Guest Post: Patrick McCollum in India

[The following story was sent to us by the Patrick McCollum Foundation. It brings us highlights of Patrick McCollum's current sojourn through India, part of his larger ongoing interfaith and World Peace work. Patrick McCollum has been working as a Pagan chaplain and activist for well over twenty years. He was one of the founding members of the Lady Liberty League, and has been involved in numerous legal struggles involving modern Pagans. You can read more about Patrick's accomplishment's, here.]

Rev. Patrick McCollum traveled to India this month as a part of his international interfaith and World Peace work. Patrick, who works openly as a Pagan elder in these areas, works diligently to forge international alliances in the hope of building a better world. In the last five years, he has created significant alliances between Hindus, Buddhists, and Native Americans, in addition to creating friendships with numerous influential people.

This month, At the invitation of His Highness, Jyotendrasinhji Vikramsinhji Sahib, Maharaja of Gondal, Patrick had the esteemed honor of being invited to participate in the facilitation of the ancient ritual of Maha Shivarati, inside the renouned sacred Bhavnath Temple at Junagadh in the Ghia Forrest. It is estimated by the Gujarat Police that over a Million pilgrims flocked to the site to be blessed by the ritual, creating an undulating mass of worshipers far beyond what the eye could see.

Patrick McCollum receives the first blessing in preparation to enter the temple.

Patrick McCollum receives the first blessing in preparation to enter the temple.

“Everywhere you looked there were people as far as you could see as our car and its advance security team pushed its way like an icebreaker through the pulsing crowd. We were the only two vehicles allowed to travel within the last ten mile radius of the temple and there was a surreal quality as the sheer weight of the people became overwhelming.”

Upon reaching the temple grounds, Patrick, His Highness the Maharaja, Her Highness the Maharani, and the Viscountess Windsor of the British Royal Family, exited the car, and made their way to a small patio while the temple space was prepared. Women are not allowed in the ceremony, so the Countess and Maharani were seated comfortably and Patrick and His Highness were escorted forward into the temple.

The Maharaja, Patrick McCollum, Viscountess Windsor-Clive, and the Maharani waiting at temple entrance.

The Maharaja, Patrick McCollum, Viscountess Windsor-Clive, and the Maharani waiting at temple entrance.

The inner temple which is dedicated to the god Shiva, the Lord of the Dance, was only large enough for Patrick and the King and the other seven Sacred Priests, making nine Priests total. In the center, polished by millennia of pouring Ghee and other sacred sacraments over it, stands a time-worn dark stone Lignin under the protective gaze of a multiple-headed silver cobra.

Chanting filled the air, as vessels filled with milk and herbs were emptied over the ultimate male symbol. Sadhu’s, India’s recluse jungle priests, decended from their secret mountain abodes, naked and covered in ash for the sacred event.

A view of the Sivaratri ritual.

A view of the Sivaratri ritual.

“It is not possible to the explain the intensity and sacredness of the ritual,” Patrick shared. “it is beyond description. It is so ancient and holy that all I can say is that as a Pagan Priest, I am incredibly humbled and cannot imagine that anything I could possibly do in the future will even come close. Just imagine performing a ritual with over a million people surrounding you, each focusing all of their energy and attention on the tiny cubical you’re standing in. The sheer power of their prayers creating a wave of power so concentrated that you could cut it with a knife. This is the stuff of legend.”

But Maha Shivarati was not the only legendary event in store for Rev. McCollum while in India. The following day, Patrick attended as a VIP guest at a Royal Wedding at the Palace Wankaner in the state of Gujurat, joined by Lady Windsor-Clive of the British Royal family. The wedding, joining two Royal families, was hosted by HH the Maharana and HH the Maharani of Wankaner, to celebrate the coming together of their son, Prince Yuvraj Kesri Dev Sinh & Princess Rajkumari Yogini Kumari
of Sirohi.

