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Beltane:
The Tree of Life
May 6, 2005
http://cainer.com/ericfrancis/may6.html
When in the springtime of the year
When the trees are crowned with leaves
When the ash and oak, and the birch and yew
Are dressed in ribbons fair...
--Loreena McKennitt
Dear Readers:
I?ve noticed an unusual level of
discussion about Beltane this year. What a relief. Any traces of a return to
honoring the Old Religion are welcome developments on our planet, because we
need all the contact with nature we can get. I remember when I was a kid, the
calendar had these arbitrary dates for the beginnings of the seasons. This
seemed really silly. Now, even the modern media world seems to grok that the
seasons begin when the Sun reaches an equinox or solstice. But this week, it?s
exactly half way between the two.
Beltane, traditionally celebrated the
first week of May, is one of the four High Sabbats (days of worship) of the
Pagan calendar, a calendar closely intertwined with astrology. This is the
pre-Christian cycle of the seasons that is based on what some call the Natural
Religion or Earth-based practice. In some places Beltane is referred to as The
May, and historically in many locales, the celebration lasted an entire month.
Also known as the Midspring holiday, Beltane is traditionally celebrated at the
time the Sun reaches the middle degrees of Taurus, the first Earth sign of the
horoscope, in early May.
It is the celebration of renewed life
after the long winter, as well as a celebration of sexuality, abundance and
community. This is the traditional time to 'fertilize the fields'.
Beltane is one of the 'cross-quarter
days', the four central holidays that make up the cycle of the seasons. There
are also the 'quarter days', which are the beginnings of the seasons -- the
equinoxes and the solstices. The cross-quarter days fall exactly six weeks
after the quarter days. They always occur when the Sun is at the midpoint of a
fixed sign: Taurus, Leo, Scorpio, or Aquarius. For example, Beltane falls
exactly between spring equinox and summer solstice, with the Sun in Taurus.
Readers down under, please note that
these holidays are based on the seasons in the Northern Hemisphere. There are
different theories as to how the seasonal changes may be applied to the
Southern Hemisphere, where the seasons run opposite than the north. But the
initial story and the placement of the holidays is based on the European
climates.
Each spring, the Earth's life is renewed,
and we are given a fresh chance to live. This is the simplest meaning of
Beltane. While we may view this metaphorically today, in earlier times there
were no guarantees of surviving winter. Harsh climates throughout
Many forms of Paganism, which is an
Earth-based, natural religion that predates Christianity by thousands of years,
involved tree worship. Trees grow in and from the Earth, and provide us with
fruit, as well as wood to build our homes, and to warm them. They are the 'cow'
of the Earth -- providing all the basic needs of humanity. In honor of spring,
trees were dressed in garlands, wreaths, and ribbons.
There is an element of tree worship
associated with Beltane, symbolized in the May Pole dance. There is also a not
so subtle phallic symbol alluded to in the May Pole. The May Pole, an ancient
symbol of fertility, was celebrated in a dance involving the interweaving of
ribbons, symbolic of the entwined fabric of the human family. Today this kind
of woven intertwining is known to exist in the genetic codes contained in DNA.
It is interesting that Christian
tradition has taken over the holiday as Holy Cross Day (May 3, right in the heart
of Beltane season) and that in political tradition it's a holiday about labor
and productivity (May Day, celebrated across
Traditionally, both phallic symbols and
their opposite, yonic symbols, have been part of Beltane. When I visited
Avebury Henge last year in England, a 5,000 year old stone circle just outside
of London, the Keeper of the Stones explained that at one time there was an
obelisk (shaped kind of like the Washington Monument) at the center of one of
the circles, which at Beltane cast a shadow on something called the 'vulva
stone'. The male and female polarities would make contact, via a shadow. Since
sex is the basis of reproduction and thus all life and all abundance, this is a
time of year when sexual symbolism (and reality) are acknowledged openly.
In other words, the most basic property
of nature was given a space in the mind and in human affairs. Beltane is the
acknowledgement of this.
"Marriage vows were temporarily
forgotten during this honey month," writes Donna Henes in her revered,
positively beautiful book, Celestially Auspicious Occasions.
"People coupled freely in the woods and fields, fertilizing the soil and
each other, sharing a fervent participation in the regenerative magic of the
Earth."
This is confirmed by other scholars.
"In pre-Christian
Beltane is the Taurus holiday, so by
studying its themes, we can find out something about this particular sign of
the zodiac.
Like Beltane, each of the cross-quarter
days has a different theme. I will go over them briefly, for context. The first
Sabbat each year occurs in February, and is called Imbolc or Midwinter holiday,
which means 'in the belly' or 'in the milk', depending on who you ask. This is
the Aquarius holiday of the four.
It celebrates gestation before birth, and
the life contained within apparent stillness and darkness. This occurs when
it's still dark and cold outside and we are contained deep within the
night-world of the cosmos. It's traditionally a celebration of light, with
candles lit in each window. Hence, the Christian version of the holiday is
called Candlemas. Each of these holidays has a Christianized version, much like
every cathedral in the
Next comes Beltane or Midspring holiday,
which, as explained above, is about birth and rebirth, when plants are coming
out of the ground, and young animals are being born.
Then in early August, Lammas or Midsummer
holiday is known as the 'first harvest'. This is the Leo holiday. Sometimes
called 'second planting', Lammas is obviously a holiday of abundance and of
celebrating the successful fruition of the Earth. The earlier name is
Lughnasadh, which is difficult to spell and more difficult to pronounce, so the
Christianized name seems to have stuck. Of the four, this is the one that has
faded into the deepest obscurity, though the word 'Midsummer' is preserved in
the name of a Shakespeare play, so it's familiar to us.
Last is Samhain (usually pronounced
sa-wen), known to us as Halloween. Whereas Beltane is the celebration of birth,
rebirth, fertility and passion, Samhain is, throughout much of the world, a
time when death is acknowledged. Apparently, the imagery of skeletons so
commonly seen at this time of year in the United States, England and Europe,
goes back as far as ancient Egypt and as far south as Mexico and Central
America, where people celebrate Days of the Dead and prepare feasts in
cemeteries. Samhain is considered by some scholars to be the longest
continually celebrated holiday in existence.
Now, however, it's time for Midspring
holiday, when Old Man Winter finally goes away for good, when the trees are
lined with leaves, and when the ash and oak, the birch and yew, are dressed in
ribbons faire.
Happy Beltane to ye.
This week, I am on holiday, so we have
researched some of the favorite questions from the Astrology Secrets Revealed
column. The research was done by two people who work behind the scenes of this
column, who I have not introduced: Michele Perin, who actually reads your
questions before I do, and Rachael Stillman, who is the proofreader and
archivist for the project. Looking over the selection, it?s a small astrology
text covering many basic subjects that I?m curious about myself.
Please keep your comments and questions
coming, and don't forget to visit Planet Waves and Planet
Waves Weekly.
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