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Sanguina-chan
Zombicide

From what I gathered from that post, the threefold law is pretty much a fancy way of saying "karma". You saying that Wiccans don't believe in good or bad karma?


Dharmic or western interpretation?

The threefold law states that what one gives out comes back to one three times over. Some people interpret this to mean "three times as bad/good" and others interpret it to mean in three ways, for example to mind, body and spirit. It's not the same thing as the western interpretation of karma, which doesn't multiply it in that way. (It may seem like a small distinction but it's fairly big for some people, who believe in one but not the other.)

Wicca is orthopraxic, so it's about what you do rather than what you believe. From what I gather Wiccans do tend to believe that you get back what you give out, but whether they interpret this as a form of karma or cause-and-effect or whatever appears to differ from Wiccan to Wiccan.

As for the dharmic interpretation, I wouldn't know. I don't know enough about it.

I don't know what the dharmic interpretation of karma is. I pretty much believe in the karma that says that "if you're good in life, good things happen; if you're bad in life, bad things happen". Well, karma shouldn't be a belief. It's pure logic. If you're a total douchebag, you're not going to have many friends, and friends help you in life, so since you have no friends, you're going to be a lonely person and life will suck. If you're good, you'll have tons of friends and people will respect you, so you'll succeed in life. It's common sense.
myruna-chan's avatar
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oh my! sorry!! i was extra busy this past weeks so when i came to gaia was really fast, truly sorry u_u

well i read all the post that all the people here came and left, and i came back with more questions!!!

here i go:

mmm so chakra is energy? it can be used in a special way? i mean why we have 7 chakras?

so druidsm is not a death thing?

Crooked Path Witchcraft post? whats that?

for Zombicide: sorry dear i started this because i was honestly interested and curious , dont get mad please n_nu

Sanguina-chan: dear thanks a lot!!! you know so much, and you have a lot of patience with me, you deserve something special in return n_n


and i have on emore question,


Since Halloween is so close (in Mexico is deatsh days, 1st and 2nd of november), how do wiccan celebrate this day? ignoring it? doing trick or treat? having a special ceremony? a normal day?
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myruna-chan
mmm so chakra is energy? it can be used in a special way? i mean why we have 7 chakras?


Your chakras are energy centers in your body that correspond to certain aspects of our physical/mental health. When these centers are blocked illness can occur. There are 7 major chakras centers in the body. Each one has its own color and it’s own purpose (the following is a general list of associations, more details can be found at the following link http://www.sacredcenters.com/chakras.html ):

1. Base (or perineum chakra), its color is red. It controls the legs, feet, bones, large intestine, and adrenal glands.
2. Sacral, its color is orange. It controls the reproductive system, kidneys and lower back.
3. Solar plexus (or stomach chakra), its color is yellow. It controls the digestive system, liver and gall bladder.
4. Heart, its color is green. It controls the lungs, heart, circulatory system, arms and hands.
5. Throat, its color is blue. It controls the throat, ears, mouth, shoulders and neck.
6. Brow, its color is indigo. It controls the eyes, base of the skull and the brow.
7. Crown, its color is violet. It controls the central nervous system and cerebral cortex.

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Crooked Path Witchcraft post? whats that?

The Crooked Path is a type of Witchcraft.

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Since Halloween is so close (in Mexico is death days, 1st and 2nd of november), how do wiccan celebrate this day? ignoring it? doing trick or treat? having a special ceremony? a normal day?
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Samhain one of the major Sabbats, (though the actual cross-quater day varies), it is usually celebrated around the 31st. If we do anything for Halloween (like trick-or-treating), it would be separate from any Samhain rituals or activities. Some may choose to ignore it completely and just celebrate Samhain.
So have you all gone through your sex rites yet?
myruna-chan's avatar
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cool! but then, how do you know one of your chakras is blocked? i mean how can you notice one is not working well?

so people can see it? i mean the coulored chakras? how can you make them work well?
do wiccans know a way to do that? or is completely non related to wicca?

