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(Pagan) News of Note

My semi-regular round-up of articles, essays, and opinions of note for discerning Pagans and Heathens.

A paper in Livingston County, Michigan reports on the closing of a Pagan/Metaphysical shop in downtown Howell. The paper cites a depressed local economy and competition from larger retail and outlet stores as the primary reasons for the shop’s failure, achieving what Christian protesters failed to do eight years ago.

“Wisdom of the Ages has withstood a religious protest against the store’s Wiccan tradition and set up shop in mostly Christian Livingston County, but has fallen victim to Michigan’s struggling economy … The year Wisdom of the Ages opened, two Howell-area churches protested outside the building, praying for the souls of Lindsay and store staff. The Daily Press & Argus and television stations in Detroit, Lansing and Jackson picked up the story. Business spiked as a result, Lindsay recalled. “They wanted us shut down. It was the best thing that could have happened to us,” she recalled.”

The owner, Mona Lindsay, will be opening a smaller shop (called “Moon Magick”) in nearby Hamburg Township, where no doubt rents are cheaper and the chances for success in a struggling economy a bit better.

Student Newspaper The Appalachian explores divination, magick, and Paganism, through the lens of a new class taught by anthropology professor Dr. Gregory G. Reck.

“As an outgrowth of Reck’s anthropological interests, this spring semester he instructs a ‘Magic, Witchcraft, and Religion’ course that strives to understand different theoretical approaches to religious behaviors and beliefs. ‘We use religion and magic as a kind of prism through which we can explore questions of the nature of the human experience,’ Reck said. It is through that prism that such individuals as psychics, tarot card readers, or Pagans regard their world.”

The article also talks to James Crew, an interdisciplinary studies major with a concentration in contemporary Pagan studies, and local tarot card readers Cheryl and Sage.

The American Muslim has posted a petition to appeal the execution in Saudi Arabia of Fawza Falih Mumammad Ali, a woman who has been accused of “witchcraft, recourse to jinn, and slaughter of animals”. Among the signatories are Pagan leaders like Phyllis Curott, Ellen Evert Hopman, and Selena Fox.

“Surely it is the wisdom of God who is, as so many of the verses of the Qur’an teach, much-forgiving, a dispenser of grace, which must inspire mercy for Fawza Falih, and it is you who embodies that compassion in this realm where the least of humanity most needs your protection. In the name of God, please, halt the execution of Fawza Falih immediately and release her from the Quraiyat Prison.”

You can add your signature, here. The New York-based Human Rights Watch has also written to King Abdullah asking for clemency. I’m still wondering why Abdullah’s good pal George W. Bush hasn’t responded to this controversy.

Executive Pagan points out that two major Druid organizations now have regular podcasts. OBOD’s Druidcast, hosted by Damh the Bard, and Tribeways, the official podcast of the ADF.

“ADF’s very first podcast, Tribeways, was released into the wild on February 19, 2008! You can download the podcast directly from our host, or through iTunes … The February Feast features the following contributions: “Make Offerings, Dammit!” by Rev. Kirk Thomas … “Comparative Mythology – Why Bother?” by Rev. Jenni Hunt … “Trance Meditation” by Archdruid Emeritus Ian Corrigan”

The Tribeways podcast also comes with “liner notes”, featuring notes and transcripts from the show.

In a final note, last week was Pantheacon, one of the largest indoor Pagan-themed conventions in America, and reports, pictures, and videos have been trickling in from the event. Cherry Hill Seminary has photos and commentary, Deborah Oak discusses embracing paradox at Pantheacon, Chas Clifton shares the news of who won the Llewellyn and BBI Media co-sponsored Pagan fiction contest, T. Thorn Coyle discusses the magic of possibility, and M. Macha NightMare leads us to some videos of the WOW Besom Brigade.

That is all I have for now, have a great day!

2 responses so far

  • Anonymous

    “I’m still wondering why Abdullah’s good pal George W. Bush hasn’t responded to this controversy.”President Bush and King Abdullah are not on good terms these days, personally or policy-wise. That has been the case for about 2 or 3 years now. The King even backed out of a dinner planned for last year that was to held in the King’s honor. It was a very public sign that the friendship was over.

  • http://patheos.com/blogs/wildhunt/2009/03/a-few-quick-notes-2.html The Wild Hunt » A Few Quick Notes

    [...] a final note, last year I reported on a Pagan shop that survived Christian protests only to be done in by the local economy. Now the Daily Press and Argus reports that the owner has [...]