Page 1 of 4 1234 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 32

Thread: Pagans celebrate Halloween as part of the country’s newest religion

  1. #1
    Novichok
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    British Isles
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Germanic
    Ethnicity
    Boer
    Ancestry
    Dutch, German, French Huguenot, British
    Country
    Great Britain
    Region
    Essex
    Y-DNA
    E-V13
    mtDNA
    H1b
    Taxonomy
    Norid
    Politics
    Godly
    Hero
    Jesus, the King of Kings
    Religion
    Christian
    Gender
    Posts
    60,967
    Blog Entries
    82
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 44,948
    Given: 45,034

    0 Not allowed!

    Default Pagans celebrate Halloween as part of the country’s newest religion

    Pagans celebrate Halloween as part of the country’s newest religion

    In a riverside meadow in the Dorset town of Weymouth, a witch is using a broom to sweep a sacred circle in the grass.

    The rest of the coven stand, some in hooded gowns, in a circle around an iron cauldron where a fire is burning.

    They've met to celebrate Samhain, pronounced "sah-wen": the turning of the year from light into dark.

    Many think of Halloween as a time of ghouls and ghosts, and for some retailers it has become the third most lucrative event of the year.

    It is the time of year when some churches remember the souls of the departed.

    For the witches of Weymouth it is one of their most important religious festivals, a time when they believe the barriers between the physical and spiritual worlds are at their thinnest.

    They invite the spirits of north, south, east and west into the circle, and cut apples to share with the spirits of people who have died.

    The leader of the coven, Diane Narraway, bids farewell to the goddess of light, and kneels before the head of a horned ram, holding her hands out as if to a flame.

    "I kneel before... the horned god, Lord of Witchdom, as we welcome him back to reign over the dark months," she says.

    The coven meets regularly to make spells, using a variety of potions and differently coloured candles in order to achieve particular ends.

    Green is for money, pink is for love

    They say the spells are exclusively positive, and should be seen more as prayers.

    Anouska Ireland, a 35-year-old teaching assistant, is wearing a hooded cloak in pale blue - the colour of good health.



    They say the spells are exclusively positive, and should be seen more as prayers.

    Anouska Ireland, a 35-year-old teaching assistant, is wearing a hooded cloak in pale blue - the colour of good health.

    She says: "We sometimes use the cauldron to mix spells... it could be for the purpose of healing, and in harnessing positive intentions for someone who is unwell."

    Sarah Sanford, a mother-of-three, uses spells to protect them.

    "When my children are going to school I'll do a protection spell for them, so they get through the day all right," she says.

    Among the youngest witches is Holly Syme, who says spells serve several purposes.

    "You do a money spell, or you do a happiness spell, and it's giving you the motivation to go out there and get it as well. And it makes you feel better in a way," she says.

    The coven is composed entirely of women, and as in other branches of Paganism, a particular regard for the female is driving its widening appeal in contemporary society.

    Ronald Hutton, Professor of History at Bristol University, says Paganism is partly a reaction to a perceived discrimination against women, practised by mainstream religions.

    He says: "It's feminist. Women have an automatic place... and in some areas of Paganism they are actually in charge. And they're working with a goddess or goddesses who are just as powerful as gods, if not more so."

    The increasing popularity of Paganism is visible in the Dolmen Grove, a group of Dorset druids.

    It claims a total membership of around 1,000, double what it was a year ago.

    Its leader, or bard, Tony Jameson, says Druidry is functioning more and more as a mainstream religion.

    Spectacular headdress and horns
    Wearing a spectacular headdress and horns, he presides over a wedding, or "hand-fasting".

    Beth Irving and Teach Carter have their hands bound in coloured ribbons representing the elements of earth, wind, fire and water.

    They drink mead and bread representing the blood and body of the earth.

    It is symbolism strikingly similar to Christian practice.

    Indeed modern Paganism is a reinvented religion, whose members seek the divine in nature.

    Death and danger
    It originated among ancient Celts for whom the natural world was a wilderness that brought them death and danger as well as sustaining life.

    In contemporary Britain its members are more worried about the destruction of the natural world.

    Although Paganism is largely a recent invention, and imposes very few constraints on its members, one important branch of it has been designated "officially" a religion.

    Earlier this month the Charities Commission gave the Druid Network the status of a religion.

    It said its worship of a supreme entity, its set of coherent practices, and its beneficial moral code, met the definition of a religion.

    The Dolmen Grove does not belong to the Network, but Mr Jameson says the decision is hugely significant, a sign of official acceptance that religion need not be all about rules and a prescribed form of spirituality.

    "We've come to a time, after thousands of years of dogmatic religion... for human beings to take hold of their spirit and become free. Free themselves of all the dogma, of all the rules and regulations, and let the conscience grow on its own," he says.

    Cat Treadwell represents another sign of official acknowledgement of Paganism as a mainstream religion.

    In her everyday life she wears the green uniform of an NHS ambulance worker.

    But she is also listed by Derby NHS Trust as their Pagan Hospital Visitor - a kind of Pagan Chaplain.

    At home, in the long hooded cloak she wears as a Druid priest, Cat stands at a small altar on which is the sculpted form of a woman, green leaves and an apple.

    She lights a candle at a small altar for the patients she has tended to during the day.

    "Druidry has changed a lot in the last 20 years in terms of public perception. It's now certainly more legitimate to actually go out now and call yourself a Druid. I generally get a little bit of fun (made of me) but people understand that it's a specific and serious faith," she says.

