Thursday, 30 September 2010

Of castles, ghosts and a lady in red

Castles are among the most impressive historic monuments one can visit - and they vie with temples, cathedrals and ancient stone circles for being the most symbolic places built by man.

While I was out and about making the most of the glorious autumn equinox weather last week, I visited Bodiam Castle, in East Sussex.

Bodiam Castle is considered to be one of the loveliest castles in the area.

It was built in 1385 as a defensive structure, but also as a fashionable and comfortable home. Although it is now partly in ruins, the exterior is still almost complete and enough of the interior survives to make exploring its towers and turrets exciting.

I went there with my partner on a hot, sunny day. The sky was blue and the castle looked glorious, framed by greenery and with its white ramparts reflected in the dark waters of the moat.

Yet I couldn't help feeling that the castle, however beautiful it might appear, had an uneasy atmosphere. I mentioned it to my partner - who is normally quite skeptical - and he said he also felt there was something unquiet about Bodiam, its deep moat and wooded grounds.

So I did a bit of research.

Like most castles, Bodiam has its ghosts. The most famous, I discovered, is the Red Lady. She has been seen standing on the top of a tower, usually at night under a full moon. Those who have seen her say she seems to be waiting for someone or some thing. She seems to gaze out over the moonlit countryside, her eyes fixed upon some distant point. What or who she seeks, no one knows.

I must admit that after finding out about the Red Lady, I got a bit of a shock when I looked back over the photos I had taken at Bodiam and found I had, indeed, photographed a lady in red. However, I suspect the woman with the crimson gown and besom broom in the picture above is not an apparition, but a costumed guide employed by the National Trust, which owns Bodiam Castle.

According to Haunted Castles of Britain and Ireland,by Richard Jones and John Mason, other ghosts that haunt the castle include a little boy in Victorian clothes who is sometimes seen running across the bridge, only to vanish half way across as though he had fallen into the moat and, presumably, drowned.

The book also states: "Some people passing the ruins at dead of night have reported the distinctive sound of spectral revels emanating from the hollow shell. Others have told of hearing 'strange oaths' and 'foreign-sounding songs'."

But, of course, I was at Bodiam during the day rather than at night and my unease was not necessarily connected to any supernatural experience - it could have been something to do with my own feelings about the history of the area. Sussex is where the Normans under William the Conqueror defeated the English King Harold at the Battle of Hastings on 14 October 1066. Although Bodiam was built several centuries after the Norman Conquest, I do tend to see all Norman-style castles as symbols of a time when the English were a conquered and oppressed people.

And castles are very powerful symbols, which can mean different things depending on how they are depicted. The castle in the story The Royal Surveyorby Kafka is a place of strange foreboding; in Edgar Allan Poe's gothic tale The Fall of the House of Usher,the castle represents death; in Mervyn Peake's visionary The Gormenghast Trilogythe monstrous, maze-like castle represents stifling tradition.

Castles can certainly be symbols of evil and tyranny, but they can also be symbols of safety and all that is good - especially if you are living inside one when threatening forces are without.

They can be the fantastical dwellings of fairy-tale princesses, where knights quest to win their hand from all that would oppose them; they can represent justice, honour and chivalry - the seat of the Round Table and the Knights of King Arthur; they can be every Englishman's home.

Or they can simply be the ruins of bygone times, that might still hold secrets and treasures for us to find.

Perhaps that was why I felt uneasy. Perhaps Bodiam castle still holds a secret - something the Red Lady is trying to show us, or that fell to the bottom of the moat with the body of a little boy who lost his footing a century ago.

Perhaps, one day, someone will seek out those hidden secrets and lay the ghosts of Bodiam Castle to rest.

Bodiam Castle is at Bodiam, near Robertsbridge, East Sussex TN32 5UA. For visiting details, call 01580 830196, email bodiamcastle@nationaltrust.org.uk or see http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-vh/w-visits/w-findaplace/w-bodiamcastle.htm

The standard price for an adult is £5.80. However, the people at the ticket office will automatically charge you the gift aid price of £6.40 unless you specifically ask for a standard price ticket. Other concessions are also available. If you do not pay tax in the UK, or are on a low income, make sure you ask for the ticket you want.