“We arrived at the gates of the Palace and it was like a fairy tale.” Patrick said. “The Palace was huge with towers and parapets silhouetting the night sky, and it was entirely lit up with colored lights. A canopied red carpet adorned with thousands of flowers guided us a quarter of a mile through courtyards to the reception. We were then greeted by a troop of performing turbaned sword dancers in white as the colorfully turbaned Prince & veiled Princess sat on a wonderfully decorated Dias. We sat right up front with full view of all of the festivities, and there were colorfully and exotically dressed Maharajas, political figures, and nobility everywhere. It was like a scene from the Arabian Nights!

Following ceremony, we were whisked away through carved stone hallways and secluded gardens. We continued past the rear of the Palace to a huge circular tent made of colorful strips of cloth for a small private dinner. I had the opportunity to meet a number of important people including the Chief Minister.

After it was all over, our car picked us up and transported us back to our Palace in Gondal, to a long and fully appreciated sleep.”

After leaving Gondal, Patrick traveled on to Varanasi, considered the oldest surviving city in the world, and perhaps the most sacred in India. In Varanasi, Patrick entered the River Ganges in ceremony. Following that, he had the privilege of being invited by the Presiding Priest of Lord Shiva (to whom the city is dedicated) to have his work blessed during the revered Aarti ritual on the banks of Ganges.

“As the water enveloped me, I came to understand the sacredness of this place. I could feel the bones of those who were recently put to rest under my feet and between my toes, and the silt that had washed down from the mountains slid past like thick syrup carrying the memory of all it had seen. I’d heard Crocodiles patrolled the waters speeding up the decay process as I watched the cremation fires only yards away, like a conveyor belt of celebration and sadness, and I realized that this is the very vortex between life and death, an Axis Mundi if you will. Everything eventually ends up in the river, and everything emerges from it. On my third time down under, the river spoke to me, and I will never be the same.”

On February 26th, Patrick spoke at the International Conference on Spiritual Paradigm for Surmounting Global Management Crisis at the School of Management Sciences, Varanasi, sharing a Pagan perspective toward resolving the Global crisis.

Patrick speaking at the International Conference on Spiritual Paradigm for Surmounting Global Management Crisis.

Patrick speaking at the International Conference on Spiritual Paradigm for Surmounting Global Management Crisis.

Patrick also met with several world renowned Swamis at their Ashrams, and had detailed discussions with them on spirituality and on creating alliances between Pagans and Hindus.

Patrick will finish his tour of India, visiting several more Ashrams and speaking at the World Council of Elders of Ancient Traditions & Cultures in Haridwar.

Patrick makes the local papers!

Patrick makes the local papers!

“My journey has not only been one of making important alliances and gaining respect for our Pagan traditions, it has also been a deep spiritual journey for me personally. I hope I can share what I’ve learned with my community when I return, and that I have opened doorways that will make it easier for others to follow.”

[I'd like to thank Patrick McCollum, and the Patrick McCollum Foundation for sending us this update. Patrick's increasing role as an international interfaith diplomat for modern Pagans is both exciting and heartening. I hope that the bridges being built in India between Hindus and modern Pagans continue to strengthen and grow. You can read all of my coverage regarding Patrick McCollum's work, here.]

Top Ten Pagan Stories of 2011 (Part Two)

[You can read part one of this entry, here.]

05. Dominionism! The Reponse! Christians Behaving Badly! I don’t revel in writing about extremism and anti-Pagan fervor within the politically and culturally dominant Christian religion(s), much preferring to instead highlight achievements and challenges within our interconnected communities. Still, even the most temperate of commentator would have to agree that this was the year when some ugly elements within Christianity inched ever closer to the mainstream, and, for a time, received some much-needed scrutiny from the mainstream press. There were three main and intertwining narratives, the Christian religious phenomenon known as Dominionism, the continuing emergence of the New Apostolic Reformation, and the embrace of these elements by mainstream politicians.

