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"Stonehenge's Feminine Side"?

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I generally cringe when I see people discussing the "Goddess

Movement," as if it were simply some New Age flavor of the week or a

marketing niche. In the case of Shaktism, at least (which is

mentioned below in passing) we're dealing with a wholly legitimate,

ancient and powerful religious tradition. Still, I saw this article

in the Boston Globe on Saturday, and it made some legitimate points,

and I figured some members of this forum might enjoy it:

 

GODDESS MOVEMENT LOOKS TO STONEHENGE'S FEMININE SIDE

 

By Don Aucoin, Globe Staff, 7/12/2003

 

When a British medical journal published a researcher's theory this

week that Stonehenge was designed 5,000 years ago as a fertility

symbol in the form of female genitalia, some headline writers reacted

with amusement.

 

"The Vagina Monoliths: Stonehenge Was Ancient Sex Symbol," read a

headline in The Observer of London. CBC News in Canada

proclaimed: "Stonehenge Mystery Solved: It's a Girl."

 

To adherents of the goddess movement, though, the new theory is

serious business. They are hoping this woman-centered interpretation

of Stonehenge, a monument with a unique hold on the world's

imagination, will help build momentum toward a recognition of what

they call "the feminine sacred" and further add to the ranks of their

growing movement.

 

"In the circles of women priestesses, we have always believed the

stone circles were somehow linked to fertility -- but fertility in a

much broader sense," Hemitra Crecraft, a self-described "Dianic

priestess," said yesterday from Malvern, Pa. "Returning to these

ideas, and visiting the whole principle of the sacredness of the

earth, is imperative if we're going to create a sustainable future."

 

Crecraft hopes that the Stonehenge theory will be seen as a reminder

of a time when societies were constructed around a belief in female

deities -- a belief, she says, that holds a message and lesson for

our own war-torn, environmentally ravaged time.

 

The author of the research paper in Britain's Journal of the Royal

Society of Medicine, retired gynecology professor Anthony Perks,

touched on that theme, writing that Stonehenge "could represent,

symbolically, the opening by which Earth Mother gave birth to the

plants and animals on which the ancient people so depended."

 

Some archeologists have scoffed at the theory that Stonehenge was

built to resemble a part of the female anatomy. They note that the

builders of Stonehenge could not have seen the monument from above,

as Perks did, and that the monument was not constructed all at once

but rather modified repeatedly over 1,500 years.

 

Moreover, Cynthia Eller, author of "The Myth of Matriarchal

Prehistory: Why an Invented Past Won't Give Women a Future" (Beacon

Press), said the evidence does not support the notion that human

society was more female-centered thousands of years ago or

that "there was a patriarchal revolution in 3,000 BC that destroyed

all this and brought us to where we are now."

 

As for the new theory, she observed wryly, "Stonehenge is phallic in

a way you can't ignore." Still, she said, the Stonehenge story "can't

help but be good for the goddess movement."

 

That movement has gained force in recent years, as followers, many

inspired by feminist thinking, have sought an alternative to male-

centered mainstream religion. Proponents of the goddess movement say

that millions of people across the world to a belief in

female deities or to a belief that God can be seen as both female and

male.

 

"Women in particular feel that within organized religion, there isn't

any honor of what they hold sacred: the life process, the birth of

their children, their sexual experiences," said Elinor Gadon, a

visiting scholar at the Brandeis University Women's Studies Research

Center and author of "The Once and Future Goddess" (HarperCollins).

 

Yet even some mainstream denominations, Eller said, have "drawn on

ideas and energy that have been pioneered in goddess spirituality" by

opening the door to discussion groups focusing on "the feminine

nature of God." The goddess movement, she said, is "an effective way

of getting at our preconceptions about God's maleness and raising

people's awareness of how the God we talk about now is very gendered,

and very narrow as a result. It excludes women."

 

To capitalize on growing interest, tour companies have begun to

organize trips to goddess temples in Malta, Egypt, India, and

elsewhere; songwriter Laura Powers released a 1998 recording

titled "Legends of the Goddess," inspired by the tales of a Celtic

goddess.

 

In this context, the Stonehenge story created a considerable buzz. At

the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco, two

students were so excited by the Stonehenge news that they rushed to

tape up an article about the theory on a campus bulletin board.

 

Mara Lynn Keller, head of the institute's women's spirituality

program, said yesterday that she believes Stonehenge "represents not

only the genitalia of the Great Mother but her womb. The entry in and

out of the womb was the way people celebrated their relationship to

the regeneration of life and tapped into those powers of the earth

and the cosmos."

 

Belief in goddesses takes a different form, with different names,

depending on the culture.

 

Crecraft, for instance, believes in the Great Mother, of whom Diana,

Aphrodite, Athena, and other goddesses embody different aspects. The

cofounder of Woman Wisdom, a women's spirituality program near

Philadelphia, she leads ceremonial circles of dancing, drumming women

to mark full moons and solstices, when "there is a dispensation of

energies on the earth," she said.

 

Crecraft acknowledges the "male principle" is present at Stonehenge

in the form of monolithic stones, but she insists that the monument's

circles are what "builds the sacred space." And she hopes when others

look at Stonehenge from now on, they will draw a link between the

past and the present in a way that helps build the goddess movement.

 

"In orthodox religions, God has been worshiped as a male, and that

has brought men great privilege," said Crecraft. "It has not been so

favorable for women. We have lived in a patriarchal social system for

the past several thousand years. The goddess-rising is to bring the

balance, so individuals can have an option."

 

This story ran on page C1 of the Boston Globe on Saturday, July 12,

2003.

© Copyright 2003 Globe Newspaper Company.

