“Feasting on a Hekate Supper at the Crossroads”
with Dr. Kay Turner
Thursday, September 26, 2024 at 3 pm Eastern Time Â
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Hekate has often been called the Goddess of Witches. She was and is that, but also so much more. In ancient Greece her worship took place in temples and also at crossroads shrines dedicated to her where devotees gathered to feast and make petitions for her intercession. I propose a Hekate Supper! Join me to feast on knowing the many facets of Hekate through her lineage, her epithets, her invocations, her rites, her symbols, her realms, and her alliances. I highlight Hekate’s recognition and repair of brokenness as seen in her role in the myth of Demeter’s separation from Persephone. Hekate heard the cries of Persephone and lighted the way to her recovery.
To repair brokenness is her moral charge. She urges commingling, links worlds together, threads connections. A goddess sought after to repair brokenness, her work was made most potent through her union of the living and the dead. My lecture works with materials from primary sources such as Hesiod’s Theogony and The Chaldean Oracles, and from the interpretive work of Hekate scholars such as Sarah Iles Johnston and Froma Zeitlin. Participants in the meeting will also join me in a bit of invocation.
I wrote this evocation in 2022 to recite at the ruins of Hekate’s temple at Eleusis, outside Athens, the site of the Great and Lesser annual rites of Demeter and Persephone. I will touch on a number of the themes presented here:
Hekate: Invocation by Kay Turner
Eleusis: the place of Happy Arrival
Completion brings return
Pomegranates buried in the depths of death
unearthed:
If all we know is this cycle,
It is enough.
Hekate of earth, air, water, and fire,
Light our way with your double torches,
Open the gates with your keys,
Accept our offerings,
Brought to Trivium.
Lead us down the third road
To epiphany,
Greeted by “the grinning one.”
Mother Demeter, Daughter Persephone
Hekate Escort,
Take us with you.
Kay Turner is an artist and scholar working across disciplines including performance, writing, music, and folklore. Since 2012 her performance works and writing have revolved around an exploration of the witch figure in folklore and history. She has worked with artist Elizabeth Insogna on several projects exploring the Greek goddess Hekate including “Healing Persephone Wounds” and “A Hekate Supper,” Parts 1 and 2. Kay is the founding editor of Lady-Unique-Inclination-of-the-Night, a journal of art and the goddess published from 1976-1983. Her books include What a Witch: Before and After (with Zini Lardieri,), Transgressive Tales: Queering the Grimms (with Pauline Greenhill), and Beautiful Necessity: The Art and Meaning of Women’s Altars. She taught for 20 years in the Performance Studies Department at NYU and is a past president of the American Folklore Society.
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Save the Dates for future Salons:
Thursday, October 10, 2024 at 12 NOON Eastern Time
“Exploring Matriarchal Societies:Â Encounters and Insights from Around the World,” with Maria HaasÂ
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Thursday, October 24, 2024 at 3:00 PM Eastern Time
“Becoming a Good Relative: Calling White Settlers toward Truth, Healing, and Repair” with Hilary Giovale
This Salon recording will also be available to members when processed after the event.Â