The Crooked Path is a type of Witchcraft? so not all the Witchcrafts work in the same way? how many of them exist?


Samhain? so what do wiccans do for that celebration?

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Einstein Speed
So have you all gone through your sex rites yet?


I don't think there are actually too many people on this thread who have claimed to be Trad Wiccans. And while there may be sexual aspects to some of the rituals (such as the initiations), they are not "sex rites" in and of themselves.

myruna-chan
cool! but then, how do you know one of your chakras is blocked? i mean how can you notice one is not working well?

Odds are if you are feeling run down and crappy, then one of them may be blocked or at least somewhat "clogged". There are any number of "healing systems", such as Reiki, Healing Touch, etc.. that teach ways to balance the chakras.

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so people can see it? i mean the coulored chakras? how can you make them work well?

For the most part it is a matter of paying close attention to your body. If you know the areas where the chakras are located you can visualize them/meditate on them and push energy through them to help clear/balance them.

The following is a meditation you can use to help clear any blockages that may be present in your chakras.

When you are ready - begin:
Sit/lay down in a comfortable position...close your eyes...remember to take slow, deep breaths

breath in...and breathe out...and in again...notice the endless cycle...breathing in...and breathing out...and in again... and with every breath that you let out...breathe out all of your stress, your cares, your concerns and your worries...and breathe in the calm, the peaceful, the relaxation... breathe out all the negative, dark energies that have been dragging you down...and breathe in the positive light...breathe in...breathe out...breathe in and fill your body with warm glowing light... feel your body completely relax as you let all your stress drift away...take a few moments and simply breathe

when you are ready...imagine your body...and on your body there are 7 circles...each one is an energy center, a sub-station, that allows the life energy that is in all of us to flow freely through the body...stop now for a moment...and look at the big picture...take a quick snapshot and note what is happening in each circle... when all is well, each one should be bright - with energy swirling and rotating as it flows through...note any that seem dark, or any that are blocked or seem sluggish...take a few moments and observe yourself...attune yourself to the energy flow within your body

when you are ready...imagine a pure white light flowing up from the ground and flowing into your body through your feet...this is a warm, healing light - one which brings positive energies into the body and helps to clear out any blockages that you may have... when you are ready, the white light moves up your legs and into your first chakra - your base...pause for a few moments until the energy has merged and the chakra point is rotating and bright... when you are ready, the white light moves up to your sacral chakra...pause here until the energy has merged and the chakra point is rotating and bright... when you are ready, the white light moves up to your solar plexus chakra...pause here until the energy has merged and the chakra point is rotating and bright... when you are ready, the white light moves up to your heart chakra...pause here until the energy has merged and the chakra point is rotating and bright... when you are ready, the white light moves up to your throat chakra...pause here until the energy has merged and the chakra point is rotating and bright... when you are ready the white light moves up to your brow chakra...pause here until the energy has merged and the chakra point is rotating and bright... when you are ready the white light moves up to your crown chakra...pause here until the energy has merged and the chakra point is rotating and bright... when you are ready the white light flows out of the top of your head like a fountain and it's pure healing light rains down on your body and then flows back into the earth...

take a few moments now and observe yourself again...notice the how the energy in each chakra is flowing more freely...how each is bright with color and rotating with the energy that is swirling through your body... when you are ready you may open your eyes feeling recharged and refreshed.

You can use this meditation any time you need to recharge. If you have specific chakras that have strong blockages, it can take several "recharges" before it will become completely unblocked and you may need to pause at those chakra points for a little longer before the energy will begin to flow through the blockage.


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do wiccans know a way to do that? or is completely non related to wicca?

It is completely non-related to Wicca. There may be many who know how, but it's something that almost anyone can learn to do.

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The Crooked Path is a type of Witchcraft? so not all the Witchcrafts work in the same way? how many of them exist?

I don't know how many different traditions or paths there are. But the differences have to do with how a person practices and/or believes that witchcraft works. Some paths deal with spirits, some with elementals, some with Gods. Unfortunately I don't really know that much about other types of Witchcraft (other than Wicca based paths).

