons. Eye of newt.
   "Macbeth."
   
   "One of my in-laws sent an e-mail saying he was anxious to discuss the
   occult with me," Robin Brown said. "What's he thinking? What would I
   know about the occult? I'm a witch."
   
   Another member of the coven said she has to laugh when people ask what
   costume she's going to wear for Halloween.
   
   "I have work to do that night," said "Logan," the nanny, who asked for
   obvious reasons that only her "magical name" be used. "I'm a witch --
   I don't have time to fool around."
   
   Brown, a grandmother who lives on Capitol Hill and works at Amnesty
   International, is the only coven member out of the witches closet at
   work. Thus, she is the only member able to take the day as a religious
   holiday.
   
   Their celebration of Samhain will begin as the coven builds an altar,
   using a compass to find true north so that candles can be set
   precisely in all four directions. They will light incense. Everyone
   will bring something of personal significance to set on the altar.
   
   The starting time is up in the air. "We operate on coven time, which
   is a little like Unitarian time," said Brown, referring to the church
   most coven members attend. "There's nothing mysterious about it; it
   just starts when everybody manages to get there from work."
   
   As the evening progresses, someone will cast a circle -- one member
   tends to favor a ritual sword to create a mental space, although Brown
   prefers a multicolored scarf she found in a thrift store, where she
   buys most of what she owns. (Witches tend to recycle a lot out of
   respect for the Earth.)
   
   Some may wear black ritual robes; others, ordinary street clothes. "We
   are not a sky-clad coven," said Logan, meaning they do not practice
   naked.
   
   Once all agree that a circle has been cast, they will gather inside it
   and call to all four directions. East represents air; south is fire;
   west is water; and north is earth. Someone will invoke a god or
   goddess. Most likely, it will be Apollo, since that was Paul's magical
   name, or Hecata, the goddess most associated with Samhain . Halloween
   began centuries ago as a druidic ritual honoring Samhain, Lord of the
   Dead, on the last day of the Celtic year.
   
   Coven members will then mentally send a taproot down into the earth
   and draw energy. They will use it for a purpose -- as a healing coven,
   the members often choose as a purpose the relief of pain. They will
   call out Paul's name, and the names of others who have gone on before.
   
   "I personally believe that you keep someone alive by saying their
   name," Brown said. "The spark of energy that makes us alive remains in
   some form forever."
   
   If someone were to videotape their rituals, she said, it would look
   stupid because so much of what is happening takes place within the
   mind. In actuality, she added, an awesome, powerful creation is being
   formed.
   
   When the creation is complete, and any remaining energy is sent back
   down to the earth's core, the group will chat and share something to
   eat.
   
   "It's real mysterious stuff," Brown said. "I'll probably pick up a
   cake at Safeway."
   
   Witchcraft and paganism, they say, is a growing alternative religion.
   Take, for example, the 600 pagans who showed up for last week's Grand
   Magickal Congress at a Holiday Inn in Wilmington, Del. Workshops
   included "Pagan Pastoral Counseling," "Medicinal Herbology," "Druidic
   Ritual Patterns" and "Glenshire Witchcraft."
   
   Some workshops, Brown said, were a little much even for her: "One told
   us the fairies would be coming back within five years."
   
   The Holiday Inn scene was a study in Americana: Along with the pagans,
   the hotel played host to a high school football team, the Tammy
   Wynette Road Show, a coalition of Christians and Jews and -- briefly
   -- the NAACP.
   
   "It was really weird," Brown said. Saturday night, at the end of a
   sacred ritual, the pagans looked out the window at a costumed
   Halloween pub crawl in the parking lot.
   
   "There were all these people pretending to be what we were upstairs
   practicing," she said.
   
   Brown brought back a stack of brochures advertising pagan events: a
   Samhain convention at the Frederick County (Md.) Fairgrounds; a
   "Sacred Space X" exploration of equinoxes and solstices in Timonium,
   Md.; a monthly coffee klatch at La Madeleine's in Rockville. Dark
   Flame will be the host for "Blood and Bone, a Weekend of Intensive
   Magic" next month in the District.
   
   There are pagan and witchcraft Web sites on the Internet and vacation
   packages for pagans. One is an Irish tour of Celtic and neolithic
   sites that will include a visit to Lady Olivia Robertson, high
   priestess of Isis, in her castle at Clonegal.
   
   A coven -- Dark Flame knows of 10 in the Washington area -- will weave
   together a set of beliefs from various traditions. All covens share a
   belief in the interconnectedness of humanity and the universe. All are
   polytheistic and nature-centered.
   
   The existence of witches is very threatening to some Christians, who
   associate them with Satanists. But these witches say they are not like
   that -- they don't even believe in Satan, or his antithesis, Christ.
   They believe that the potential for good and evil resides in all
   things.
   
   The witches' creed -- "And harm it none, do what ye will" -- is much
   like the doctor's Hippocratic oath.
   
   So why are they so often confused with the occult?
   
   "The public relations arm of the Catholic Church during the
   Inquisition is all I know," Brown said.
   
   Brown, formerly a Lutheran, found herself edging over to witchcraft as
   part of her search for meaning as a woman.
   
   "Somewhere along the way, something happened with the way religions
   looked at the deity, and it became very much favorable to men," Brown
   said.
   
   Logan, raised as a Roman Catholic, was barely 12 when she stumbled
   across a book on witchcraft and quickly embraced the subject,
   searching for everything she could read on it, sneaking out of her
   Midwestern farmhouse at night to practice rituals.
   