Links
http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-vh/w-visits/w-findaplace/w-bodiamcastle.htm
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2010/07/bad-witch-goes-ghost-hunting.html
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2008/09/ghosts-and-how-to-see-them.html
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2009/08/ghosts-and-grails-of-lewes.html
Haunted Castles of Britain and Ireland
http://www.paranormaldatabase.com/index.htm
http://www.britevents.com/whats-on/sussex/bodiam/halloween-happening-spooky-challenge/101754/
http://www.freewebs.com/castlesoftheworld/castlesleyends.htm
http://www.greatcastles.org/bodiamghost.php
http://www.unclesirbobby.org.uk/dreamessaycastle.php
http://www.morethanagift.com/occasion/housewarming/section/symbols

Wednesday, 29 September 2010

A quest to find The Wishing Face

The little fellow in the photo above is called The Wishing Face. This little goblin-like figure is a carved stone set into a flint wall opposite a church in the village of Rottingdean, Sussex.

According to folklore, if you rub his nose and make a wish it will come true.

I learnt about The Wishing Face from the book Where Witchcraft Lives. This was written in 1962 by Doreen Valiente, who wrote much of the Gardnerian Book of Shadows, and has recently been republished by The Centre for Pagan Studies.

What I particularly like about the book is that it is about the history and surviving practices of witchcraft and magic in Sussex - an area I love and frequently visit.

For me, the book was the perfect reading material while I was on holiday in Sussex last week, and it inspired me to try to find this mysterious magical stone for myself.

Where Witchcraft Lives was written about 50 years ago, so I was a little worried that The Wishing Face would no longer exist, but a little web browsing assured me the little fellow has not been lost.

According to the website for St Margaret's Church, he is set "in the wall which surrounds the garden of The Elms, about twenty feet beyond the little arched door in the wall".

And, indeed, that was where I discovered him although, despite the accurate description, it took a bit of searching to spot that stone among all the other nobbly stones in a very long stone wall.

However, the little goblin has seen a few changes over the years. Doreen's book mentions the date "1306" being inscribed in the cement under him, but that doesn't seem to be there any more. Also, his name seems to have changed from The Wishing Face to The Wishing Stone, and the ritual surrounding the wish making now includes turning around three times after saying what you want.

Deciding to err on the side of caution, I adopted the new custom and turned around three times quickly when making my wish - despite the strange glances this earned me from passers-by.

I suspect Where Witchcraft Lives will travel to Sussex with me whenever I return there, and I will search for more of the places it mentions to see how they have changed since the book was written. I do love a magical quest.

Links
http://www.stmargaret.org.uk/index.php?link=13
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2010/09/charge-of-goddess-conference-2010.html
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2010/07/where-witchcraft-lives-book-launch.html
http://centre-for-pagan-studies.com/?p=2573
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2009/08/ghosts-and-grails-of-lewes.html
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2009/09/day-for-doreen-valiente.html

Tuesday, 28 September 2010

Sacred mounds and burial grounds

One of the places I visited while I was in Sussex last week was the church of St Peter and St Paul in Hellingly.

I was intrigued by a description of it in a tourist information leaflet, which said the church was built on a raised circular Saxon burial ground called a cric.

According to the leaflet: "The circular form of the burial ground is believed to represent the Celtic symbol of immortality and was raised above ground to keep the dead dry."

It was a beautiful day when I visited. The sun was out, the sky was blue and I had the churchyard all to myself to soak up the atmosphere - which was beautifully peaceful.

After walking the bounds of the cric, I went inside the church - which, unfortunately, was considerably less peaceful as a woman wearing bright yellow pyjamas and a pair of Crocswas noisily vacuuming the nave.

I guess the dust needed to be kept in its rightful place, but it wasn't really conducive to quiet contemplation so I left and sat outside on a bench in the sunlight to whisper a few words in honour of the ancient dead who rested there.

If you are thinking of visiting the area, Hellingly is on the Cuckoo Trail, a lovely walk on the site of a closed railway line through the Sussex countryside.


Links
http://www.wealden.gov.uk/tourism_leisure_culture/Leisure/Cuckoo%20Trail.pdf

Monday, 27 September 2010

Pagan events in and near London

Here are highlights of this week's pagan events in and near London. To find out about future events, click on the events link at the top of the page.