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Samhain? so what do wiccans do for that celebration?

It is primarily about honoring our loved ones who have passed on. So you might set up ancestor altars, or have "dumb suppers". It is also considered one of the times of the year when the "veil" between the worlds is thinnest, so it is a good time for divination rituals.
listen, i myself am a roman catholic, but im really interested in this Wicca thing. im not saying that im gonna convert (honestly, i come from a die-hard family, with an uncle as a priest xd ) i just want to be more open-minded about things that are radically different to everything ive ever heard of about witches. i was taught that anything related to witchcraft was of the devil (which i still agree with to some degree. i am not easily swayed). so.. pm me with some info please! i'll start a thread in relation to this some other time, cuz im too tired right now sweatdrop heart
ybunnygurl's avatar
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chakras

If you want to know if your chakras are blocked, there is the meditation mentioned above, but if you really want to get in to learning more about them take a yoga class, find some were that's offering yoga, but not power yoga, some thing more like Hatha yoga, its slow and really healthy for you. here is more info on types of yoga
TriumphantChaos
At it's most traditional, Wicca is secretive, oathbound Neo-Pagan religion based on an amalgamation of old beliefs, though it was created in the 1950s. It's not Satanic, and they [Wiccans] aren't any more dangerous than any other person.
"Though it was created adapted in the 1950s."
Myruna-chan: You're very welcome 4laugh And thank you so much for the gift!!

Sweet has given you a pretty good explanation of everything.

"The crooked path" is like a folksy name given to witchcraft. It's typically what we might call "non-Wiccan witchcraft". Wiccan magic is influenced by Ceremonial Magic, so they do things in quite a ritualistic and ceremonial way. Wiccan spells have more tools and so on. Non-Wiccan witchcraft can be just a craft but often it's a spirituality in its own right, and some people choose to call their spiritual path "witchcraft", which can be confusing but that's okay. So they might choose to use the phrase "the crooked path" to describe it.


dragonskaraka
: Myruna is Catholic too ^_^ You may have some of the same questions she had. You may want to read through this thread wink Although it's a bit long at this point.
myruna-chan's avatar
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cool!!! thanks a lot!! i practiced the ritual of chakras a little, i couldnt complete it (someone interrupted me n_nu) but looks like it really works! i felt a little better (my body sometimes have aches that not even my grandma hd xd ) wow, but i have more questions:

chakars are conected to elements? why? i readit in the link that too2sweet gave me, so i was wondering how that works

now that Halloween passed, what did wicans did ? if someone could explain me more about the Samhain i will be very happy?

so this periods that are special increase the abilites of wiccans? yes , no? why?

is there a periods in the year when they feel better or poweful?

i know i asked something similar some pages ago, but, when wiccans are in this days like Samhain they feel different? or they experience something special?

do someone can read the future asking the moon or something? sorry, i read it i a book about a woman that felt more conected to the moon in special days and confesed to be a witch (maybe i should stop fantasiazing about this xd )


ybunnygurl thanks, maybe i should practice some yoga n_n
Herr Esdii Kadin i think you are refering also to neo wicca , bu maybe im wrong
dragonskaraka as sa-chan said, im also caholic, i truly invite you again to come to the treat heart

sa-chan: your welcome! thanks for all your guidance, too2sweet also received something, i had to response to all the patience you and too2sweet had hvae along this threat 3nodding
Hi Myruna! ^_^

I think Sweet has a pretty good info-dump on Samhain somewhere so I'll leave it to her to explain that one. (Also I haven't had a coffee yet and I'm feeling lazy wink )

There are particular days when we feel more "energized". It depends on the person, how you feel about the holiday, etc. Wiccans might feel particularly energized on the night of a full moon, but if your practice isn't connected to the moon, you might not. Samhain is the favourite holiday of quite a few witches and Pagans. We tend to think of it as a day when the "veils are thin", when it's easiest to contact the dead and for the dead to contact us. It's not typically a day when people do much work with energy; they tend to spend more time in meditation, contemplation, and divination. Despite this, I always feel more energized around this time, but I can't speak for everyone wink

During a good ritual you feel energized. If a ritual is done well, you get the change in mind-state and the connection to the gods and the world around you that does make you feel energized. I've had some rituals that I considered fairly unfulfilling where I didn't feel very energized during the ritual. So it's not just the day itself, but the fact that we perform ritual on this day.

The more attuned you are to the changing of the seasons and so on, the more likely you are simply to feel something on those holidays. I've had days where I just felt that the day was special. Last Beltaine, for example, I felt like the whole world was rejoicing and spreading the love and having sex and so on. Probably an illusion as much as anything else but it was a lovely sensation all the same.
*inserts info dump* 4laugh

THE ORIGINS OF HALLOWEEN
(c) copyright 1989, Rowan Moonstone

In recent years, there have been a number of pamphlets and books put out by various Christian organizations dealing with the origins of modern- day Halloween customs.

Being a Witch myself, and a student of the ancient Celts from whom we get this holiday, I have found these pamphlets woefully inaccurate and poorly researched. A typical example of this information is contained in the following quote from the pamphlet entitled "What's Wrong with Halloween?" by Russell K. Tardo.
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The Druids believed that on October 31st, the last day of the year by the ancient Celtic calendar, the lord of death gathered together the souls of the dead who had been made to enter bodies of animals, and decided what forms they should take the following year. Cats were held sacred because it was believed that they were once human beings ... We see that this holiday has its origin, basis and root in the occultic Druid celebration of the dead. Only they called it 'Samhain', who was the lord of the dead (a big demon)


When these books and pamphlets cite sources at all, they usually list the Encyclopedia Britannica, Encyclopedia Americana, and the World Book
Encyclopedia. The Britannica and the Americana make no mention of cats, but do, indeed list Samhain as the Lord of Death, contrary to Celtic scholars, and list no references. The World Book mentions the cats, and calls Samhain the Lord of Death, and lists as its sources several children's books (hardly what one could consider scholarly texts, and, of course, themselves citing no references).

In an effort to correct some of this erroneous information, I have researched the religious life of the ancient Celtic peoples and the survivals of that religious life in modern times. Listed below are some of the most commonly asked questions concerning the origins and customs of Halloween. Following the questions is a lengthy bibliography where the curious reader can go to learn more about this holiday than space in this small pamphlet permits.

Where does Halloween come from?

Our modern celebration of Halloween is a descendent of the ancient Celtic festival called "Samhain". The word is pronounced "sow-in", with "sow" rhyming with "cow".

What does "Samhain" mean?

The Irish-English Dictionary published by the Irish Texts Society defines the word as follows:

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Samhain, All Hallowtide, the feast of the dead in Pagan and Christian times, signaling the close of harvest and the initiation of the winter season, lasting till May, during which troops were quartered. Fairies were imagined as particularly active at this season. From it, the half-year is reckoned. Also called Feile Moingfinne (Snow Goddess).


The Scottish Gaelic Dictionary defines it as
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Hallowtide. The Feast of All Souls. Sam + Fuin = end of summer.


Contrary to the information published by many organizations, there is no archaeological or literary evidence to indicate that Samhain was a deity.
Eliade's Encyclopedia of Religion states as follows:
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The Eve and day of Samhain were characterized as a time when the barriers between the human and supernatural worlds were broken... Not a festival honoring any particular Celtic deity, Samhain acknowledged the entire spectrum of nonhuman forces that roamed the earth during that period.


The Celtic Gods of the dead were Gwynn ap Nudd for the British and Arawn for the Welsh. The Irish did not have a "lord of death" as such.

Why was the end of summer of significance to the Celts?

The Celts were a pastoral people as opposed to an agricultural people. The end of summer was significant to them because it meant the time of year when the structure of their lives changed radically. The cattle were brought down from the summer pastures in the hills and the people were gathered into the houses for the long winter nights of story- telling and handicrafts .

What does it have to do with a festival of the dead?

The Celts believed that when people died, they went to a land of eternal youth and happiness called Tir nan Og. They did not have the concept of heaven and hell that the Christian church later brought into the land. The dead were sometimes believed to be dwelling with the Fairy Folk, who lived in the numerous mounds, or sidhe, (pronounced "shee" ) that dotted the Irish and Scottish countryside. Samhain was the new year to the Celts. In the Celtic belief system, turning points, such as the time between one day and the next, the meeting of sea and shore, or the turning of one year into the next were seen as magickal times. The turning of the year was the most potent of these times. This was the time when the "veil between the worlds" was at its thinnest, and the living could communicate with their beloved dead in Tir nan Og.

What about the aspects of "evil' that we associate with the night today?

The Celts did not have demons and devils in their belief system. The fairies, however, were often considered hostile and dangerous to humans
because they were seen as being resentful of man taking over their land. On this night, they would sometimes trick humans into becoming lost in the fairy mounds, where they would be trapped forever. After the coming of the Christians to the Celtic lands, certain of the folk saw the fairies as those angels who had sided neither with God or with Lucifer in their dispute, and thus were condemned to walk the earth until judgment day.5

In addition to the fairies, many humans were abroad on this night, causing mischief. Since this night belonged neither to one year or the other, Celtic folk believed that chaos reigned, and the people would engage in "horseplay and practical jokes".6

This also served as a final outlet for high spirits before the gloom of winter set in.

What about "trick or treat"?

During the course of these hijinks, many of the people would imitate the fairies and go from house to house begging for treats. Failure to supply the treats would usually result in practical jokes being visited on the owner of the house. Since the fairies were abroad on this night, an offering of food or milk was frequently left for them on the steps of the house, so the homeowner could gain the blessing of the "good folk" for the coming year.
Many of the households would also leave out a "dumb supper" for the spirits of the departed.7

The folks who were abroad in the night imitating the fairies would sometimes carry turnips carved to represent faces. This is the origin of our modern Jack-o-lantern.

Was there any special significance of cats to the Celts?

According to Katherine Briggs in Nine Lives: Cats in Folklore, the Celts associated cats with the Cailleach Bheur, or Blue Hag of Winter.
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She was a nature goddess, who herded the deer as her cattle. The touch of her staff drove the leaves off the trees and brought snow and harsh weather.


Dr. Anne Ross addresses the use of divine animals in her book Pagan Celtic Britain and has this to day about cats.
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Cats do not play a large role in Celtic mythology ... the evidence for the cat as an important cult animal in Celtic mythology is slight.

She cites as supporting evidence, the lack of archaeological artifacts and literary references in surviving works of mythology.

Was this also a religious festival?

Yes. Celtic religion was very closely tied to the Earth. Their great legends are concerned with momentous happenings which took place around the time of Samhain. Many of the great battles and legends of kings and heroes center on this night. Many of the legends concern the promotion of fertility of the earth and the insurance of the continuance of the lives of the people through the dark winter season.

How was the religious festival observed?

Unfortunately, we know very little about that. W.G. Wood-Martin, in his book, Traces of the Elder Faiths of Ireland, states,
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There is comparatively little trace of the religion of the Druids now discoverable, save in the folklore of the peasantry, and the references relative to it that occur in ancient and authentic Irish manuscripts are, as far as present appearances go, meager and insufficient to support anything like a sound theory for full development of the ancient religion
.

The Druids were the priests of the Celtic peoples. They passed on their teachings by oral tradition instead of committing them to writing, so when they perished, most of their religious teachings were lost. We do know that this festival was characterized as one of the four great "Fire Festivals" of the Celts. Legends tell us that on this night, all the hearth fires in Ireland were extinguished, and then re-lit from the central fire of the Druids at Tlachtga, 12 miles from the royal hill of Tara. This fire was kindled from "need fire" which had been generated by the friction of rubbing two sticks together, as opposed to more conventional methods (such as the flint- and-steel method) common in those days. 11

The extinguishing of the fires symbolized the "dark half" of the year, and the re-kindling from the Druidic fires was symbolic of the returning life hoped for, and brought about through the ministrations of the priesthood.

What about sacrifices?

Animals were certainly killed at this time of year. This was the time to "cull" from the herds those animals which were not desired for breeding
purposes for the next year. Most certainly, some of these would have been done in a ritual manner for the use of the priesthood.

Were humans sacrificed?

Scholars are sharply divided on this account, with about half believing that it took place and half doubting its veracity. Caesar and Tacitus certainly tell tales of the human sacrifices of the Celts, but Nora Chadwick points out in her book The Celts that
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it is not without interest that the Romans themselves had abolished human sacrifice not long before Caesar's time, and references to the practice among various barbarian peoples have certain overtones of self-righteousness. There is little direct archaeological evidence relevant to Celtic sacrifice.


Indeed, there is little reference to this practice in Celtic literature. The only surviving story echoes the tale of the Minotaur in Greek legend: the Fomorians, a race of evil giants said to inhabit portions of Ireland before the coming of the Tuatha de Danaan (or "people of the Goddess Danu" ), demanded the sacrifice of 2/3 of the corn, milk, and first born children of the Fir Bolg, or human inhabitants of Ireland. The de Danaan ended this practice in the second battle of Moy Tura, which incidentally, took place on Samhain. It should be noted, however, that this story appears in only one (relatively modern) manuscript from Irish literature, and that manuscript, the "Dinnsenchus" , is known to be a collection of fables. According to P.W. Joyce in Vol. 2 of The Social History of Ancient Ireland,
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Scattered everywhere through our ancient literature, both secular and ecclesiastical, we find abundant descriptions and details of the rites and superstitions of the pagan Irish; and in no place - with this single exception - do we find a word or hint pointing to human sacrifice to pagan gods or idols.


What other practices were associated with this season?

Folk tradition tells us of many divination practices associated with Samhain. Among the most common were divinations dealing with marriage, weather, and the coming fortunes for the year. These were performed via such methods as ducking for apples and apple peeling. Ducking for apples was a marriage divination. The first person to bite an apple would be the first to marry in the coming year. Apple peeling was a divination to see how long your life would be. The longer the unbroken apple peel, the longer your life was destined to be.14

In Scotland, people would place stones in the ashes of the hearth before retiring for the night. Anyone whose stone had been disturbed during the night was said to be destined to die during the coming year.

How did these ancient Celtic practices come to America?

When the potato crop in Ireland failed, many of the Irish people, modern descendants of the Celts, immigrated to America, bringing with them their folk practices, which were remnants of the Celtic festival observances.

We in America view this as a harvest festival. Did the Celts also view
it as such?


Yes. The Celts had 3 harvests. Aug 1, or Lammas, was the first harvest, when the first fruits were offered to the Gods in thanks. The Fall equinox was the true harvest. This was when the bulk of the crops would be brought in. Samhain was the final harvest of the year. Anything left on the vines or in the fields after this date was considered blasted by the fairies ("pu'ka" ) and unfit for human consumption.

Does anyone today celebrate Samhain as a religious observance?

Yes. Many followers of various pagan religions, such as Druidism and Wicca, observe this day as a religious festival. They view it as a memorial day for their dead friends and family, much as the world does the national Memorial Day holiday in May. It is still a night to practice various forms of divination concerning future events. It is also considered a time to wrap up old projects, take stock of one's life, and initiate new projects for the coming year. As the winter season is approaching, it is a good time to do studying on research projects, and also a good time to begin hand work such as sewing, leather working, woodworking, etc., for Yule gifts later in the year. And while "satanists" are using this holiday as their own, this is certainly not the only example of a holiday (or even religious symbols) being "borrowed" from an older religion by a newer one.

Does this involve human or animal sacrifice?

Absolutely NOT! Hollywood to the contrary, blood sacrifice is not practiced by modern followers of Wicca or Druidism. There may be some people who THINK they are practicing Wicca by performing blood sacrificing, but this is NOT condoned by reputable practitioners of today's neo-Pagan religions.

FOOTNOTES:

1 Tardo, Russell K., What's Wrong with Halloween?, Faithful Word Publishers, (Arabi, LA, undated), p. 2

2 Rev. Patrick Dinneen, An Irish English Dictionary, (Dublin, 1927), p. 937

3 Malcolm MacLennan, A Pronouncing and Etymological Dictionary of the Gaelic Language, (Aberdeen, 1979), p. 279

4 The Encyclopedia of Religion, ed. Mircea Eliade, "Halloween" by Primiano, (New York, 1987) pp. 176-177

5 Katherine Briggs, Nine Lives: Cats in Folklore, (London,1980) , p.5

6 Dr. Anne Ross, Pagan Celtic Britain, (London,1967) , p. 301-302

7 W.G. Wood-Martin, Traces of the Elder Faiths of Ireland, Vol. II, (Port Washington, NY, 1902), p. 5

8 Kevin Danaher, The Year in Ireland, (Cork, 1972), p. 214

9 Alwyn & Brinley Rees, Celtic Heritage, (New York, 1961), p. 90

10 Wood-Martin, op. cit., p. 249

11 Rees & Rees, op. cit., p. 90

12 Nora Chadwick, The Celts, (Harmondsworth, 1982), p. 151

13 P.W. Joyce, A Social History of Ancient Ireland, Vol.2, (New York, 1968 ), pp. 282-283

14 Madeleine Pelner Cosman, Medieval Holidays and Festivals, (New York, 1981), p. 81

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

*Bord, Janet & Colin, The Secret Country, (London: Paladin Books,1978 )

*Briggs, Katherine, Nine Lives, Cats in Folklore, (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1980)

*Chadwick, Nora, The Celts, (Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books, 1982)

*Coglan, Ronan, A Dictionary of Irish Myth and Legend, (Dublin: 1979)

*Cosman, Madeleine Pelner, Medieval Holidays and Festivals, (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1981)

*Danaher, Kevin, The Year in Ireland, (Cork, Ireland: The Mercier Press 1972)

*Dinneen, Rev. Patrick S., M.A., An Irish-English Dictionary, (Dublin: The Irish Texts Society, 1927)

*Joyce, P.W., A Social History of Ancient Ireland, (New York: Benjamin Blom, 1968 )

*MacCana, Proinsias, Celtic Mythology, (London: The Hamlyn Publishing Group Limited, 1970)

*MacLennan, Malcolm, A pronouncing and Etymological Dictionary of the Gaelic Language, (Aberdeen: Acair and Aberdeen University Press, 1979)

*MacNeill, Maire', The Festival of Lughnasa, (Dublin: Comhairle Bhealoideas Eireann, 1982)

*Powell, T.G.E., The Celts, (New York: Thames & Hudson, 1980)

*Primiano, Leonard Norman, "Halloween" from The Encyclopedia of Religion, ed. Mircea Eliade, (New York, McMillan Publiching Co., 1987)

*Rees, Alwyn and Brinley, Celtic Heritage, Ancient Tradition in Ireland and Wales, (New York: Thames & Hudson, 1961)

*Ross, Dr. Anne, Pagan Celtic Britain, (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1967)

*Sharkey, John, Celtic Mysteries, (New York: Thames & Hudson, 1975)

*Spence, Lewis, British Fairy Origins, (Wellingborough: Aquarian Press, 1946)

*Squire, Charles, Celtic Myth & Legend, Poetry & Romance, (New York: Newcastle Publishing Co., Inc., 1975)

*Toulson, Shirley, The Winter Solstice, (London: Jill Norman & Hobhouse, Ltd., 1981)

*Wood-Martin, W.G., Traces of the Elder Faiths of Ireland, Vols. I & II, (Port Washington, NY: Kennikat Press, 1902)

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