   Until three years ago, when she helped found Dark Flame, she worked
   alone, in secret. Some family members who know she is a lesbian still
   don't know she's a witch.
   
   "I thought I'd always practice solitary, because I'd done that so long
   in a backward, rural area. In a coven, it's like people making music
   together, and it's an awesome experience."
   
   
   
   &copy Copyright 1996 The Washington Post Company
   
   Back to the top

17 responses total.



#1 of 17 by robh on Sat Nov 2 23:41:27 1996:

This item has been linked from Synthesis 101 to Intro 113.
Type "join synthesis" at the Ok: prompt for discussion of
witches, cakes, ale, and related topics.


#2 of 17 by jazz on Sun Nov 3 00:30:51 1996:

        This is from the Washington Post?!?  Their standards must've dropped
considerably ...


#3 of 17 by rcurl on Sun Nov 3 05:27:19 1996:

I don't know. They are just reporting on some ridiculous ideas that some
people hold.


#4 of 17 by kami on Sun Nov 3 18:10:08 1996:

What a delightful, pleasant, positive, not-threatening article, *despite* the
innacutracies (sorry about the typose, not only am I stuck in telnet, it
wont take a bloody backspace!)- Not into the occult?  What does the(er- she)
think the "occult" is?  Sigh.  And there is not "Sm (bother, try again)
There is no "Samhain, god of the underworld)" or wahtever, Samhain,pronounced
saween or sow-en, means "end of summer".  Other than that, it's pretty
reasonable for a small, self0taught coven.  I sure wish I could get to some
of those gatherings.  I went to school quite close to Timonium, MD.  Some
wonderful, magicl places thereabouts.


#5 of 17 by void on Sun Nov 3 19:58:35 1996:

   there are a fair number of pagans who regard the occult as something
different from paganism. the difference seems to be mostly semantic and an
attempt to disassociate pagans/witches from charlatans and people who are
cluelessly stumbling about calling themselves witches and generally doing more
harm than good.


#6 of 17 by kami on Mon Nov 4 17:12:59 1996:

Sigh.  If they're dodging words with negative associations, how can they 
call themselves witches?  I guess everyone draws their line somewhere.
Occult=hidden, as in clouds occulting the moon. What else is "the craft of 
the wise"?  Oh well.


#7 of 17 by eartha on Tue Nov 5 05:13:59 1996:

Well put kami. Thanks for another positve article, void! I also read one in
a newspaper out of Milford! Unfortunately, I dont have it with me, Id love
to share it if I could! Anyway, public education is in need, indeed.BB


#8 of 17 by birdlady on Tue Nov 5 19:33:39 1996:

I enjoyed reading it, even with the innacuracies.  I have *such* a hard time
convincing people at work that witches are NOT satan worshippers.


#9 of 17 by kami on Tue Nov 5 19:35:39 1996:

Someone said that, in the SOuth, a lot of people are *convinced* that 
Pagan means "people against goodness and niceness" or things like that.  Oof!


#10 of 17 by robh on Tue Nov 5 19:44:26 1996:

That particular interpretation of PAGAN comes from the 1988 film
version of _Dragnet_, where the bad guys were an organization named
People Against Goodness and Normalcy.  I'm all for goodness, but I have
to agree with them on the normalcy bit.  >8)


#11 of 17 by kami on Tue Nov 5 19:45:29 1996:

Gee, thanks Rob. I didn't know there was a legitimate origin for that bit
of silliness.  Cool.


#12 of 17 by birdlady on Thu Nov 7 18:47:56 1996:

<birdy vows to throw water balloons at the _Dragnet_ writers if she meets
them>


#13 of 17 by j0ker666 on Thu Dec 26 05:15:10 1996:

WHOEVER WROTE THAT BULLSHIT HAS TO MUCH FUCKING TIME GET OF YOUR FAT ASS AND
GET A FUCKING LIFE BBBBIIIIIITTTTTTCCCCCCHHHHHHHH


#14 of 17 by hokshila on Wed Jan 1 12:10:53 1997:

j0ker666, you have too much anger in your heart. You can get help for this.


#15 of 17 by babozita on Wed Jan 1 17:24:03 1997:

Maybe some of us need anger to remind the others of the balance of energy in
the universe.


#16 of 17 by hokshila on Tue Jan 7 13:24:39 1997:

Some need anger for they lack the skills necessary to deal with fear and hurt.
Not all have had the luxury of functional parenting on the emotional level.
I wrote a poem about my father dying and joker's response was "Die and burn
in hell." Anger is not a blancing of the energy of the universe, in my
opinion, it is by and large a way for people to deal with fear and self esteem
issues arising from disconnection from spirit (fear) and negitive basic
assumptions about self. We get angry when we feel less than worthy and when
we fear something. Anger is an attitude, not an emotion.


#17 of 17 by jazz on Sat Jan 11 15:10:15 1997:

        Reminds me of a part of a Zen parable (quoted entirely out of context,
it was ostensibly about finances):

        ... and the priest made a fist of his hand, and said, "What would you
call it if my hand were always this way?"

        "A deformity."

        And then he extended his hand out flat, fingers rigid, "And what would
ou call it if my hand were always this way?"

        "Another kind of deformity."

        To all things in their place, including anger.  If you're angry, then
feel it, do something about it.  Don't let it build up, don't try to deny it
out of a moral conviction.  It is you.

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