Monday, 27 September; New Therapy with Bach Flowers – Healing On A Deep Level. Talk by Hildegard Maier at pagan forum Secret Chiefs (note this is on Tuesday due to the Monday being a Bank Holiday). Venue: Devereux public house, 20 Devereux Court, off Essex Street, London WC2R 3JJ. Meet from 7.30pm, event starts at 8.30pm. Admission £2. http://secretchiefslondon.wordpress.com/

Monday 27 September; Riding the Dragon - Shamanism, Creativity and Art. Talk by Eva Weaver at Equilibrium Complementary Health Clinic, 16 Station Road, Lewes BN17 2DB from 7pm-8.45pm. Cost: £5 each on the door. For more info email: evaweaver@talk21.com, call 07757747027 or visit www.wildwing.co.uk

Wednesday, 29 September; John Cowper Powys. Talk by Chris Thomas at The Moot with No Name, upstairs at the Devereux Public House, 20 Devereux Court, off Essex Street, The Strand, London WC2R 3JJ. Price £3/£5. Time 7.30pm. http://www.theatlantisbookshopevents.com/page2.htm

Thursday 30 September; Interview with a Witch: Chris Crowley in Conversation
with Christina Oakley Harrington at Treadwell's, 34 Tavistock Street, Covent Garden, London. Price: £7: Time: 7.15pm for 7.30 start. For more details call 020 7240 8906 or email info@treadwells-london.com

Saturday, 2 October; The London Faerie Ball. Venue: Elixir Bar, Camden, London. Tickets cost £20. For more details call 07845438340 or visit the website http://www.thefairyball.co.uk/

Saturday, 2 October; The 2010 Dion Fortune Conference: Magic and Mysticism. Talks by Bob Gilbert, Geraldine Beskin, Marian Green and Naomi Ozaniec. Venue: The Southville Centre, Beauley Rd, Bristol, BS23 1QZ. Time: 10am - 5pm. Tickets £30 including lunch. For more details or to make paypal payment for tickets, email naomi.ozaniec@gmail.com

Saturday, 2 October; Rhiannon, Mare of Sovereignty. Final workshop in a series of four, called Pwyll, Rhiannon and the Spirits of the Land, by Deertracks. The workshops take place in Harrow & Wealdstone, which is just north of London, 15 minutes by train from Euston. For more information, and to book tickets, visit http://www.firetree.net/wheel/Deertracks/Workshops/rhiannon.html

If you know of any pagan events and want them listed on A Bad Witch's Blog, email me at badwitch1234@gmail.com or leave a comment below.
Please note: I try to keep my events page accurate, but if you do spot any errors, please let me know by leaving a comment.

Saturday, 25 September 2010

Brighton and Hove Faerie Fayre

Today, rather on the spur of the moment, I decided to go to the Brighton and Hove Faerie Fayre at Hove Town Hall, just outside Brighton, in East Sussex.

I'm really glad I went because I had a lovely time, although perhaps I should have gone tomorrow instead because on Sunday the Hove Centre is also hosting a mind, body and spirit festival. If you are in the area, I'd recommend popping in to have a look.

The Brighton and Hove Faerie Fayre is on 25 and 26 September at Hove Town Hall, Norton Road, Hove, East Sussex, BN3 4AH. There is a big car park just over the road. Tickets are £2 and there is lots to do with entertainment, stalls and workshops. The event runs from 11am - 6pm daily. For more details visit http://www.thefairyball.co.uk/

The picture shows two photogenic people at the Faerie Fayre who didn't mind posing while I took a photo.

Help save City Lit

City Lit is one of London's foremost adult education colleges and some of its courses are of particular interest to pagans. Over the years it has run classes in folklore and mythology, shamanism, crystal healing and much more.

However, the college is under threat.

The Government is currently making sweeping spending cuts and is not convinced about the value of adult education. As a result, there is a very real risk that colleges such as City Lit will face a massive and disproportionate reduction in Government funding.

At present nearly half City Lit's income comes from the Government - major reductions will jeopardise its whole future and certainly would result in very large fee increases.

If you want to save City Lit, and preserve your opportunity to enrol on some great courses there, please help the college by writing to your local MP. The college website has an example letter created by the college with some hints about other things you could say, although the more personal you make it the more impact it is likely to have. Please write in the next couple of days if it is to have any impact on decisions.

You can find your local MP by following the following link: http://findyourmp.parliament.uk/

You can view the full story, download the draft letter and find other information on the City Lit website http://www.citylit.ac.uk/news/article/112

Links

Friday, 24 September 2010

More pagan news...

