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Britain
Druidry recognised as religion in Britain
2010-10-03
[Pak Daily Times] Britain has recognised druidry as an official religion for the first time, thousands of years after the Celtic pagan faith emerged in Europe, the country's charity commission said on Saturday.
And a little more than two thousand years after the Romans wiped it out because of the priests' little habit of human sacrifice, pretty much the only religious practice the Romans objected to.
The Druid Network, an organisation representing the religion in Britain, was granted charitable status in a decision that not only gives it tax breaks but also lets the religion take its place alongside more mainstream beliefs.

"This has been a long hard struggle, taking over five years to complete," the Druid Network said in a statement after its application to be registered as a charity had been accepted by the Charity Commission.

In its ruling on the group's application, the commission said it accepted that druidry was an "ancient pagan religion" in its own right involving the worship of nature, particularly the sun and the earth.

Druid rituals involve "commonality of practice" across the faith including solar and fire festivals, ceremonies at various phases of the moon, seasonal festivals and rites of passage in life.
So really, they're 'neo-druids', taking the old name but engaging in generic pagan practices. That's ok, then.
There had also been some official recognition already, it added, including a provision by Britain's Prison Service for the practice of druidry and the attendance of a pagan chaplain at services.

"The board members concluded that The Druid Network is established for exclusively charitable purposes for the advancement of religion for the public benefit," the Charity Commission said. Druidry emerged in ancient Ireland and Britain and spread further afield during the Iron Age, especially into France, but became largely supplanted as Christianity took hold across Europe.

It has gained recent popularity because of its pantheistic nature and concern with ecology.
And dancing au natural in the moonlight... or is that another group?
Posted by:Fred

#12  SSSOOOOOOOO IOW, NICHOLAS CAGE SHOULD NOT TRAVEL TO BRITAIN, iff He hopes to escape the sacrificial Tower + sexy slinky Babes that put 'im there.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2010-10-03 22:24  

#11  I can't fault the Brits on this one. Human sacrifice for convenience (now gov't financed) already an accepted "mainstream" practice here. What could be the harm with linking the activity with an appropriate people-group label?
Posted by: Besoeker   2010-10-03 15:23  

#10  And the Archbishop of Canterbury can step right in as both a leader of the Church of England, and the leader of the Druids.
Posted by: Rambler in Virginia   2010-10-03 14:03  

#9  You left out that Roman sources cite one of their sacrificial ceremonies involved the severing of the spinal cord of humans to divine from the spasms of the victime some interpretation of their dieties wishes, before they finished the victim off by slow strangulation. As for Bulldog's comments,
I offer this excellent article about the Roman Invasion of Angelesey to eradicate the Druids.

http://www.militaryhistoryonline.com/ancient/anglesey/default.aspx
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2010-10-03 13:30  

#8  OK, so the dirt worshipers are now officially recognized. No sweatÂ…right? Just wait till someone gets charged with a hate crime for calling them pagans or the like.
Posted by: DepotGuy   2010-10-03 12:58  

#7  Barbara Skolaut: Actually, somewhat creepier. Voluntary human sacrifice seems more peaceful on the surface than murder of captives and all, but it reduces humans to animals. If a captive is to be murdered, and they resist, they still die a human being.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2010-10-03 12:46  

#6  ...but one notch above a four hour old kitten in a fight. Posted by: Bulldog 2010-10-03 03:38

Beautiful word play, Bulldog!!!
Posted by: WolfDog   2010-10-03 11:14  

#5  "Except for that whole "human sacrifice" thing."

Ah, so they're just like today's Islamics, 'moose? Just used knives and rocks instead of bombs.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2010-10-03 10:23  

#4  Except for that whole "human sacrifice" thing. Interesting, I suppose, for the eccentricity noted both by the Romans and the archaeologists, that they used three different means at the same time to insure death. Typically strangulation, concussion and throat slicing.

And yes, I can imagine Archdruid Williams doing that, to some hooker in a dark alley.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2010-10-03 09:30  

#3  Methinks Fred wannted an excuse to run the archdruid pic ;) .

Who knows - some time in the future we might see all adherents of the Mohammedan cult forcibly converted to Druidry.

Given the shambolic self-defence of the druids when challenged by the Romans, my take is that they were something akin to the Hindu sadhus. Influential and revered, and relatively good fun to be around, but one notch above a four hour old kitten in a fight.
Posted by: Bulldog   2010-10-03 03:38  

#2  Eh, I really don't give a squat what someone wants to claim as their religion. It really isn't important that they choose the same as I do nor do I experience it as "invalidating" of my own religious choices. I wouldn't care if they worshiped snails. More power to them.
Posted by: crosspatch   2010-10-03 02:42  

#1  As long as the world is going-to-hell-in-a hand-basket, why not grease the wheels some more.

Maybe we should start a religion too.
The Rantburg Order of the Scribes or some nonsense like that.
We could all stop paying taxes and have to post here, in monks robes, all day.
why not?
every other entity is now called a religion.
Posted by: Mike Hunt   2010-10-03 02:39  

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