HISTORY (NEOpagan, 70s) [An ABC of Witchcraft Past & Present, by Doreen Valiente, St. Martin's Press, 1973; pp. 15.] With regard to black magic and Satanism, two things often confounded with witchcraft in the popular mind, these are in fact nothing to do with the Craft of the Wise, nor do modern witches wish to have anything to do with them or those who practise them. To say that black magic and Satanism do not exist, in view of the desecrations of churches and graveyards that have made the headlines in recent years, would be to ignore a good deal of disturbing evidence. Nevertheless, witches were not the culprits. -------------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, pp. 61-4.] _BLACK MASS, THE_ Popular belief credits the Black Mass with being the central rite of witchcraft, and the very ultimate in horror and abomination. As a matter of fact, however, the Black Mass is not a witchcraft rite at all. The whole point of the Black Mass is to pervert and insult the highest Christian sacrament. Therefore, one has to accept the validity of the Mass as the highest Christian sacrament, and to believe in its efficacy, before one can pervert it; and people who believe this are Christians, not witches. They may be bad Christians, but they are certainly not pagans. In fact, they are really playing Christianity, by their very laboured efforts at blasphemy, a sort of back-handed compliment.... The stories about the Black Mass have had a number of different sources; but they are not all fiction. Black Masses of various kinds have taken place, and probably still do. Where they are genuine, they arise mainly from a revolt against Church oppression, and the frustration of those who have to submit to it. In the Middle Ages the Church ruled public and private life with an iron hand. The feudal system, which the Church supported, was a heavy yoke upon men's necks. Under the surface, resentment smouldered, and sometimes burst into flame, only to be stamped out with pitiless severity. The lords ruled in their castles, while the serf had no future but constant toil, in order to make them richer. In these circumstances, Satan in medieval France acquired a significant title, *Le Grande Serf Revolte*, 'The Great Serf in Revolt'; and the stage was set for probably the only circumstances in which real devil-worship manifests itself. Not because people choose to worship evil; but because everything they can enjoy or hope for in this world, they have been told belongs to the Devil. Freedom is of the Devil; sexual enjoyment is of the Devil; even music and dancing are of the Devil. Very well -- then let us invoke the Devil! But how can we invoke the Devil? What other means than by reversing the forms of Christianity?.... However, the Black Mass does not belong to genuine witchcraft, because the latter has its own traditions and rituals. The real witch is a pagan, and the old Horned God of the witches is much older than Christianity or the Christian Devil or Satan. Though it will be seen from the foregoing how the Horned God can have come to be united in the popular mind with the Devil; especially as the Church had impressed upon everyone that the old pagan gods were all really devils. The only reason people ever worshipped the Devil was that the image of the Christian God was made so harsh and cruel that the Devil seemed pleasanter.... Moreover, the highly-sophisticated Black Mass, so beloved of films and books designed to thrill as they horrify, is mainly of literary origin. The Marquis de Sade included descriptions of it in his notorious novels, _Justine_ (Paris, 1791) and _Juliette_ (Paris, 1797). These descriptions may have been inspired by stories of French high society about the secret activities of Madame de Montespan. De Sade's books had an extensive circulation 'under the counter', in spite of efforts to suppress them. Forbidden fruit is always attractive, hence the idea of the Black Mass gained status, especially when suitably decorated with beautiful, nude women. In Britain, the famous Hell Fire Club, or the Monks of Medmenham, organised by Sir Francis Dashwood, had been staging something very similar, though much more light- hearted. There were in fact a number of Hell Fire Clubs in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries; but their object was more daring debauchery than serious black magic. Like similar organisations today, if their 'invocations of the Devil' had actually produced some manifestation, no one would have been more terrified -- or surprised -- than themselves. Nevertheless, within the late and literary Black Mass, with its theatrical trappings, there is one genuinely ancient figure -- the naked woman upon the altar. It would be more correct to say, the naked woman who *is* the altar; because this is her original role, not that of sacrificial victim (whom the hero of the thriller rescues just in time from the black magician's knife, as so often seen in films). This use of a living woman's naked body as the altar where the forces of Life are worshipped and invoked goes back to the days of ancient worship of the Great Goddess of Nature, in whom all things were one, under the image of Woman. ----------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, p. 84.] The magic of the grimoires, such as the _Key of Solomon_, the _Legemeton_, the _Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses_, etc., is something entirely different from the old pagan traditions of witchcraft. Ceremonial magic is the magic of learned men, and even of priests. It has a strongly religious tinge, of both Christianity and Judaism, and has mostly been derived from the Hebrew Qabalah and given a Christian veneer. Its method of working is to control the powers of nature, which are conceived of as being either angelic or demonic, by the powerful Divine Names which form the words of conjur- ation. Such words, for instance, Agla, Adonai, Tetragrammaton, Sabaoth, Anaphaxeton, Primeumaton, Sother, Athanatos; words which are a mixture of Hebrew and Greek, and are all names of God. Its instructions are usually complicated and exacting, and require the magician to purify himself by fasting, taking baths, and dressing in clean and consecrated robes before he enters the magic circle. He uses pentacles and consecrated tools, as does the witch, but all of a more elaborate kind. He prays at length, in the forms of either Judaism or Christianity, for power to perform this magical operation, by compelling the spirits of either heaven or hell to do his bidding. The witch's method of proceeding is simpler and more direct. In fact, the people who practised witchcraft could be and often were illiterate; while the ceremonial magician had to be more or less a 'learned clerk'. His arts were officially forbidden by the Church, but not in practice with such severity as those of the witch; because the witch was a pagan heretic, while the ceremonial magician, even when he set out to evoke demons, considered himself to be within the Church's pale. He would indignantly deny that he was a Satanist or a devil worshipper. Indeed, the alleged cult of Satanism is, in this writers opinion, something of a fairly modern and mainly literary origin. The Black Magic novels of Mr. Dennis Wheatley, while first-rate entertainment as imaginative thrillers, bear little relationship to the real traditional practices of either ceremonial magicians or witches. The witch's origins and practices go back to the dawn of time. She keeps pagan festivals and invokes pagan gods; and while there is much common ground between witchcraft and ceremonial magic, this is the main and essential difference. ----------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, pp. 104- ] _DEMONOLOGY_ A knowledge of demonology, or the supposed science of the study and classification of demons, was considered in times past to be essential to the investigation of witchcraft. This followed logically upon the Church doctrine that all witchcraft, and indeed all rival cults to that of Christianity, were inspired and directed by Satan. This attitude is exemplified by the fact that in medieval times *Mahound*, a popular form of Mohammed, the founder of Islam, was another name for the devil. [examination of _The Book of Enoch_ through this section, as per Cavendish, though not in as much depth, omitted.] ... The famous French occultist Eliphas Levi has pointed out that if the Devil exists, he must be a Devil of God. Levi had to write in an obscure manner to avoid offending the Catholic Church, of which he was a member; but he protests in his chief work, _Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie_ (Translated as _Transcendental Magic_ by Arthur Edward Waite, George Redway, London, 1896), against the ideas of the demonologists. He accuses them of setting up Satan as a rival to God, and derives their beliefs from the Eastern doctrines of Zoroastrianism rather than from true Christianity. Zoroaster postulated two great powers, one of light and one of darkness, between which the ruleship of the universe was divided [note that Crowley was fond of Levi, even suggesting that he might be a reincarnation of Levi himself -- nocT]. ... ...to the demonologists of the Middle Ages, the subject of fallen angels was of great importance. In the notorious grimoire called _The Goetia, or Lesser Key of Solomon_, we are given the names and descriptions of seventy-two fallen angels, each of whom is a ruler over legions of spirits. We are told that King Solomon, by his command of magic, confined these demon rulers within a vessel of brass, which he then sealed with a magical seal and cast into a deep lake. Unfortunately, the people of Babylon, thinking the vessel contained treasure, drew it out and broke it open, so that all the demons escaped again [shades of Pandora! -- nocT]. Nevertheless, by means of magical sigils and instructions derived from Solomon, the magician may command these spirits and make them obey him. The same theme is repeated in other grimoires. Another view of demons is that they are not fallen angels, nor created wicked, but rather the personification of blind forces of nature. Alternatively, they may be regarded as non-human spirits of a violent, capricious nature, often