Posts tagged ‘Open Letter’

April 16, 2012

More Beatitude than Platitude? An Open Letter to Cristina Odone

Cristina Odone believes it is ridiculous that Paganism be included in British RE lessons.

Dear Ms Odone.

You recently produced an article condemning the inclusion of Paganism and Druidry as part of the Religious Education syllabus in Cornish schools. You omit, though, that teaching about these faiths is not actually required, merely optional – what is required however, is that 60% of every RE course in this county must be concerned with your own faith of Christianity. It is therefore patently ridiculous for you to claim that our society believes that “one set of belief(sic.) is as good as another.” Christianity still is top dog, being the only faith that it is mandatory for schools to teach our children about.

Of course, the error at the heart of your article – you elide cultural and moral relativism and class this unwarranted merger as a “liberal fear of religious values” – is nothing new. The right wing press (including your erstwhile sparring partners over at The Daily Mail) regularly roll their eyes at any mention of Pagans or other minorities getting greater religious rights; considering such concessions to be the acts of timorous bureaucrats with no discernment when it comes to matters of religious validity.

Such journalists, as you have done, make the allegation that Paganism doesn’t have an ethical compass. Indeed, in reference to your encounter with Emma Restall-Orr on the BBC’s The Big Questions, you said much the same thing – dismissing the ethical teachings she shared on that show as “platitudes” and expressing high dudgeon that such a base occult person as a Druid should be permitted a platform in the high halls of public service broadcasting. Presumably, you believe the BBC’s function is to  “edify” (read “indoctrinate”) everybody in true, good religious values. The alternatives are wishy-washy relativism.

To be honest, I think you’ve fallen into the usual trap of Christians faced with people who aren’t, and assumed that just because we don’t have Abrahamic-style morality, we must not have any morality at all. This could not be further from the truth. We Pagans have very clear moral frameworks – they’re just not like yours.

Pagan ethical teaching, was, I felt, very clearly elucidated by Emma (a Druid, like myself) on The Big Questions, and in a very good book she wrote to answer the questions she received there. To use her words, Pagans believe that the good life is founded upon sustainable relationship. We must always, as moral beings, be sensitive to the needs and situation of all others – only in light of that sensitivity can ethics truly shine. Empathy – the same principle that underpins the Christian Golden Rule – is critical here. This is not simply a principle poached from Christian thought though; it has its origins in the work of Greek philosophers such as Aristotle, and beyond. Refusing the special pleading of humanism, modern Pagans attempt to apply empathy universally to create a fully heartfelt ecological perspective.

Despite this shared cornerstone of empathy, though, Pagan ethics are quite different from Christian ones. Christian ethics are heavily influenced by the political views of their day – most notably the Bronze-Age notions of sacral kingship it inherited from Judaism, and the Roman concept of Imperium. In both these political systems, the king-emperor is the absolute autocrat, whose word is law – never (in principle) to be questioned. Ultimate moral authority is therefore invested in the judgements of a single personality; one who is assumed to be uniquely elevated above all others.

All the Abrahamic faiths retain this concept – although, unlike the cultures from which they sprang, in them this role ceases to be filled by humans, and instead is filled by a transcendent god. The primary human role becomes that of the Prophet, the one into whose ear the absent Emperor whispers. The Pope still holds this role for Catholics such as yourself, as Christ’s representative on Earth. For Protestants, it is the Bible who holds such authority.

As a non-Abrahamic faith, modern-day Paganism has no such fondness for autocrats. We acknowledge the fact, as the ancient philosophers of Greece and India did, that true certainty is inaccessible for human minds. This doesn’t deny that the truth is out there (as relativism proper does), it just insists that the human capacity to know that truth is always provisional, no matter what title a person may have. In our view, the Pope, for all his learning and influence, has no greater claim to moral (or metaphysical) authority than you, regardless of which chair he might be sitting on at the time. The Bible might have been written mere decades after god himself (or one of them, anyway) walked the Earth – but that doesn’t guarantee its veracity.

This centralizing of doubt (the technical term is “skepticism”) in fact makes Paganism, Buddhism and other non-Abrahamic traditions far more like Western academia than they are like Christianity, Islam or Judaism, which place much greater stock in faith. This is always painted as faith in God, but it is really faith in whoever or whatever told you about God in the first place – be it man or book. It is an attitude that breeds hierarchy and autocracy.

Pagans believe that there is certainly a right and wrong course of action to take, in any situation. We reach, we fight, we strive to discern what is right, but, because we’re flawed beings, very often we fail. History more often than not reveals shortcomings in our own choices that we could never have imagined at the time of their making. Both our traditions accept this – but rather than give up, crying in the dust of our failures, and hope that some surrogate eternal parent will pick us up and make everything better as the Christians do; we pick ourselves up, and struggle on.  We don’t do this because we want to, often – we do so because it is right. It is necessary. It is ethical. It is, to point to a growing line of thought within Paganism, the heroic thing to do.

In a positive application of the Nietzschean critique of Christianity as the religion of slavery, we Pagans seek an emancipated morality that doesn’t sugar the pill of a life filled with difficult decisions, but treats us as spiritual adults and calls us to embrace responsibility for our mistakes. It allows for a plurality of views. Although there may be one reality behind the plurality of human experiences of it, it is impossible from our perspective that any one experience could grasp that reality completely. Therefore, it is up to us to come together, and discern the most moral course of action from our many insights. Christians do this too of course, but rather than bow and scrape around the supposed divine authority of Pope or Presbyter, we acknowledge the truth of what we are doing, and honour it for what it is – messy, difficult and ultimately finite.

