|
|
Craft History- The Burning Times
By Rev. Cheryl Sulyma-Masson
Witchcraft has a long eventful history, some
of those events are joyous while others serve to remind us of the consequences
of seeking to live freely. Witchcraft is often called the oldest religion
existent in the West. It is pre-Christian. It is also pre-Judaism, pre-Buddhism,
pre-Islam and pre-Hinduism. Many statements made about Witchcraft are disputed
and judged even by those with no real research or knowledge of their own.
In actuality, it is closer to Native American traditions and the early
Shamanic traditions of many areas. Unlike many of the more modern religions,
those currently referred to as mainstream, Witchcraft is not based on dogma
and scriptures. Witchcraft, the Old Religion, takes its teachings and inspirations
from nature. The Sun, Moon and Stars are looked to for their insights and
information, as well as trees, birds, animals, seasonal cycles and other
vibrational realities.
It is probably important to note here that
Wicca or Witchcraft is not Shamanism, and that Shamanism is not a religion
but rather an ancient mystical practice that uses altered states to contact
Gods, Spirits and other energies from this realm and others. These efforts
were made to bring healing, wholeness and guidance into the life of the
Shaman and his or her tribe. Shamanic practices exist within Witchcraft
and many other religions. The Shamanic view is "that for wholeness all
realms must be incorporated including the mental, physical and spiritual
realms."
Anthropologist Dr. Margaret Murray felt that
she had traced back and saw Witchcraft¹s roots in Paleolithic times
some 25,000 to 30,000 years ago. She felt that it was a fully organized
religion throughout Western Europe. Many recent scholars have disputed
and sought to dismiss her findings with regard to Witchcraft, but few have
disputed or found fault with her opinions regarding the existence of a
religio-magick system.
We can see throughout anthropological research
that early man and woman tended to deify that which they held in awe or
did not understand. This is a process now called animism. Early man and
woman also practiced what we now call sympathetic magick. Sympathetic magick
is the art of showing a deity what one wants or needs by acting out the
symbolism necessary to bring about an understanding of that need or desire.
Tribes gathered to show the deity that food was needed through successful
hunts or that fertility was required within the tribe or animal population.
In this way the act of ritual was born and became a part of the Old Religion
then and now.
The primitive people of those thousands of
years ago were hunters who followed animal herds. Some of those primitive
people were called Shamans. These Shamans were said to be able to attune
themselves with nature and the animals. Early man believed the concept
of a Mother (female) lifegiver and a Father (male) who hunted and protected.
Early man respected animals and their lives that had to be taken for
the tribe's survival. To show this respect, after hunting, the unused parts
and skins were filled with rocks and given to the waters or the womb of
the Great Mother. Their skulls were kept and used for portents and guidance.
During these times, many symbols of the Goddess were carved in stone, and
womb cave openings were honored as symbols of the Mother. Symbols of the
God were also carved on cave walls along with symbols of the animals that
came to sacrifice themselves for the survival of the tribe.
The phases of the Moon were marked, as well
as the Sun's cyclic journey through the sky. As time passed, fishing and
wild food collection became an important part of life. During all this
time the Shamans were working with the energies of the times and as villages
grew from settling tribes, the people combined their energies and efforts
for the good of the clan. In this we see what probably represented the
first covens.
These groups continued working with the energies
of the land. Working more and more to attune with the areas they had settled
in. Learning the ways of planting and growing crops. Marking the seasonal
wheel and watching the signs of the earth and sky, planet and star, animal
and plant became magickal sciences. As these magical sciences became more
understood they could be more easily worked with and further studied.
During this time other cultures, more organized
and Warrior based were coming into power. Sometimes these Warrior clans
would drive the followers of the Old Religion into the hills and mountains
where they became known as the Faeries, the Sidhe or spirit people. In
some cases the Goddess of the Old Religion would be married to the invading
clans Gods within newly created mythology. The Celts, like others, adopted
many of the Goddess features and incorporated them into the incoming Druidic
Mysteries. Through this intermingling and marriage the "faerie blood" was
implanted into the new conquerors.
When Christianity first arrived there was
no real change. The people viewed the Mother/Child/Sacrificial King of
the Christ mythos as simply another version of their own earlier tales.
The mythology of the Goddess cycle with Consort/Mother/Child was often
adjusted by conquering Patriarchies.The Priest of the new Christian Religion
would often work with the Priest of the Old Religion in the celebrating
of seasonal rites. The early groups of the Old Religion (the covens) became
known as the benders and shapers of the subtle forces that they had knowledge
of. They became known as the "Wit", "Witta", "Wicca", "Wicce",or "Vitki",
Irish, Anglo Saxon and Germanic words respectively meaning " to bend or
shape".