    In the ruins of a church on Portland Bill in Dorset, the hand-fasting ceremony is reaching a climax.

    The beat of drums reaches a crescendo as Beth and Teach run down what was once the church's nave and jump over a broomstick.

    It is a leap into married life, and a religion whose members say its time has come.
    Help support Apricity by making a donation

  2. #2
    Banned
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Last Online
    04-28-2012 @ 04:02 PM
    Location
    the Open Road...
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Celto-Germanic
    Ethnicity
    English
    Ancestry
    Lancashire, Bernicia, Munster, Mercia etc.
    Country
    England
    Region
    Devon
    Taxonomy
    Manchester Man
    Politics
    Nationalist
    Religion
    British
    Age
    31
    Gender
    Posts
    7,419
    Blog Entries
    1
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 118
    Given: 0

    0 Not allowed!

    Default

    Heh, I saw this on the BBC news today. THe newsreader says there's to be a special on the phenomenon tomorrow...

  3. #3
    Banned
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Last Online
    07-25-2020 @ 05:11 AM
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Celto-Germanic
    Ethnicity
    UK/Germany
    Country
    United States
    Taxonomy
    Celto-Germanic
    Religion
    Chaos-Gnosticism
    Gender
    Posts
    1,740
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 10
    Given: 0

    0 Not allowed!

    Default

    This is pretty awesome, even if you don't agree with their path.

  4. #4
    Banned
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Last Online
    @
    Meta-Ethnicity
    European-American
    Ethnicity
    British-American
    Gender
    Posts
    8,861
    Blog Entries
    8
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 31
    Given: 0

    0 Not allowed!

    Default

    That picture, oh God.

  5. #5
    Banned
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Last Online
    03-13-2012 @ 01:36 PM
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Finnic
    Ethnicity
    Suomalainen
    Country
    Finland
    Taxonomy
    Itämerensuomalainen/Baltic Finn
    Politics
    Send in the jack-booted thugs
    Religion
    That which does not kill us makes us stranger
    Gender
    Posts
    8,692
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 69
    Given: 0

    0 Not allowed!

    Default

    Um, I hope I'm not being offensive by asking this, but maybe our resident heathens could tell us just how seriously we should take these people?

    In some cases the border between paganism and larping becomes pretty blurred.

  6. #6
    Banned
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Last Online
    @
    Meta-Ethnicity
    European-American
    Ethnicity
    British-American
    Gender
    Posts
    8,861
    Blog Entries
    8
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 31
    Given: 0

    0 Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Eldritch View Post
    Um, I hope I'm not being offensive by asking this, but maybe our resident heathens could tell us just how seriously we should take these people?

    In some cases the border between paganism and larping becomes pretty blurred.
    It's Robin Hood and his Merry Men.

  7. #7
    Veteran Member Wulfhere's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Last Online
    06-26-2022 @ 09:55 PM
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Anglo-Saxon
    Ethnicity
    English
    Country
    England
    Gender
    Posts
    3,630
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 140
    Given: 0

    0 Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Eldritch View Post
    Um, I hope I'm not being offensive by asking this, but maybe our resident heathens could tell us just how seriously we should take these people?

    In some cases the border between paganism and larping becomes pretty blurred.
    Pagans quite often like to dress up. It doesn't mean they're not serious as well.

  8. #8
    Clairvoyance... Lithium's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Last Online
    07-18-2017 @ 02:37 PM
    Location
    In a Reverie
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Slavic
    Ethnicity
    Bulgarian
    Ancestry
    Slavic, Thracian
    Country
    Bulgaria
    Taxonomy
    Atlanto-Nordid
    Politics
    Eurocentrism, Human rights, Anti-Putinism
    Hero
    The Mother Goddess
    Religion
    Eclectic Paganism
    Age
    23
    Gender
    Posts
    3,956
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 799
    Given: 1,158

    0 Not allowed!

    Default

    ^ I agree.

    I think it depends on the person, you can't jugde how serious is he only by the clothes he wears...
    До твоя олтар утъпкана пътека води...

    Let virtue distinguish the brave

  9. #9
    Veteran Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Last Online
    09-07-2011 @ 06:46 PM
    Meta-Ethnicity
    -
    Ethnicity
    -
    Ancestry
    Ireland, England
    Religion
    Roman Catholic
    Gender
    Posts
    1,647
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 11
    Given: 0

    0 Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by HomesickSonnets View Post
    ^ I agree.

    I think it depends on the person, you can't jugde how serious is he only by the clothes he wears...
    True, but when people dress up in certain kids of clothes, for no traditional etc. sort of reason, you have to wonder how seriously they want to be taken. They should be more concious of how they're going to be perceived, to put it bluntly.

  10. #10
    Veteran Member Wulfhere's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Last Online
    06-26-2022 @ 09:55 PM
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Anglo-Saxon
    Ethnicity
    English
    Country
    England
    Gender
    Posts
    3,630
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 140
    Given: 0

    0 Not allowed!

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Wynfrith View Post
    True, but when people dress up in certain kids of clothes, for no traditional etc. sort of reason, you have to wonder how seriously they want to be taken. They should be more concious of how they're going to be perceived, to put it bluntly.
    Why should they? Paganism is a joyous religion, and laughter is always heard at ceremonies.

Page 1 of 4 1234 LastLast

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •