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- Gardnerianism by Kyril Oakwind & Judy Harrow
- appearing in the spring/summer 1989 issue of FireHeart
-
-
- Each year, Garderians come together for the Annual Samhain Garderian
- Gather. In the years since it began, the Gather has grown from a
- small local get-together to a national gathering, with participants
- from both East and West coasts. This year, England was represented as
- well ! Our experience in the Gardnerian community has shown that we
- are not a homogeneous group. These family reunions have allowed us to
- maintain a certain amount of continutity while learning about of
- differences. There is a spectrum within Gardnerian practice. Kryil
- represents the more traditional or conservative side of the family,
- while the practices of Judy's coven look more eclectic or innovative.
- We felt that by working together, we could describe our tradition more
- clearly than either of us could writing alone.
- Gardnerianism as a distinct Tradition began with the writings of
- Gerald B. Gardner. He was initiated into the New Forest coven in
- England by "old Dorothy" Clutterbuck. During World War II, Gardner
- participated in the efforts of British Witches, led by Dorothy
- Clutterbuck, to turn back Germany's invasion troops. Gardner was
- active in the Craft and published a fictional novel about medeival
- Witchcraft in 1949. He started a Museum of witchcraft on the Isle of
- Man after the 1951 repeal of the last anti-witchcraft law in England.
- Coming out publicly as a Witch in 1954, he published "Witchcraft
- Today".
- At that time, he believed the Craft was dying out-most of the
- members were older and few young members were being initiated.
- Gardner stronly believed not only in reincarnation, but that he would
- be reborn to the craft. If it died out, this could not be, and so he
- dedicated himself to reviving the Craft. Unable to directly reveal
- much of his coven's workings, he developed a system that was a
- systhesis of various elements from Masonic ritual, ceremonial magick,
- French Mediterranean Craft and the teachings of his coven. Gardner
- and later Doreen Valiente, rewrote some of the ritual, improving its
- poetic qualities and adding yet another dimension. As generations of
- Witches, they became the basis of Garnderianism, and those who
- practiced these rituals as handed down (not as published) became known
- as Garnderians.
- Gardneriansim was brought to America by the Bucklands in 1962.
- Their coven was passed on to Lady Theos and Pheonix in 1972 and to
- Lady Rhiannon in 1985.
- Judy notes that the existence of the earlier New Forest coven is
- unproven, and not particularly important. We may not know wether our
- Craft is old or new. We know for sure that it works. What we can
- prove is that Gerald Gardner, Doreen Valiete, and their associates did
- develop a ritual and symbolic system, drawing from many sources
- including their own inspirations. Their single greatest innovation
- was to make the Goddess their main focus. The fruit of that
- generation's research, innovation and creativity was a strong and
- flexible ritual structure that forms a foundation for the research,
- innovation and creativity of later generations. In fact, we know that
- each successive generations of Gardnerians did augment the materials
- they received, and develop the Tradition. As we live with this
- material, use it and practice it, while continuing to study whatever
- Pagan sources we can find and, we hope, grow in our understanding both
- experientially and intellectually, we must and will make changes. A
- tradition that does not change is dead.
- Gardnerisnism, like mush of the craft, is an initiatory, Mystery
- Tradition. To become a member of the Tradition, an individual must be
- initiated by a Garnderian who was initiated by a Gardnerian, on back
- to Gardner and his High Priestesses, and the initiation ritual used
- must be the Gardnerian ritual. Initiation is more than a rite of
- passage that unites the participants. They have not only undergone a
- similar death and rebirth but are reborn into a particular world.
- That world is a microcosm of the universe with a unique psychic
- pattern of the created by the particular ritual, energy current, and
- vibration of the Deity names used by the participants. They take on
- the group karma of their new family and clan, and they add to it as
- well. They also take an oath of secrecy.
- From a more eclectic Gardnerian viewpoint, any initiation ritual
- that is based on the Gardnerian structure and contains certain
- elements is a valid Gardnerian initiations. Lineage-the sense of
- family and continuity- is intensely important to Garderians. Within
- Judy's line, any variants on initiation or elevation rituals must be
- checked with the Priestess immediately senior to the one making the
- changes. In this way, we make room for growing understanding and
- changing times without sacrificing the continuity that all Garderians
- value equally.
- Kyril points out that Neo-Gardnerian or Gardnerian based groups
- using the published versions of Gardnerian rituals, while performing
- and having perfectly valid initiatory experiences, are not being
- "reborn" into the same psychic pattern as that of the Gardnerian
- Tradition. A real difference exists in the energy they draw on and
- the psychic patterning that is being done. Gardnerianism is very much
- a family. We have our different covens and our different practices,
- But the family feeling is very strong. We are bound by the magickal
- ties of the initiation and our oath of secrecy. We are bound by the
- ties of love. No amount of book knowledge can ever replace human
- contact and the feeling of belonging to a loving family. This is why
- Judy feels a re-written ritual within the context of lineage, makes
- you a Gardnerian in a way that a word-perfect ritual out of a book
- never could.
- Gardnerianism as a Tradition has a body of rituals passed down from
- Gardner that helps to form the core identity - a shared current of
- energy which is added to and drawn on by all the initiates, secret
- Deity names, and a specific group Karma. It also has a hierarchial
- form of leadership, a three degree systems of training, experienced
- and knowledgeable Witch Queens and Maguses (high Priestesses and High
- Priest who have successfully trained a coven to the point where
- another coven has hived off from theirs) from which to draw on. And
- there is an oath of secrecy.
- Judy feels Gardnerianism is not much so the body of rituals as the
- ritual system and the symbolic vocabulary. She tells her students
- that Gerald, Doreen and their associates were the architects, but we
- are the interior decorators. The structural pattern can be gotten
- from books almost as easily as a particular script can be. More and
- more, she believes that the personal affiliation, the group Karama if
- you will, and the energy current are as definitive as the ritual and
- symbol system.
- Our respect for lineage, and for the seniors within our lineage, is
- very important. But Judy does not think of it as hierarchical. In
- hierarchy, those "above" us would have been assigned by those above
- them, without our consent. We choose to work with our teachers, our
- Priest/esses, our Queens and Maguses out of respect and love and
- trust. The bond is freer and more flexiable- and far more real. Nor
- are they considered to be holier or higher, simply more experienced.
- The three degree system is an uncomfortable but necessary form of
- quality control. An initiation is a statement, not only to the Gods,
- but also to the community, that this person is a Priest/ess, qualified
- to fulfill certain roles. If we initiate people, or do degree
- elevations, before they are competent, harm may result.
-