Russia's witches face advert ban
Witches, faith healers and other spellcasters in Russia are to be banned from advertising. This is due to concerns that they are giving false hope to sufferers of illnesses such as cancer.
Links:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/8018643/Russias-witches-and-wizards-face-ad-ban-to-protect-cancer-victims.html
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/breaking-news/witches-wizards-banned-from-russian-ads/story-e6frf7jx-1225928555405

Lord Mayor to visit pagan conference
Leeds's Lord Mayor, Coun Jim McKenna and his wife Andrea are intending to visit the Pagan Federation North East's annual conference this Saturday. Jim McKenna was quick to point out that he is not a pagan and has never attended a pagan event before. If you want to go, the conference takes place this Saturday, 25 September, from 10am to 10pm at Blackburn Hall, Rothwell, Leeds LS26 0AW.
Links:
http://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/news/Lord-Mayor-of-Leeds-goes.6540742.jp
http://www.paganfedne.org/conferences/leeds2010.html

Pagan obituary
Influential American pagan Candace H Lehrman White, also known as Lady Sintana, has died at the age of 73. You can read a moving obituary for her at:
http://www.ajc.com/news/candace-h-lehrman-white-619109.html

Old news...

I've been away since last weekend and I managed to miss the biggest news week for pagans and witches in a long time.

While I was in Sussex out and about enjoying some glorious autumn weather, celebrating the equinox and not paying much attention to the news, the story broke that American Republican Senate candidate for Delaware, Christine O'Donnell, claimed to have dabbled in witchcraft.

Apparently she said: “One of my first dates with a witch was on a Satanic altar. We went to a movie and then had a little midnight picnic on a satanic altar.”

When asked further about this, she had replied: “How many of you didn’t hang out with questionable folks in high school?”

The comments, understandably, angered witches, wiccans and pagans. Wiccans and most modern witches are not Satanists, they are nature worshippers and honour the pagan gods and goddesses of the Earth and the heavens. They do not worship Satan, who is the devil in Christian mythology. They also don't like to be called "questionable".

However, this is old news for a far better reason than the fact that I was a few days late writing about it, as Christine O'Donnell's original comment was made about a decade ago.

Nevertheless, this has prompted considerable debate in the press and on the internet and some of the comments made are very interesting. So, just in case you have missed the news like me, here are some links so you can read the reports yourself.

(Oh and if you were wondering how I was blogging while I was away, I'd better confess that I wrote most of them before I went. My main access to the internet for the past few days has been a rather slow connection on my mobile phone.)

Here are some of the reports
http://newshawksreview.com/christine-o%E2%80%99donnell-disparaging-witches-warlocks-and-karl-rove/1571/
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2010/sep/22/divine-dispatches-religion-roundup
http://www.worldnewsheardnow.com/o%E2%80%99donnell-%E2%80%98dabbled%E2%80%99-in-witchcraft-but-was-it-really-witchcraft/2952/
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-20017026-503544.html?tag=mncol
http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenumbers/2010/09/of-pagans-and-politics.html
http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2010/09/22/gop-candidates-witchcraft-dabbling-worries-wiccan/

Pagan Eye: Autumn Berries

For this Pagan Eye post, here is a picture of some ripe berries I saw while on an autumnal country walk. This autumn, the trees and bushes seem to be far more laden than usual with fruit, berries and nuts - which according to folklore could mean we will have a harsh winter ahead of us.

On each Pagan Eye post, I show a photo that I find interesting, with a few words about it. I'm not quite sure what I'll be including - it could be a seasonal image, a pagan site, an event, or just a pretty picture.

If you want to send me a photo for a Pagan Eye post, please email it to badwitch1234@gmail.com Let me know what the photo shows and whether you want your name mentioned or not. For copyright reasons, the photo must be one you have taken yourself and you must confirm that you are submitting it for A Bad Witch's Blog.

Previous Pagan Eye post:
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2010/08/pagan-eye-beautiful-moon-iii_24.html

Thursday, 23 September 2010

Review: London's Ley Lines: Pathways of Enlightenment

When I went to see Align, a performance about London's ley lines and psychogeography, I was handed a card advertising a new book called London's Ley Lines: Pathways of Enlightenmentby Christopher Street.

