I can also say I've never heard of a "Muslim witch." The Muslims I speak to would be rather horrified about this as they are against "djinn" and "magic".
A "Christian" witch is scoffed at by other Wiccans who seem to by and large (now, I cannot prove this academically except to say I've been in a lot of Wiccan chats) to laugh at what they perceive as the confusion of being a "Christian witch." It seems that to some it is akin to simply "being confused" about what you want to be, because of the longstanding tiff between Christians and witches courtesy of the very Christian Sprenger and his Malleus Maleficarum. What was spooky to me was the introduction, written in 1920 by a Pope who thought Sprenger had a great idea in writing the Malleus in the first place, and that witch hunting ought to be more aggressively pursued than it was.
I am sure there is an anthropological take on this too.
Again, looking forward to what the rest of you think. As a Wiccan, mine is only one point of view. (And I can't believe I just paid 250.00 for the new two volume edition of the Malleus Maleficarum newly redone and with scholarly notes vis a vis Oxford University!!)
Diane Yoder
MA candidate, Religion and Literature
Antioch University-McGregor
I think also, what needs to be taken into account re: Malleus Maleficarum is that the term "witch" is a Christian construct. I wonder if those who would practice what Mogg described below would not have considered themselves "witches" per se....it would be other Christians pointing a finger and screaming "Witch" that would be the rule of the day.
So perhaps in terms of self-identification, "witchcraft" as we know it today in which people such as myself are no longer afraid to say "I'm a witch" (meaning "Wiccan"...is a modern construct--and even some Wiccans hesitate to use the word "witch" because of its historically negative connotations).
During the Salem witchcraft trials, Cotton Mather, et. al. were using the "Rules" of European witch hunting a la Sprenger et. al. as a guide to "identifying" what a witch was/looked like because apparently, they didn't know without the "rules." (See Mather's Wonders of the Invisible World). So would it be proper to even say such rural practitioners were self-identified as "witches?" Reading "trial" records, it seems these people were pretty sincere in their denials that they were witches.
What do you all think?
Diane Yoder
Antioch University-McGregor
Yellow Springs, OH--On 12/1/06, Mandrake of Oxford < [log in to unmask]> wrote:Dear FriendI guess that before the twentieth century mosteuropean witches were christian -although perhaps the theology is unorthodox eg:from 'Secret of Secrets':'Hail thou holy herb growing on the groundthou heals many a grief and staunces many a woundin the name of Jesus Christ I pluck you from the ground.'so perhaps 'pagan' witchcraft is a modern thing?and indeed there is no fundamental reason why a magician or witch shoould not a christian or indeed muslim be ??Some sabbatics still have 'christian' affiliations'love and do what you will'mogg-----Original Message-----
From: Society for The Academic Study of Magic [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of anna hudson
Sent: 02 December 2006 08:54
To: [log in to unmask]Subject: [ACADEMIC-STUDY-MAGIC] Christian/muslim witchesWhat do people think re other ( than pagan that is) religious witches, such as christian or muslim witches (witch being defined as self identified and a practioner of magic/the Craft)?Are these taken to be pagan witches who include in their pantheon symbols and Gods of the 'Great' religions....or ex Christians/muslim who have converted to paganism and witchcraft.
If a christian witch is seen as valid..then what can be said about for instance christian muslims? If paganism is seen as a religion can a christian/muslim witch be???
Anna
From: Khem Caigan <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To: Society for The Academic Study of Magic <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [ACADEMIC-STUDY-MAGIC] Defining Magic
Date: Mon, 14 Aug 2006 11:56:11 -0400
>Christopher Kimberley doth schriebble:
>> Magic, as usually defined, is a technology which is either
>>accessible to
>>everyone or to a set of a population that has defining
>>characteristics.
>
>And thus the term, *magike techne*.
>
>Cors in Manu Domine,
>
>
>~ Khem Caigan
><[log in to unmask]>
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Nature and Nature's laws lay hid in night,
God said: "Let Newton be!", and all was light.
Alexander Pope (1688-1744) English poet.