Conference Panel: “Hearing the Call of the Ancestors”

Hearing the Call of the Ancestors through Myth, Lineage, and the Spirit of Place

A panel by three women seeking their Ancestors who found each other along the way. Their paths met on the shores of the Salish Sea at a time when each was in graduate school. In sharing the experiences of their journeys with each other, they witnessed the transformational power of being willing to listen to the call of the Ancestors.

We find our Ancestors – and they find us – in many ways. It can be through an intentional ancestral journey, a “chance” opportunity to visit another city, detailed genealogical research, or focused scholarly study. By leaving clues to guide our path, the Ancestors seem to want us to discover them, if we are willing to pay attention – to hear their call. This panel features the presentations of three women who have made ancestral journeys to learn who they are by knowing where they come from. Their quests employ many ways of knowing as they retrieve the values transmitted in the folk stories, recover traditional knowledge held in the land itself, and reveal submerged histories through scholarly research.

Mary Beth Moser: “My story begins decades ago when I first walked on the land of my grandparents in what is now called northern Italy. Having been raised without explicit knowledge of my cultural heritage, I felt a sense of belonging, a genetic resonance that I had not felt before. This experience led to years of genealogical research and study trips. Through luck, or perhaps ancestral intervention, I met Lucia Chiavola Birnbaum, who became my mentor in the Women’s Spirituality doctoral program. Using the methodology of feminist cultural history, a field for which Lucia was a pathfinder, opened my eyes to the fullness of my culture, including what had been suppressed, submerged or unwritten. In my research, I learned of an animate land with an oral history of indigenous goddesses, magical women, and folk women and men who lived sustainably and harmoniously with Nature. Always a spiritual seeker, I have found great meaning in the values conveyed in the folk stories, in the enduring customs of the folk culture and in the rituals of the folk religion. Serving as president of the local cultural club, Circolo Trentino di Seattle, enables me to have an ongoing engagement with those who share my ancestral heritage. Through my writing and presentations, I hope to inspire others to seek their own indigenous roots.”

Maryka Ives Paquette, of Franco-Norse ancestry, is a cultural and environmental specialist whose ancestral research laid the foundation for her professional work to support indigenous peoples’ voices in environmental management and policy. She holds an MA in Indigenous Mind from Wisdom University and an MPA in Environmental Science and Policy from Columbia University. She currently resides in Mannahatta, present day Manhattan.

“My presentation examines identity and the recovery of knowledge through multidisciplinary research I conducted for my Master’s thesis that draws on indigenous ways of knowing, genealogy, and cultural history, and culminates in a journey to Armorica, present day Normandy. My research is founded on the ancient premise that humans are equal and active participants in creation, a worldview maintained and passed down by indigenous peoples and traditional societies to this day. I trace the origins of a family line back to earth-based traditions honoring the yew, acknowledging the effects of colonization on cultural memory, to recover wisdom hidden in plain view across the Norman landscape. This research not only grounds my own sense of identity in the story of humanity, it also sheds light on aspects of traditional Gallic culture that can strengthen values and build connection among all peoples through a renewed relationship to place.”

Marion Gail Dumont: I was born in Thiereville-Sur-Meuse, Lorraine, France and named after Marion, Montana where my paternal Grandparents had a cattle ranch. Life has been shaped by the many places that I have inhabited. My French heritage has always been important to me and it is only recently that I have discovered further details of my ancestral lineage, including Irish, Scots-Irish, and African-American. In this discovery, I have come to recognize the life-changing significance of knowing our ancestors. As I approach the 60th year of my life, I yearn to find a way to bridge the land of the living with the land of the ancestors. My life has been graced by women: three daughters and a six-year old granddaughter. As a registered nurse, mother, and grandmother it is not surprising that the focus of my work over the past 34 years has been women’s health and development. I have additional training as a childbirth educator, lactation consultant, and doula. Today, I offer non-religious and personalized attention to the spiritual needs of women as they step across a life threshold. As a spiritual midwife, I work with women to create a space to celebrate or mourn life-changing events and transitions. Hearing the call of our ancestors through lineage, myth, and place can gain us access to knowledge and create connections that help us in the crossing of life thresholds. My presentation shares my experience of the discovery of my Irish ancestry that came about through my doctoral research and a visit to a particular place in East Tennessee.

 

 

ASWM Gains Nonprofit Status

We are delighted to announce that our organization is now a bona fide 501-C3 group, with federal nonprofit status. Thanks to ASWM’s Treasurer and other board members, we now have our certificate in hand. The change in status means that we are better positioned to raise funds to create events, services, and publications. Watch ASWM’s website for updates on projects as they emerge, and check out the “Donate” page under About ASWM if you want to help us move research and scholarship into the future!

