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At the end of desire: Starhawk: "A Pagan Response to Katrina"
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At the end of desire
The things that make us Happy make us Wise
Friday, September 16, 2005
Starhawk: "A Pagan Response to Katrina"
Essay reprinted in full, and absolutely worth reading the whole thing (via Goddessing ): Feel free to post, forward, and reprint this article for non-commercial purposes. All other rights reserved. As Pagans, as worshippers of nature, how do we respond to an event like Hurricane Katrina, one of the most destructive natural disasters in the history of the United States? What does it mean to 'worship' something that, with one breath, can wipe out a major city? Do we see this as punishment, retribution for some Pagan sin? As an object lesson in the reality of climate change and global warming? As an overheated Goddess batting away some of the oil rigs contributing to her fever? Of course, no one can speak for all Pagans. There is no overall Council of Pagan Thealogy to hand down an official dogma. But here is my own answer, as a priestess, teacher, writer, activist and thealogian. Pagan religions are not punishment systems. We don't worship Gods of retribution, but a Goddess -- or Gods and Goddesses -- of mystery, in many aspects. The Goddess has immense power, both creative and destructive: the power that pushes a root out from a tiny seed and sends its shoot reaching for the sky, the power of the earthquake and the volcano, the rain that feeds the crops and the hurricane. We respond to that power with awe, wonder , amazement and gratitude, not fear. The great powers of nature have an intelligence, a consciousness, albeit different in magnitude and kind from our own. Everything in nature is alive and speaking: the deep, crystalline intelligence of the rock heart of the planet, the fungal threads that link the roots of trees into the nerve-net of the forests, the chattering birds and the biochemistry of plants and mushrooms are all commu"
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