During the 12th and 13th century many temples
were built for this new religions' Goddess "Mary." By now Pope Gregory
The Great decided to make an attempt to mass convert to Christianity. He
did this by building new Christian churches over ancient pagan worshiping
sites. He was somewhat successful since the artisans who built the churches
were most often pagans. Because of this many of the churches to this
date can be seen full of Green Men, quarter guardians and pentacles.
At this time the Church began to truly realize
how difficult a rival the Horned God and Fertility Goddess were in their
created battle for followers. The early Old Religion had a much more attractive
P.R. package than the religion of Christianity with all of its restrictions.
Christianity incorporated this information when creating the concept of
a totally evil opponent to their own deity. It was no accident that this
figure resembled the Horned God.
Poetry and the music of the Goddess were still
widespread compensating the peoples need for the Goddess in some manner.
Pope Gregory also instituted the first Papal Bull in 1233. In 1324, an
Irish coven led by Dame Alice Kyteler was tried by the Bishop of Ossory
for worshiping a Non-Christian god. Dame Kyteler was saved because of her
title but the rest of her group were burned for heresy.
During the next centuries' wars, plagues and
crusades advanced over Europe. Joan of Arc lead the armies of France to
victory. She was popularly bruited as a sorceress and originally alleged
a witch, but she was officially condemned as a heretic and was burned at
the stake on May 30, 1431, as a relapsed heretic. This fact indicates the
embryonic stages of Witchcraft accusations, when in 1431 it was much simpler
to secure a conviction for heresy rather than sorcery. Unfortunately within
the century the reverse would be true.
During this time the stability of the Medieval
Church was shaken and the feudal system was breaking down. The Christian
Church was swept by religious revolts that Church felt it could no longer
tolerate. In 1494 The Papal Bull of Innocent the VIII unleashed the inquisition
against the Old Religion. Issued on December 5, 1494, it served as justification
for pitiless persecution. It instituted the of combating the "Devil" and
saving mankind from "his" clutches. (Three earlier Bulls"Sixtus 4th," were
the first to equate sorcery and black magic with heresy, thereby facilitating
the task of the Witch hunters. 1473, 1478 & 1483).
In 1486 the Malleus Maleficarum, "the Hammer
of the Witches," was produced by Dominicans Kramer and Springer, two of
Pope Innocent¹s Inquisitors. This laid the ground work for a reign
of terror that gripped Europe well into the 18th century. All of this indelibly
equated the incorrect definition of the word Witch, created by the Christian
Church, as a reality in the minds of many.
During this period it is estimated that 9
million men, women and children were tortured, some estimate 85% of those
were women and children. They were tortured and killed under this incorrect
and convenient (for the Church) definition. Misogyny (hatred of women)
is evidenced as a strong element in the medieval Christianity. Because
women gave birth they became acutely identified with sexuality, and due
to the views at that time regarding sexuality, they were associated with
evil. The Malleus stated "All Witchcraft stems from carnal lust, which
is in women, insatiable." Anyone could be accused of this concocted evil
and anyone could accuse anyone else, including children. In those days
it was "Guilty until proven innocent."
These so called Witches (per Christian definition)
were held prisoner, stripped, tortured (at the time it was legal), deprived
of sleep, food and much more, all in an effort to obtain a confession to
the act of Witchcraft, as the Church defined it. Even after confessing
to the inquisitors many times, the torture would continue until a full
coven of thirteen names were given. Confessions were all written entirely
by the Inquisitors
to be signed by the prisoners. Occasionally torture would bring a merciful
strangulation before the pyre, but this was not usually the case.
The job of inquisitor became quite profitable since these hunters were
paid for each conviction. Midwives (who were considered threatening to
the patriarchal medical society), up-spoken women, the elderly and any
other possible problem creators for the Church were targeted. Many say
that few who died were actually members of any covens of the Old Religion,
but due to the sheer numbers some may have been. In the
Bishopric of Trier in Germany, in 1585, there were only two villagers
left and only one single female inhabitant after the arrival of the Inquisition.
In 1586 the Archbishop of Treves accused the local Witches of causing
severe weather. After torture and confession one hundred and twenty men
and women were burned to death for interfering with the elements. Those
who could escape did, but those who could not suffered a cruel fate.
By the late 17th century the surviving craft
was well underground. During this underground period Christianity published
much on its version of Witchcraft. When James the Sixth of Scotland became
James the First of Scotland and England in 1603 he brought with him new
versions of his "Demonology". In 1604 he convinced Parliament to pass his
new act changing the emphasis from the Malleficarum to "a pact with the
Devil" type thinking, to heighten the acts against Witches. By the end
of his reign even though his attitude had changed, his act remained in
effect until 1736. It was then replaced in England with an act from George
the Second that stated there was no such thing as Witchcraft and to pretend
to have occult powers was fraud.
