Pagans come out in full force at week's festival
by Emma Cosgrove
The GW Hatchet
Published: 9/19/2005
Pagan groups across the D.C. area spent the past week celebrating their
different traditions and trying to get the word out about their faith.
A week of events, including worship services, faith discussion sessions, drum
circles, moon rituals and a healing and divination fair, culminated Saturday
with the fifth annual Washington D.C. Pagan Pride Day celebration near Dupont
Circle. Sponsored by the Open Hearth Foundation, a non-profit organization
working to create a pagan community center in the D.C. area, the events
throughout the week brought pagans of different traditions together and educated
the public about the misconceptions surrounding paganism.
Paganism is defined as a group of individual modern faiths that have been
reconstructed from beliefs, deities, symbols, practices and other elements of an
ancient religion. Some of its denominations include Wicca, which has been
compared to witchcraft traditions and is based on the symbols, seasonal days of
celebration, beliefs and deities of ancient Celtic society and Druidism, which
focuses on divination, conversing with the ancestors, and prophesizing the
future.
Sherry Marts, vice chair of the Open Hearth Foundation, said that Pagan Pride
Day gives different denominational groups a chance to share their faith with
others.
"Essentially it's just an opportunity for the different pagan groups in the
area to get together and talk to each other and also the public about what they
do and what their practices are, what kinds of events they hold," she
said.
About 16 tents were set up in a grassy area of Rock Creek Park commonly referred
to as P Street Beach. The tents were manned by representatives from a variety of
Pagan groups from the D.C. area and as far as North Carolina.
The groups sponsoring tents ranged from the traditional denominational groups to
social groups such as Pagan Night Out, an organization that plans monthly social
activities for pagans in the D.C. area.
During the day, rituals were performed by three different pagan groups,
occurring in the morning to open the day, at midday, and at the end of the
day.
Just after the midday ritual, a drumming circle formed. About twelve people
began a sort of "jam session" practicing a tradition with roots more
in pagan culture than religion, according to participants.
"That's one of the things that we're trying to do; to show that we're more
similar than we are different," Eric Eldritch, Pagan Pride Day coordinator,
said.
Attendees also had the opportunity to walk a labyrinth, which is an archetypal
symbol in Paganism similar to a maze that is used as meditative tool. Walking
through the symbol, which was created in a nearby field using birch chips, is
said to be calming.
Organizers of the event were very satisfied and said about one hundred people
came to the event throughout the day and about two hundred to three hundred
attended events during the week.
"It grows every year," Marts said.
Paganism is in fact growing in the United States, according to experts, but the
faith itself is still exceedingly misunderstood.
Dr. Terry Prewitt, professor of anthropology at the University of West Florida
and expert in the anthropology of religion, said that there are a number of
common misconceptions Americans have with Paganism.
"All pagans are 'witches,' that pagans participate in animal sacrifices,
and especially that pagans are involved in demon or devil worship," he
said. "The misconceptions are sometimes wildly fanciful."
Due to the private nature of Pagan practices and the stigma surrounding the
religion, Eric Eldritch, coordinator for Pagan Pride Day, said Pagans had no
real way of getting together and sharing ideas before festivals such as Pagan
Pride began.
"We're trying to provide a professional (angle) to it to bring people
together and strengthen each other by knowing each other," he said.
"In the Christian community they often call it interfaith work. We call it
inter-path work."
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