Witchcraft trends need to be faced, says author

(SH) – The witches ball included the midnight spinning of the “Wheel of the Year” and a chance to gaze into the “Fire of Transformation” before the faithful were guided into the “Underworld and our Ritual Space.”

The Samhain celebration last weekend in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., also included deejay music, dancing, door prizes and fun for the children.

“No photos at rituals! Some of us are still closeted,” said the online invitation from the MoonPath Chapter of the Covenant of Unitarian Universalist Pagans. “Perhaps it’s time to come out of the broom closet?”

There were plenty of signs this Halloween season that more witches and wizards are doing precisely that.

Are there SpiralScouts circles in your area offering pagan parents an alternative to the rigid morality of the Boy Scouts? Have teenagers formed reading clubs at school to dig into popular books like “Wild Girls: The Path of the Young Goddess” and “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Wicca and Witchcraft”?
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Wiccan fights for religious freedom

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Folberth, 40, was a graphic artist for more than six years at U.S. Surgical Corp. in North Haven. She said she was fired because she began requesting unpaid Wicca holidays off. The holidays include the Celtic New Year, known as Samhain — or Halloween as it is more widely known.

“If the investigation is decided in my favor, the state can force my reinstatement on the job, which I’m not interested in,” the Derby resident said. “Or they can compensate me with back pay from the time I was fired to the time the decision is made. “I’m definitely interested in that. I feel I’m owed that.”

Commission officials could not comment on specifics of the case, but confirmed they are working on it.

“Once there is a finding, there will be an attempt to conciliate the matter between the two parties,” said Lena Ferguson, spokeswoman for the commission. “If that fails, there will be a public hearing with referees to determine whether discrimination has occurred and we’ll make appropriate remedies.”

U.S. Surgical officials did not return a telephone call seeking comment.

In the meantime, Folberth has been working as a tarot card reader at her friend Rapid Freeman’s witch store in East Haven, called SubRosa Magick.

She has also made appearances on Freeman’s public-access cable show, “The Witchin’ Hour,” to drum up support for her campaign for legislation protecting religious freedom in the workplace for all faiths. The show is no longer aired in the Valley but is broadcast in the New Haven area.

“I haven’t gotten much support for my campaign for religious freedom,” Folberth said.

But she said she is trying to get legislators to pass a law providing unpaid religious days off in the workplace.

Christians, Jews, Muslims, and believers of other faiths would benefit from the law as much as any Wiccan, Folberth said.

Wiccans are pagans who follow the Celtic traditions of pre-Christian England. They have a pantheon of goddesses and gods, much like ancient civilizations including Greece, Rome and Egypt. They have roughly eight significant holidays, including Samhain today.

They get a chuckle out of all the attention paid to Halloween, which has become a multibillion-dollar consumer holiday.

“I laugh about it,” Freeman said. “There are so many pagan elements that nobody thinks about. Samhain [pronounced sow-wen] is our Celtic New Year, the day to honor our ancestors, and the day the barrier between the living and the dead is thinnest.”

The Connecticut Post Online – News

Wiccans mark Halloween as start of new year

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The self-described witch said she planned to join Wiccans and followers of similar faiths in Adrian to mark Samhain.

The number of adult adherents of Wicca grew from 8,000 in 1990 to 134,000 in 2001, according to the American Religious Identification Survey.

Wiccans make up one of the faiths classified as Pagan. Other Pagan groups include Druids and Shamans.

Wiccans say their religion is based on respect for the earth, nature and the cycle of the seasons.

“For most Wiccan practitioners, (Samhain) is the New Year, and a time for letting go of the old and looking ahead to the new,” according to the Web site of Circle Sanctuary, a Mount Horeb, Wis.-based spirituality resource center and Wiccan church.

Samhain “marks the end of the harvest season. Since ancient times, Pagans have paid their respects to departed loved ones, ancestors, and guides in the Spirit World at Samhain,” according to the Web site. “The Goddess manifests as the Crone and the God as the Horned Hunter and Lord of Death. Sacred colors are Black and Orange. It is the festival of endings and transformation.”

Many Pagans keep their beliefs secret because they fear losing families or jobs, said Kimberly Varela, a Druid from Wyandotte.

Denessa Smith told The Detroit News that her 12-year-old daughter Tempest killed herself about five years ago in her Lincoln Park home after her classmates teased her about her Wiccan beliefs.

The 40-year-old said people worldwide have sent her letters and gifts. She said she founded the Tempest Smith Foundation to promote religious tolerance.

“I want to make sure I can help make other children safe in this world,” said Smith.

On the Net:

Circle Sanctuary: http://www.circlesanctuary.org

American Religious Identification Survey: http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0922574.html

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Information from: The Detroit News, http://www.detnews.com

Catherine Sanders on Wicca

Wicca has become incredibly popular in the past ten years,” one witch in Salem, Massachusetts, told Catherine Edwards Sanders, author of Wicca’s Charm : Understanding the Spiritual Hunger Behind the Rise of Modern Witchcraft and Pagan Spirituality. In her book, Sanders tries to find out just how big Wicca is (you’ll find them in Salem but also in Topeka), what the attraction is, and what others can learn from them.

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National Review Online

Wiccan fights for religious freedom

DERBY — Make-believe witches may worry most about not getting enough chocolate today. But a real-life witch has her hands full with more pressing matters.

Alicia Folberth, a Wiccan high priestess, has persuaded the state Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities to review her complaint last June that she was fired, ostensibly because of her need for time off to practice her faith.
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Interview with a witch

Four years ago, OnMilwaukee.com posted the first “Interview with a Witch” segment, and because of its popularity, later created two more segments in the series. Now, the three articles are combined and updated with new information to provide a clear and honest glimpse into the life of a Milwaukee witch. Luna is 36 years old, lives in Bay View and works as an artist and hair stylist. Fifteen years ago she was initiated as a High Priestess, and today, is a part of a small coven.
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