hostile to man, but of inferior mentality to him, and therefore able to be commanded by a powerful magician. This latter concept of demons is one which prevails among practitioners of magic all over the world. The Victorian novelist Bulwer Lytton, who was the leader of a secret magical circle, tells us in his occult novel _A Strange Story_: In the creed of the Dervish, and of all who adventure into that realm of nature which is closed to philosophy and open to magic, there are races in the magnitude of space unseen as animalcules in the world of a drop. For the tribes of the drop, science has its microscope. Of the hosts of yon azure Infinite magic gains sight, and through them gains command over fluid conductors that link all the parts of creation. Of these races, some are wholly indifferent to man, some benign to him, and some deadly hostile. Such is an initiate's view of demons, namely that some spirits may be dangerous for man to meddle with, not because they have been created for the purpose of tempting or tormenting, but in the sam way that a wild animal is dangerous. This is a dark and difficult subject. Nevertheless, demonologists in years gone by undauntedly drew up the most precise, detailed and fantastic list of demons, and their various powers and offices. The legions of hell were believed to be everywhere, and witches were their agents. These beliefs undoubtedly contributed much to the panicking of public opinion, until people unthinkingly acquiesced in the cruellest persecutions of the days of witch-hunting. (*See DEVIL.*) _DEVIL_ This word of fear to the superstitious, and of profit to the sensational reporter, is generally taken to mean the personified principle of evil. However, the doctrine of the existence of a personal Devil has of late years been dropped by many leading churchmen. The belief in a rebellious Satan as the Power of Evil has always been contrary to the text of Isaiah, Chapter 45, verse 7: "I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the Lord do all these things." Some religious people need the concept of the Devil; it comes in extremely useful. For one thing, the idea that man is responsible for his own evils is distasteful to him. He likes to have something, or someone, to blame. The pattern was laid down very early, according to the story of the Garden of Eden; Adam blamed the woman, and the woman blamed the serpent. In the eyes of the early Church, which as markedly anti-feminist, woman and the Devil had been responsible for all mischief ever since. Also, the story of the Devil, ever seeking and plotting for man's damnation, has been a powerful weapon of fear ,to be used to keep people in line. When the very successful film, 'Rosemary's Baby' (which deals with the alleged diabolical activities of some modern witches), was first shown in America, it was condemned by the National Catholic Office for Motion Pictures. The plot of the film concerns a girl who has a baby by the Devil; and Mia Farrow who starred in this part, spoke up in reply to the Catholic Office's ban. She was quoted as saying that she did not see what grounds they had for condemnation of the picture, because it was the Catholic Church itself which had "invented the Satan figure" and it was they who were trying to hold masses of people together by fear of hell. Miss Farrow could have added that it was the Catholic Church which laid down the dogma that, because all of the gods of the older religions were really devils, all pagans were devil-worshippers, and therefore fair game for any treatment, however bad. This attitude appears still to be maintained today, in certain sections of the Press. Yet the very fact of the enormous success of 'Rosemary's Baby', both as a book and a film, indicates the ambivalent attitude of society towards the concept of the Devil. He is supposed to be the personification of evil, and yet he fascinates. Why? The concept that "the god of the old religion becomes he devil of the new" is something which anthropologists, and students of comparative religion, have found to be literally true. For instance, 'Old Nick' as a name for the Devil is derived from Nik, which was a title of a pagan English god Woden. Sometimes the Devil is simply called 'the Old 'Un', another name full of meaning in this respect. (*See OLD ONE, THE*.) The conventional representation of the Devil is that of a being with horns upon his head, and having a body which terminates in shaggy lower limbs and cloven hoofs. Again why? Is there any texts in the Bible which describes 'Satan' or 'the Devil' in this manner? None whatever. Yet this is the picture which a mention of 'the Devil' conjures up. In fact, it is simply a representation of Pan, the goat-footed god of nature, of life and vitality; and the Great God Pan himself is just another version of the most ancient Horned God, the deity whom the cave-men worshipped. "Beloved Pan, and all the other gods who haunt this place, give me beauty in the inmost soul; and grant that the outward and the inward may be as one." Such was the prayer of Socrates. Was he a devil- worshipper? [Socrates is also said to have