“What [Pastor] Thomas [Muthee] was probably doing, and he and I are friends also, what he was probably doing was speculating that there would be some people who practiced witchcraft and other forms of the occult who would try and take Sarah Palin down through certain rituals or curses or other techniques that witches have and try to destroy her through those things. And I think Thomas was praying a shield of protection around Sarah so that she would not be affected by them.” - C. Peter Wagner, one of key architects and Apostles of the New Apostolic Reformation movement, on NPR’s Fresh Air.

Fred Clark at Slacktivist pointed out that Dominionism has been a serious concern within conservative Christian circles for some time now, but many Christian commentators chose to frame questions about it as conspiracy theory  or anti-Christian paranoia by leftist/liberal elements. Meanwhile, for many Pagans, the New Apostolic Reformation’s spiritual warfare techniques started hitting too close to home, spurring a counter-campaign to preserve religious liberty and diversity. A serious discussion of these issues that goes beyond denial and alarmism is clearly needed, especially since we are at a point where serious presidential candidate have clear and definable ties to figures within these movements. As I’ve pointed out before, paying lip-service to extreme elements may seem politically expedient, but it can have serious repercussions once a candidate has taken power. I fear the “Religious Right” is becoming something very different from what people understand, and I hope that these controversies in 2011 were but passing storms and not a harbinger of what is to come.

04. Patrick McCollum, The Ninth Circuit, and the Future of Pagan Chaplaincy: At the end of 2010 I said that the struggles of Pagan activist and chaplain Patrick McCollum “represented and defined the public face of Paganism” and that there’s “every indication the 2011 will see even more from this tireless advocate for Pagan rights.” 2011 did indeed see much more from McCollum, as his legal challenge to the State of California’s “five faiths” policy saw a serious setback when the 9th Circuit Court upheld a lower court decision stating he doesn’t have standing to challenge California’s discriminatory “five faiths” policy. This policy limits the hiring of paid chaplains to Protestant, Catholic, Jewish, Muslim, and Native American adherents and is part of what McCollum has called an “endemic” level of religious discrimination against minority faiths in our prison system. Ultimately, McCollum decided to not appeal this ruling, and is instead working to shepherd new cases through the court system.

Patrick McCollum on the cover of Witches & Pagans.

Patrick McCollum on the cover of Witches & Pagans.

“I’m currently in a place where if an inmate brought a case, my case could go forward [...] I saw this coming down the pike, and so I have helped inmates bring forward cases that meet the criteria to make it so my case is viable and valid [...] I’ve managed to keep those cases under the radar and the first of those cases his the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals last week. [...] If the court rules that those inmates who are on that case do have a right to a chaplain then I can walk right back into the court and forget the ruling made by the 9th Circuit or anybody else.”

These battles are vital, as the basic question of equal treatment for Pagans and other minority religions lies at its center. Access to chaplains, to religious guidance and instruction, should be a fundamental right and the human cost when that right is denied can be greater that some would imagine. The rights of prisoners are a canary in the coalmine of our society, what we imagine is acceptable to deny them eventually become acceptable to deny others. Precedents are won and lost behind bars, and McCollum has worked tirelessly to ensure that minority religions have access to chaplaincy. I have no doubt that 2012 will see even more reverberations from this story, and from the larger battle over access to chaplains.

03. Candidate Gary Johnson and the Pagan Media: On October 16th a live Google+ video interview/”hangout” with GOP Presidential candidate Gov. Gary Johnson and members of the Pagan media was held. Pagan media organizations participating in the Q&A with the former New Mexico Governor included Cara Schulz of PNC-Minnesota, Star Foster of Patheos.com, Devin Hunter of ModernWitch Podcast, David Salisbury of PNC-Washinton DC, Crystal Blanton of PNC-Bay Area, and myself. In addition,Ramesh Rao of the Hindu American Foundation also took part. It was, as far as I can tell, the first time any serious presidential candidate agreed to speak with Pagan media representatives, and Johnson’s willingness to reach out to us ended up making headlines in the political-minded press (and snarked about at WonketteNew York Magazine, and Gawker).