ASWM Gains Nonprofit Status!

We are delighted to announce that our organization is now a bona fide 501-C 3 group, with federal nonprofit status. Thanks to ASWM’s Treasurer and other board members, we now have our certificate in hand. The change in status means that we are better positioned to raise funds to create events, services, and publications. Watch ASWM’s website for updates on projects as they emerge, and check out the “Donate” page under About ASWM if you want to help us move scholarship into the future!

Remembering Patricia Monaghan

patricia

In Memoriam Patricia Monaghan

Patricia Monaghan, scholar, author, poet, activist, artist, visionary died early on November 11, 2012 after a two year journey with cancer. She was a Founding Mother of the Association for the Study of Women and Mythology. ASWM grieves this loss and honors Patricia’s memory as we continue the work she envisioned.

Patricia was born in Brooklyn, N.Y. to Irish-American parents, and maintained dual Irish and American citizenship. She earned her undergraduate and first graduate degree at the University of Minnesota, where she studied English and French literature. She also earned an MFA in creative writing (poetry) from the University of Alaska. She worked as a journalist in both Minnesota and Alaska, writing about culture, nature, and the intersection of the two. Patricia earned her PhD in Science and Literature from The Union Institute in Cincinnati in 1994. In 1995, she joined the faculty of the School for New Learning at DePaul University, where she taught classes in arts and environmental sciences.

ASWM members will remember Patricia for her groundbreaking contributions to the fields of Goddess Studies and Women’s Spirituality. In 1979, she published the first encyclopedia of female divinities, a book which has remained steadily in print since then and was recently republished in a two volume set as The Encyclopedia of Goddesses and Heroines. She has also published The Encyclopedia of Celtic Myth and Folklore. She edited a three-volume collection of essays entitled Goddesses in World Culture, published in late 2010. Patricia brought her lifelong interest in Ireland together with her commitment to women’s spirituality in The Red-Haired Girl from the Bog: The Landscape of Celtic Myth and Spirit, a travelogue of Irish heritage sites and their relation to goddess figures. Her other books on this subject are The Goddess Path and The Goddess Companion, both introductory books on the subject; O Mother Sun, an analysis of world myths about solar goddesses, Wild Girls: The Path of the Young Goddess, a group of stories for girls about youthful goddesses; and Magical Gardens, a book of garden designs based in mythology that was reissued in early 2012. A revised and expanded edition of Meditation: The Complete Guide was recently published. At the time of her death, Patricia had just finished co-editing with her spouse Dr. Michael McDermott an anthology of writings called Brigit: Sun of Womanhood. She was also revising The Encyclopedia of Goddesses and Heroines for a paperback edition. Both can be expected in 2013.

The last few years of her life were devoted to the projects she held the most dear: ASWM, The Black Earth Institute, and Irish folklore study. The Black Earth Institute is dedicated to inspiring artists to serve the causes of inclusive spirituality, protecting and healing the earth and fighting for social justice. She focused her work and travels increasingly on discovering Irish mythology and folklore. The creation and development of ASWM were high priorities for Patricia. She was committed to the importance of reward and recognition, to call attention to Goddess scholarship within academia at large. She was devoted to the mentoring of new and emerging scholars. Through her generosity, she endowed the Kore Dissertation Prize for ASWM; in this way, scholars will continue to benefit from her commitment to excellence for years to come.

Patricia was also an avid gardener with a large organic garden, orchard and vineyard that she tended with her husband. A memorial will be held at the farm on Saturday, December 1, 2012. The same morning, at 11:00 a.m., an additional memorial will be held at the Quaker meeting house in Madison, Wisconsin. Because Patricia was connected to people all over the world, there are many memorials and vigils being held in local communities. ASWM plans a ceremony of remembrance in conjunction with the Symposium in St. Paul, Minnesota in April 2013.

We celebrate and honor Patricia’s life, spirit and work by continuing her vision to develop the Association for the Study of Women and Mythology.

Contributions to continue her work may also be made to the Black Earth Institute, PO box 424 Black Earth, Wisconsin 53515.

For another remembrance of Patricia, see this article in The Wild Hunt.

In Memorium

Dear Members and Friends of ASWM,

Our co-founder Patricia Monaghan passed away last weekend following a two-year journey with cancer.  The loss of our dear friend is immeasurable.  We who remain to do this work are trying now to find the right words to speak when there’s nothing to be said.  Please bear with us; a more complete post will follow shortly.
Sid Reger and the Board of ASWM