had an 'augoeides' or guardian angel along the lines of a familiar spirit -- nocT]. Certainly the pagans had some gods o terrifying aspect. But these gods were not fallen angels, who plotted hideously to encompass man's misery and perdition. They were the personification of destroying natural forces: the storm-wind, the darkness, the plague. The people who really worshipped Nature knew that she was not all pretty flowers and charming little birds and butterflies. The forces of the creation were counter-balanced by the forces of destruction; but the Great Mother destroyed only to give rebirth in a higher form. The word 'Devil' is of uncertain derivation. In my opinion, its most likely origin is the same as that of *Deus*, God; namely the Sanskrit *Deva*, meaning 'a shining one, a god'. The Gypsies, whose Romany language is of Indo-European orign, call God *Duvel*. Truly, *Demon est Deus Inversus*, "the Demon is God reversed", as the old magical motto has it. The word 'demon' itself comes from the Greek *daimon*, which originally meant a spirit holding a middle place between gods and men. Only later, in Early Christian times, was it taken to mean an evil spirit. The spirits of Nature which the pagans sensed as haunting lonely places, were neither good nor evil. They were simply different from man, not flesh and blood, and therefore best regarded with caution and respect. People of Celtic blood in the lonelier parts of the British Isles take this attitude to this day towards the fairies, whom they call the Good Neighbours or the People of Peace. The Devil is that which is wild, untamed, and unresolved -- in nature, and in human nature. He is the impulses in *themselves*, which people fear and which they dislike to admit the existence of. Hence these impulses become exteriorised, and projected in the form of devils and demons. No wonder that in the Middle Ages, when the Church ruled with an iron hand, the Devil appeared everywhere! He was the projected image of the natural desires, especially sexual desires, which would not be denied, however much the Church denounced them as sin. The Devi las the personification of the mysterious and untamed forces of nature, appears all over the British Isles in place-names, applied to things which seemed extraordinary and inexplicable. There is a great gash in the South Downs, near Brighton, called the Devil's Dyke. Hindhead, in Surrey, has the Devil's Punch Bowl, and there are two more in the Scilly Isles and in Eire. There are two Devil's Glens, one in Wicklow and another in the Vale of Neath. A curious pinnacle of rock in the witch-haunted Cotswolds is called the Devil's Chimney. On the bank of the River Wye, opposite Tintern Abbey, is the Devil's Pulpit, from which he is said to have preached in defiance of the Church. There are the Devil's Cheese-Wring, a strange heap of rocks near Liskeard in Cornwall; the Devil's Frying- Pan, in the same country; the Devil's Jumps, a series of low hills near Frensham in Surrey; and so on and on, all over the map. Curious old buildings often have the Devil's name attributed to them. There is the Devil's Tower at Windsor Castle, and a Devil's Battery in the Tower of London. Prehistoric stone monuments have been called the Devil's Arrows or the Devil's Quoits; and one legend ascribes the building of Stonehenge to the Devil. Anything which was felt to be beyond human ingenuity or comprehension, belonged to the realm of the Devil. He was the personification of the Unknown. He was the rebel; he was everything which would not conform. He was the spirit of the wild, the darkness, the storm, the Wild Huntsman riding the night wind. He was the forbidden, yet dangerously attractive; the secret, which allured while defying one to find it out. He put the spice into life, in a situation where goodness had become synonymous with dullness and respectability. He was the enemy of the negative virtues. As such, the Devil has played an important part in the psychological development of mankind. The corruption of man's heart has been projected onto him. Peopl have accused his supposed servants, the witches, of doing the forbidden things they wanted to do themselves, in the dark deep hells of their own souls, and then tortured and burned the witches for being so 'wicked'. It is significant that the word 'hell' comes from the same root as the Anglo-Saxon *helan*, 'to conceal, to cover over'. The real powers of hell come not from external devils, but from the unacknowledged contents of man's own mind. To what extent, then, is the Devil the god of the witches? The answer is that the Church, and not the witches, identified the old Horned God with the Devil, precisely because he stood for the things the Church had forbidden -- especially uninhibited sexual enjoyment and the pride that will not bow down and serve. So determined were they upon this identification, that in the old accounts of witch trials nearly every mention by the witches of a non-Christian deity is set down as 'the Devil' by those recording the proceedings. The male leader of the coven, also, was so persistently described as the Devil that some witches actually began to call him this -- though the term is seldom used by witches today [cf. GBGardner, Witchcraft Today -- nocT]. In fact, the Horned God of the witches is far, far older than Christianity; and he only began to be identified with the Devil when the Church branded nature itself as 'fallen', and natural impulses as 'sin'. This identifica- tion was not only a deliberate matter of dogma; it was a psychological process, which in some places is still at work. It was this deep-seated emotional drive which gave the witch-hunts of olden days their horrific impetus, their pitiless and obscene cruelty, their element of nightmare unreasonable. In those days, the dark forces were indeed released; but the hell they came from was of man's own making, not God's or the Devil's. ------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, p. 328.] One of California's Satanist cults has found a nastily ingenius way to hold a 'human sacrifice' and yet keep within the law. Their Satanic chapel is the basement of an old building, where a 6-foot-tall crucifix hangs upside down over an altar made of oak, and adorned with weird carvings. Skulls are used as chalices, and the scene is dimly lit by flickering candles. But the naked girl victim who lies upon the altar is actually a realistic, life-size plastic doll. The doll is hollow, and inside is a plastic bag filled with fake 'blood' and 'entrails'. In the course of the ritual, the self-styled priest of Satan gashes the figure open with a knife, and the 'blood' flows freely, to the accompaniment of wild yells from his congregation, many of whom are young girls. Magic signs are drawn upon the girls' bodies in 'blood', and the ritual ends with a sexual orgy. -------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, pp. 375-6.] A more serious, and sadder, development is the number of mushroom 'Satanist' cults which have sprung up. These insist upon identifying witchcraft with devil-worship and Satanism. Their rituals are synthetic as the plastic horns their flamboyant leaders delight to be photographed wearing; as any experienced occultist would immediately recognise. But to the frustrated and sexually repressed, and to young people looking for kicks, these cults are attractive. What is sad about them is the way in which they show that there are many people who can only under- stand sexual satisfaction as being the work of the Devil. Hence such people can only achieve the fulfilment of their natural instincts in a context of 'wickedness'. In the surroundings of what they conceive of as a 'Black Mass' or a 'witches Sabbat' -- the more lurid the better -- they find at last the orgasmic release that has hitherto been denied them. People of this mentality have been sexually crippled by life-denying negative morality, phoney 'purity' and hypocritical prudery. The sadism and blood-lust which often go hand-in-hand with Satanism, are further symptoms of what Wilhelm Reich has truly called the emotional plague, which is the result of centuries of 'Churchianity'. People have been indoctrinated with the idea that nearly all their natural feelings and desires are evil; and the old gods have been hidden behind the ugly mask of Satan. Some of the leaders of these cults believe in what they are doing, and are a classic example in the occult world of saying that a little learning is a dangerous thing. Others are simply clever psycholo- gists, whose only real belief in Satanism is that they've found a devilish good racket. In my opinion, all are dangerous; not because they can evoke a non- existent 'Satan', but because they invite their followers to attune themselves to the unseen forces of evil, and to the lowest planes of the astral world. One of the influences which have brought about the craze for delving into the darker regions of the occult, is the sensational film 'Rosemary's Baby', which deals with Satanism. Was it more than a cruel coincidence that the producer of this film, Roman Polanski, lost his wife and their unborn child in the horrific murders carried out by Charles Manson and his followers, who called themselves Satan's Slaves?... American witches who are serious followers of the Craft of the Wise have, like their brothers and sisters in Britain, been coming forward publically in an effort to combat misrepresentation, and clear themselves of the stigma of Satanism.... -------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, pp. 391-2.] ...anyone, up to comparatively recent years, who demon- strated any psychic or mediumistic ability, was likely to be accused of being in league with Satan, or at least with evil spirits; even though [citing Dr. Henry More, 1614--1687] this was not originally implied at all by the word 'witch'. So ingrained in some followers of the Christian denominations is this idea that we still sometimes see condemnations of Spiritualism on these grounds; namely that it is 'dealing with the Devil'. When the famous medium, Daniel Douglas Home, was travelling in European countries where the Catholic Church was predominant, he was quite seriously accused of having a pact with Satan! The