SPEAKING
FOR THE ANCESTORS
By Wolf-Child
The reburial issue in Britain and
Ireland
Personal thoughts concerning modern-day Druidic and Pagan philosophies
of burial, life after life and the conflicting practices of archaeologists.
There are many different realities in the worlds of
philosophy, religion and science. My ideas concerning the reburial issue is Druidic, and
concerns (essentially) esoteric concepts of time and space. Such realities are not at once
obvious to the museum curator or the archaeologist in the field. I speak for the ancestors
and guardians of the land, those spirits not currently represented in the archaeological
record. It is this awareness that leads myself to the conclude that the ancestors and
guardians residing at sacred sites are either concerned, saddened or angry about the
disturbance of their sacred places of rest such as Avebury, Stonehenge, Newgrange, Emain
Macha, Tara et al. Other sites in Wales have also had their ancestors disturbed by
archaeological investigation, such as Tinkinswood Long Cairn and Dyffryn Arddwy, and at
Maes Howe and other sites the ancestors remains have suffered the indignation of centuries
of desecration and theft of their skeletal remains and grave goods.
We belong to the Earth, she does not belong to us
I do not believe that Druids or Pagans own these
sites, anymore than archaeologists do, and neither Pagans nor archaeologists should be
able to treat sacred spaces as tools for their own authority and dominance as the Roman
and Viking plunderers once did in the past. The Earth - the goddess, is our mother, and
not an object to be owned or plundered. The sacred burial is a functioning part of the
body of the god/dess or to use New Age terminology, an energy chakra. It therefore serves
a purpose in the present as well as having meaning in the past. It does not have a
singular role as a burial place, or a space through which the ancestors can simply be
contacted through rite or ritual. Ownership is not the issue here, but respect and
representation.
Multiple roles of the sacred burial
When the resting places of 'the dead' are viewed as
houses of the ancestors, the visitors perspective of them changes. If the ancestors live
at these sites, and are concerned about the way they are treated, these ancestors (lets
think of them as people) have a right to be represented and respected. As Druids and
Pagans, this is our job as guardians of the spiritual. It is our job to keep sacred what
is sacred, to protect and honour our heritage. As mediators, we should communicate between
the reality of the Other world, and this physical reality. The psychic or shaman does not
own a site due to their ability to listen, hear and feel, but simply acts as a bridge
between seen and unseen realities, in the same way the grave, mound or sacred site is a
bridge between this world and the next. The Druid or Pagan shaman can use their gifts as
'harmonic bridges' to communicate between the realities of science and religion, between
the realities of archaeology, land developers and Pagan Druids.
So, the sacred site and the burial has three main
roles in Druidic and Pagan philosophy (1) it is the spiritual heart of the god/dess, (2)
it a house of the living ancestor, and (3) it is a bridge between this reality and the
Other world. I am sure there are many more meanings that are individual to each Druid,
Pagan, ancestor, tourist, farmer or archaeologist, all of which are relevant in their own
right.
The sacred marriage of initiation
There is another ill-considered relationship between
the Pagan/Druid and the sacred houses of the ancestor. Through the ceremony of initiation,
the neophyte enters not only the family of present day Druidry/Paganism, but also the
greater family of collective Paganism past and present. The sacred space of ritual
activity exists not only in this world, but also in the past and the present in a reality
of no time, or holistic time. It is a space of harmony and power, and in Jungian
psychology, this could be called the collective mind. Initiation is then a 'cultural
affiliation' between that which was and that which is. The initiation solidifies the past
and present through the initiate, and the essence of the ancient traditions live on.
Ceremonies held at sacred sites such as stone
circles, chambered barrows and hill top enclosures are ceremonies that work with the
spirit of the place, the guardians, the ancestors, the god/dess. Not the spirits of the
past, but spirit people and deities present today. Through initiation, the ancestor
becomes a part of our spirituality, and we become part of their family, and the greater
family of the Gods.
Native American thought.
My beliefs concerning the relationship between the
transcended spirit and skeletal remains, are in line with Native American tribes people,
who believe the bones of the ancestors are not simply artefacts, but people, that the
physical connection of skeletal remains with a sacred site is a bridge that allows the
ancestors to return to help the living today. Therefore, excavation without reburial takes
the heart and soul of a group away, as well as removing the living ancestor from their
proper home.
Sites being utilised by Druid and Pagan groups
therefore rely on the spirit of the place with which we celebrate and remember ourselves.
To believe in the living presence of the ancestors is to acknowledge the life and meanings
within the bone that is not inanimate, but of spirit. Many Pagans and Druids believe in
the spirituality of all things, stones, trees, mountain, air, fire, sun, river, sea, as
well as animal spirits and ancestors. Consider then the spiritual value of the ancestors
skeleton in comparison to a tree, stone or wooden table for example. All these things are
alive, but the bones of the 'dead' not only hold the energy of the life force that was,
but also of the life force of that person who is still alive, only in another, unseen
reality. The Druid and Pagan greets the ancestors through ceremony at such sacred sites,
and the psychic can greet the ancestor on another level through meditation (ideally at the
place of internment where the relationship is intimate). It makes perfect sense to me...
bones are living people and should be respected as people and ceremonially reburied.
