Happy New
Year to Druids everywhere, and to all those who honor a tradition forgotten,
but not gone.
It's now
known as Hallowe'en, or the evening of All Hallows Day, the time of year when
this Middle World is closest to the spiritual Otherworld, and when those in the
Otherworld can most easily return to visit family, friends and others still
here, and when those of us here in the Middle World can most easily visit the
spirit worlds.
We do this by
dressing up as "ghoulies and ghosties and long-leggedy beasties and things
that go bump in the night," as Robert Burns wrote.
To Celtic
peoples, November 1 is known as Samhain, the end of the harvest season and the
end of the year. It also marks the beginning of a new cycle of the year, when
we begin to enter the dark time as the sun fades and the spirits of the dark
begin to dominate the season.
It is a time
to reflect on the past and honor those who have crossed to the spirit world. It
was and remains a time to mimic the tricksters of the spirit world and treat
them to small favors so they would remain friendly.
Samhain
(pronounced: SAH-win) is the first of eight festivals of the Druid year, all of
which are still observed, even as they were given different names as a new
spiritual tradition spread throughout the Celtic world.
Next is the
Winter Solstice, December 21, known to the ancients as Yule, when the sun seems
to stop its retreat toward darkness and begins to return, metaphorically
defeating the powers of darkness and returning to dominate the world.
Third in the
series is Imbolc, February 1, when the first early signs of spring begin to show
through the sleeping earth. The groundhog emerges from his winter sleep, lambs
are born and we look for new life in grass, trees and flowers. A carryover of
this tradition is Groundhog Day, or Candlemas Day, the Feast of Lights.
Next in the
cycle is the Spring Equinox, March 21, when days and nights are again in
balance and people prepare in earnest for the return of the sun.
At Beltane,
May 1, the Druidic cycle is half-way through the year as people honor Belenos,
a god of love. It is also a time to gather flowers, to dance and to honor
Mother Earth during the modern romance festival of Mayday.
Midsummer
brings another festival, as the sun reaches its highest point in its yearly
journey -- the Summer Solstice, June 21.
Then comes
Lughnasadh, August 1, time to gather the first harvest of wheat and bake the
first loaves of bread from the new harvest. It is the day to honor Lugh, the
sun god, with dancing and feasting. It is also known as Lammas (loaf-mass) Day.
Lugh was also
known as a warrior, with his Sword of Light, and is remembered in Hollywood as
Luke Skywalker, with his laser sword.
The final
festival in the Druid year is the Autumn Equinox, September 21, when the days
and nights are again in balance and it is time to prepare for the full harvest
and begin preparations for winter.
All these
festivals go back many centuries, before the time when a new spiritual
tradition began to spread throughout Europe. Rather then try to ban them
entirely, the missionaries gave them new names and adapted them to fit the new
tradition.
Nevertheless,
the old ways continue, as modern Druids incorporate them into newer belief
systems.
John
T. Harding is the author of "Druidry for Today: A Tradition Forgotten But
Not Gone," available as an ebook or in paperback from Amazon.