Witchcraft Act was persistently used to harass Spiritualist mediums. In fact, the last big trial under this Act was that of the medium Helen Duncan, in 1944; and it was not until 1951 that the Act was finally removed from the Statute Book.... Charles Godfrey Leland regarded the alleged 'Satanic' side of witchcraft as being the creation of the Churches, and grafted by them on to the old paganism. The darker hues of witchcraft, where they existed in the Middle Ages, he saw as being shadowed upon it by the misery nd oppression prevalent in society at that time. In this _Legends of Florence_ (David Nutt, London, 1896), he has this to say about the history of witchcraft: The witches and sorcerers of early times were a widely spread class who had retained the beliefs and traditions of heathenism with all its license and romance and charm of the forbidden. At their head were the Promethean Templars, at their tail all the ignorance and superstition of the time, and in their ranks every one who was oppressed or injured either by the nobility or the Church. They were treated with indescribable cruelty, in most cases worse than beasts of burden, for they were outraged in all their feelings, not at intervals for punishment, but habitually by custom, and they revenged themselves by secret orgies and fancied devil- worship, and occult ties, and stupendous sins, or what they had fancied were such. I can seriously conceive -- what no writer seems to have considered -- that there must have been immense satisfaction in selling or giving one's self to the devil, or to any power which was at war with their oppressors. So they went by night, at the full moon, and sacrificed to Diana, or 'later on' to Satan, and danced and rebelled. It is very well worth noting that we have *all* our accounts of sorcerers and heretics from Catholic priests, who had every earthly reason for misrepresenting them, and did so. In the vast amount of ancient witch- craft still surviving in Italy [see Ginzburg's _Ecstasies: Deciphering the Witches' Sabbath_ for more on the question of Italian witch- craft and its possible survival -- nocT], there is not much anti-Christianity, but a great deal of early heathenism. Diana, not Satan, is still the real head of the witches [see Leland's own rendering of their 'Gospel', _Aradia..._, in which Lucifer figures as Diana's consort! -- nocT]. The Italian witch, as the priest Gilandus said, stole oil to make a love-charm. But she did not, and does not say, as he declared, in doing so, 'I renounce Christ'. There the priest plainly lied. The whole history of the witch mania is an ecclesiastical falsehood, in which such lies were subtly grafted on the truth. But in due time the Church, and the Protestants with them, created a Satanic witchcraft of their own, and it is this aftergrowth which is now regarded as witchcraft in truth. I agree with Leland's view, because it makes sense and can be supported by the evidence of history and folklore. If any witch ever 'renounced Christ', it was in blazing resentment against a Church that supported the oppressors and stifled human liberty. If he or she ever indulged in 'devil worship', it was because the Church had declared the ancient gods to be devils, and invested the Devil with the attributes of Pan. In the second volume of the same work, Leland declares: "I could, indeed, fill many pages with citations from classic and medieval authors which prove the ancient belief that Diana was queen of the witches." Further on, he says: It is worth noting that sundry old writers trace back the witch sabbats, or wild orgies, worshipping of Satan, and full-moon frolics to the festivals of Diana. Thus Despina declares: "It was customary of old to celebrate the nightly rites of Diana with mad rejoicing and the wildest or most delirious dancing and sound (*ordine contrario sen praepostero*), and all kinds of licentiousness, and with these rites as partakers were popularly identified the Dryads of the forests, the Napaeoe of the fountains, the Oreads of the mountians, nymphs, and all false gods." If we add to this that all kinds of outlaws and children of the night, such as robbers and prostitutes, worshipped Diana-Hecate as their patron saint and protectress, we can well believe that this was the true cause and origin of the belief still extremely current or at least known even among the people in Florence, that Diana was the queen of the witches. In a fresco of the fourteenth century in the Palazzo Publico in Siena, Diana is represented with a bat flying under her, to indicate night and sorcery. There is no reason to believe that the witchcraft of Italy is *basically* any different from that of the remainder of Western Europe; though the more Celtic regions will naturally show an admixture of their own traditions, as will those where Norse ancestry is prevalent, and so on. Witchcraft is not only the secret religion of the outcasts of society such as mentioned above, however. It was also the cult of *people who did not conform*, in whatever walk of life they found themselves.... ------------------------------------------------------------