wicca is a very diverse relgion, so some may be polytheistic, and some may be monotheistic, but all gods and goddeses go into the dvind masculine and the divine feminine.
wicca is a very diverse relgion, so some may be polytheistic, and some may be monotheistic, but all gods and goddeses go into the dvind masculine and the divine feminine.
There is some debate about whether Wicca is a new religion or one of the oldest. Certainly Goddess centered worship has perhaps existed since before recorded history, but the modern Wicca movement was started when Gerald Gardner, known as the father of Wicca, published Witchcraft Today in 1954.
Wicca has its own scriptures.
Wicca isn't based anywhere.
Wicca isn't based anywhere.
No. Wicca is a religion, not a language.
Many Wiccans regard their modern faith as the restoration of a nature-based spiritual tradition that reaches back through the earliest ages of pre-history. In the historical sense, the modern practice of Wicca began with Gerald Gardner in Britain in the 1930s, or, according to some claims, in the 1920s. Many different groups, schools and forms of Wicca branched off from that original group very quickly. Gardnerian Wicca and the related Alexandrian Wicca, continue to thrive today. Some feminist and other forms of Wicca now have very little in common with the Gardnerian tradition.
Yes, Faerie Wicca is practiced.
Georgian Wicca was created in 1970.
Wicca Craft was created in 1991.
As Wicca is a religion focusing not on race, but on the belief structures of the individual, there is not (to my knowledge) a specific African-American Wicca. If you are asking if there is a participation by African-Americans in wicca, then the answer is yes.