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- From: Tagi@cup.portal.com (Thyagi Morgoth NagaSiva)
- Newsgroups: alt.pagan,talk.religion.newage
- Subject: Wicca: History and Theoretics
- Message-ID: <70395@cup.portal.com>
- Date: Fri, 27 Nov 92 12:57:46 PST
- Organization: The Portal System (TM)
- Distribution: world
- Lines: 362
-
- 9211.27 e.v.
-
- I wrote this article and the next as part of a seminar on understanding
- Wicca which was run on IRC over the last couple weeks. As they ought
- make clear, I don't represent anyone but myself and hope that my words
- add to a general understanding and social harmony.
-
- I'd like to receive comments, reviews and/or questions about them
- and would be happy to address any of those here if they are cc'd to
- my mailbox (I don't usually read this newsgroup). Thanks.
-
- =============================================================
- PART ONE: Witches and the Western Mystery Traditions
-
- Introduction
-
- This essay concerns paganism, the Western mystery traditions,
- and Witches. I make no claims regarding orthodoxy or truth here.
- I'm only telling a story that I have learned which is meaningful
- to those as skeptical and imaginative as myself.
-
- There are certainly more fantastic accounts regarding these
- social traditions which I enjoy, yet for me they do not hold the
- same level of credibility. These tend to be more mythical and
- meaningful to the subconscious mind, and are therefore of perhaps
- MORE value than a story of the type you are about to read.
-
- The Western mystery traditions, comprised of their mystical and
- occult threads, are impossible to define in any concrete fashion.
- Several people have of course attempted to do this, yet in each case
- their bias and short-sightedness hindered a complete description.
-
- Besides this, the traditions themselves form a complex, arising as
- they do from numerous sources, locations and time periods. To
- isolate one tradition within this complex and attempt to understand
- its origin and character is not only difficult, it is a mistake.
-
- In writing about paganism and witches here I therefore do you
- a disservice. I can only provide a small glimpse, a micro-view
- of the entirety. It is the equivalent of attempting to understand
- your nose. Without you and some understanding of the rest of you,
- my attempts will be minimal and perhaps futile.
-
- Given all of this, I will nonetheless proceed...
-
-
- A Rough Historical Basis of Paganism
-
- In the ancient world there were two major types of society: the
- nomadic or wandering tribes and the stable homesteading tribes.
- Families tended to hold together in clans, at times joining and
- separating based upon need or individual difference, respectively.
-
- These tribes developed their own forms of language, government,
- religion and philosophy. Their lifestyle contributed greatly
- toward their societal constructs. For this reason the most
- popular ideas and practices (those which have been preserved in
- their art and tools) included such themes as tool-making, hunting,
- and the Mysteries of birth, sex, power and death.
-
- The stories and mythical artwork of ancient times portray someone
- immersed in a world of great powers. Sun, Moon, Clouds and Night
- often rivalled or combined with influential plants and animals
- as religious foci. Some of these became associated with individuals
- as symbols of personal identity and power.
-
- There is little known regarding the actual practices of ancient
- peoples. What is commonly referred to as 'Paganism' in today's
- society is really a fabrication of fantasy, dreams and theory -
- useful for those who wish to create their own path, yet difficult
- to substantiate in anthropological terms.
-
-
- The Developing World
-
- Out of these family clans two major societal traditions developed
- in line with the types of tribes mentioned above. These were the
- nonmobile communities that settled in rich, comfortable environments
- near sources of water and food, and the pioneering explorers who
- roamed freely through sometimes quite inhospitable regions.
-
- Without getting into too much detail, let us say that most of the
- ancient civilizations took root in what we today refer to as the 'East'
- or 'Middle East'. Those in China, India and Egypt/Mesopotamia are
- quite possibly the oldest large communities known.
-
- The pioneers scattered in clans throughout the world, crossing
- the ice-bridge into the North Americas, and spread throughout
- Africa and the rest of the world. Some parts of these peoples are
- known as the 'Indo-Europeans', and the common heritage of both the
- Indus Valley Civilization (India) and the nomads of Europe (Celts,
- Teutons, etc.) is sometimes overlooked.
-
- The religious practices were comprised of the same elements as in
- ancient times with variation based on lifestyle. Those who were
- nomadic tended to focus more on courage, stability and the figure
- of the Hero/ine.
-
- Those who were stationary tended to focus upon bounty, life, and
- the figure of the Mother or Father (depending on region and time).
-
- Again, while more is known about these civilizations and pioneers,
- ideas concerning their lifestyle is speculation and projection,
- assembled from pottery, statuettes, tools, buried cities and
- mass graves.
-
-
- A Rough Historical Overview of the Western Mystery Traditions
-
- With greater and greater numbers of people vying for use and
- control of resources, and given the nature of humans, warring
- became inevitable.
-
- Tribes focussed the advantage of group power toward their own ends,
- often at the expense of individuals and/or smaller communities.