URL:

http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/193/living/Goddess_movement_looks_to

_Stonehenge_s_feminine_side+.shtml

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Namaste:

 

This is very interesting. I've pulled out the quotes below that

really irk me.

 

Ironic that archeologists cannot seem to pass a single upright

monument without making note of it's phallic connotations, but

they've been staring at Stonehenge for hundreds of years scratching

their heads and shrugging their shoulders. "Hmmmm, can't think of

what it might be, can you?" Obviously some of those guys couldn't

find the "central altar" with a map.

 

And though the builders of Stonehenge could not see their work from

above, neither could the creators of the Nazca lines in Peru. But

that didn't seem to stop them, and as there's nothing overtly female

about the Nazca lines we're not embroiled in any rediculousness about

whether or not they were created to look the way they do with

intention on the part of their builders.

 

I'm glad Ms. Eller can laugh at herself, after all, that she cannot

ignore the phallic nature of any protruding architecture says more

about her than about the intentions of their creators.

 

However, I do welcome her perspective on the debate. I don't think

that she is credible, but I feel that skeptics keep us honest, even

when they are not. Her work is important because counterpoints are

important, but that also makes her critics and reviewers important.

 

I'm glad that this "discovery" about Stonehenge is getting some

attention. I'm sure that it's a relief to some people out there still

searching blindly for the Goddess.

 

We need Her.

 

Namaste,

 

prainbow

 

 

 

<<Some archeologists have scoffed at the theory that Stonehenge was

built to resemble a part of the female anatomy. They note that the

builders of Stonehenge could not have seen the monument from above,

as Perks did, and that the monument was not constructed all at once

but rather modified repeatedly over 1,500 years.

 

Moreover, Cynthia Eller, author of "The Myth of Matriarchal

Prehistory: Why an Invented Past Won't Give Women a Future" (Beacon

Press), said the evidence does not support the notion that human

society was more female-centered thousands of years ago or

that "there was a patriarchal revolution in 3,000 BC that destroyed

all this and brought us to where we are now."

 

As for the new theory, she observed wryly, "Stonehenge is phallic in

a way you can't ignore." >>

 

 

 

, "Devi Bhakta"

<devi_bhakta> wrote:

> I generally cringe when I see people discussing the "Goddess

> Movement," as if it were simply some New Age flavor of the week or

a

> marketing niche. In the case of Shaktism, at least (which is

> mentioned below in passing) we're dealing with a wholly legitimate,

> ancient and powerful religious tradition. Still, I saw this article

> in the Boston Globe on Saturday, and it made some legitimate

points,

> and I figured some members of this forum might enjoy it:

>

> GODDESS MOVEMENT LOOKS TO STONEHENGE'S FEMININE SIDE

>

<Clipped>

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Namaste,

 

Please understand that the irksome part would be the 3 paragraphs

directly below my signature. I included a portion of DB's thoughtful

original only for context, not at all to indicate any degree of

displeasure.

 

Yours in the service of a Goddess surely amused by my fallibility,

 

prainbow

 

 

, "prainbow61" <paulie-

rainbow@u...> wrote:

> Namaste:

>

> This is very interesting. I've pulled out the quotes below that

> really irk me.

>

> Ironic that archeologists cannot seem to pass a single upright

> monument without making note of it's phallic connotations, but

> they've been staring at Stonehenge for hundreds of years scratching

> their heads and shrugging their shoulders. "Hmmmm, can't think of

> what it might be, can you?" Obviously some of those guys couldn't

> find the "central altar" with a map.

>

> And though the builders of Stonehenge could not see their work from

> above, neither could the creators of the Nazca lines in Peru. But

> that didn't seem to stop them, and as there's nothing overtly

female

> about the Nazca lines we're not embroiled in any rediculousness

about

> whether or not they were created to look the way they do with

> intention on the part of their builders.

>

> I'm glad Ms. Eller can laugh at herself, after all, that she cannot

> ignore the phallic nature of any protruding architecture says more

> about her than about the intentions of their creators.

>

> However, I do welcome her perspective on the debate. I don't think

> that she is credible, but I feel that skeptics keep us honest, even

> when they are not. Her work is important because counterpoints are

> important, but that also makes her critics and reviewers important.

>

> I'm glad that this "discovery" about Stonehenge is getting some

> attention. I'm sure that it's a relief to some people out there

still

> searching blindly for the Goddess.

>

> We need Her.

>

> Namaste,

>

> prainbow

>

>

>

> <<Some archeologists have scoffed at the theory that Stonehenge was

> built to resemble a part of the female anatomy. They note that the

> builders of Stonehenge could not have seen the monument from above,

> as Perks did, and that the monument was not constructed all at once

> but rather modified repeatedly over 1,500 years.

>

> Moreover, Cynthia Eller, author of "The Myth of Matriarchal

> Prehistory: Why an Invented Past Won't Give Women a Future" (Beacon

> Press), said the evidence does not support the notion that human

> society was more female-centered thousands of years ago or

> that "there was a patriarchal revolution in 3,000 BC that destroyed

> all this and brought us to where we are now."

>

> As for the new theory, she observed wryly, "Stonehenge is phallic

in

> a way you can't ignore." >>

>

>

>

> , "Devi Bhakta"

> <devi_bhakta> wrote:

> > I generally cringe when I see people discussing the "Goddess

> > Movement," as if it were simply some New Age flavor of the week

or

> a

> > marketing niche. In the case of Shaktism, at least (which is

> > mentioned below in passing) we're dealing with a wholly

legitimate,

> > ancient and powerful religious tradition. Still, I saw this

article

> > in the Boston Globe on Saturday, and it made some legitimate

> points,

> > and I figured some members of this forum might enjoy it:

> >

> > GODDESS MOVEMENT LOOKS TO STONEHENGE'S FEMININE SIDE

> >

> <Clipped>

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