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Tools of the Craft:
The Broom
The broom might be, along with the cauldron, the most famous tool connected
popularly with witches. Traditionally an element symbolising the union of the
masculine and feminin principles, was used not for flying, but for the ritual
cleaning of the working space, and protection and fertility rites. Some authors
suggest the broom was the perfect place to hide the wand during the Witch Hunt,
disguising it as an element of daily use.
Sir James Frazer in "The Golden Bough" gathers multiple examples of rituals
that involved the use of a broom, generally as a symbol of fertility or fecunding
energy. According to one of those, to assest the fertility of the fields a
young woman had to circle them once they were sown, naked and riding a broomstick.
In these rituals might be seen the remains of the primal fertility rituals,
where the High Priest and the High Priestess symbolised the marriage of Earth
and Sky, the Goddess and the God, renewing the fertility of the land.
Another version suggests that if we want a cleansing broom, it should be
made of willow wands, which was believed of old to cast off evil spirits. This
was believed to the point of considering the whipping with willow wands a sure
method of exorcism.
The truth is, our ritual broom must be of the old style, made of wigs or
straw, and it must be reserved to a symbolic pass to cleanse the place
of any type of energies before starting any ritual, and as every tool named so
far, must be kept for this purpose only. The best results will be achieved if
we make it ourselves, but due to the difficulty of this task, we can safely
leave it in someone else's hands, if we're careful enough to do the energetical
cleansing before using it.
It's use is not strictly necesary, so let us not despair if we can't find
a broom maker where we are: we can easily go on with our celebrations without
the broom, as long as we replace the cleansing action with a similar one.
Index
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