-
- This group identity and force concretized many times in the course
- of time and, in the area of Europe and the Mediterranean, reached
- its height in the form of the Roman Empire.
-
- Founded upon pagan fertility rites and martial Mystery schools,
- the Romans sought to bring unity, through force, to the decentralized
- tribes of Europe, driving the last rebellious factions into the British
- Isles (chiefly Ireland and Scotland) and northerly reaches
- (Scandanavia, Finland, etc.).
-
- During the rule of the Romans a wave of religious fervor spread
- from the Middle East. It was a martyrdom cult, given life by the
- Mystery traditions of Osiris and other heroic figures, and centering
- on the concepts of indwelling authority, the resistance
- to oppression and the sacrifice of one's life in the cause of freedom.
-
- When first attempts to stamp this out only inflammed its growth,
- the Romans took the only reasonable action in response, taking its mantle
- and co-opting the movement through deception. This was the Roman
- response to the threat of 'Christianity' and the beginning of the
- 'Holy Roman Empire'.
-
- Centuries rolled by, during which the social factions of the country
- farmer, the warrior, the creative artisan/merchant and the lawyer,
- or priestly, clerical (scribe) castes developed along an age-old
- system of Indo-european, tribal stratification.
-
- In each of these social classes there arose a different type of
- religious practice, given substance by a common ancient heritage,
- yet formed within the values and lifestyles of those who created them.
-
- The clerical caste, often sharing political and social power
- with the warriors, developed a form of Christianity focussed
- on literature and the skills of language, sometimes becoming dogmatism.
-
- The warrior and merchant classes pursued a mixture of the ancient
- Mystery schools (which the warrior class would perpetually retain),
- Christian symbology (much of which originated from within the
- Mystery schools in any case), and a type of social and personal
- alchemy, inspired by the work of the pyramids in Egypt and other
- created world wonders of the time. This developed into a fraternal
- artisan guild structure known as Masonry.
-
- The peasants and farmers pursued variations of older, regional
- practices, largely agricultural and fertility rites. It was the
- variation both in literacy and in economic status which would
- stigmatize the lower classes as 'primitive' in the eyes of 'scholars'
- for many years.
-
-
- The Current Western Mystery Traditions
-
- Human civilization is an ever-renewing flower, a recurrently-
- erupting volcano of art, politics, religion and philosophy.
- We might compare the development of the human brain with the
- development of 'civilization' (society). The deeper, more
- central and less obvious elements of the brain are its oldest
- parts, and this is true also for Western society and its religious
- traditions.
-
- Today's purely Western sects include the complex which is
- called Christianity, the ripe material objectivism which is called
- modern Science, the Masonic tradition, and what can reasonably
- be called neo-paganism or neo-shamanism.
-
- Christianity is largely the result of enforced conformity,
- and its doctrines and practices, while retaining an essentially
- (as from the essenes, 'those who are') valuable teaching,
- are now geared more toward the simple of mind or extremely
- intelligent than to anyone between the two.
-
- Modern Science is a renegade sect of philosophers and engineers,
- often disconnected from their roots in Christian and Masonic
- traditions. Much of it has become for the West what Christianity
- once was: an orthodoxy of intellectual stagnation, producing
- specialists and elitists. They now wield authority in the field
- of 'objective knowledge', supplanting Church doctrine.
-
- Masonic traditions are, at their worst, social indoctrination
- schemes that effectively disempower the individual and diffuse
- rebellion. At their best they are mechanisms of preserving
- important pscho-social symbols and concepts. The form and meaning
- of these symbols may have a profoundly transformative effect
- upon those who use them as a foci of meditation.
-
-
- Setting the Stage: The fragmentation of paganism
-
- It ought be said that none of the aforementioned social, religious
- developments took place in a vacuum. Just as there is an
- incredible mixture among economic classes by virtue of a shared
- society, so has there been a weaving of religious traditions in
- the West.
-
- Ancient roots of unknown form gave way, through civilization,
- to an agrarian and fertility-based religious expression amidst
- peasantry, the farmers in much of Europe. This was dissapated
- by war, plague and the oppression of upper class fear (exemplified
- by the Inquisition).
-
- Many, if not all, of the ancient rites have been forgotten or lost,
- only preserved in form by a co-opting 'Christian' social tradition
- (e.g. communion and the concept of the Dying Sun-King), or by those
- who have seized upon times of old as some sort of some of 'Golden Age',
- free from the pressures and trials of civilized, citified life.
-
- Whether or not any remnants of an agrarian, fertility-religion somehow
- managed to be preserved by such a non-literary, ravaged culture as was
- peasant Europe, it did not likely retained the same form over
- hundreds of years, especially given the pressures from the upper
- classes to dissolve it.
-
- It has been popular to assume that if indeed this did occur, then
- it would most likely have found shelter within places which
- withstood the onslaught of the Romans, British and other imperialists
- bent on unification through force.
