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The Spiral Dance - Special 20th Anniversary Edition
A Rebirth of the Ancient Religion of the Goddess, by Starhawk -- extended excerpt.
CHAPTER 1
Witchcraft as Goddess Religion
Between the Worlds
The moon is full. We meet on a hilltop that looks out over the bay. Below
us, lights spread out like a field of jewels, and faraway skyscrapers
pierce the swirling fog like the spires of fairytale towers. The night is
enchanted,
Our candles have been blown out, and our makeshift altar cannot stand up
under the force of the wind, as it sings through the branches of tall
eucalyptus. We hold up our arms and let it hurl against our faces. We are
exhilarated, hair and eyes streaming. The tools are unimportant; we have
all we need to make magic: our bodies, our breath, our voices, each other.
The circle has been cast. The invocations begin:
All-dewy, sky-sailing pregnant moon,
Who shines for all.
Who flows through all...
Aradia, Diana, Cybele, Mah...
Sailor of the last sea,
Guardian of the gate,
Ever-dying, ever-living radiance...
Dionysus, Osiris, Pan, Arthur, Hu...
The moon clears the treetops and shines on the circle. We huddle closer for
warmth. A woman moves into the center of the circle. We begin to chant her
name:
"Diana..."
"Dee-ah-nah..."
"Aaaah..."
The chant builds, spiraling upward. Voices merge into one endlessly
modulated harmony. The circle is enveloped in a cone of light.
Then, in a breath -- silence.
"You are Goddess," we say to Diane, and kiss her as she steps back into the
outer ring. She is smiling.
She remembers who she is.
One by one, we will step into the center of the circle. We will hear our
names chanted, feel the cone rise around us. We will receive the gift, and
remember:
"I am Goddess. You are God, Goddess. All that lives, breathes, loves, sings
in the unending harmony of being is divine. "
In the circle, we will take hands and dance under the moon.
"To disbelieve in witchcraft is the greatest
of all heresies." Malleus Maleficarum
(1486)
On every full moon, rituals such as the one described above take place on
hilltops, on beaches, in open fields, and in ordinary houses. Writers,
teachers, nurses, computer programmers, artists, lawyers, poets, plumbers,
and auto mechanics--women and men from many backgrounds come together to
celebrate the mysteries of the Triple Goddess of birth, love, and death,
and of her Consort, the Hunter, who is Lord of the Dance of life. The
religion they practice is called Witchcraft.
Witchcraft is a word that frightens many people and confuses many others.
In the popular imagination, Witches are ugly, old hags riding broomsticks,
or evil Satanists performing obscene rites. Modern Witches are thought to
be members of a kooky cult, primarily concerned with cursing enemies by
jabbing wax images with pins, and lacking the depth, the dignity, and
seriousness of purpose of a true religion.
But Witchcraft is a religion, perhaps the oldest religion extant in the
West. Its origins go back before Christianity, Judaism, Islam -- before
Buddhism and Hinduism, as well, and it is very different from all the
so-called great religions. The Old Religion, as we call it, is closer in
spirit to Native American traditions or to the shamanism of the Arctic. It
is not based on dogma or a set of beliefs, nor on scriptures or a sacred
book revealed by a great man. Witchcraft takes its teachings from nature,
and reads inspiration in the movements of the sun, moon, and stars, the
flight of birds, the slow growth of trees, and the cycles of the seasons.
According to our legends, Witchcraft began more than thirty-five thousand
years ago, when the temperature of Europe began to drop and the great
sheets of ice crept slowly south in their last advance. Across the rich
tundra, teeming with animal life, small groups of hunters followed the
free-running reindeer and the thundering bison. They were armed with only
the most primitive of weapons, but some among the clans were gifted, could
"call" the herds to a cliffside or a pit, where a few beasts, in willing
sacrifice, would let themselves be trapped. These gifted shamans could
attune themselves to the spirits of the herds, and in so doing they became
aware of the pulsating rhythm that infuses all life, the dance of the
double spiral, of whirling into being, and whirling out again. They did not
phrase this insight intellectually, but in images: the Mother Goddess, the
birthgiver, who brings into existence all life; and the Homed God, hunter
and hunted, who eternally passes through the gates of death that new life
may go on.
Male shamans dressed in skins and horns in identification with the Go and
the herds; but female priestesses presided naked, embodying the fertility
of the Goddess. Life and death were a continuous stream; the dead were
buried as if sleeping in a womb, surrounded by their tools and ornaments,
so that they might awaken to a new life. In the caves of the Alps, skulls
of the great bears were mounted in niches, where they pronounced oracles
that guided the clans to game. In lowland pools, reindeer does, their
bellies filled with stones that embodied the souls of deer, were submerged
in the waters of the Mother's womb, so that victims of the hunt would be
reborn.
In the East -- Siberia and the Ukraine -- the Goddess was Lady of the
Mammoths; She was carved from stone in great swelling curves that embodied
her gifts of abundance. In the West, in the great cave temples of southern
France and Spain, her rites were performed deep in the secret wombs of the
earth, where the great polar forces were painted as bison and horses,
superimposed, emerging from the cave walls like spirits out of a dream.
The spiral dance was seen also in the sky:
in the moon, who monthly dies and is reborn;
in the sun, whose waxing light brings summer's
warmth and whose waning brings the chill of
winter. Records of the moon's passing were
scratched on bone, and the Goddess was shown
holding the bison horn, which is also the
crescent moon.
The foregoing is excerpted from The Spiral Dance - Special 20th Anniversary
Edition by Starhawk. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used
or reproduced without written permission from HarperCollins Publishers, 10
East 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022
Imprint: HarperSanFrancisco; ISBN: 0062516329
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