The other day, Steve Hayes brought the book, “Shades of Faith: Minority Voices in Paganism” to my attention. As I’ve been highly interested in the intersectionality between various minority groups, discovering a book that discusses minority people within my own religious community came as a terrific boon.
In her introduction, editor Crystal Blanton describes her own experience as a Black[1] Wiccan High Priestess thus:
I am accustomed to being who I am among those who are different. I am also accustomed to seeing the world a little differently because my experiences in the world are different. I am used to being the one that people have turned to when they wanted to ask a question about cultures outside of their own. This has become a part of what I recognize as a gift the Gods have graced me with; and like the pattern of my life, I have found a path to purpose in being the minority within the minority.
Ms. Blanton acknowledges that some minority people within Paganism have felt alienated within the Pagan community, and I hope that some of the essays within this analogy will provide examples of such experiences. I am hoping that as a Pagan community builder, I can find ways in which to make my own community more inclusive by discovering needs and issues that I may not have considered before. After all, I agree with Ms. Blanton’s assessment of how a diversity of voices only strengthens us:
The voice of differences add in an element of harmony to the collective voices of any path or movement. We are in the human and social movement of spiritual understanding; Black, White, Hispanic, Native or other. Together we harmonize on a frequency that is powerful enough to manifest divinity on earth and bring spiritual rest to so much collective suffering and pain. I am honored to be the black key on the piano.
Note:
[1] This is the description that Ms. Blanton chose for herself. As such, I felt it fitting to use her own terminology.