I think I may be on this sub-forum considerably more often than I have hitherto been. Goodness knows it can do with an injection
Too true! And unpleasantly so.
It does not help, of course that, unlike on the old Beeb, there are only three pagans, all of different paths, on the entire forum and when posts are made, as Rhi has said, they are usually immediately attacked from all directions, or, if not attacked then certainly and royally taken the piss out of.
Take the usual comments:
"Tree-huggers" - this epithet was coined for the "New-Age" eco-warriors who tried to fight the growing destruction of the landscape by chaining themselves to trees. These were mostly not pagan but a few were and thus were tarred with the same brush.
"Naked dancing" - Gardnerian and Alexandrian Wiccans are required, by their originators Gerald B Gardner and Alex Sanders, to perform their rituals "sky-clad", naked, on the ground that the energy to be raised in the circle was impeded by clothing worn by those raising the energy. This requirement had more to do with the lechery of naturist Gardner than any other reason.
Working sky-clad at 9 or 10 o'clock at night during May, June, July and August might be OK, but the rest of the year it is very hard to concentrate on the raising of energy and focus on the job that that energy is being raised to perform when your personal bits are threatening to turn to ice.
"Orgies" - supposedly held 'in the woods', sometimes called the greenwood wedding, this is a hang-over from the description of a Sabbat (held on the eight points of the Wheel of the Year - Imbolc, February 1st; Spring/Vernal Equinox, March 21rd/23rd; Beltaine (or Beltane), April 30th/May 1st; Summer Solstice, June 21st; Lughnasadh (pronounced Loo-nassa), August 1st; Autumn Equinox, September 21st; Samhain (pronounced Sah-wane), October 31st; and Yule/Winter Solstice, December 21st.) held to mark the Spring Equinox. 'Supposedly' because the only evidence for these orgies comes from the torture obtained confessions during the Burning Times (q v).
"The Burning Times" - a name used to define the time of the major witch-hunts of te 14th to 17th centuries. The name is inappropriate in England as burning was the Catholic Church's punishment for heresy and witches in England, a Protestant country, were prosecuted for
maleficium, causing harm by magic and those convicted were hanged.
NO - modern witchcraft is not a continuation of a craft that has survived since pre-Chritian times. This is a fallacy created by Margaret A Murray and picked up by Gardner when he created Wicca. There is little or no evidence that those persecuted as witches were witches at all, most were entirely innocent, the old women, widows, the senile, the poor, the outcasts, easy targets to be blamed for a village's misfortunes - no-body dared blame the Christian god.
As I think I might have stated previously - not all pagans are witches - I am reasonably sure that neither Rhi nor Horsethorn are witches and I have no intention of asking them and neither would I "out" them if I did - but most witches are pagans.
I hope that this information will help to dispel soem of the misinformation propagated by the Chr . . . , by our detractors.