Chris Street is a well known author when it comes to books about London's mysteries, legends and sacred geography. His books Earthstars: Geometric Groundplan Underlying London's Ancient Sacred Sites and Its Significance for the New Ageand London's Camelot and the Secrets of the Grailare on the recommended reading list if you do the course on London Mythology at City Lit. So, his new publication was one I had to get.

Having just finished reading it, I would definitely recommended it to anyone who is intrigued by ley lines or who is looking for an alternative London tour guide covering its pagan past and sacred sites - and a very good way to explore them.

Ley lines are straight lines that can be seen to run through sacred sites and important geographical features. They were first described by travelling businessman Alfred Watkins in 1925 and he considered them to be ancient trackways. Since then, a theory has developed that ley lines are a power grid for the forces of creation and that is why so many churches and ancient sites of spiritual significance, such as holy wells and megaliths, lie along them.

Alfred Watkins mentioned four London leys in his book The Old Straight Track,although others have since been discovered. London's Ley Lines covers these leys and many more that can be found in the capital and nearby countryside.

Chris Street's book is also a practical guide for those wanting to walk these leys and explore the sites along them. Illustrated with plenty of photos, there are details of ancient stones that have been incorporated into churches, unusual architectural features and the best places to sit to meditate or soak up the atmosphere of the place.

There are suggestions for good times of year to walk each ley, as some seem to line up closely with the solstices or equinoxes. And, perhaps most importantly, London's Ley Lines offers ideas on how to do a ley pilgrimage, because ley lines are better understood through experience than through reading even the best book on the subject.

You can simply walk the line and be aware of your thoughts, feelings and the sensations as you do so. If you want to do more, you can take advantage of the ceremonial words offered in a chapter at the end of the book. You could say simple blessings at each sacred site along the way, or do a meditation to visualise the energy of the earth and the universe flowing through the world, and through yourself, via the great network of ley lines.

I must admit that the book has inspired me to “get out into the real world” to try walking a London ley myself. When I do so, I'll definitely take London's Ley Lines as my guide book – and I'll write about the experience on A Bad Witch's Blog

London's Ley Lines: Pathways of Enlightenment is available from Amazon and from Earthstars Publishing. For more details visit http://www.earthstars.co.uk/ or email starman144@hotmail.com

Links
http://www.earthstars.co.uk/
London's Ley Lines: Pathways of Enlightenment
Earthstars: Geometric Groundplan Underlying London's Ancient Sacred Sites and Its Significance for the New Age
London's Camelot and the Secrets of the Grail
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2009/09/mystical-legendary-london-in-day.html
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2010/08/review-aligh.html
The Old Straight Track

Wednesday, 22 September 2010

Words for the Autumn Equinox


Autumn Equinox

We stand at the equinox,
In the midst of autumn.
Dark and light are in balance,
Day and night are of equal length.
Summer lies behind us and winter before us;
It is time to take stock of our year's harvest,
To celebrate and give thanks for what we have reaped;
And to weigh up what we will need for harsh times to come.
A time of joy and sadness in equal measure
Of golden memories, sweet as ripe fruit plucked from the orchard
And silver tears, bitter as the tang of fallen leaves on frost-rimed earth.
A moment to cherish,
Like the last dance at the end of the party;
Like the last kiss before saying farewell.

Words by The Bad Witch, Mabon 2010

Tuesday, 21 September 2010

The Chiding Stone - a pagan mystery

If you are looking for somewhere to go for a lovely day out this autumn, I would recommend going to see the Chiding Stone, in Kent, near Chiddingstone – a picturesque village owned by the National Trust.

The Chiding Stone is a large sandstone boulder on the edge of a field, and has a bit of a pagan mystery attached to it in the form of local legends about its history.

Although the stone is natural, it clearly has great local importance that may date back to ancient pagan times and folk tales say it was once used by druids as an altar or place where judgements were made. Another popular story is that in medieval times, nagging wives, wrongdoers or witches were brought to the stone to be chided as punishment by an assembly of villagers. It is also said to be an old Saxon boundary marker.

There is no strong evidence to support or disprove any of these theories, but the tales are intriguing. The Chiding Stone clearly holds a sense of importance to people even today, as it is covered with graffiti inscribed by those who felt they wanted to make their mark, declare undying love or simply state that they were there.

Now, I am not a fan of people putting graffiti on important spiritual sites or ancient monuments and if every visitor carves their name in the soft sandstone of the Chiding Stone it will soon be worn away to nothing. So please, if you go there, do not damage it.

Nevertheless, I have to say that when I visited the site in the summer, I felt that the messages people had left on the Chiding Stone seemed sincere rather than wanton vandalism, and had not destroyed the atmosphere of the place quite yet.

There are also some lovely country walks in the area. A couple of books with good ones include: Kent (AA 50 Walks Series)and The Rough Guide to Walks in London and Southeast England.

If the weather turns cold or wet I can recommend the local pub, The Castle Inn, in Chiddingstone, which you might recognise because it has appeared in films and TV dramas including A Room with a View and Wind in the Willows. It isn’t the cheapest pub you might find, but the food and beer are very good.

Chiddingstone Castle, on the edge of the village, is also well worth visiting and has some interesting collections of Japanese and Egyptian artifacts.

The photos were all taken by myself, The Bad Witch. I have no idea who the children in the picture are, or the woman in the shadows, but they gave me permission to photograph them.

Links:
http://www.roughwood.net/PostcardAlbum/Kent/Chiddingstone/ChiddingstoneChidingStone.htm
http://www.themobilefoodguide.com/select/info17107.php
http://hubpages.com/hub/Legendary-rocks
http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=18438
http://www.sussexweald.org/B10.asp?BookId=kcA1043&v=0&xid=&xnm=1
http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-global/w-localtoyou/w-south_east/w-south_east-countryside/w-south_east-places-north_kent/w-south_east-places-north_kent-chidding.htm
http://www.aboutbritain.com/towns/chiddingstone.asp
Kent (AA 50 Walks Series)
The Rough Guide to Walks in London and Southeast England.

Monday, 20 September 2010

Pagan events in and near London

Here are highlights of this week's pagan events in and near London. To find out about future events, click on the events link at the top of the page.

Monday 20 September; Croydon Crows. PF moot held every 3rd Monday of each month at the Skylark pub, South End, South Croydon from 8pm onwards.

Wednesday, 22 September; Talk at The Moot with No Name, upstairs at the Devereux Public House, 20 Devereux Court, off Essex Street, The Strand, London WC2R 3JJ. Price £3/£5. Time 7.30pm. http://www.theatlantisbookshopevents.com/page2.htm

Thursday 23 September; The Druid Order Autumn Equinox Ceremony at the top of Primrose Hill, London NW3 at 1pm. Free event.

Thursday 23 September; Autumn Equinox Open Ritual by Herns Tribe with Pagan Federation London. Venue: Conway Hall, Red Lion Square, Holborn. Time: 7.30pm for 8pm start. Event ends at 10pm. Entrance: £5. Just turn up, no need to book in advance, but bring seasonal food and drink to share.

Thursday 23 September; Traditional Witchcraft: With Special attention to the 1734 Tradition. Talk by Stuart Inman at Treadwell's, 34 Tavistock Street, Covent Garden, London. Price: £7: Time: 7.15pm for 7.30 start. For more details call 020 7240 8906 or email info@treadwells-london.com

Friday, 24 September; Demonstration of Mediumship and Self Portraits by June-Elleni Laine and Angela Watkins at The College of Psychic Studies 16 Queensberry Place, London SW7 2EB. Time: 7pm - 8.30pm. Cost: £5/£8. Advance booking essential. Tel: 020 - 7589 3292. http://www.collegeofpsychicstudies.co.uk/index.html

Friday, 24 September, Faerie Ball in Hove, East Sussex, with music from The Dolmen, Rigantona and Tribal Unity. Doors open 7.30pm for 8pm start. Tickets cost £20. To book call 07845 438340 or visit http://www.thefairyball.co.uk/

25 & 26 September; Brighton and Hove Faerie Event at The Hove Centre, Hove, East Sussex. Free entry and lots to do with entertainment, stalls and workshops. Times: 11am - 6pm daily. For more details: http://www.thefairyball.co.uk/

Saturday, 25 September; Working with Crystals. One-day introductory crystal workshop at City Lit, Keeley Street, Covent Garden, London. The fee is £48. To enrol or for more details, call 020 7492 2622 or visit the City Lit website at http://www.citylit.ac.uk/

Saturday, 25 September; Open Ritual for Mabon at Avebury stone circle. The Cauldron of Cerridwen will be holding an open ritual to celebrate the Autumn Equinox at Avebury, in Wiltshire, at noon. All are welcome, including families. For more details, email: sian_ap_pysgotwr@yahoo.co.uk or call 07746365980.

