A Legacy of Druids: Conversations With Druid Leaders Of Britain, The USA And Canada, Past And Present
A book of conversations with prominent Druids from across Britain, the USA and other countries whose voices describe the basic beliefs, practices and struggles of the emerging Druid faith. Conducted in person and online in the late 20th century, these collected conversations provide a historic window into the movers and shakers of the modern Druid world.
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A Legacy of Druids: Conversations With Druid Leaders Of Britain, The USA And Canada, Past And Present
A book of conversations with prominent Druids from across Britain, the USA and other countries whose voices describe the basic beliefs, practices and struggles of the emerging Druid faith. Conducted in person and online in the late 20th century, these collected conversations provide a historic window into the movers and shakers of the modern Druid world.
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A Legacy of Druids: Conversations With Druid Leaders Of Britain, The USA And Canada, Past And Present

A Legacy of Druids: Conversations With Druid Leaders Of Britain, The USA And Canada, Past And Present

by Ellen Hopman
A Legacy of Druids: Conversations With Druid Leaders Of Britain, The USA And Canada, Past And Present

A Legacy of Druids: Conversations With Druid Leaders Of Britain, The USA And Canada, Past And Present

by Ellen Hopman

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Overview

A book of conversations with prominent Druids from across Britain, the USA and other countries whose voices describe the basic beliefs, practices and struggles of the emerging Druid faith. Conducted in person and online in the late 20th century, these collected conversations provide a historic window into the movers and shakers of the modern Druid world.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781785351358
Publisher: Collective Ink
Publication date: 04/29/2016
Pages: 392
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.40(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Ellen Evert Hopman is the author of a number of books and has been a teacher of Herbalism since 1983 and of Druidism since 1990. She has presented on Druidism, herbal lore, tree lore, Paganism and magic at conferences, festivals, and events in Northern Ireland, Ireland, Scotland, Canada, and in the United States. She is currently Archdruid of Tribe of the Oak (http://tribeoftheoak.com/) an international Druid teaching Order based in New England, USA.

Read an Excerpt

A Legacy of Druids

Conversations with Druid Leaders of Britain, the USA and Canada, Past and Present


By Ellen Evert Hopman

John Hunt Publishing Ltd.

Copyright © 2015 Ellen Evert Hopman
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-78535-135-8



CHAPTER 1

Druidry of the Spirit


It is time for the old Earth spirituality of the Europeans to start coming back. We're in real trouble if it doesn't. People really need to start turning to their own ancestors for help. This is what needs to happen. Some people will be afraid of this. Why else did they burn everyone over there? If you're following the lead of the Old Ones and people are afraid or critical of you, then you know you are doing something right. Anishinaabe, Elder of the Ojibwa

The word 'Druid' has for thousands of years evoked an image of majesty and mystery. Succeeding generations have seized on it and interpreted it according to the yearnings and needs of their time. The Druids of old were philosophers, poets, law givers, healers and peace makers. They were Priests and Priestesses and providers of religious inspiration and generational continuity for the guilds, the clans and the tribes.

This chapter explores the many faces of Druid spirituality as it is currently being expressed in England, Ireland, Scotland, Japan, and the United States. Celtic Reconstructionists, Geomancers, Theosophists, Pagans, ritualists and scholars have added their interpretations to the blend, offering a rich and varied approach to the sacred through the religious and philosophical path of Druidry.

As with all Neo-Pagan traditions today there is an underlying unity to the approaches – a deep reverence for the Earth and the kingdoms of nature, a fierce dedication to self-determination in the areas of personal growth and spiritual development, and a passionate devotion to the Gods and Goddesses of the Celtic pantheons and of other Earth-based spiritual traditions.

Philip Carr-GommInterviewed April 20, 1996 Craftwise Conference, Waterbury, CT

Philip is the Chosen Chief of the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids (OBOD), an international Druid Order with two thousand members. Philip has a degree in psychology and has studied psychosynthesis, adult psychotherapy, and play therapy for children.

Living in Sussex, England, he is the author of The Elements of the Druid Tradition and The Druid Way. He is also editor of The Book of Druidry and The Druid Renaissance and co-author of The Druid Animal Oracle.