-
- With all this history behind it, and given inspiration by an orthodoxy
- which berated and condemned it, when tides of political and social
- restriction began to recede, it is no wonder that a renewal,
- a resurgence, began to develop. Much of this rejuvenation has taken
- place very recently.
-
-
- A New Religion: Gerald Gardner and the Craft
-
- Controversy has raged during the latter half of this century
- concernng the origin and history of neo-paganism. The term
- itself derives from a new version (neo) of the religion of the
- country-dweller (paganus). It is a similar descriptor to the
- 'heathen' or, 'one who dwells within the heaths', the shrubland.
-
- Until 1951 many countries had laws against Masonry and Witchcraft,
- a holdover from earlier times. England was among them, and in that
- year it repealed restriction of Witchcraft.
-
- In immediate response to this, a man by the name of Gerald Gardner
- published several books on the subject, claiming to have had
- dealings with an extant 'family tradition' of Witches in England.
- In so doing he revealed details of their lives and religious
- expression.
-
- Much of the resultant history of Wicca, or Witchcraft, is available
- in written form by such notable authors as Margot Adler. I shall
- not repeat their words here except to say that there are important
- relationships between today's organized Witches and traditions
- outside the peasant class, notably Masonry.
-
- Terms such as 'craft', ritual forms such as 'initiations', and social
- delineations like 'degrees' are indicators to me of the similarity
- of origin between modern Wicca and Masonry. For this reason and
- because I personally find its seemingly rigid structures distasteful,
- I consider the religion of Wicca to be different than the Way of the
- Witch. This is largely as a result my own experience and the prevalence
- of this attitude among many of those whose vision I respected greatly.
-
- I would distinguish between a Wiccan, who is a member of an
- organized and tax-exempt tradition with many sects (such as
- Gardnerianism, Alexandrianism, Faerie, etc.), and a witch,
- who needs no social tradition yet may or may not engage
- society and group rite. A Wiccan may be a Witch, but a witch
- need not be a Wiccan.
-
-
- My Meaning for the term 'Witch'
-
- 'Witch' appears to derive from the root 'wicce', which means 'to bend'.
- I like to play with the ambiguity of this definition. A witch
- bends like the reed in the wind. She also is one who bends or
- shapes hir world.
-
- Witches are healers. This varies, however, among those who
- engage the healing of individuals, those who work for the
- healing of all, and those who seek both, or see no essential
- difference between them. In this way witches may be identified
- as shamans.
-
-
- Here my bias becomes blatant...
-
- Witches TEND to focus more heavily upon certain mythic images
- than on others. Usually this is the imagery which common society
- has shunned/repressed. For this reason I say that modern witches
- focus more on the wrathful, repulsive, and/or aged aspects of
- any deities which enter hir practice - the Crone, the Old King,
- the Underworld Lord, the Demon Queen.
-
- Witches are often ecologists and may apply the principles of
- ecology in their lives where they feel able. Many are engaged
- in political activities designed to awaken a sensitivity to
- issues surrounding plant and animal, the balance of nature,
- and one's place in nature.
-
- Witches are individualists. Most are solitary workers. It is rare
- that I meet a witch who says she's a member of an organized religion.
- Those who do often work for social change, harmony, and a global
- consciousness without doctrinal or moral sectarianism.
-
- I find that most witches are open-minded and focus on actions rather
- than words and ideas, many having studied other cultures and
- acquired a broader view of social issues, and are generally
- accepting of all those whom they meet.
-
- I would say one more thing about witches. They have a sense of
- humor. They don't seize on details and ostracize, they don't require
- the seriousness of others, they often don't take themselves too
- seriously, understanding the Great Cosmic Joke in which they live.
-
-
- Conclusion
-
- In conclusion, I would further note there is absolutely
- NOTHING which separates a witch from a Christian, a Buddhist,
- a Taoist, or even a Satanist.
-
- One reason this is the case is that being a witch's life doesn't
- necessarily have anything to DO with social religious tradition,
- though it may include it. Another is that there
- is a place where all paths converge and this 'place between' is
- where the witch spends the bulk of hir time.
-
-
- Afterward
-
- My definitions and descriptions are by no means the last word
- on the subject of witches. I urge you to develop your own ideas
- if you have not done so already. There are no false paths in the
- amusement park of the imagination.
-
- Create fabulous stories about your origin and the origin of groups
- to which you belong. Witches are more about fantasy than about
- fact, more about imagination than about knowledge, more about
- ambiguity than about clarity.
-
- I hope you will take what I've said here and chew on it, mash it
- up, destroy it, then create your own stories with the combined
- mastications of all the stories you have found inspiring.
-
- There is no truth but what we discover.
-
- Thank you for your time and your attentions,
-
- Thyagi Morgoth NagaSiva
- Tagi@Cup.Portal.Com
- 871 Ironwood Drive
- San Jose, Kali Fornica, 95125
-