Arrested Druid Gets Permit to Carry Sword

by Gerard 5 Replies latest social current

  • Gerard
    Gerard

    Druid Gets Right to Carry Hard-to-Conceal Weapon

    http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,128170,00.html

    PORTSMOUTH, England (AP) ? Prosecutors dropped charges Tuesday against a man who explained that he carried a sword into a shop because he is a druid.

    At a brief appearance in court last month, Merlin Michael Williams, 26, said previous cases heard by the court had allowed druids the right to carry ceremonial swords, which are used to cast spells and create circles of safety.

    Williams, of Westbourne, southern England, was arrested July 9 after carrying his weapon while shopping at a store in Portsmouth. The sword was confiscated as evidence.

    The Crown Prosecution Service said the matter had been considered and "it was deemed not to be in the public interest to continue with the case."

    Williams, who wore his green and blue druid's robes at last month's court appearance, said his sword, which he calls Talisen, had been returned.

    "I am just happy to have got my sword back so I can continue with my duties as sword-bearer," he said.

    "I can understand how the misunderstanding happened with the police but it was all a bit heavy-handed and they should have listened to my explanation."

    Williams is a member of Insular Order of the Druids, which was founded in 1993 at Stonehenge and is one of at least eight self-styled druid groups in Britain.

  • NeonMadman
    NeonMadman

    Is it true that he is a Reform Druid, and is allowed to pray at bushes as well as trees?

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    lol @ neon

  • Gerard
    Gerard

    Druidry is to become the first pagan practice in UK to be given official recognition as a religion:


    2 October 2010

    Druidry to be classed as religion by Charity Commission

    Druidry is to become the first pagan practice to be given official recognition as a religion.

    The Charity Commission has accepted that druids' worship of natural spirits could be seen as religious activity.

    The Druid Network's charitable status entitles it to tax breaks, but the organisation says it does not earn enough to benefit from this.

    The commission says the network's work in promoting druidry as a religion is in the public interest.

    The move comes thousands of years after the first druids worshipped in Britain.

    Druidry was one the first known spiritual practices in Britain, and druids existed in Celtic societies elsewhere in Europe as well.

    Phil Ryder, chairman of the trustees of the Druid Network told the BBC: "It's nice to have that official recognition. It's not why we applied originally.

    "We applied because we were legally obliged to do so."

    He said the organisation represented around 350 people who had paid £10 each for membership but referred to a BBC Inside Out investigation from 2003 which suggested that up to 10,000 people described themselves as druids.

    He added: "You have to apply [for charitable status] if you're an organisation that is taking money off people because the Inland Revenue want to know what you're doing with it."

    Turning seasons

    BBC religious affairs correspondent Robert Pigott says that with concern for the environment growing and the influence of mainstream faiths waning, druidry is flourishing more now than at any time since the arrival of Christianity.

    Druidry's followers are not restricted to one god or creator, but worship the spirit they believe inhabits the earth and forces of nature such as thunder.

    Druids also worship the spirits of places, such as mountains and rivers, with rituals focused particularly on the turning of the seasons.

    After a four-year inquiry, the Charity Commission decided that druidry offered coherent practices for the worship of a supreme being, and provided a beneficial moral framework.

    The decision will also mean that druidry will have the status of a genuine faith.

    Referring to the tax breaks, Mr Ryder said: "For us that is a very small consideration because we don't really have that level of income to make that even an issue."

    He said what was more important was that it would make administrative tasks a lot easier for the organisation.

    "It does give recognition with local councils and people who provide premises and services to charities, who will only deal with registered charities," he said.

    Senior druid King Arthur Pendragon, told the BBC News website the organisation had had to "jump through hoops" to meet the commission's requirements.

    Although he runs his own druid order, he said the Druid Network's achievement was a celebration for all members of the faith.

    He said: "We are looking at the indigenous religion of these isles - it's not a new religion but one of the oldest."

    The 56-year-old added that people were becoming more interested in finding spirituality and the decision reflected this.

    "I think people are looking to their roots and looking back at the secular world certain that things don't work.

    "This decision shows how important our faith is. We are getting credence from a secular government about our belief structure - which not only shows it is valuable but also valued by us and others."

    Mr Pendragon, of Stonehenge, said he would not be seeking charitable status for his own order - the Loyal Arthurian Warband - as it was a political wing and therefore had no need to be recognised as a charity.


    If you were to become a druid, what would your new name be? I'd go for Green Sword-Bearer Gerardix.
  • Black Sheep
    Black Sheep

    I might join just so that I can carry a sword.

    That thing makes my Buck look like a fruit knife.

    My druid name would be an old Pagan family name that would give away my ID to family members who just happened to spot this thread.

  • cantleave
    cantleave

    Can only happen in Pompey.

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit