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LET'S TAKE A CLOSER LOOK :
As Christianity and mass Abrahamic religions in general declines in Britain, we find that Bronze Age and pre-Bronze Age (neo-lithic or Stone Age) faiths specific to Europe, that is, faiths pre-dating Abrahamic faiths, are making a huge comeback.
Druidism and Wicca are experiencing a significant resurgence and making a cultural comeback in recent years, including in 2025.
Both are SPIRITUAL MOVEMENTS rooted in nature reverence and pre-Christian, pre-Abrahamic traditions, reaching back to the Bronze Age (3000 BC to 1000 BC, or 5000 to 3000 years ago), and even earlier to the Neo-lithic Age (Stone Age), before any metals were used in tools and weapons.
Druidism and Wicca are appealing especially to people seeking connection with nature, ecological awareness, and alternative spiritual paths.
● Druidism Resurgence
Modern Druidry, also called Neo-Druidism, is a nature-centered spiritual movement emphasizing honor and connection with landscapes, flora, fauna, and nature spirits.
It has diverse theological beliefs but centers around veneration of the divine essence of Nature.
Its revival started in the 18th century (1700s) and picked up notably in the 1990s but especially now.
Contemporary Druids engage in meditation, environmental stewardship, rituals aligned with seasonal festivals, and community service.
The movement is open and inclusive, often blending with other spiritual practices like Shamanism and Wicca.
Many Druids today are actively involved in environmental activism and promoting ecological sustainability .
● Wicca's Popularity Comeback
Wicca, a subset of witchcraft and modern so-called "paganism" (in other words, NON-ABRAMAMIC), has been one of the fastest-growing spiritual paths in the EwwwSA and Western Europe.
Starting from thousands of practitioners in the 1990s, its numbers have surged significantly, with hundreds of thousands, even millions today, identifying as WICCAN.
This growth is fueled by younger generations drawn to its focus on a MOTHER EARTH instead of the MALE GODHEAD of Abrahamic faiths.
Wicca is 💯 % nature worship, rituals, magic practices, and spirituality that aligns with ecological and social consciousness.
Wicca's visibility and appeal have increased through popular culture and social media trends where hashtags related to witchcraft and "paganism" (anti-Abrahamic faiths) have millions of posts.
Its appeal also lies in its inclusive and empowering nature, often emphasizing healing, divination, and personal growth.
● Common Factors in Their Comeback
▪︎ Both emphasize a deep connection to nature, ecology, and seasonal cycles.
▪︎ They offer alternative spiritual frameworks that resonate with modern concerns about environmental crises and the consumer society.
▪︎ Their flexibility and inclusiveness attract a diverse demographic, including people disillusioned with traditional Abrahamic organized religions.
▪︎ Social media and popular culture have played large roles in raising awareness and normalization of these paths.
▪︎Both movements often celebrate many shared holy days though with different focal points (Druidry more land and tree focused, Wicca more on focused on Mother Earth / Gaia and animal protection).
In summary, Druidism and Wicca are making a notable comeback driven by environmental awareness, cultural shifts toward alternative spirituality, and active community-buildind, especially among younger generations in 2025.
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Druidism and Wicca are both Bronze Age non-Abrahamic pre-Abrahamic faiths, and they share some ancient roots and characteristics.
● Druidism Origins :
Druidism is primarily associated with the Celtic cultures of Britain, Ireland, and northern Gaul (modern France and Belgium), flourishing roughly from the 4th millennium BC (4000 BC, or 6000 years ago) to the 2nd century CE (100s and 200s AD), therefore roots going back into the Bronze Age or earlier.
It formed among Celtic peoples, influenced by Indo-European migrations around 2000 BC (4000 years ago), and drew on earlier Neolithic and Bronze Age beliefs tied to nature worship, megalithic monuments, and shamanistic practices.
Druids were priestly figures focused on nature, ancestral traditions, cycles of life and death, and the cosmos.
Much of their knowledge was oral and secretive, with emphasis on nature conservation and harmony with nature rather than text-based religion.
However, historically, classical Greek and Roman records mainly describe Druids in the Iron Age (circa 1200 BC) context rather than specifically the Bronze Age and the earlier Neo-lithic Age.
...PART #2...
