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Witching Hour In America

By LENORE SKENAZY
April 25, 2007

Praise the Goddess and pass the magical candle — the Federal Department of Veterans Affairs has finally recognized the Wicca religion.

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You've heard of the Wiccans, right? They're the group perhaps 700,000 strong in this country who sometimes call themselves witches — but sometimes don't. They believe in the power of the seasons, the Goddess of the earth, and the United States of America, which some of them even died for. Until Monday, however, none of these vets were allowed to be officially buried under the Wiccan symbol, the pentacle — a five-pointed star inside a circle.

After a 10-year fight, the VA finally relented, agreeing to add the pentacle to its list of 38 other approved religious symbols, including an atom for atheists.

Leaving aside the question of why a country founded on religious freedom would even make a list of "approved religions" (what are we, China?), how did this breakthrough finally come to pass?

Simple, Wiccan High Priestess (and Bronx shopkeeper) Lady Rhea said: Magic.

"There have been thousands of spells done" to make the VA come around, the Lady R, reached at the Magickal Realms botanica on Webster Avenue, said. "Everyone's been doing a lot of magical operations to get them to agree that we have our constitutional rights."

The fruits of these spells could not have come at a more propitious moment, as this weekend is Beltane, one of the two highest holidays in the Wiccan religion (the other being Samhain, a.k.a. Halloween).

Beltane in the Park, an event taking place this Saturday at the Central Park dairy, has already received 300 RSVPs, according to its organizer, a Brooklyn Wiccan named Starr.

"It's supposed to be on the eve of May, but we're doing it on Saturday because of everyone's work schedule," Starr said. Activities include dancing ‘round the Maypole — an age-old fertility rite (think: pole) — and a purifying ritual called "jumping the cauldron." Traditionally, one jumps over a cauldron brimming with fire, Starr said. For safety purposes, "We're using a plastic cauldron."

There will be incense inside it.

There will be a line to jump it.

"Wicca has exploded in the last 10 to 15 years," the author of the Goddess classic "Drawing Down the Moon," Margo Adler, said. "There's even a military pagan network." And yet she sounds a little wistful remembering the religion's earlier, struggling days.

"When I got involved about 35 years ago, you went to the library to find out about groups," Ms. Adler said. You were lucky if there was one near you. "Now you can go on witchvox.com and if you're Irish you can find a Celtic group, or an Italian one with a strega background." At big Wiccan shindigs there's often a "teen tent" (where the kids probably talk about how square their parents are). Pagan Pride events are popping up all over. And Alcoholic Wiccans can join a Pagan AA.

Wicca is the next yoga.

For all that, the religion is still widely distrusted, in good part because many confuse it with devil worship — something Wiccans never practiced, except in B-movies. To fight such disinformation, Laurie Cabot formed the witchcraft equivalent of the Anti-Defamation League.

"We have an organization here in Salem called the Witches Public Awareness League," Ms. Cabot said. She is the Official Witch of Salem — thus proclaimed by Governor Dukakis. As the founder of the WPAL, she campaigns for Wiccan civil rights. In particular, she hopes to raise awareness of the prejudice that still meets many Wiccans in the courtroom, where judges have decided custody suits against them because of their religion.

Unfortunately, there is still no spell against prejudice that has proved 100% effective. But Brooklyn's Starr has concocted one potion that is almost as sought after.

"I have an incense and oil to try to get rid of parking tickets," she said. "It worked a little bit. I got a couple less tickets."

Share that with the world and Wiccans will not only be tolerated, they will be worshipped.


Reader comments on this article

TitleByDate

Respect for Pagans Long Overdue [170 words]

Jennifer 

Aug 20, 2007 00:09

why wicca vs god! [68 words]

Kara 

May 16, 2007 11:28

Praise the Goddess [94 words]

Ashley 

Apr 27, 2007 22:48

  Ashley [64 words]

alteredbeat 

Apr 28, 2007 18:49

Something to be proud of! [255 words]

Harbor 

Apr 26, 2007 12:40

  Wiccans verses God [337 words]

Phillip Gaskins 

May 4, 2007 17:29

Response: Wiccans vs. God by Phillip Gaskins [176 words]

Shawnee 

Apr 26, 2007 10:19

  Wiccans verses God [170 words]

Phillip Gaskins 

May 4, 2007 18:06

A brief on belief [65 words]

Dale Netherton 

Apr 26, 2007 08:49

Wiccans verses God [159 words]

Phillip Gaskins 

Apr 25, 2007 23:23

  Response [135 words]

l Mallia 

Apr 30, 2007 10:14

  Wiccans verses God [203 words]

Phillip Gaskins 

Apr 30, 2007 23:02

  God vs ??? [143 words]

Gryphonelder 

May 1, 2007 21:47

  Wiccans verses God [233 words]

Phillip Gaskins 

May 3, 2007 23:50

  Wiccans vs ??? [243 words]

Gryphonelder 

May 4, 2007 07:00

  Wiccans verses God [366 words]

Phillip Gaskins 

May 4, 2007 16:43

  Why vs anything? [516 words]

Gryphonelder 

May 5, 2007 14:01

  Wiccans verses God [858 words]

Phillip Gaskins 

May 9, 2007 17:04

the pentacle/pentagram is everywhere [154 words]

trinitymoonchild 

Apr 25, 2007 22:41

Ten years of work and finally legal pressure [549 words]

Charlayne Elizabeth Denney 

Apr 25, 2007 17:59

In Goddess We Trust Also [50 words]

Kara Highley 

Apr 25, 2007 12:40

It's about time, VA! [371 words]

Cerridwyn Morganne 

Apr 25, 2007 05:22

  The Great Federal Divide. [76 words]

John Kraft 

Apr 25, 2007 15:45

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