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FREE ESSAY ON WITCHCRAFT

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Salem Witchcraft
This paper discusses the witchcraft hysteria, specifically the witchcraft trials held in Salem Village, Massachusetts in 1692: Executions, key personalities, historical and social aspects. -- 2,025 words;

Witchcraft
This paper searches for answers about the reality of witchcraft in the 16th and 17th Centuries. -- 2,595 words; APA

Effects of Witchcraft on African Culture
A survey of witchcraft belief and practice and social dynamics in Africa. -- 1,840 words; APA

The Salem Witchcraft Trials
An examination of the Salem witchcraft trials of 1692. -- 1,288 words; APA

Medieval Witchcraft
A look at the history and theory behind witchcraft and witch-hunts. -- 2,476 words; MLA

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WITCHCRAFT

For nearly two centuries, witchcraft seemed to have disappeared. Although it was driven
underground for a time, it is now the fastest growing religion in the United States.
There are several reasons for its disappearance and now, for its return.
Until the fifteenth century, witchcraft was not considered an evil practice. It was about
that time that the Catholic church started labeling witches as heretics and sinners
because of their belief in social rebellion. The idea of social rebellion was also a
rebellion against the church, which taught that It was the duty of the common people to
endure the tyranny of authority, no matter how oppressive. (Donovan 118)
There were also the other acts in the rituals of witchcraft which included feasting and
dancing, both of which the church considered rebellious. But, it was not until the end of
the fifteenth century that witchcraft got the reputation of being a satanic religion. The
idea of a purely diabolical witchcraft was said to have been invented by the Roman
Catholics to supply a way to destroy the threat of the heretic Germans. The idea of satan
as an evil figure in religion was not even in the Old Testament, it was put there for an
easy way to accuse people. Witches were seen worshipping a horned God, so the church
created a horned figure that they related to evil, they called this figure satan. But the
creation of this figure did much more than kill just Germans. The theory that witches
were devil worshippers gave the church license to begin persecuting them as heretics, and
they did. It was the beginning of two hundred years of torture and execution.
In those two hundred years it has been estimated that anywhere from 200,000 to 9,000,000
people were executed or met their death. These people were cruelly tortured, tormented,
and harassed until they confessed, and then they were tortured again to be sure that they
had given a full confession and that they had been properly purified. Some tortures
included strapping the accused's feet in a pair of metal boots and then filling the boots
with boiling hot oil. The accused were often whipped for their purification, sometimes
they were left out in the open for hours after having been whipped while the torturers
went out to lunch. They had to hang there and wait until they returned and often they
received additional torture after their wait just to be certain they had been purified.
Tortures were so extreme that many people took their practices underground to avoid the
Inquisition.
Tyagi stated on his website on witchcraft that up to 90% of the people executed probably
were not witches. They were innocents who happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong
time, or have some abnormal traits or habits, or even just being the wrong person could
be a sufficient reason. It was not until after the Salem witch trials that people really
started to see how foolish the entire witch-hunt was. By then, the entire witchcraft
population had been either killed or scared off by the hunters.
But, even after the trials, people still practiced the rituals and beliefs. It became a
family religion, passed down from generation to generation. It also stayed alive in small
isolated areas where it was practiced in folk customs and in their celebrations and
festivals. It just proves the incredible integrity of those involved.
Those who still secretly practiced witchcraft kept their secret for many years. It was
not until after World War I that witchcraft started to make a comeback. Even then it was
still kept underground for fear of it losing its spiritual inspiration if it was
practiced publicly and for an audience. By the 1960's witches began to feel free enough
to practice the Craft openly, and by the 1970's there were many public groups. Quite a
few of these groups were feminists who had adopted witchcraft as a feminist movement.
Witchcraft started to return at this time because of a general change in the people of
the United States as Scott Moreau said in the Evangelical Dictionary of Theology. He says
that a large reason for its return is because people started thinking magically again,
rather than scientifically. It was also inviting to those who did not fit in and wanted a
place to go where they would feel wanted, or for those who did not want to fit in.
Now, close to a hundred years after it began its comeback, it is the fastest growing
religion in the United States. Although it is mostly middle class, people from all walks
of life are members; doctors, scientists, farmers, even people living on the streets. The
religion's beliefs cater mostly to those who are not happy with their present lives and
wish to have a retreat, somewhere that they can go and feel important and accepted, which
is something that many people today want.
There were several people who were large factors in the resurrection of the Craft. In the
20th century, Aleister Crowly renounced his background and began to write down new
rituals and beliefs. His thoughts and ideas laid the path for future writers and thinkers
like Gerald Gardner and Margaret Murray. Gerald Gardner was a retired British civil
servant whose writings had a profound influence on modern witchcraft practices. He wrote
down many other people's ideas along with ancient practices of pagan religions, possibly
with some of his own ideas added in. Many of his ideas may possibly have come from the
writings of Margaret Murray, another very influential writer. Their ideas and writings
were the foundation of a religio 
Witchcraft was driven underground by fear of death, and the fear of pain. But, even
though witches were not allowed to openly practice their beliefs, their beliefs still
lived on in secret gatherings and local customs. And it is our modern ideas and
attitudes, and people like Gerald Gardner and Margaret Murray who brought about the
revival of witchcraft.

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