Saturday, 25 September; Hell Fire Caves International Gathering. Venue: The Hell Fire Caves, West Wycombe, Buckinghamshire. Itinerary: 10am walk around the hill and Dashwood memorial; 11am gather at the cafe at the entrance to The Hell Fire Caves; 12.30pm guided tour of the caves by a Steward of The Club; 1pm official guest ceremony; 1.30pm journey down to the Inner Temple; 2pm chapter meetings of the Hellfire Club; 2.30pm leave the caves; 3pm onwards drinks and social gathering at a nearby pub. The event is free but there is a normal £5 entrance fee to the caves, reduced to £4 for members of the Hell Fire Club. For more details, email: mailto:HellFireStratford%40gmail.com

Sunday 26 September; the Gorsedd of Bards of Caer Abiril is holding an Autumn Equinox open ritual at the stone circle at Avebury, in Wiltshire. Meet at noon beside the cafe before heading to the stone circle for the ritual, which will go on until about 4pm. All are welcome, but please bring offerings of music, poetry, bread, mead and cakes.

If you know of any pagan events and want them listed on A Bad Witch's Blog, email me at badwitch1234@gmail.com or leave a comment below.

Please note: I try to keep my events page accurate, but if you do spot any errors, please let me know by leaving a comment.

Saturday, 18 September 2010

News: Witchy adverts cause controversy

Canadian witch faces fraud charges
A man in Canada who advertised his magical services is being charged with fraud because according to Section 365 of the Criminal Code of Canada, it is illegal to "pretend " to practice witchcraft.
Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/297576#ixzz0zmgbFanj


Witch's broom advert causes controversy
When a downsizer advertised a second-hand besom broom for sale as "witch's broom", they received complaints about the accuracy of the description.
You can read the full story at:
http://www.tampabay.com/features/humaninterest/witchs-broom-in-classified-ads-bring-spooky-calls/1121680

Pirate radio sends out adverts to Nessy
Paranormal researcher Kevin Carlyon says he intends to creating his own "pirate radio" to use music to summon an appearance of the Loch Ness Monster.
You can read the full story at: http://www.highland-news.co.uk/news/fullstory.php/aid/8093/Rock_Ness_Monster%21.html

Friday, 17 September 2010

Charge of the Goddess Conference 2010

If Gerald Gardner, the father of modern Wicca, had been around at London’s Conway Hall last Sunday, I think he would have been proud.

Not just because an entire conference was put on to honour his life; he would also have been proud at the strength of the religious movement he founded, nearly 50 years after his death.

Wiccans and witches from all over the world attended The Charge of the Goddess Conference 2010 – Celebrating the Life and Work of Gerald Brosseau Gardner (1884-1964). Many were highly-respected members of the Craft. There were those who have championed paganism through organisations such as The Pagan Federation, authors of books on Wicca and witchcraft and those who have run covens since the early days and trained most of those now in the Craft.

Yet I think everyone learnt something new at The Day for Gerald, as the conference had been nicknamed, because of the quality of the talks.

Philip Heselton

The first speaker was Philip Heselton, an expert on Gerald Gardner who has written several books about him including Gerald Gardner and the Cauldron of Inspirationand Wiccan Roots: Gerald Gardner and the Modern Witchcraft Revival.His latest book, Witchfather, which is due out later this year, formed the basis of his illustrated talk, entitled The Life of Gerald Gardner.

Philip covered Gerald’s early life in a family of wealthy Liverpool timber importers, being sent abroad for much of his childhood because of ill health and as a result getting no formal education. Gerald remained abroad for much of his adult life, working in Ceylon and Borneo on plantations and later in Malaya as a customs official overseeing opium shops. In those places he took an interest in local customs and got invited to religious ceremonies, which he called “seances”.

Gerald retired at 52 and returned to England, moving to a town near the New Forest. There, he met occult and spiritual groups via a Rosicrucian theatre and underwent an initiation into what he described as a surviving witch cult called “the Wica”.

He persuaded the witches to let him write about their practices, first as fiction in the novel High Magic's Aidunder the pen name Scire. Later, he wrote Witchcraft Today,the first non-fiction book by a self-proclaimed witch.

