"Germany's spiritual crisis: why many are turning to witchcraft"
"Germany's spiritual crisis: why many are turning to witchcraft"
("DPA," November 01, 2005)
Berlin, Germany - While German retailers welcome the rise in popularity of
Halloween, and Wicca practitioners celebrate the ancient Celtic holiday,
church officials view it with alarm. Ernest Gill looks at why more and
more Germans are turning to the occult for spiritual solace.
Amid double-digit unemployment and post- unification trauma, increasing
numbers of Germans are turning to witchcraft and the occult to provide
the solace they once found in churches, jobs and family.
Germans are discovering Halloween as never before
The land of Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation, where the 30
Years War was fought over religious beliefs, has become a nation in the
throes of "de-Christianisation" as churches across the land are forced to
close for lack of congregations.
A crisis of faith
"This de-Christianisation is the result of a serious crisis of faith that
has been spreading for many years, fed by two world wars and the
protracted division of Germany," says Hansjoerg Hemminger, a leading
Lutheran theologian in Wuerttemberg.
"Witchcraft and the occult are filling that age-old human need for
spiritual reassurance, particularly among young people, millions of whom
have seldom or never set foot inside a church," Hemminger says.
"We are reverting back to a pre-Christian heathen society where people
gather in clearings and worship tree sprites."
Pagan hotbeds
Belief in magic, spiritism (nowadays called "channelling"), shamanism and
other New Age beliefs has supplanted Christianity in many areas,
particularly in what used to be Communist East Germany where a Stalinist
regime actively discouraged church-going.
Cities like Berlin, Hamburg and Cologne have become hotbeds of pagan
practises.
"There are now scores of covens throughout Germany, with at least one in
every major city," says a 44-year-old witch named Maddalina, who is high
priestess of a coven in Berlin.
"The number has quadrupled since German unification 15 years ago," she
says. Maddalina insists she practises "beneficent white magic" known as
Wicca.
Impressionable kids
"The Internet has made all the difference," she says. "I get e-mails daily
from 13- and 14-year-olds wanting to become witches. We Wiccans don't
believe in recruiting anybody, certainly not impressionable kids. So I
don't encourage them."
Maddalina's coven consists of eight adults, all over age 25, all of whom
have been practising witches for years. She and her coven witches say the
rampant spread of belief in the occult is a mixed blessing.
"There is so much material out there these days," she says. "Walk into any
book store or surf the Internet and you'll find lots of books on
spellcraft and Satanism and demonology and all sorts of things. Veritable
cookbooks with curses and spells you can download for free. I shudder to
think what dangerous stuff is readily available to impressionable young
minds."
Impressing young girls
The media are full of misleading and glamorised depictions of the occult.
The new Nicole Kidman film version of the popular old TV sitcom
"Bewitched" might not have been a big box office hit, but it impressed
lots of girls and young women in Germany, Maddalina fears.
Then there are TV series like "Charmed" and "Sabrina", depicting witches
as teens beauties leading literally charmed lives.
Maddalina says being a witch is "a lot of hard work and responsibility and
very little glamour". She agrees with religious sect experts like
Hemminger that there is a dangerous spiritual emptiness among many
Germans, young and old.
Repression and brainwashing
"People forget that the Communists actively repressed the church,"
Hemminger notes. "And before that, the Nazis brainwashed people into
believing in Nordic myths. The Nazis called the Christmas tree the
Solstice Yule tree and claimed Santa Claus was a Teutonic spirit and
discouraged calling him Saint Nicholas," he says.
"And after the war, many young people in West Germany rebelled against the
beliefs of their elders and adopted pseudo-Hindu and Buddhist
philosophies," he adds. "So for most of the 20th Century, practising
Christians were looked down upon in many places."
A spooky economic boost
In addition, Germans are discovering Halloween as never before, and the
nation's retailers hope this imported Irish-American holiday can help
spook Germany out of economic recession.
Long-forgotten in Europe, the ancient Celtic holiday has become trendy
among post-unification Germans. Thanks largely to American movies and TV
shows, young Germans are intrigued by images of costumed
"trick-or-treaters" going door-to-door in search of sweets.
A decade ago, few people in Germany had heard of Jack-o'-Lanterns. Now
they grin madly from store windows throughout the country as shoppers buy
decorations and costumes for their own Halloween parties.
"Halloween has achieved cult status among young Germans," says Dieter
Tschorn, head of the German Toy and Novelty Retailers Association.
No promotion
Church officials however view Halloween with alarm.
"We don't ban Halloween from our church kindergarten," says Luebeck
Catholic priest Ralf Meister. "But we certainly don't intend to promote
it."
Maddalina and her coven will be celebrating Halloween, which is one of the
major holidays in the Wiccan calendar. She views the spread of interest in
witchcraft as understandable.
"People in Germany used to go to a priest or they turned to family members
in times of need," she explains. "The witch today gives strength to the
weak, comfort and consolation to the bereaved and hope to the despairing.
She is Samaritan, social worker and priest. When people have unsolvable
problems, they come to me."
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