The former New Mexico governor spoke with members of the Pagan Newswire Collective, ModernWitch Podcast and Patheos.com, among others. He said it was important to reach out to voters that fall outside the Christian, Jewish and Muslim faiths, and slammed his own party for being too beholden to the Christian right. “I think the world looks down on Republicans for their socially conservative views, which includes religion in government,” Johnson said. “I think that should not play a role in any of this. When Republicans talk about values — you know what? I bet you and I have the same values.”

In an editorial at The Washington Post I tried to contextualize the importance of this event, noting that alienating religious minorities is not a good long-term strategy for any political party, and that modern Pagans have real, serious, concerns that should be addressed by our political system. Since that press conference, Johnson has indicated that he’ll try to run as a Libertarian in 2012, noting that obstacles his candidacy has faced within the current Republican Party. Johnson’s chances to win the presidency of the United States are slim, but his willingness to reach out to Pagans, whatever the motivations were, opens a door to our faiths being taken seriously within the context of American politics.

02. Occupy Paganism: Time Magazine named “The Protester” as its Person of the Year, including in that archetype the growing and ever-evolving Occupy movement that started with Occupy Wall Street in New York. The movement, centered on issues of economic justice, has gripped the news as Occupy camps were (sometimes violently) removed by police, and Occupiers “mic checked” various events and political figures. Several modern Pagans have involved themselves with the Occupy movement, including noted figures like Starhawk, who noted with amazement how the organizing ethos she’s long preached suddenly sprung forward organically to effect massive changes in a matter of months. Former COG First Officer Peter Dybing stood ready to be arrested with Occupiers in Florida, while T. Thorn Coyle noted why so many Pagans seemed to take to Occupy so readily.

Peter Dybing at Occupy Fort Lauderdale

Peter Dybing at Occupy Fort Lauderdale

“Not all Pagans or Magick Workers support the Occupy movement. I would not expect them to. However, I am unsurprised at the large number of us who do. We are used to linking the spiritual with the material, honoring the sacred in the baking bread, the programmed pixels, the words we speak, the trees, the earth, the sky. Some of us find comfort in humanity and some from our Gods. For me, the Occupy movement includes all of this. Also, Occupy is about the spirit of individual people striving to connect with one another, to feed each other, to fight for each other, and to lift each other up.”

Here at The Wild Hunt I’ve tried to document Pagan involvement with the Occupy movement, highlighting Pagan chaplains at Occupy Wall Street, launching a group blog to document Pagan and Heathen voices, and even interjecting with a rare moment of pure editorializing in favor of the movement’s goals. As things progress I think we’ll see more Pagan voices emerge from within the Occupy movement, using the organizational and spiritual technologies taught them by their traditions to effect change. I think this is a unique moment for politics in America, and for modern Pagans who involve themselves with it. I think history is being made, and when it is written, Pagan voices will be a part of that narrative.

01. West Memphis Three Go Free: On August 19th, 2011, the West Memphis 3 (Damien Echols, Jason Baldwin and Jesse Misskelley Jr.) were released from prison on an Alford plea. The West Memphis 3 case is perhaps the most high-profile trial known in which the 1980s Satanic moral panic played a significant role, using Damien Echols interest in the occult and Wicca as proof of his murderous interests. The case was decided with no physical evidence, and a coerced confession from the mentally challenged Misskelley. Jessie Misskelley’s former defense attorney Dan Stidham, in an interview with John Morehead, paints a picture of the Satanic hysteria that surrounded the trial.

“…you really have to put this case into historical perspective. In 1993, the Satanic Bandwagon Folks like Dr. Griffis were mainstream and largely supported by both the media and established religion. We now know better, just like we now know that there are such things as “coerced confessions.” In 1993, virtually everybody believed that the phenomena of Satanic Ritualistic Homicide was very real, and perhaps even more regrettably, that no one, not even a mentally handicapped person, or a child, would confess to a crime that they did not commit. Thankfully, due in large part to pioneers with real credentials like Dr. Gisli Gudjohnson, Dr. Richard Ofshe, and Dr. Richard Leo, we now understand the dynamics of false confessions. By the way, not many people remember that Dr. Ofshe won a Pulitzer Prize for his work studying religious “cults.” He had a dual expertise.”