Most of the Salem Witch trials were persecuted
under the King James the First statute. On December 14, 1692, the Massachusetts
General Counsel enacted the 1604 bill to give "more particular direction
in the execution of the laws against Witchcraft." It remained Massachusetts
Law until 1695.
In 1692 there were many areas of tension in
New England. Those included political, land related, disease and those
related to religious repression. Because of the strict religious society
of the time with its strict upbringing of children and adherence to the
Bible, it created a very strong societal belief in the Devil and so called
Witchcraft that had already been accepted overseas. Though the Witchcraft
craze abroad was starting to subside (the last execution was in 1685) New
England was heading into its own crazed entanglement with the inaccurate
Christian definition of Witchcraft.
The onset of hysteria in New England was related
to a group of young girls, one of them being the daughter of Rev. Samuel
Parris. Their meetings with a West Indian slave Tituba to do divinations
about future husbands and other things prompted their guilt and anxiety.
When some of the girls started "taking fits", no one could make sense of
the behavior or discover medical causes for the episodes. This led to the
opinion of bewitchment as the cause. Questions started being asked, the
first was always "Who is bothering you ?" As the calls came out for names
the accusations against more vulnerable members in society started. Some
believe it was easier for the girls to name these people and view their
punishment rather than admit to their own lies. Others had explored theories
of an alkaloid type toxin called "ergot", a mold that produces the fits
and other symptoms.
Regardless of the causes the accusations started
to spread. The difference in the New England trials was none of those who
confessed were put to death. Those who denied the accusations and fought
to clear their names were the ones who were hanged. What started with the
vulnerable people in society spread to the more prosperous members in society,
Martha Corey was one of these people. Martha Corey was believed to have
a good position in the church and politics of society, but she was very
outspoken against the Witchcraft Trials. During her trial Sheriff Corwin,
appointed by those who did the hangings, surprised even her when he presented
her husband as a witness. He claimed he could not say his prayers one evening
while they were home. After Martha Coreys' conviction floods of people
from all society were accused. Even Martha's husband Giles did not escape
the trials. He found himself accused and when he refused to speak or present
a plea so that he could be tried, he was pressed to death in the attempt
to get that plea. This was probably done by Giles Corey because he knew
that people who went to court were always found guilty.
These incidents brought about the beginning
of the end of the New England Witchcraft Trials. Soon after the fifty prisoners
still confined to jail were released. It is claimed that one hundred and
fifty people were accused and fifty five were found guilty, but even today
more records are being uncovered and reviewed about the accuracy of those
claims.
Finally in 1711, the General Court declared the use of spectral evidence
unlawful, and reversed twenty-two of the thirty one convictions. It was
not until 1957 that the Commonwealth of Massachusetts reversed the remaining
guilty verdicts finally acknowledging the errors of that time.
During the Witch Trials much misinformation came to the forefront.
Most of the actual Witches had gone underground and most were not very
enthusiastic about volunteering information regarding the real practices
to try to combat the misinformation.
In 1921, Dr. Margaret Murray produced her
book "Witch Cult in Western Europe". In that book she discussed the Pre-Christian
religion of Witchcraft. Though many of her opinions have disputed there
is still important information in her book. In 1931, her second book "God
of the Witches" elaborated on some of her other comments.
In 1949 "High Magicks Aid" by Squire (Gerald
Gardner) was written. It combined Witchcraft and some ceremonial magick
in a fiction book to spread information safely. Finally , in 1951 England
repealed its last Witchcraft Laws and replaced them with the Fraudulent
Mediums Act. This opened the way for two more books by Gardner; "Witchcraft
Today" and "The Meaning of Witchcraft".
Other Witches followed. Raymond Buckland was
initiated in Perth Scotland, and is considered responsible for bringing
Gardnerian Witchcraft to the USA. Sybil Leek and Laurie Cabot brought other
family traditions and European traditions to the forefront in America.
Today there are many well known Witches, some from the more modern traditions,
and others from older traditions, all providing a wide range of choices
for the beginning Witch. Some resent the more public Witches, while others
believe that their involvement has enabled many people who would not otherwise
have known about the Craft, to become involved. Many early Witches have
taken much abuse so that those of us who follow in their path can have
the hope of suffering less.
Today Witchcraft is growing as more and more
people are drawn to reconnect with the Old Ways, and through them, to the
Earth.
|
|
|