Showing posts with label pagan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pagan. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Voodoo Violence and Accustions hits Close to Home

 Dolls are just Dolls, right?
The answer is yes and no.  As a girl my mother and I would often make Dolls for fun.  They allowed us to spend time together and help to build the foundation for much of the crafting I do now.  As I have gotten older I have read up on different religions and discovered a much different kind of doll- a Voodoo doll.

While Voodoo, and it's close cousin Hoodoo, use dolls called poppets in many magical ways it is not something that should be frightening.  For example, suppose that you would like to have more money.  You could make a prosperity poppet out of green fabric filled with chamomile, ginger, cinnamon, clover, and a stone such as snowflake obsidian or sodalite.  Sounds kind of interesting?  Most people think so.  Often the misconception that magic and pagan rituals are silly or dangerous is perpetuated through misinformation and not having knowledge or an open mind.

Violence in the Name of Voodoo
On Sunday, October 19th in Ohio, the Martin family blamed Voodoo for their misfortunes.  Patrica was in a car accident, her son was charged with attempted murder, and her grandchild's living conditions are being investigated by the local Child Welfare Services.  All of this because she found voodoo dolls in her yard.  She says that a neighbor (whom she has a longstanding feud with) makes and sells them. While the maker of the dolls denies responsibility, Patricia Martin feels otherwise.

In Bainbridge Georgia on October 9th, a man Bellsouth telephone worker was shot at by Cecil Thornton who believed that voodoo and black magic was placed in front of his house by the worker.

In Pittsfield, Massachusetts Fofana attacked a woman in a grocery store because she believed the other woman was practicing voodoo against her.

Surely it Couldn't Happen Here...
In Nitro, WV on October 17th, Anthony Harrah woke to the sound of gunshots at his home on 3rd Avenue.  The police investigated and discovered Joel Marshall Turley had shot at Harrah's home in self-defense because Harrah was practicing Voodoo and Witchcraft against him.
While the shooter is said to have some mental issues, it is still very disturbing.  For one, I don't remember voodoo ever making the news before unless it was in connection with a business name.  There is some story about a celebrity wanting a voodoo wedding, but you know how it is with celebrity news-best taken with a grain of salt.

The second reason that I find it all so disturbing is Nitro is my backyard.  My children attend the local school.  I shop here.  I live here.  Should I be worried, and more importantly, should you?

We all need to help educate the public on our beliefs.  Just because my church is the woods and my pastor the nature around me does not make me, or anyone who is not of a traditional faith, dangerous. 

Let us hope that these are just isolated incidents that do not continue.  May the God/dess be with you.  Blessings.

Monday, September 13, 2010

The Cost of Being Different

Have You Heard Stories About Religious Intolerance?

Yeah, they are all over the news.

How about when the religion isn't Christianity or Muslim?

Not quite as much, is it?

I think that is because others tend to keep their thoughts on religion and their beliefs secret for fear of ridicule, or worse. This is something that has recently hit home for my family. So, I went looking for anything I could find and most everything was very high profile (military stories), or small posts online because virtually all of the stories are available only on the internet. Here is one of the stories I found that could be traced to print.

Where Religious Intolerance Lives

In Connecticut, Gina Uberti wanted to take time off for Samhain, and approved the time off one year in advance. When a asked why she took off Halloween week by a new regional manager, Gina told her of her religious beliefs, and was fired, according to the Connecticut Law Tribune.

Here is a story that I cannot find in newspapers, only on pagan sites such as witchvox. A school in Detroit, Michigan tries to ban pentacles as part of the dress code because they are afraid of gang activity.

Many other stories that I have found are older, mainly because Wiccans and their children pretty much stay in the broom closet so that they do not feel the sting of harassment...after all, schools hard enough without adding religious harassment to the mix. But what happens when it isn't Wicca, or Buddhism? What happens when it is just the beginnings of finding a religion to call your own?

It Can't Happen To Me,...Right?

It started a couple of weeks ago a friend and I were talking. We'll call her Sarah, because she would rather be unnamed. Here's what happened...

Her daughter "Ann" began asking questions about what religion the family practiced. Sarah and her husband talked about it, and decided what they were going to tell her. However, these were not just random questions as she had a school report due with the topic of "What is important to you?"

Sarah and her husband claimed the general title of "spiritual" , fearing that saying more could influence what Ann believed or lead to teasing at school if she told her friends. So only the basics of what they believed were divulged "There is something out there, that we are all part of nature and part of a higher power, and that you need morals and values to keep you on the right path."

It was after talking to her parents, her friends, and some parents of her friends that she decided she was agnostic. She believes in a higher power, and though she doesn't follow the bible, she understands why others do. She also wrote that she didn't think that other religions were wrong, but that there was just too much information for her to decide right now. She also believes that whatever religion others choose to follow is a good thing as long as it feels right to them.

After getting her paper back, she told Sarah why she had asked about religion and showed her the paper. She received a B and thought that was the end of it. Sarah was proud see her take all this information, and draw her own ideas and beliefs from it because it showed independent thought. Little did she know what it would cost her.

The Cost Of Being Different

On Monday, the entire class was asked to stand up and read their reports. She wasn't nervous about her topic, just nervous about reading aloud, never suspecting what would follow. During her oral report her classmates started interrupting her and asking if she worshiped the devil, and things of that nature. By the end of the day just about everyone in her school heard about her report. For the next four days she was harassed in the hallways, being told that she was going to hell, and that she must be a Satan-worshiper if she didn't go to church on Sundays. Not once during those four days did anyone say anything to the other children. Sarah didn't know about the harassment until another parent spoke to her about it.

After Ann told her parents everything( including how she didn't want to go back to school because of the harassment), Sarah spoke to the teacher about her concerns and wanted to know what could be done. The teacher decided to have a talk with the class over the harassment. What was interesting, is after he lectured on being nice to others, and how one person's religion should never be ridiculed, he said (as Ann quotes it) "acting like that just isn't very christian of you." While, if the large majority of the children were christian (which they probably are), at least one of them obviously wasn't, and it really made Ann uncomfortable.

Though the lecture didn't help much, it did help some, though now the ridicule mostly goes on outside the hearing range of the teachers. What hurts her the most is the fact that she is made fun of and belittled by some of the people she believed to be friends.

No matter a persons religion, or lack thereof, it is not a reason to ostracize or belittle them. Everyone should be free to hold their own beliefs without fear of what might be said or done. Sarah has tried her best to see that the ridicule stops but as the teachers don't hear it,...it doesn't happen.

I have waited until now to post this story because Ann has just started high school. Sarah's husband was offered a job in another county and he took it so Ann could start over in a new school. After moving , she became less depressed and her grades are looking better than they were.