Moral issues.
The circumstances in which the dead were initially
interred make no difference to our treatment of them in the present. To remove the bones
of the dead from a place intended for their disposal when the original culture that placed
them there have gone is akin to 'cultural shoplifting' when the shop keepers back is
turned. The dead may have been willing sacrifices/unwilling sacrifices, or may have died
of natural causes. We cannot tell. Even determining gender is a difficult task today. What
is certain, is that the dead were placed in the ground, and that this was a final act,
commemorated through the monument, and should be respected so. The bones are not public
property simply because those who interred the dead are no longer present. It is morally
abhorrent to permanently remove the dead from their graves, and it is clear that we should
rethink, respect and rebury.
What are the benefits of reburial and scientific study?
Considering these arguments, should archaeological
excavation or land development around sacred burial sites be allowed at all? The answer is
simple. Archaeologically recovered data is knowledge, and knowledge is power. Power should
be equally shared, and indeed, site reports are (usually) produced. If the general public
are lucky, reports are worded in a comprehensible manner and made available. But where
does this leave the living ancestor? Maybe the shaman should ask the ancestors permission,
and explain that they are to be exhumed and taken away to a laboratory for radiocarbon
dating (which would reduce their bone fragments to an unrecognisable pulp). If I was an
ancestor residing at a sacred site, I wouldn't feel very happy about that! Having said
this, I do believe that Pagans can, and have benefited from investigation conducted upon
sacred sites.
A second important consideration is that of the
nature of the human psyche that requires and constantly seeks knowledge and learning. I
conclude then, that even if the ancestors are unhappy about being disturbed, that they too
are not totally separated from our realities, and the human race might benefit from such
knowledge acquired through the process of exhumation.
Even if Druids or Pagans conclude that excavation
after excavation after excavation only satisfies a morbid curiosity and serves no obvious
purpose, the reality is that archaeological excavation will continue, no matter how well
we attempt to protect these places. A more reasonable path to follow is to encourage the
equality of relationships between the ancestors, archaeologists and Druids. It is not
simply a question of whether science can tell us anything about esoteric realities, but
that one group should not dominate another through squabbles over ownership. I believe
reburial would not interfere greatly in archaeological investigation into the past, but
would serve to guard against the ancestors being permanently displaced. It naturally
follows that Pagan Druidry would also benefit generally from such respectful action.
Christian reburials.
At this point, I turn (unhappily) to the comparative
treatments of Christian and non-Christian burials. While I consider the negativity that
exists between some Pagan Druids and Christians tedious, I feel I must reflect upon such
conflicts between these traditions in archaeology in order to present my argument...
Christian burials are sometimes excavated, studied in
a variety of ways, and then reburied afterwards. This happens at sites that are currently
being used as places of worship, as well as sites that are no longer used and in ruin. In
North America, archaeologists often rebury Euroamerican skeletal remains while Native
American people have to suffer the indignation of having to ask the permission of the
museums, institutes and archaeological trusts.
Given this fact, and the arguments presented above,
any request by Druids and Pagans for the reburial of prehistoric or Iron Age remains is by
no means outrageous or fanciful in any way. As Druids and Pagans, all we should ask for is
that respect and equality be shown for the ancestors.
I believe that as practising guardians of esoteric
lore, modern-day Pagan Druids should join together and encourage debate between
archaeologists and museums in this reburial issue, concentrating upon a single site that
is currently used by various Druid Orders and Pagan groups. Avebury springs to mind, but I
know there are many sites in the English Midlands, Wales, Eire and Northern Ireland and
Scotland to consider. Once our beliefs as Pagans or Druids are known to archaeologists
generally, any refusal to co-operate can be viewed as ethnocentric, and appropriate action
taken, action that should be carried out on behalf of the ancestors, and not the Pagan or
Druid Order.
Concluding thoughts.
Conversations with many Pagans and Druids have led me
to the belief that while individual concerns are generally harmonious (that things need to
change), in no way is there a clearly defined collective belief in how this should
manifest, or how liberal or militant any debate or action should be.
There are several possibilities that spring to mind,
(1) simple debate through archaeological, anthropological and Pagan publications, (2) one
to one conversations with museum curators and excavators, (3) asking for reburial, (4)
demanding reburial, (5) reclaiming human remains from museum cases, and (6) other direct
action such as protest and picketing... the list is endless. At this point, I would like
to inform the reader that in Canada, tribal lands under treat from land developers have
been defended with firearms, and less militant tribal activists have picketed many
excavations in Canada, the United States, and Australia. Such is the emotional power
evoked by such issues. In New York, Afroamericans halted land development when a black
slave cemetery was unearthed, although it took quite a lot of demonstrating and
campaigning to do so.
I know what I would like to do, but what I am really
interested in is what other Druids, Pagans, Christians, anthropologists and archaeologists
(et al) think of this issue.
ooOoo