A Pagan Response to Katrina

Similar documents
Yom Kippur 5768 May this fast be the one that will make a difference!

enews from Ministerial and Member Services Issue 292 August 31, 2017

Summer of Peace 2013 Global Attunement for Peace 2 (Sep. 21)

WGUMC March 1, 2015 Genesis 9:8-17 "Rainbows" The Chumash Indians of Southern California tell a story

Where is God in the midst of the storm?

Compassion in Crisis

Good morning this message may sound like a Sociology lesson, it s about Givers and

Sermon for Easter 2 Year B 2015 Before and After, Doubt and Faith

She argues that for hundreds of years the questions that people asked were: Who is God? What must I do to be a good person or be saved?

Mr. President, His Excellency and other heads of delegations, Good Morning/Good afternoon.

Were The Poor Of New Orleans Murdered?

Study Guide BACKGROUND INFORMATION

wild human meditations on the sacred art of becoming real Written by Marni Sclaroff

Seeing God s Will for Life Embedded in Creation: Studies in Mark

Healing the Healers. Richenel Ansano

Easter 2014 Readings and Sermon Rev. Tracey Robinson-Harris Practice Resurrection April 20, 2014

Florida diocese moving from prayer to action in wake of Hurricane Michael

Practicing Resurrection SWWAUC Annual Meeting. Matthew

Education for a Sustainable Planet

For The Love of God For the Love of the World

They're obviously faltering!!!

Weekly Session One: DISASTER AND HUNGER (Luke 13:31-34) Devotion from Bishop Gordy, bishop for the Southeastern Synod of the ELCA.

The Great Mother by Rev. Don Garrett Delivered May 13, 2012 The Unitarian Universalist Church of the Lehigh Valley

Cosmic Walk Prayer in Response to Pope Francis Global Day of Prayer for Our Common Home

Being the Church in a Post-Katrina World New Orleans Area Prayer Pilgrimage February, 2007

DISASTERS AND THE LOCAL CHURCH

THE WIDOW AND THE PROPHET

Shamanism: A Practice for Healing and Guidance

Newsletter BIBLICAL INSIGHTS FOR TODAY S MANAGERS

LISTEN A MINUTE.com. Natural Disasters.

THE EARTH IS CALLING ARE YOU LISTENING? By Chief Geronimo With a Message from The Pleiadian Emissaries of Light

QUAKES AND FLOODS. Earthquakes are caused when tension is released from the rocks in the earth s

Sweet grass Teachings

Natural Disasters: Why Doesn t God Stop Them? How Should We Respond?

Hey! Are you ready to do an Angel card reading together? Make sure you have your cards

Seeds: Where it all begins Sermon text: Psalm 8 University United Methodist Church, Fort Worth

Three Perspectives. System: Building a Justice System Rooted in Healing By Shari Silberstein

This blessing has been polishing oiling the hinges, sweeping the steps, lighting candles in the windows.

In the Midst of the Storm

When Waters Rise Isaiah August 28, 2016 Pentecost +15C Rev. Elizabeth Mangham Lott St. Charles Ave. Baptist Church

Giving Catalog

Awakening Feminine. the new. Spirit. Meditation

HOW DOES DANCING, MEDITATING, RITUAL OR AFFIRMATION EMPOWER ME?

The Story Parable of the Unmerciful Servant We are looking at some of the parables of Jesus as part of our series this year. I looked back and I

Rabbi Lisa Edwards. Erev Rosh Hashanah 5766/2005. October 3, Beth Chayim Chadashim, Los Angeles. Katrina, or Change

RMM Tracker Inventories

Chapter 1. VortexHealing Divine Energy Healing

The New Orleans Religious Community Responds to Katrina and its Aftermath

46 OSHUN WEA. She brings the sweet waters of life to the earth and promotes the air of consciousness in beauty, culture and divination.

SCIENTIFIC THEORIES ABOUT THE ORIGINS OF THE WORLD AND HUMANITY

pray us WITH 28 DAYS OF PRAYER

IMMERSION. Welcome to the Waters. A mikvah is a Jewish ritual bath in which people choose to immerse for a variety of reasons.

Full Speed Ahead. Celebration Church s Response to Disaster. Rose Fienman

CONTACT: Donald Lehr The Nolan/Lehr Group FOR RELEASE: (212) / mob +1 (917) Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Storm Survivors! Jonah 1:1-16 July 2, 2017

MC: Thirawer, would you describe your background in terms of family and community and when you grew up.

24 June 2018 LSUMC The Beginning of the Good News Mark 3-5; Hebrews 2:10-18

First Presbyterian Church of Kissimmee, Florida Dr. Frank Allen, Pastor 3/30/08

2011 Sara Wiseman. All rights reserved; not for reproduction or distribution.

Rev. Cindy Worthington-Berry UCCB September 14, 2014 It Must Be Said. Let us pray...

LIVING A LIFE FREE FROM FEAR

Some chants have MP3 recordings. View this chant book at beltania.org to click the links and hear the recordings.

Spirituality Without God

Community. Glorify God. Encourage One Another. Share Jesus. United Methodist Church. the newsletter of. All Things Considered.

ANOTHER DAY IN THE WAR ZONE

Hope you enjoyed this article and any ideas or thoughts are very much encouraged, me at

Global issues. the arms trade child labour disease endangered species famine global warming war. homelessness pollution poverty racism terrorism

Designing for Humanity Episode 4: A professional catastrophizer brings creativity to crises, with Gabby Almon

The Stories We Tell of War and Peace Rev. Susan Frederick-Gray May 29, 2016

THE WOUND IN THE WATER. Libretto by: EUAN TAIT.

Core Energy Healing A revolutionary, multidimensional way of healing. With Rosemary Dan

Social Justice Sunday Liturgy Notes

Compassion in Healing Loving what Ails Us (with a little help from Mary)

Do you know this way? It is the way of attunement. It is the way of being one with the way of things.

Proverbs 1:20-33 September 13, 2015 SUFFERING FOOLS

Long Green Valley Church of the Brethren Long Green and Kanes Rds., near Glen Arm, MD January 1, 2017

Tomorrow, I will go back to Kigali. How worthless it had been to send me to Rwanda I start wondering if my boss had wanted to get rid of me

Lenten Novena for Protectors of Mother Earth March 1-9, 2017

And this week, peace between Israel and Gaza hangs by a thread, in such an incredibly complex battle for home.

Robert W. Courtney II 1

READ ONLINE PRINT

Have the Conversation Ecclesiastes 3:1-8 John 13: 1, 33-36, and 14:1-3, 19-21

RH 2018 Day 1 Hineni Showing Up for the World We Need Rabbi Alan Flam. Hineni chant Here I am.

falling into Grace Boulder, Colorado

This question comes up most often from middle-aged and older people in congregations, and it tends to be voiced when they have new grandchildren.

The Modern Day Priestess Credo

Overshadowed by the Holy Spirit. Brendan Mc Crossan

SID: Wait a second. Her parents are not believers. Tell me, between you and me, did they think you were a little meshuga, nuts?

Now in 2030 we live in a country which we have remade. Vision Statement

The Existence of God

How To Create Your Altar Checklist

ENTRAINMENT AND THE SCIENCE OF ENERGY HEALING

The Tempest is Raging! The Rev. Dr. Katherine L. Ward

Nineteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Who is My Neighbour?

What s Going On? Rev. Ken Read-Brown First Parish in Hingham (Old Ship Church) Unitarian Universalist September 18, 2016

GLOBAL CONCERNS LORD, YOU HAVE MADE SO MANY THINGS! HOW WISELY YOU MADE THEM ALL! THE EARTH IS FILLED WITH YOUR CREATURES (PSALM 104:24)

- Why is Biodiversity Conservation essential for the future of Humanity?

30 Days of Prayer for. Clean Water

Isaiah Lives! -- The Challenge of Yom Kippur

Transcription:

A Pagan Response to Katrina Sept. 14, 2005 By Starhawk As Pagans, as worshippers of nature, how do we respond to an event like Hurricane Katrina, one of the most destructive natural disasters in the history of the United States? What does it mean to worship something that, with one breath, can wipe out a major city? Do we see this as punishment, retribution for some Pagan sin? As an object lesson in the reality of climate change and global warming? As an overheated Goddess batting away some of the oil rigs contributing to her fever? Of course, no one can speak for all Pagans. There is no overall Council of Pagan Thealogy to hand down an official dogma. But here is my own answer, as a priestess, teacher, writer, activist and thealogian. Pagan religions are not punishment systems. We don t worship Gods of retribution, but a Goddess or Gods and Goddesses-- of mystery, in many aspects. The Goddess has immense power, both creative and destructive: the power that pushes a root out from a tiny seed and sends its shoot reaching for the sky, the power of the earthquake and the volcano, the rain that feeds the crops and the hurricane. We respond to that power with awe, wonder, amazement and gratitude, not fear. The great powers of nature have an intelligence, a consciousness, albeit different in magnitude and kind from our own. Everything in nature is alive and speaking: the deep, crystalline intelligence of the rock heart of the planet, the fungal threads that link the roots of trees into the nerve-net of the forests, the chattering birds and the biochemistry of plants and mushrooms are all communicating. Our spiritual practice, the practice of magic, is about opening our eyes, ears and hearts to be able to hear, understand, and communicate back. And those powers want us to communicate with them. The Goddess is not omnipotent she is co-creative with human beings. She needs human help to create fertility and regeneration. The elements, the ancestors, the spirit beings that surround us want to work with us to protect and heal the earth, but they need our invitation. Nature is also human nature. Our human intelligence, our particular, sharp-pointed ability to analyze, think, draw conclusions and act, our esthetic/emotional capacity to thrill at a beautiful sunset, our deep bonds with those we love and our empathy and compassion for others, are all aspects of the Goddess Herself. Indeed, she evolved us complicated, contradictory big-brained creatures precisely to experience some of those aspects. Or to put it simply, she gave us brains and she expects us to use them.

As a Witch, as a priestess of the Goddess, I make daily time to meditate and listen, ideally in some place where I have direct contact with nature. I rarely use an indoor altar any more instead I sit in the woods, or at least, in my garden, quiet my thoughts, open my eyes, look and listen. And what I ve been hearing lately, in company with every other person I know who is in tune with the deep powers of the earth, is anguish, distress, deep rage, and dire warnings. The processes of environmental destruction, in particular, the overheating of the earth s climate, are already underway. A few weeks ago, when we were preparing for the Free Activist Witch Camp that Reclaiming, our network of Witches, offered in Southern Oregon, I asked, Is there any way to avert massive death and destruction. The answer I got was an unequivocal no. The process has gone too far, was the answer. The image that came to me was river rafting and shooting the rapids.. There was a point where we as a species could have chosen a different river, or a different boat, or a different channel. But now we re in the chute. We can t turn back. We can t stop. There s a command in river rafting, used in extreme situations: Paddle or die. If you paddle, you have some power not enough to change the flow of the river, but enough to steer a course and avoid crashing on the rocks. If you give up, the river will most likely flip your boat, and you will drown. When we emerged from the woods, a little-reported item in the news media, hidden away on the back pages, informed us that vast stretches of the tundra were melting in Siberia. If we were collectively using even a minimum of our human intelligence, this news should have been trumpeted on the front page with all the alarm of a terrorist attack, for it is far more dangerous. Global warming increases the intensity of storms. Turn up the fire under a pot of water, and the bubbles will be bigger, faster and stronger. Hurricanes draw their energy from the heat in seawater. The Gulf of Mexico is abnormally warm and hurricanes have doubled in average intensity in the last decade and a half. Hurricane Katrina was a natural phenomenon, but Katrina s progression from a Category Two up to a Category Five as she crossed the gulf was a human-caused phenomenon, a function of our choices and decisions, our failure to steer a different course. The forms and names we put on Goddesses, Gods, and Powers help translate those forces into terms our human minds can grasp. And so the Yoruba based traditions that originate in West Africa have given the name Oya to the whirlwind, the hurricane, to those great powers of sudden change and destruction. Santeria, candomble, lucumi, voudoun, all include Oya in some form as a major orisha, a Great Power. Offerings are made to her, ceremonies done in her behalf, priestesses dance themselves into trance possession so that she can communicate with directly with the human community. No city in the U.S. has more practitioners of these traditions than New Orleans. On the night the hurricane was due to hit, I made a ritual with a small group of friends to support the spiritual efforts that I knew were being made by priestesses of Oya all over the country. We were in Crawford, Texas, at Camp Casey, where Gold Star mother Cindy Sheehan, whose son was killed in Itaq, camped near Bush s ranch to confront Bush with the painful reality of the deaths his policies have caused. Many of the

