Do you call it Lammas
or Lughnasadh? (I like Lugh.)
Do you hold it
on a hilltop or by a well?
And at which exact point
between Solstice and Equinox?
How do you gather the grain?
Where do you store it?
Can you tell me what I should do —
not growing my own food,
living in a country
with different spirits,
whose only native God
is our Mother Earth?
What is the way, here,
to turn the Wheel of the Year?
Not being indigenous either,
though lifelong in this land,
born to country
I too claim as mine,
have I not the right (I believe)
to make my own rituals,
even to use some
which echo old traditions?
Will you smile
as, by candle or moon,
I cast a circle of air,
call the directions,
say a prayer of thanks,
break bread and drink wine?
Do you see? There are spirits
unknown, kindly, drawing close.
Sharing with Poets and Storytellers United for Friday Writings #210 Great Combination/Collaboration.
Here's one I wrote a few days ago, not specifically for this prompt – but I think it fits, as it questions how to combine old traditions, based in the Northern Hemisphere, with being an inhabitant of a very different land in the Southern Hemisphere. (The ‘you’ the speaker addresses is not anyone in particular, so much as others in general who follow the Pagan path.)
Here, this Sabbat happens on 1 February, 6 months away from its Northern Hemisphere date, 1 August. As Lammas, it is often associated with the grain goddess, Demeter. Some traditions, calling it Lughnasadh, associate it with Lugh, a figure in Irish mythology, a god of harvests among other things.
Beautiful Rosemarie I especially love the first stanza! I haven't heard of Lammas before. I am reading a lot about Hermeticism an ancient philosophical tradition which is considered pagan. It's fascinating
ReplyDeleteOops the above comment was me
ReplyDeleteMy first teacher / mentor in such things was a Hermetic magician!
DeleteKindly. As long as they are kindly.
ReplyDeleteCasting circle is, among other things, protective. Anything unkindly would not enter.
DeleteInteresting thoughts and questions you raise here Rosemary 👏
ReplyDeleteFor me, given my particular path, there has been a necessity to resolve them.
DeleteI love the sense of belief, dedication and ritual celebrating your place in the world- Jae
ReplyDeleteWell put! Thank you, Jae.
DeleteIt's amazing to know the various rituals of various countries!! It just occured to me with cultural intermingling , ritual intermingling also takes place and goes a long way to give birth to 'combined' rituals.
ReplyDeleteI was thinking more of religious rituals, but they do also seem to be shaped by the country of origin, and the kind of Paganism I follow has a lot to do with seasonal / agricultural festivals originating in the UK.
DeleteHow wonderful it would be if we all embraced our own rituals, without asking (read forcing) others to follow ours or dismissing theirs as inferior (read rubbish)....
ReplyDeleteI do agree!
DeleteIn North America we have, with or without other special rituals, the Feast of Green Corn. It's held whenever people's corn (maize) reaches the edible stage :-)
ReplyDeleteWorth celebrating! And a thankyou to the earth for providing. (I didn't know of it, but I think our forebears all over the world, who lived closer to nature, had similar festivals for similar reasons.)
DeleteCreate your own rituals, by all means! Thanks for the background information
ReplyDeleteon the words I was unfamiliar with.
Thanks for paying such good attention!
Delete