● Wicca Origins :
Wicca is a faith that also has roots going back to the Neo-lithic Age. In modern times, it has berm popularized in the mid-20th century (circa 1940s) by Gerald Gardner, though it draws heavily on older "pagan", folk, and ceremonial magic traditions.
Its spiritual and ritual framework is inspired by a interpretation of European pre-Christian pre-Abrahamic female and sometimes male nature deities, fertility faiths, and ancient seasonal festivals.
It is a direct continuation of Stone Age and Bronze Age and Iron Age faiths and rituals, including modern revivalist and reconstructionist elements of faiths rooted in a broader "pagan", nature-based spirituality.
It is clearly pre-Abrahamic historically as it was developed well before the spread of Abrahamic religions starting in the Bronze Age too, circa 1500 BC or 3500 years ago in Ancient Canaan (modern Palestine).
● Summary :
▪︎ Druidism:
Ancient religious traditions linked to Neo-lithic pre-Celtic, and Bronze Age and Iron Age Celtic culture, with ancestral roots reaching far deep nto the Neolithic period, and so is non-Abrahamic and predates the rise of Abrahamic religions.
▪︎ Wicca:
A faith movement inspired by ancient "pagan "and folk practices, pre-dating the Bronze Age ... it is a religious movement shaped to revive and reinterpret older nature-based spirituality.
So, Druidism can be described as a faith movement with ancient pre-Abrahamic origins meaning Neo-lithic and Bronze and Iron Age roots, focusing on water, land, trees, and fire, while Wicca is a faith movement incorporating ancient ideals focused on worshipping Mother Earth and animal protection.
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Both Druidism and Wicca have strong feminist aspects and emphasize significant roles for women as leaders and spiritual authorities, though the nature and historical context of these roles differ.
● Women in Ancient and Modern Druidism :
Historically, women in pre-Celtic and Celtic societies could and did serve as druids or druidesses, holding important religious, civil, and healing roles.
Classical authors like Julius Caesar and Tacitus mentioned female druids, and archaeological finds affirm that women attained high-status religious roles including priestly and leadership positions within druidic orders.
One of the reasons is that ALL pre-Abrahamic faiths around the WORLD, not just in Europe, were entirely dominated by WOMEN at a time and age, 300,000 years before the bronze age, when the role of women were vastly different, when they held virtually all authority and power, because they were seen as the only figure who can bring / create new life inside her own body, much as Mother Nature creates life inside her own body, ie the Planet Earth, meaning new fighters, new workers, increasing the population ...
they were seen as QUEEN BEES in many ways, as nurturing and nourishing figures, and thus were held in high esteem, and often even worshipped. Then came the Bronze Age, a male-dominated age, in direct opposition to the female-centered world that had existed for the previous 300,000 years of human existence on earth ... the male dominated Bronze Age was a reversal for the world, and a reflection of males rebelling against female authority and power.
In the male-dominated Bronze Age, we see male-dominated faiths around the world, such as Odin/Wotan and Thor in Western and Northern Europe, Zeus in Southern Europe, Durga and Mithra in Hinduism in India, Ahura Mazda in Eranian societies in Central Asia, Baal Jehofuck Allah El in the Middle-East, ETC.
The Bronze Age brought an end to female dominance of 300,000 years of human existence on this planet.
Since 2000 BC (4000 years) until now, it's been the male ... the male godhead has become dominant in culture, tradition, and society.
Female druids were respected as healers, seers, and ritual leaders. This presence of women as spiritual leaders reflects the relatively higher status women had in ancient pre-Celtic and Celtic cultures compared to many contemporary societies.
In modern Druidry, women continue to serve as leaders, teachers, and priests, reflecting a feminist ethic that rejects hierarchies based on gender and embraces sex-positive spirituality.
This is supported by contemporary "pagan" communities that emphasize equality, inclusiveness, and empowerment of women aligned spiritually with Mother Earth worship and the feminine divine.
...PART #3...
● Women in Wicca :
Wicca also strongly emphasizes the divine feminine, centering many of its rituals around Mother Earth / GAIA the Earth Goddess, thereby creating a religious framework where women play highly respected and often leading roles.
Many Wiccan COVENS are led by women (High Priestesses), and feminist spirituality is a core element of the practice.