supporters there were from New Orleans, worried about their homes, their friends and families. The overall culture of the camp was very Christian we found no natural opening for public Pagan ritual, although a number of people did indicate to me quietly that they were one of us. But our little group gathered by the roadside, cast a circle, chanted and prayed. We prayed, speaking personally in the way humans do: Please, Mama, we know what a mess we ve made, but if there is any way to mitigate the death and the destruction, to lessen it slightly, please do. That same night Christians were praying and Orisha priestesses were working Oya, and the hurricane did shift its course, slightly, and lessened its force, down to a Category Four. And New Orleans survived. Not without loss, and death, but without the massive flooding and destruction that was feared., We all breathed a sigh of relief. And a day later, the levees failed, and the floods came. They failed not from an Act of Goddess, but from a lack of resources. The Bush Administration had systematically cut funding for flood control and for repairing and increasing the strength of the levees. The money went to Iraq. Much of the Louisiana National Guard was also in Iraq. FEMA, the Federal Agency responsible for responding to natural disasters, had been gutted, defunded, refocused on terrorism, and its directorship given to a Bush political crony with no experience in disaster response. Now, weeks later, New Orleans remains under martial law. Official efforts at relief have ranged from inept to brutal, and the lack of planning and concern for human life, the punitive quality of the official response, seem deeply linked to prejudice and racism which devalues the lives of the poor, especially if they re black. But ordinary people of all faiths have responded to this disaster with caring and compassion, with massive donations and relief efforts, and with shock and rage at a government which so completely fails to embody the values of human decency and respect for life that it claims to represent. The Goddess does not punish us, but she also doesn t shield us from the logical consequences of our actions. Katrina s destructive power was a consequence of a human course that is contemptuous of nature. A Native American proverb says, If we don t change our direction, we re going to wind up where we re headed. Katrina shows us a glimpse of that awful destination. And she also shows us hope. We can change, and if we truly awaken to the need, maybe we will, before it is too late. The outpouring of concern and efforts to help, the hope, determination and vision of some of the citizens of New Orleans who remain, the grief we feel for the dead and the losses and the compassion that a huge tragedy evokes are the tools we need to set a different course, one that honors nature and human life, that uses our human intelligence to restore and regenerate the natural world, awakens our compassion, and kindles our passion for justice. When we set a new course, all the powers of life and growth and regeneration will be flowing with us. And when we ally with those powers, miracles can happen.

Some Pagan Resources: The Blanket Project is an ongoing spell of compassion with the goal of providing handmade blankets to survivors, symbolizing the intention to blanket the country with compassion and caring. For information, see: http://www.theblanketproject.com or email info@theblanketproject.com. E-Witch Pagan Auction: www.e-witch.info/ Look for items marked NOLA PaganRelief I will be donating an original manuscript and a limited edition, signed, numbered leather-bound 10th Anniversary Spiral Dance Housing board for Pagan hurricane survivors and those who can offer housing: www.ironoak.org officersofavalon.com -- an organization of Pagan police officers and emergency service providers, they have already made one supply run to Missippi, reports are on their webpage as well as information on how to donate. Temple of Diana is accepting financial donations to be sent to the best organizations involved with hurricane relief efforts. Send your donations in any amount, and payable to Temple of Diana, with "hurricane relief" in the memo, and send to: Temple of Diana p.o. Box 6425 Monona, WI 53716 Some general places to send aid: www.rebuildgreen.org -- hurricane survivors who have remained in the Algiers neighborhood of New Orleans are determined to remain, rebuild their city with environmental awareness and a social conscience. They have set up the first functioning medical clinic for ordinary people, and have other projects in hand. They desperately need funds. Families and Friends of Louisiana's Incarcerated Children are doing intense work among the shelters and prisons with displaced youth, mostly African American. Believe me, the Red Cross and the Christian charities won't be pouring out relief to this group! They can also use some volunteers (especially African American) and many gifts in kind. Send a check to the "FFLIC Hurricane Relief Fund" to: 920 Platt Street, Sulphur, Louisiana, 70663. Info: awakenprogress@yahoo.com

kd.higgs@yahoo.com The Veterans for Peace bus that was at Camp Casey in Crawford, TX has now gone down to Covington, Louisiana to do relief work. They also need donations of money and computer equipment. Make a donation to Veterans For Peace Chapter 116 www.vfproadtrips.org Tax deductible cash donations can be send to: Veterans For Peace Chapter 116 28500 Sherwood Rd Willits CA 95490 pjtate@sonic.net Cell PH: 707-536-3001 Food Not Bombs will be providing food for refugees. They can use volunteers to prepare and serve food, and, of course, donations. Web: www.foodnotbombs.net. You can make a financial donation on line or mail checks to: Food Not Bombs, P.O. Box 744, Tucson, AZ 85702. Please call (1-800-884-1136) or email katrina@foodnotbombs.net if you can join them on the bus or help with gas money.