So what? What do these fine words mean for my daily life?

I recycle. I’m kind to others. I’m seeking a job that doesn’t involve working for an organization that exploits or harms the planet. I don’t have a car, because I feel it’s unsustainable. I support democracy and civil liberties. I respect the autonomy of others. I accept the limitations of my own perspective, and despite my critical view of Christianity, I fully support it being taught in RE lessons. Because I know that I might be wrong.

December 31, 2011

Fake Druids: An Open Letter to Paul Kingsnorth

Are druids nothing more than a bloody romantic fantasy?

Dear Paul,

My name is Jonathan, and I’m a druid. Yes, one of those irritating, beardy people who celebrate the solstices at Stonehenge, in an act of abrasive anachronism. However, I’m also a fan of your work. I’ve listened to a talk you chaired at the Institute of Art and Ideas, I’ve read a couple of your blog posts and I devoured The Dark Mountain Manifesto. You’ve given eloquent voice to ideas and sentiments I’ve had for years, and have already started the sort of work I myself would like to do – calling people away from the neon hearth of consumer capitalism, to a more honest aesthetic; rooted in the land and the realities of living with it. So your tweets about contemporary Druidry being “mass historical silliness” didn’t actually provoke me to anger, despite your rather unpleasant re-assertion of first-century blood libel against our own ancestors. Instead, I found them thought-provoking. I myself worry, as you do, about how certain English people seem to be somewhat coy about embracing their nation’s own traditions. And I agree, this needs to change. But I think that the case of Druidry is a little more complex than you seem to acknowledge, and I’m hopeful that we could be allies, rather than enemies, in this common cause.

Firstly, I have to say, I accept that contemporary Druids are “Victorian Romantic Fictions”, as you suggest. All the Druids I know would agree. As a community, we happily acknowledge that what we do has its roots in the taking up by early 20th century occultists (such as Ross Nicholls) of a nationalist ball first rolled by men such as Iolo Morganwg and Edward Llwyd. And those of that latter rogues’ gallery that weren’t charlatans who falsified historical records, were in most cases quite simply incorrect – hence Stonehenge. But just because they got their history wrong, doesn’t mean that some of their ideas don’t have validity independent of historical authenticity. The intent with which modern Druids conduct rites at Stonehenge, or study the writings of Morganwg, is not to give or get an idea of what “real” Druids did. It is simply to take inspiration from the idea of the Druids, and to build something of our own in response. Because Stonehenge was built by pre-Christian ancestors, celebrating the solstices there inspires us, whether the Druids used it or not. And the fact is, that all nationalisms/spiritualities/aesthetic movements work in precisely the same way. The Native American Ghost Dance borrowed aspects of Millenarian Christianity. Snorri Sturlusson used Roman divinities to help order his account of the Aesir, and now it’s difficult to tell to what extent he adapted the latter to imitate the former. Creating a sense of a collective culture isn’t an exercise in finding some essentialist Bible-surrogate which we can quote faithfully to give us our sense of ourselves. It is instead an act of creative re-assembly; of syncretism of the old and the new. Druidry is no different – not a revival, but a use of the past to inspire the present.
But English Druids? The English people, if Bede and others are to be believed, are a Germanic society, not a Celtic one. Although this is the source of much debate in academic circles, it’s not unfair to say that the culture of the east of Britain had been significantly Germanicised by the year 1000 AD. We spoke a Germanic language. We used runes. We worshipped gods like Woden, Eostre and Tiw, rather than Gwydion, Rhiannon and Lludd. So why Druids in England? Well, in my case, I’m part Welsh, part Irish, part English. Therefore, practicing a faith that draws on Welsh and Irish epic literature for guidance in self-development therefore connects with a big part of my ancestry, and evokes my memories as a child of being driven to a wild, mountainous land across the water, to see “the family” and learn who I was. However, this Winter Solstice, rather than go to Stonehenge, I was in a field near my home, pouring a libation to the Sun-child Maponos and to Ingue Frea, the Lord of Peace and Plenty, in the hope that he’ll send me some good fortune as the Sun grows stronger and the winter wheat grows taller. I’m a child of mixed ancestry, and so I don’t see why I don’t have a claim to both Germanic and Celtic heritage. And the point is, that most of us probably are. Regardless, I’m no fan of essentialism, so I fail to see why, if somebody feels drawn to the culture of the Celtic west, why shouldn’t they honour that connection, even if it isn’t reflected in lines of descent?

In one of your blog posts, you’ve cited Druidry as an example of how English people don’t look to their own heritage – of Wayland, of Puck of Pook’s Hill, of Elves and Ents and Wotan – to help give us a sense of rootedness and identity. I don’t think Druidry is necessarily an example of that, for the reasons I’ve given above. It doesn’t forge links to our deep past through true-to-life recreations of ancient rituals – we have neither the evidence nor the inclination to engage in such things anyway – but instead it connects us by reaching out to our ancestors in our own way. Stonehenge stands as a place made by the ancients, and so it is in such a place that those who love those ancients cluster. And although I agree that the English need to be put in touch with the heritage of their Anglo-Saxon roots, there is no reason why that is where the roots must terminate. England was as much part of the “Druidic sphere” as France, Wales or Ireland in their time, and to ignore that heritage, in my view, would be a true denial of fullness of the variegated nature of this land.

So, having given you my reasons for identifying as a Druid (and standing by stones), I’d like to know a bit more detail about your reasons for criticising us. Like I said above, this does not come from a place of hostility (despite my somewhat terse tweets – they were delivered when I was tired and not at my best), but in the spirit of genuine interest.

I hope to hear back from you,

Jonathan

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