Monday, November 1, 2010

The Assembly of Peace

The Assembly of Peace

"It was their custom at the Feis of Tara to pass six days in feasting
together before the sitting of the assembly: three days before Samhain and three days after it, making peace and entering into friendly alliance with each other."
   ___ Geoffrey Keating, "Forus Feasa ar Eirinn"

   The Festival Assembly of Tara, at which the nobles and learned people of Ireland ratified and renewed laws, took place every three years. During the festival it was strictly forbidden for any robbery, assault or legal wrangles to take place. Anyone so engaged was summarily sentenced to death, and not even the king himself had power to pardon the one who had disrespected the assembly of peace. Samhain (SOW'en) marked the beginning of winter and the cessation of hostilities between warring factions. The poets and their retinues quartered with the rich households of Ireland until Beltane (BEL'tenn-a; May) so that the winter months might pass more quickly by their entertainment.
   Samhain means 'the summer's end.' In early days, this festival heralded a period when the gates of sid (SHEE), the faery gates of the Otherworldm were open and when the ancestors were nearer to the Otherworld than at any other time.
   After a preliminary evening of half-fearful, half-mischievous activities, the daytime of Samhain was one of gravity, wherein all the changes could be acknowledged and assimilated. Of all the Celtic festivals, this is the one at which we best experience the overlap of one world with the other. It is time to assemble peacefully and be conscious of the ordering of our affairs, bringing ourselves into alignment with the blessings, work, and opportunities of the darker half of the year,.

"Spend part of this day in assessing your place in life: look at the unfinished. Assess your current spiritual position, scrutinize your movtives, clarify your commitments, recognize and discard inappropriate patterns that no longer serve you."
[From: "The Celtic Spirit" by Caitlin Matthews]

November

"Month of November - very fat are the swine;
Let the shepherd go; let the minstrel come;
Bloody the blade, full the barn."
     ___ anon Welsh poem


The season of Winter begins at Samhain, the Celtic New Year, on the eve of November. The meditation themes this month include destiny and fate, cycles and ages, fullness and emptiness, enduring traditions, overcoming difficulty by finding deep resources, the nature of action, and directions and spaces.




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