removes the shroud of misconception that often surrounds non-traditional believers By Sara Jarrett Oregon Daily Emerald Around this time every year, they creep out of their little hovels with a black cat in tow, leaving their cauldron to boil in anticipation of young, scrumptious trick-or-treaters. Their scraggly gray hair flows beneath a per fectly pointed black hat, framing the huge wart that protrudes from the tip of their crooked nose. This image of witches couldn’t be farther from the truth, said Teri Ciacchi and Becca Perry, who both call them selves witches and are organizers for Cauldron of Changes, a local non-profit group dedicated to creating public events for area Pagans, Wiccans and Earth Worshippers. They don’t have green warts and they don’t just come out just for Hal loween. With some minor Internet searching, one can find out that Wic cans are not the evil characters Holly wood portrays them as. Bits and pieces of the ancient beliefs and practices of the Celts are being pieced together by modem Dmids. Modem day followers still celebrate a series of fire-festivals on the first of November, February, May, and August as well as Full Moon Rituals every month. The holiday that corresponds with Halloween is called Samhian. This is literally the end of the warm season, and falls on Nov. 1. It is said that this fire festival was adopted by the Christians as All Soul’s Eve, and later became the secular holiday Hal loween. The occasion is a combined Feast of the Dead and New Year’s Day for the Celtic calendar, marking “a time when the veil between our reality and that of the Otherworld is most easily penetrat ed,” according to a web page. The Oth erworld is the place where life contin ues after death. To the ancient Dmids, after a person dies in the Otherworld, their soul lives again in another human body. Ciacchi explained the holiday on Nov. 1 as celebrating a journey inward toward self-knowing, which centers on the complex relationship between ec stasy and sacrifice. The fifth annual Witches’ Ball sponsored by the Caul dron of Changes, to be held at the WOW Hall on Oct. 30, commemorates this journey. The event will include a faux ritual that has no real precedence, Ciacchi said, though it will explore three as pects of the Greek deities Hecate and Dionysus. The myth surrounding these Gods includes ecstasy, jealousy and re venge. The myth teaches that “the need for ecstasy and divine contacts overrides our rational selves,” Ciacchi said. “If Turn to Wicca, Page 6B HIM Ebvl-o-veen grans don't have < to be _ +-ney can b e (suihe f-oo. send one to your baby. ©|[lw §1 Deadline Wednesday, October 27 Published Friday, October 29 Emerald