It’s easy to forget how pervasive anti-Satanic propaganda was back then, with many journalists and talk-show hosts (even Oprah) diving right into the hysteria. The result was thousands of lives ruined, directly or indirectly, by this phenomenon until it finally lost steam and faced a backlash from investigators and skeptical Christians. As a society, we are still dealing with the fallout of “Satanic Ritual Abuse” panic, and sadly, some judges and prosecutors are continuing to engage in the same tactics that convicted the WM3. The freeing of the West Memphis Three presents a vindication of those who have long fought against individuals being prosecuted simply for their outsider beliefs or mannerisms, and a warning that these moral panics can happen in a supposedly rational and free society.

That wraps up my top ten news stories about or affecting modern Paganism in 2011. Thanks for reading, and I hope you’ll join me for another year of sifting through the news and views of interest to our communities. See you in 2012!

Patrick McCollum Not Pursuing Supreme Court Appeal, Shepherding New Rights Cases

Last night on the PagansTonight show special guest Patrick McCollum, a noted chaplain and activist within the Pagan community, announced that he would not be pursuing a Supreme Court appeal to a recent 9th Circuit Court ruling that upheld a lower court decision stating he doesn’t have standing to challenge California’s discriminatory “five faiths” policy. This policy limits the hiring of paid chaplains to Protestant, Catholic, Jewish, Muslim, and Native American adherents.

Patrick McCollum on the cover of Witches & Pagans.

Patrick McCollum on the cover of Witches & Pagans.

“I have decided not to go to the Supreme Court. My primary reason for deciding not to go to the Supreme Court is that there would only be two issues the court would allow us to bring forward out of the whole case. The one issue is not if we [Pagans?] have rights, but do inmates generally have religious rights. So if I went and I lost I would take away the religious rights of every inmate in every correctional institutuion [...] but if I won all I would get is that we had rights, but I would not win our case.”

Instead of going forward in challenging the 9th Circuit Court decision, McCollum has been nurturing new cases brought by Pagan inmates that would also challenge the California chaplaincy policy. According to McCollum, one of those cases is now before the 9th Circuit, with more waiting in the wings if necessary.

“I’m currently in a place where if an inmate brought a case, my case could go forward [...] I saw this coming down the pike, and so I have helped inmates bring forward cases that meet the criteria to make it so my case is viable and valid [...] I’ve managed to keep those cases under the radar and the first of those cases his the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals last week. [...] If the court rules that those inmates who are on that case do have a right to a chaplain then I can walk right back into the court and forget the ruling made by the 9th Circuit or anybody else.”

McCollum also noted that Jones Day, the law firm that has been representing his case, has agreed to not only continue working his case pro bono, but has also committed itself to represent all these other cases that could result in clearing the way for Pagan chaplains (and by extension, other minority faith chaplains). You can listen to the entire PagansTonight interview, here.

I’d like to thank the PagansTonight crew for bringing this vital update to the Pagan community, and Patrick McCollum for his tireless service on this important issue. This seems like a very hopeful move forward from the disappointing 9th Circuit decision. For more background on this case, here are some highlights from my coverage.

In addition, the latest issue of Witches & Pagans (pictured above), available in print or as a digital download, has a nice summary of the case, and an interview with Patrick McCollum regarding it, and his work.

Unleash the Hounds! (Link Roundup)

There are lots of articles and essays of interest to modern Pagans out there, sometimes more than I can write about in-depth in any given week. So The Wild Hunt must unleash the hounds in order to round them all up.

That’s it for now! Feel free to discuss any of these links in the comments, some of these I may expand into longer posts as needed.