Modern Wicca emerged in the mid-20th century (1940s) in part as a response to patriarchal Abrahamic religions, emphasizing female empowerment, gender equality, and reverence of feminine power.
This spiritual feminism manifests in rituals honoring the female deity GAIA, healing, and magical practice led or shared by women, with a strong ethos of gender balance and sexual positivity .
● Summary :
▪︎ Druidism : Historically included women as druids who were key spiritual and community leaders; modern Druidry continues this feminist legacy with egalitarian leadership roles for women.
▪︎ Wicca :
Founded as a modern continuation of Neolithic Wicca, this faith movement explicitly centers around the worship of the GAIA goddess, with women often serving as priestesses and community leaders, embodying feminist spirituality.
Both spiritual paths are notable for valuing women’s leadership and promoting feminist values rooted in reverence for the divine feminine, nature, and gender equality .
Thus, it is accurate to say that both Druidism and Wicca are feminist-leaning traditions with historical and modern elements and foundations emphasizing women as leaders and spiritual authorities.
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Human Sacrifice in Druidism and Wicca :
So here we're going to look at the elephant in the room, a charge leveled against Druidism and Wicca by Abrahamic religion leaders.
The question of human sacrifice in Druidism is complex and has been historically controversial, with strong indications that accusations of human sacrifice were largely rooted in ancient Roman propaganda used to demonize the Druids and Celtic peoples.
● Evidence and Historical Context on Druidic Human Sacrifice :
Classical Roman sources such as Julius Caesar, Pliny the Elder, and Diodorus Siculus wrote of Druids performing human sacrifices, notably involving criminals or prisoners, and sometimes even innocents when captive numbers were low.
One infamous account is the "wicker man," a large wooden effigy reportedly used to burn sacrifices alive.
Archaeological findings like the Lindow Man—an Iron Age bog body found with signs of ritualistic death—have been cited as possible evidence for ritual human sacrifice among ancient Celts linked to druidic practices.
However, these interpretations remain debated among historians and archaeologists.
Modern scholarship often views these Roman accounts as exaggerated or war propaganda to justify conquest and vilify Celtic religions.
The Romans had motivations to portray Druids as barbaric to assert cultural superiority and justify colonization. To wit, European invasions and colonizations of large areas of the world from 1492 down to the even today in EwwwSA and British and French military invasions and interventions in other countries.
Some experts argue that similar accusations were made by kikels and Christians and Muslim to demean non-Abrahamic peoples.
No direct or unequivocal evidence proves systematic or widespread human sacrifice was a central element of Druidism.
Many experts believe that if sacrifices occurred, they were not routine and were possibly framed in ways misinterpreted later or exaggerated.
The Celtic spiritual tradition, including Druids, more reliably emphasized nature worship, cosmic order, ancestral reverence, and seasonal rites, not systematic human sacrifice.
● Wicca and Human Sacrifice :
Wicca, along with its modern revival just like Druidism, explicitly rejects any form of human sacrifice.
It is focused on ethical conduct, harm none principles, and spiritual connection with nature and the divine expressed through symbolic ritual, meditation, and magic within consent-based community frameworks.
Claims of human sacrifice have no basis in Wiccan beliefs or practice, and such allegations are often mischaracterizations or worn-out stereotypes of witchcraft, which are often launched by and systemic in Abrahamic communities and leaders.
...PART #4...
● Summary :
Neither Druidism nor Wicca promotes human sacrifice as a genuine or accepted practice.
Historical claims of Druidic human sacrifice come primarily from hostile Roman sources and suffer from strong biases and propagandistic exaggeration.
Archaeological evidence like Lindow Man shows signs of ritual death but is insufficient to confirm widespread sacrifice as a core religious practice.
Wicca categorically rejects and opposes human sacrifice in its ethical codes.
The idea that ancient non-Abrahamic faiths like these practiced human sacrifice is often a misrepresentation rooted in religious and imperial bigotry and racist propaganda meant to demean indigenous beliefs.
Therefore, it is accurate that neither Druidism nor Wicca endorses or involves human sacrifice, and allegations to the contrary largely derive from external Abrahamic or colonial smear campaigns rather than reliable historical or religious facts.
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LINKS/ READINGS/ SOURCES/ REFERENCES:
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