In the News
Paganism in Utah
Article in the Deseret Morning News - June 30th, 2007
Misperceptions, fear cause many
to keep religion secret
By
Devin Felix
Deseret Morning News
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Witchcraft, also known as
Wicca, is one of hundreds of pagan religions followed around
the world. And there are hundreds of Utah pagans.
For some the word "pagan"
might bring to mind images of prehistoric tribal people in
remote village huts. While most pagan traditions are based
in the ancient past, most modern pagans present a much more
familiar picture. They hold jobs at offices or stores or
call centers. They send their children to public schools.
They drive cars rather than broomsticks.
Paganism is an umbrella term that describes a wide variety
of traditions and practices. There are as many
"flavors" of paganism as there are denominations of
Christianity, if not more, says Tara Sudweeks Willgues, also
known as the Rev. Heron. |

Scott G. Winterton, Deseret
Morning News
Tara Sudweeks Willgues, also
known as the Rev. Heron, says there are as many
types of paganism* as there are denominations of
Christianity.
*that's not really what I said! I
did say that there are numerous types of
paganism, just as there are numerous types of
Christianity.
|

Scott G. Winterton, Deseret Morning News
Followers participate in crystal well
ceremony twice a month, at every full moon and new moon.
Wicca, Asatru, Stregheria and Shamanism are all types of paganism,
just as Lutheranism, Methodism and Catholicism are
denominations of Christianity.
Misperceptions and fear cause many pagans to keep
their choice of religion hidden, especially in the
workplace, says Maureen Duffy-Boose, founder and president
of the Covenant of Unitarian Universalist pagans, a national
pagan group.
"Even in our culture in 2007, the normal cultural
response is that pagans are weird," Duffy-Boose said. "I
know people who have lost their children because of this
religion. I know people that have lost jobs. I know one
person who was actually evicted from her apartment."
Prejudice occurs because pagans have been the subject
of "1,000 years of negative propaganda," says Gretchen
Faulk, founder of the Order of Our Lady of Salt, a pagan
group in Salt Lake City.
One woman, who asked not to be identified, says she
lost her job as a public school teacher when it was
discovered she was Wiccan.
But Duffy-Boose and Faulk agree that such conflicts
are rare, and most Utahns are respectful of pagans. When
conflicts do occur, discussion usually leads to
understanding, they say. |
"I feel like Utah is one of the
most tolerant places of religious diversity in the nation,"
Duffy-Boose says. "I believe this has to do with how it was
founded. The people who founded it knew what it was like to
be persecuted."
What draws a person to paganism? The answers are as
diverse as pagans themselves.
Many are attracted to paganism because it is a modern
tradition with roots in the past. Most types of paganism
practiced today are considered neo-paganism, because they're
based on modern understanding of the past, yet they're
adapted to meet the needs of people today, Heron says.
Many pagans describe becoming dissatisfied with the
religions of their youth and feeling an instant connection
to paganism when they discovered it. That was the case with
Kelly Richan, who practices Asatru, a religion based in
Norse traditions. Richan leads Eagle's Kindred, an Asatru
group in Ogden. |

Deseret Morning News archives - Sarah
Ause
Kelly Richan calls upon Frey, Scandinavian god of
harvest, during a September 2006 ritual at Murray
Park.
|
"When I first found the Kindred, I thought, 'I'm home,"'
Richan says. "It was a feeling of roots, a feeling of home.
It made sense of everything I was feeling."
Duffy-Boose said many people seek a religion in which
feminine deity play a significant role, and nearly all pagan
religions honor both gods and goddesses. That desire led
Faulk to create the Order of Our Lady of Salt nearly 12
years ago.
She was raised Christian, but as an adult she lost
interest in the notion of God the Father and was drawn more
and more to the idea of female deity. Eventually she began
to practice Wicca, which emphasizes the importance of both
gods and goddesses.
The Order of Our Lady of Salt holds monthly Goddess
Worship Services that center on a specific goddess from one
of the world's cultures. Faulk and her group have worshipped
figures from Norse, Greek, Roman and Egyptian traditions,
among many others. The
group has also focused on revered female figures who aren't
usually seen as deity, but who "function as goddesses,"
Faulk says. Mary Magdelene, the LDS Mother in Heaven and
even Lady Liberty (the Statue of Liberty) have all been the
subject of worship services.
Another thing that draws people to paganism is the
fact that it doesn't try to dictate what its followers must
believe or how they must behave, Duffy-Boose says. There's
no universally accepted doctrine, and diverse ideas are
welcomed.
Paganism lets its followers do their own "heavy
lifting philosophically," Heron says. There's no
authoritative scripture such as the Bible, so each person
must determine what he or she believes and how best to live
ethically.

Deseret Morning News archives - Sarah
Ause
Apple juice — taking the place of mead — is served
during a pagan ritual at Murray Park in September
2006. Pagans follow a variety of traditions.
Even so, pagans are not completely without
spiritual guidance. For example, Asatru is guided by what it
calls the Nine Noble Virtues, which include courage, truth,
hospitality and discipline. It's up to each person to
determine how to apply those virtues, Richan says.
People are also drawn to paganism who have a "deeply
ecological bent to their spirituality," Duffy-Boose says. To
pagans, a grove of trees or a dirt path is as sacred as any
temple. Nearly all pagans consider it "a sacred duty to
sustain the Earth, to cherish and nourish it, to use our
resources to heal the damage we've done to the planet," she
says.
Heron is the founder and spiritual leader of the
Church of the Sacred Circle, a Wiccan group that meets in a
yurt in her back yard in West Valley, where she leads a
variety of Earth-based services and rituals.
One such ceremony is the crystal well ceremony, which
she leads twice a month, at every full moon and every new
moon. The ceremony is designed to "attune the self to the
Earth," she says, and to "heal and balance."In the candlelit
shelter in her yard, a woman uses a mallet to strike the
side of a deep 2-foot-wide bowl, producing a clear tone. She
then runs the mallet along the bowl's edge, and the tone
grows to a deep drone. Other participants repeat the process
on smaller bowls, producing higher tones, until a chorus of
resonating tones fills the space.
A woman lies face-up on the ground, and Heron begins
to speak as the harmony continues.
"Feel the warm embrace of the great mother," she says.
"Feel yourself putting down roots into the Earth. Feel them
flowing downward like water. They seek the warmth and life
of the Earth."
She continues speaking, urging the woman to release
her tension, to release negative energy and welcome positive
energy. The woman rises and smiles, a man takes her place on
the ground and the ceremony repeats.
Jeremy Appling, who participates in the crystal well
ceremonies, says he does so because of the way it connects
him to the Earth.
"When you observe all the elements, you observe a
really strong peace inside of you," he says.
Every pagan group chooses what rituals carry the most
meaning for them, or they make up rituals of their own.
"It doesn't matter who made it up, or when," Duffy-Boose
says. "It works. It's sacred. It's spiritual. It gives honor
to things that deserve honor. It enlightens people. It
assists people to live better lives." |
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E-mail:
dfelix@desnews.com |
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