Page 2

   

Editorial Division

   

Comments from the Pagan Community

   Albineus Equinus

   

What Does Midsummer Mean to Me?

It is a time to reconnect with the Father and with the masculine within myself. I need to sit down, reassess, and ask myself:

  • Do I recognise and utilise the Father within myself and my life?
  • What does the Father mean to me and why?

Summer solstice is a time when the sun reaches its peak - it "stands still" - and this is a wonderful analogy for the role of the solstice in one's life. Step outside the flow and take stock of your life. Are you living within the summer? That is, not the past (the birth/spring of life) and not the future (the death/autumn) and not the start of the next cycle (slumber before rebirth/winter), but the present, the summer of your life? This is a time when the sun is closest to the earth, and she responds with all her richness and bounty - and so should we. Let go of the matters you had cleaned out to deal with during Beltaine and move onto enjoying the moment, building memories and living.

June/July is a wonderful time to start things - perfect for new relationships, handfastings and marriages. Conceptions at this time are also wonderful - and will bring new life into the world in the Spring.

Take the time to talk to the Gods - and to listen. Partake of their bounty. As always, try and stick to seasonal foods so that you are truely partaking on the earth's bounty. Drink herbal teas and water to cleanse and refresh yourself. Light candles, incense, oils to purify and beautify your spaces.

Bring the sun into your home. Bring the earth inside as well. Live the days "in the moment" as much as possible.
Da boch, Callum
   



   

At one glance
I loved you
With a thousand hearts

They can have hold against me
No sin except my love for you
Come to me
Don't go away

Let the zealots think
Loving is sinful
Never mind
Let me burn in the hellfire
Of that sin

Mihri Hatun               

   

   

   

   

   

Hope for Change

Iphegenia,

Your editorial really struck home for me. There is a lot of fear at times in being pagan - will I be accepted? Will I be singled out and picked on? Will my kid get discriminated? I live a double life - those around me think I am a non-practicing christian because I never declare otherwise. The assumption I am "one of them" is often audible in the conversation. I am too afraid to correct them. I have heard what they think of my beliefs - not that they know what "my beliefs" are - they are certainly vocal about their distrust and hatred of "Satanic demon worshipping Wiccans".

I know I should correct their ignorance. Stand up for my beliefs. But I can't. Despite time spent online searching, it's clear that I am in the minority in my area - I don't know of any non-christians around here. It's hard enough to find any non-whites!

So I stay quiet. But reading articles like yours gives me hope for change in the future - and I worry greatly about that future. What world is my child going to grow up in?
Anon.

Anon.,

It is indeed a hard path to walk - aside from the general difficulties inherent in taking the road less travelled, there is a lot of pressure in society to conform. There is no shame in remaining silent, nor is there necessarily any special honor in speaking out. We each face trials and situations from which we make the best decisions as to our course of action. And for some, that course is a silent one because the gains in speaking up are not worth the danger or discomfit. Be true to yourself.
Iphegenia
   



   


Midsummer Night
   

   

   


   

Pagan Life Essays

   Albineus Equinus

   

Ukon Juhla

The fields are planted, the sun is high, and everything is growing well in the lengthening summer days. The Finnish people love this time of year, midsummer, more than any time of year. And for one day, the amount of alcohol sold in Finland increases by five times on the day before midsummer's eve. This is the time of the great holiday, Ukon Juhla, named so for the great god Ukko, the lord of the sky, weather and harvest. Farmers all over Finland raise a glass to him, asking for his blessing for a good harvest and fair weather in the fall months.

Though Ukon Juhla is now commonly called Juhannus, for John the Baptist, preparations for this midsummer festival would, and traditionally do, begin early on midsummer's eve or sometimes even the day before. The men would make beer, or mead, while the women prepared, and make, the cheese. At dusk, the whole village would make bonfires, and one very large bonfire lit by the eldest of the village, called the Bonfire of Ukko (Ukko-kokko). The revelers would then keep the fires going through the night, drinking and shouting to salute Ukko and chase away the demons with their yells and the light.

It is said that on this night, the spirits and demons know the turning of the year is at hand and walk freely during the night. Ghosts, in the darkest portion of this shortest night, place their treasures in the fire to clense them of the rust and mold accumulated through the years.

Midsummer is good for many things. For the Finnish people, it is a time for omens concerning hearth and home. Herbs collected on midsummers eve are said to be especially powerful or magical. People would bring birch-branches, flower garlands, and greenery into their homes to beautify and scent the home with the fresh aroma's. Many people would go looking for the forest-fern on this night. An herb that's a favorite to hunt for is the forest-fern. The forest-fern is said to flower only on this night, and whom ever finds a flower or seed could become invisible, beautiful or handsome, healthy and rich. In 1612, the Catholic Church actually prohibited the collecting of forest-fern seeds on Midsummer night in an effort to eradicate the pagan aspect of the holiday.

In addition to herb hunting, many would use this night for divination. Some try to get a feel for the harvest from the burn pattern of the bonfires, though many farmers agreed that the more alcohol you drank, the better your luck for a good harvest would be. Young women use flowers to try to gain a glimpse of their future husband. The love omens are quite popular and easy enough. Young women pick nine different kinds of flowers and place them under their pillows. When they go to sleep, it is said that they will see their future husband in their dreams.

As the midnight hour passes in modern times, and the midsummer sun rises in the morning, the bonfires burn low and the tired celebrants jump them for good luck in the darker days to come. Some considered their luck to be the harvest, others, a new beginning, and for those who celebrated to the fullest perhaps a new baby in the spring. For me and my tamer celebration of jumping over a candle flame, it's luck in general that I wish for.

No matter if it is a bonfire, mead, merry-making and love spells for you, or a candle flame, friends, and a good bottle of wine, a happy midsummer to you and may your harvest be plentiful.

Reader Contribution by Micah Barnsley

   


Bonfire Night

The World Around Us: Midsummer Celebrations

Worldwide customs

June Pelo's Midsummer in Finland

Juhannus

Finnish Midsummer


The midnight sun

   



   

   

The World Around Us Today: Links of Interest

After 2,600 years, the world gains a fourth poem by Sappho

Stone Age Erotica Found?

German police baffeled by Bush poo-flags

   


   

Unless otherwise indicated, all photographs are provided by and the property of the person submitting the article. Any artwork, images, photography, poetry, spells, rituals, or other written work displayed in this magazine remains the property of the owner of said work, and all copyrights are to be unheld. Beyond that, this magazine does not lay claim of ownership to any work not created by the magazine, and does not support plagarism or theft. Should you find your work in this magazine incorrectly credited, please contact the Web Designer with details so it can be rectified immediately.


Are you interested in submitting letters or articles to The Pagan Heart? If so, please read the Submissions Guidelines. They offer details on deadlines and the staff to contact. Our Editorial staff are also happy to answer questions.

   

Festivals

Rituals & Activities

Pagan Thought

Kitchen Witchery

Callum's Herbaria

Tools of the Trade

Pagan Families

Archive Page

Submissions Guide

The FAQ

The Library

Calendar of Observances

NEXT PAGE
Festivals & Holidays Page 3