• WITCHES PRESSING FOR RELIGIOUS RIGHTS

    From Kurt Snelling to ALL on Saturday, November 29, 2025 07:21:53
    WITCHES PRESSING FOR RELIGIOUS RIGHTS

    By Bob Harvey, religious editor, Ottawa Citizen.

    Canadian witchcraft is growing up and becoming an institution.
    Witches have formed two different national associations to press
    governments for the rights they say they deserve as abona fide
    religion.
    Among the privaleges being demanded by the Wiccan Church of
    Canada and the Congregationalist Witchcraft Association of Canada: the
    right to marry and bury their adherents, and federal status as
    tax-exempt charities.
    The Toronto-based Wiccan Church is 13 years old, and
    participates as a full member of an Ontario Interfaith
    chaplaincy commitee. That opens the doors for Wiccan Priests and
    Priestesses to visit members in provincial jails and hospitals.
    The Congregationalist Witchcraft Association of Canada is based
    in Vancouver, and has only recently obtained its charter as a non-profit association.
    Tamarra James, one of the founders of the Wiccan Church, argues,
    with some justification, that as long as governments deny Wiccan
    priests and priestesses the right to conduct marriages and
    funerals, Canadian witches are being denied the freedom of
    religion.
    "These are rites of passage which from time out of mind are the provinces of religion."
    Already, groups like at least one spiritualist church have such
    rights, and the witches deserve as much. But the witches' quest is not
    just a simple human rights issue.
    There are two problems the witches will have to overcome. The
    first is that when governments give religious groups the right to
    leaglly marry people, they grant tacit endorsement to the groups. That's
    why Ontario demands a religious group be incorporated in the province
    for 25 years before it can apply to have its ministers or priests
    lecensed to perform marriages.
    If the group makes it through 25 years without causing any
    public scandals, the government can probably safely grant it the right
    to marry its members.
    A bigger problem for the witches will be overcomming a neagative
    image that is centuries old.
    That image is on display every year at Halloween, a festival
    that's sacred to witches. James says may of the depictions of witches in children's books are simply hate literature, and many Wiccan children
    come home from school with tears in their eyes the first time they're
    pressured to draw pictures of horrendous-looking witches.
    The stereotyping is obviously wrong, but the reality is still
    that many Canadians may never be comfortable with the idea of being
    buried next to a witch whose gravesite has been consecrated in Wiccan
    rituals. After all, Ontario still has different cemetaries for Jews and Christians who want to be buried in ground consecrated by their won
    faiths.
    Some of the beliefs of Canadian witches are set out in a
    statement by the Congregationalist Witchcraft Association that James
    says the Wiccan Church would also have little difficulty with.
    Those beliefs include:

    It is appropriate to name and worship a variety of gods and
    goddesses.

    We can, through petition, action and ritual, cause change in the
    world in accrding with our wills.

    All acts of love and pleasure are acts of praise of the goddess.
    This specifically includes all non-coercive sexual orientations.

    Like it or not, those and other beliefs of Canada's witches
    would still be vehemently opposed by many Canadians. That opposition
    from other religious groups is likely to ge the biggest stumbling block
    for witches trying to win greater recognition by government.


    (Reproduced from The Ottawa Citizen, March 1992).

    Kurt,
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