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Wiccan
priestess urges religious freedom bill
Cara Baruzzi, Register Staff
10/28/2005
EAST HAVEN - Amid books of spells and sticks of incense, a wooden sign
in the front window of SubRosa Magick invites shoppers to "Come in,
sit for a spell," and owner Alicia Folberth hopes they will.
Folberth, 40, a Wiccan who practices witchcraft, casts spells and reads
tarot cards, opened the shop at 15 Foxon Blvd. in August.
"I've been really amazed - people have been nice," she said,
adding that there are many misconceptions about her religion. "Some
people are scared. They drive by kind of slowly. I'm amused."
She said she decided to open the shop after being fired in March from
United States Surgical Corp. in Norwalk after working as a graphic
designer there for seven years.
While the company cited performance reasons, Folberth said she believes
she was fired because of her Wiccan religion. She had asked to take
Wiccan Sabbath days off without pay and was denied, she said.
She filed a complaint with the state Commission on Human Rights and
Opportunities in May, Folberth said.
Lena Ferguson, a commission spokeswoman, said there is no record of
Folberth filing a complaint.
State law prohibits employers from discriminating against workers on the
basis of religious creed, said Ferguson, who added she doesn't have
enough information to comment on Folberth's situation.
Wicca, a nature-based religion whose followers believe in reincarnation,
witchcraft and magick - spelled with a "k" to differentiate it
from the more common "stage magic" is misunderstood by
many, Folberth said. It is a federally recognized religion that
celebrates eight major Sabbaths, she said.
Folberth and her boyfriend, Rapid Freeman - co-owner of SubRosa Magick
— started a petition at the store that they plan to submit to
legislators next year, urging them to enact a law of "religious
freedom" in Connecticut.
Some states, including Massachusetts, allow residents to take all
federally recognized religions holidays off from work without pay.
"There's really no protection here in (Connecticut) beyond the
federal (recognition), which doesn't give you much," she said.
So far, 326 people have signed the petition, she said.
Wicca is gaining popularity, but there are not many stores that cater to
a Wiccan and Pagan clientele, she said.
"There’s only a few, really, in this area," she said,
adding that she often travels to Salem, Mass., where the famous witch
trials of 1692 took place, to shop.
At SubRosa, bookshelves stocked with paperbacks about voodoo,
spirituality, Wicca and various spells line the perimeter of the
660-square-foot store.
The scent of incense wafts through the space, which also has tarot
cards, jewelry, CDs, candles and decorations for sale.
Folberth said she does not expect to see increased sales leading up to
Halloween, and she's closed Mondays. Halloween is actually a major
Wiccan Sabbath day called Samhain.
There are many different traditions within the religion, including the
Odyssean Wiccan Church of Canada, which Folberth follows.
"We do ritual work," she said, adding that Wiccans are witches
but not all witches are Wiccans. "We do spell work. We actively
create change."
Raised in a Presbyterian family, she became a Wiccan 21 years ago, drawn
to the religion partly because of its emphasis on respecting nature.
She has had "second sight," or the ability to see things
before they happen, since she was 3 years old, she said, a skill she
said she uses when conducting tarot card readings at the store.
Ten years ago, on Oct. 31, Folberth founded the Panthean Temple, of
which she is high priestess. The temple, which has temporary homes in
spaces it rents in New Haven and Oxford, has about 50 members, she said.
As the religion continues to grow, Folberth said she hopes people will
learn more about it.
"There are amazing misconceptions," she said, noting that some
people believe witches worship Satan and do evil deeds, which is not
true.
Most spells are designed to do good things, such as increase wealth,
happiness or love, she said. Wiccans believe everything you do comes
back to you three times over - a strong incentive to do good.
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Cara Baruzzi can be reached at cbaruzzi@nhregister.com or 789-5748.
©New Haven Register 2005
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