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Introduction
Despite competition from twentieth century life in the fast lane, the awesome
spectacle repeated in the pattern of the changing seasons still touches our lives. In the
ages when people worked more closely with nature just to survive, the numinous power of
this pattern had supreme recognition. Rituals and festivals evolved to channel these
transformations for the good of the community toward a good sowing and harvest and
bountiful herds and hunting. One result of this process is our image of the Wheel of
the Year with its eight spokesthe four major agricultural and pastoral
festivals and the four minor solar festivals of the solstices and equinoxes. In common
with many ancient people, many Witches consider the day as beginning at sundown and ending
at sundown the following day. So, for example, Samhain starts at dusk on the 31st, ending
the evening of the 1st.
October 31
November EveSamhainThe night lengthens and we work with the positive
aspects of darkness in the increasing star- and moonlight. Many Craft traditions,
following the ancient Celts, consider this the eve of the New Year (as day begins with
sundown, so the year begins with the first day of Winter). It is one night when the
barriers between the worlds of life and death are uncertain, allowing the ancestors to
walk among the living, welcomed and feasted by their kin, bestowing the Otherworlds
blessings. We may focus within ourselves to look through the glass darkly,
developing our divination and psychic skills.
December 21
Winter SolsticeYuleThe sun is at its nadir, the years longest night.
We internalize and synthesize the outward-directed activities of the previous summer
months. Some covens hold a Festival of Light to commemorate the Goddess as Mother giving
birth to the Sun God. Others celebrate the victory of the Lord of Light over the Lord of
Darkness as the turning point from which the days will lengthen. The name Yule
derives from the Norse word for wheel, and many of our customs (like those of
the Christian holiday) derive from Norse and Celtic Pagan practices (the Yule log, the
tree, the custom of Wassailing, et al).
January 31
February EveImbolc (Oimelc) or BrigidAs the days lengthening becomes
perceptible, many candles are lit to hasten the warming of the earth and emphasize the
reviving of life. Imbolc is from Old Irish, and may mean in the
belly, and Oimelc, ewes milk, as this is the lambing time. It is
the holiday of the Celtic Fire Goddess Brigid, whose threefold nature rules smithcraft,
poetry/inspiration, and healing. Brigids fire is a symbolic transformation offering
healing, visions, and tempering. Februum is a Latin word meaning purificationnaming
the month of cleansing. The thaw releases waters (Brigid is also a goddess of holy wells)
-- all that was hindered is let flow at this season.
March 21
Vernal EquinoxOstaraDay and night are equal as Spring begins to enliven the
environment with new growth and more newborn animals. Many people feel reborn
after the long nights and coldness of winter. The Germanic Goddess Ostara or Eostre
(Goddess of the Dawn), after whom Easter is named, is the tutelary deity of this holiday.
It is she, as herald of the sun, who announces the triumphal return of life to the earth.
Witches in the Greek tradition celebrate the return from Hades of Demeters daughter
Persephone; Witches in the Celtic tradition see in the blossoms the passing of Olwen, in
whose footprints flowers bloom. The enigmatic egg, laid by the regenerating snake or the
heavenly bird, is a powerful symbol of the emergence of life out of apparent death or
absence of life.
April 30
May EveBeltaineAs the weather heats up and the plant world burgeons, an
exuberant mood prevails. Folk dance around the Maypole, emblem of fertility (the name
May comes from a Norse word meaning to shoot out new growth). May
1st was the midpoint of a five-day Roman festival to Flora, Goddess of Flowers. The name
Beltaine means Bels Fires; in Celtic lands, cattle were
driven between bonfires to bless them, and people leaped the fires for luck. The
association in Germany of May Eve with Witches gatherings is a memory of
pre-Christian tradition. Wild water (dew, flowing streams or ocean water) is
collected as a basis for healing drinks and potions for the year to come.
June 21
Summer SolsticeLitha or MidsummerOn this day, the noon of the year and the
longest day, light and life are abundant. We focus outward, experiencing the joys of
plenty, tasting the first fruits of the season. In some traditions the sacred marriage of
the Goddess and God is celebrated (in others, this is attributed to the springtime
holidays). Rhea, the Mountain Mother of Crete, has breathed out all creation. It is also
the festival of the Chinese Goddess of Light, Li.
July 31
August EveLughnasadh or LammasThis festival has two aspects. First, it is
one of the Celtic fire festivals, honoring the Celtic culture-bringer and Solar God Lugh
(Lleu to the Welsh, Lugus to the Gauls). In Ireland, races and games were held in his name
and that of his mother, Tailtiu (these may have been funeral games). The second aspect is
Lammas, the Saxon Feast of Bread, at which the first of the grain harvest is consumed in
ritual loaves. These aspects are not too dissimilar, as the shamanic death and
transformation of Lleu can be compared to that of the Barley God, known from the folksong
John Barleycorn. This time is also sacred to the Greek Goddess of the Moon and
the Hunt, Artemis.
September 21
Autumnal EquinoxMabon or Harvest HomeThis day sees light and dark in
balance again, before the descent to the dark times. A harvest festival is held, thanking
the Goddess for giving us enough sustenance to feed us through the winter. Harvest
festivals of many types still occur today in farming country, and Thanksgiving is an echo
of these.
In this way the Wheel turns, bringing us back to Samhain where we began our cycle. Many
of the festival days coincide with holidays of the Jewish and Christian calendars. This is
no accident; these points in the year were important community celebrations, and were kept
largely intact although they were rededicated to the Christian God or a saint. The names
may have changed, but the old Pagan practices still show through.
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