In the remaining 15 years of his life, Gerald worked tirelessly to expand and publicise the religion. Sometimes his efforts backfired, as with a scurrilous newspaper report in the News of the World. Yet, despite these setbacks, more and more people were attracted to the Craft before and after his death in 1964.

Professor Ronald Hutton

After Philip covered the facts of Gerald’s life, Professor Ronald Hutton, author of Stations of the Sunand The Triumph of the Moon,examined Gerald’s influence and legacy in a talk called Who was Gerald Gardner and Why Does He Matter?

He described Gerald as being a kindly and well-liked man, who was hard working and diligent in his job before he retired, then after he retired was even harder working in following his dream of keeping the religion of Wicca alive.

Gerald was, perhaps, a bit of a trickster in creating some falsehoods to describe the history of witchcraft, but was absolutely genuine in his devotion to the Craft and the witches within it. He inspired great affection from those who knew him – even his detractors.

His legacy is an important religion for the new age, with its focus on feminism, environmentalism and self expression.

Professor Hutton said: “He ensured Wicca was put on the map and it doesn’t matter if it was old or new.”

Interview with a witch

As much as I enjoyed the first two talks, the highlight of the day for me was a conversation with Lois Bourne, a high priestess in Gerald Gardner’s Bricket Wood coven.

Although Lois has written several books on witchcraft, including Witch Amongst Us,Dancing with Witchesand Spells to Change Your Life,she rarely appears in public.

Conference MC Brian Botham interviewed Lois about her life and beliefs, and she came across as a fascinating person, a strong character and a powerful witch. Yet she insisted witchcraft was only a small part of her life.

“I’m a witch, so what?” she said. “I lead a very private life and have a lot of interests.”

Lois runs a coven in Hertfordshire, but calls herself a Magistra rather than a high priestess, a term that comes from an old tradition of witchcraft.

After Gerald died, Lois trained with fellow covener Monique Wilson, who claimed lineage from a hereditary family of witches going back at least 200 years.

Lois said: “Witchcraft has always existed. It existed before Gerald and it still goes on... Wicca is a sanitised version for the public.”

She was also scathing about modern witches, saying that few had any real ability.

Despite her harsh words, I could only feel admiration for this woman who emanated power and authority, and whose strong belief in witchcraft could not be doubted.

Points to the panel

The next high point of the conference for me was the panel discussion, in which Zachary Cox, Prudence Jones, Rufus Harrington, Vivianne Crowley, Julia Philips and Morgana answered questions from the audience.

Several questions were about the future of witchcraft. One potential threat to our future that was highlighted was how increased health and safety regulations might possibly affect our rites, such as concerns over fire risks from candles or bonfires.

Another point made was that the 2011 census might be the last census for a long while to ask questions about religion. To be taken seriously as a group, we should all make sure we list ourselves as “pagan” rather than Wiccan, witch or druid. If enough people are officially counted as following pagan spiritual paths, then the government will have to give us more consideration.

The best of the rest

If I wrote about all the great things that happened at the Day for Gerald, this post would go on forever. There were plenty of other fascinating talks, film clips of Gerald Gardner and the official launch of Where Witchcraft Lives, a new edition of Doreen Valiente’s most famous book that was previously long out of print.

However, one thing that I always enjoy at pagan conferences is meeting up with old friends and making new ones. I do so love being part of the wonderful family that is Wicca, and sharing such good times with my brothers and sisters in the Craft.

The photos show (from top to bottom): Gerald Gardner's Book of Shadow, which was on show at the conference; Professor Ronald Hutton talking on the stage; a scourge used by Gerald Gardner's original coven; one of Gerald's athames; a chalice used by Gerald Gardner and Doreen Valiente

Links:
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2010/07/where-witchcraft-lives-book-launch.html
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2008/11/witchfest-international-2008.html
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2009/09/day-for-doreen-valiente.html
http://www.badwitch.co.uk/2010/09/day-for-gerald.html
Gerald Gardner and the Cauldron of Inspiration: An Investigation into the Sources of Gardnerian Witchcraft
Wiccan Roots: Gerald Gardner and the Modern Witchcraft Revival
Stations of the Sun: A History of the Ritual Year in Britain
The Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft
Witch Amongst Us
Dancing with Witches
Spells to Change Your Life: Magic Matters (Little Book Matters)
High Magic's Aid
Witchcraft Today