Living
The education divide and crisis
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Educators and students are navigating the new political landscape and one Pagan educator describes some of the challenges.
The Wild Hunt (https://wildhunt.org/tag/splc)
Educators and students are navigating the new political landscape and one Pagan educator describes some of the challenges.
When the Hurst, Texas community realized the Stedfast Baptist Church relocated to and was spreading its message of hate, the Pagans and other residents of the town organized protests.
Pagan Perspectives
Over the past year, and especially since the Frith Forge conference in Germany, I’ve noticed increasing use and discussion of the term “inclusive Heathenry.”
It often seems more of a rebranding than a revolutionary concept. Practitioners of Ásatrú and Heathenry have long taken sides over issues of inclusion, with some taking hard stances on either end of the spectrum and many situating themselves in a complicated middle ground. The battles that have raged for so long have been between positions that were often defined by the other side. The universalist position supposedly said that anyone could be Heathen – no questions asked. The folkish position supposedly said that only straight white people could be Heathen – with many questions asked.