OBOD traces its ancestry to the ancient Druids, which it considers to have been one of the major inspirations for the Western Spiritual Tradition. It sees itself as drawing on ancient inspiration – from the Megalithic people who built the great stone circles and henges, to the Celts who added their wisdom and artistry, and to the Bardic schools of Ireland, Scotland, Wales, England and Brittany.

The 18th century Druid revival brought the present form of Druidry into being – flexible and relevant to the needs of the day and yet rooted in the heritage of the past. About ten years ago OBOD developed an experientially-based correspondence course, enabling individuals and Groves to study and participate in ceremonies of a like nature, all over the world.


Can you start by describing how you became a Druid and what it means to you to be a Druid now?

When I was a child my father knew the old Chief Druid, Ross Nichols, also known as Nuinn. I first met him when I was eleven and then again when I was fifteen. I was just drawn to it. I suppose it was just automatic, but that sounds like such a technical word. I was fascinated by it. I ended up asking to be initiated so when I was about sixteen or seventeen I was.

I suppose being a Druid means a number of different things to me. There are times when the Druid inside me feels like an instinctive, sort of Shamanistic Druid. When I am out in the forest or someplace like that I can feel him living in me and wanting to work in me.

Then there's the Druid who is the thinker, the philosopher. That's when I am at home in my study with my books thinking about particular issues. That's another kind of Druid who pops up.

That's the 'wet' path and the 'dry' path. Those are old alchemical terms.

Oh really? I thought you meant in terms of the guy who doesn't mind getting wet, being outdoors! In England that would be true!

The wet path is the relationship with nature and the dry path is meditation, study, and those kinds of pursuits; both with the aim of enlightenment.

Great, the wet Druid and the dry Druid! Yeah, it fits. A friend was doing a spell check on her article and for Druid it came up with 'drip dry'. So we put a little cartoon in the magazine of these little Druids hanging on a wash line. So that's perfect. Thank you!

So how were you trained?

I was still going to school when I started to train. What I used to do was I would get off the train on the way back from school a couple of times a week and go round to my teacher's house. He had a house in Baron's Court. That's where Ouspensky lived, I suppose it was the 1930s or something, I don't think they knew each other. He would make me a cup of tea. It was strangely formal in a way. He would sometimes make a sandwich and then he would go to this big cupboard where he had all the teachings. He would take something out and he would read it to me and then he would explain things, on a paper napkin or a scrap of paper. He would draw a diagram of Stonehenge or do something to illustrate what he was saying.

Then he would ask me if I had any questions. Then we would talk about the ceremony that was coming up and that would be it. I'd go home.

Did your parents know this was going on?

Oh yes. Nuinn used to run a place called a Crammer's, which was a kind of private tutorial school for kids who failed. Winston Churchill went to a Crammer's. It's a place where there is no sport, just solid cramming, and five kids in a class. And my father worked as a history teacher there.

So my family knew about this, it was fine. I grew up in a family where both of my parents weren't Christian. They questioned things, they were Agnostic. I went to church in school contexts. I went to Westminster so I was singing in Westminster Abbey every morning you know, which was beautiful.

So that was the training. It sort of drove me crazy in a way because it was apparently haphazard. In other words I would turn up one day and he would talk to me about Stonehenge. I'd turn up three days later and he'd talk to me about the element of Fire, or something like that. It was only years later that I saw the way it all fitted together, when I worked at putting the OBOD course together.

Is there anyone who you are training right now in that way?

No. I don't know if you have read the foreword to The Book of Druidry, but in there I talk about how he died in 1975 and he appeared to me in 1984, I was taking a degree in psychology then. I was meditating one morning and suddenly I was intensely aware of him about ten feet in front of me.

He told me that the Druid material was really relevant to the needs of the day and that it needed to be put into the form of a distance course so that lots of people could read it. OBOD was tiny in his day, less than a dozen people, so it was very limiting because you had to go and see him.

Now, at any one time we have about 650 people actively doing the course. There are about 4,000 people who have started it. As far as members it depends how you categorize a member. I would say that there are 2,000 members.

Can you give an overview for Americans of the British Druid scene?

Well, there is the Ancient Order of Druids, which is a bit like the Rotarians or the Freemasons. They do have some ceremony, but they would not call themselves Pagan. They wear blazers and they raise a lot of money for charity. It is said that they have about 3,000 members. That is one type of Druidry which a Pagan American Druid would feel quite uncomfortable with, I imagine. They do have some branches in America. It's mostly male-only lodges with one or two female-only lodges.

Then there is the Ancient Druid Order, which is what OBOD grew out of. That is the group that you see photographed at Stonehenge. They are quite heavily influenced by the Golden Dawn. It's what you might call esoteric. I don't know too much about them, but they never joined the Council of British Druid Orders (COBDO) and they have kept themselves very much apart as a matter of policy.

Then there are a whole lot of much more recent Orders which are really quite small, who come together in the Council of British Druid Orders. One of those is the Glastonbury Order of Druids, the other is the Secular Order of Druids, who each have a dozen or so members.

Their main concern is having Stonehenge as a place for free worship. There is an ongoing debate about that that has been going on in COBDO for about six years and which has never been resolved. There are very persuasive arguments on both sides of the fence.

Put very simply, the argument for free access is that this is a sacred place and you would never bar people from going, say, to a cathedral on Christmas day for example. So to bar people from going to Stonehenge to celebrate the Summer Solstice is criminal.

One of them has taken the British government to the European Court of Human Rights. That's happening at the moment. It's being done by a fellow who calls himself King Arthur.

The argument on the other side is that Stonehenge has become a sort of political focus. It's become a focus of anti-establishment activity and even in the days of my teacher when they did the Summer Solstice there, people would come and throw beer bottles and it was an excuse for what are called in Britain the 'lager louts' to come and jeer. Unfortunately, it has become a sort of magnet for that kind of energy.

So the counter-argument is that now that there are so many people interested in Stonehenge, English Heritage have become the guardians of this site. And that it is appropriate for it to be guarded and to be used. They do allow private ceremonies, you can 'book it' for that.

I have done ceremony there and I was very surprised about how I felt. I went there prepared to feel uncomfortable and feel that we were making a mistake. When we did the ceremony it took me by surprise, I was very pleasantly surprised. I immediately thought, I want to do this again. This is good.

I think we have to accept now that we live in a world that is so full of people ... I've been to Glastonbury Tor and it's been full of people camping out, drinking beer, cans all over and all the rest of it. If Stonehenge was completely open all the time there would be people camping there. You would be doing a ceremony and treading on beer bottles. That's the sad reality of it.

If you go to Chalice Well, part of the reason there is that beautiful influence, is that you have to pay a pound to come in and it adds to the protection. We know in magic about the power of the circle and the protection of the circle. Maybe places need it too.

What about the suggestion to have robed Pagan guardians at these sites?

Yes, but how long would it take the establishment to agree to that? The way we are looking at it now is that instead of confrontation in using the site, we are working it so that the feedback we are getting is; 'The Druids came last week and there was no problem with them. There was a very nice feeling from them.'

They have these security guards and we were all thanking them. You start to build up a relationship. Then maybe a year or two down the line you say to them; 'You see how we have been respecting the site. Could we now have a ceremony with 200 people?'

The Druids aren't the problem. The problem is the Travelers.

Right. And this is where I think the other Orders who are lobbying for free access are seeing it from a different point of view. They want everybody to be able to go.

So unfortunately what has happened over the last few years is that these three Orders have pushed their agenda so strongly that it has taken up a lot of time and energy in COBDO. The council has become a self-referring system, spending ages talking about its own structure and mechanisms.

Now the British Druid Order and OBOD have started something called The Druid Forum. We are trying to keep to the ideals of the original council, which is to create a forum for people who are interested in Druidry to come and talk about Druidry. Not to get into voting rights and subscriptions, or presenting 'united fronts', which don't exist anyway because there is such a wide range of opinions. So the Ancient Order of Druids has left the council and the British Druid Order has left, and OBOD has left.

Another thing that's happening is that there is a phenomenon called The Gorsedd of the Bards of Caer Abiri I am a member of that. I was initiated into it; I am the 'real thing'. I think I'm the only American, there's a fellow from Vermont, but he is British.

Oh good! That is growing every year. OBOD had a meeting at Avebury in the conference center there. And there was a guy at the Stones Restaurant who asked if we would tell him all our festival dates because every time there was a festival they would sell out of food. And the people in the pub said they would lay on extra bar staff at the festival times. This last Spring Equinox was the biggest one – there were over 200 people.

Another thing that is starting to happen is camps. We have run a summer camp for two years around Lughnasad. Philip Shallcrass and Emma Restall Orr, of the British Druid Order, are doing camps now at Calme, near Avebury. Our camps are ten-day camps. The ones they are doing are two or three days. And cyber-Druids have come to England. We are setting up a web page which will be ready in the middle of May. The web page is great. The problem I find with lists, like the Order of the WhiteOak, is that if you are in 'overwhelm', as we tend to be, you get all these messages coming in. I just can't handle the mail. With a web page you can control it more.

Our web page has information about the course and the Order. We also have an art gallery with changing exhibits, a poetry archive – there is a Bard in charge of that, and we are going to try and develop a Poetry Cafe with links to other sites like the Poetry Society in the UK.

If people want to visit our site they will get there and see a Grove of nine trees and they click on the tree and that will take them to the poetry gallery or the art gallery. Then we have an archive – you have been asked to contribute, haven't you?

Yes, and I have.

One development is the growing number of links between Wicca and Druidry. A lot of Wiccans are becoming Druids now. Around the same time that this has happened, people like Ronald Hutton have started to look at the history of Wicca and Druidry around the 1950s. The fact that Gerald Gardner and Ross Nichols were friends and the Wiccans were celebrating the Fire Festivals but not the Solar festivals and the Druids vice versa.

After Gardner and Ross got together in the 50s, Wiccans started celebrating all eight festivals and so did the Druids. And so there are a lot of links. I talked about these links in my introduction to The Druid Renaissance, which is coming out in July from HarperCollins.

What I suggest is that there is some danger that we will dilute our traditions if we mix them in a haphazard way. But if we recognize them as discreet, in the sense of unique, to themselves and complete in themselves it will be alright. Some of us will want to work with both and we can combine both. Other people may prefer to only work in one tradition.

This brings me to something that I keep bringing up on the internet and other places. I am an American. I live in America. I walk the land here. I listen to the trees, I look into the water and into the fire and I feel very close to the Native American ancestors. I feel them around me, I hear them, and I get messages from them. I give offerings to them.

In American Druid circles this is often taboo. You are not supposed to talk about Native American anything. They will give you all kinds of elaborate reasons about why, about not mixing traditions and how there is no way you could possibly understand who these spirits were so don't even try.

And yet when I was in England and also through the OBOD magazine I have noticed that people are very interested in Native American spirituality. They want to learn about it and there is no problem there.

Sure. Last year I went to California to do some workshops, and the first night I spent in California I woke up at about three in the morning with this dream that became a waking dream, of a Native American man. He was suggesting what to do in the workshop. He was giving me Druidic things to do. I did it the next morning in the workshop and it was fabulous and it worked.

So I think that in the spirit world they are not so interested in these kinds of divisions as we are down here. There are so many similarities with us and the Native American traditions. The circles, the birds' feathers, the importance of the directions.

Another strange experience I had was when I first came to America. The day before I flew over to New York I had a dream in which a Native American teacher, a man, came to me and said; 'It's good that you are teaching Druidry in America because White people have to learn to connect with their own roots first. And once they have connected with their own roots, then they can come to us if they wish.'


(Continues...)

Excerpted from A Legacy of Druids by Ellen Evert Hopman. Copyright © 2015 Ellen Evert Hopman. Excerpted by permission of John Hunt Publishing Ltd..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Preface by John Matthews,
Introduction by Ellen Evert Hopman,
Foreword by Philip Carr-Gomm,
Druidry of the Spirit,
Druidry and Politics,
Scholars and Writers,
Musicians, Artists and Poets,
Further Information about the Contributors to this Book,
Druidic and Celtic Bibliography,
Endnotes,

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