I wanted to share some images of my work so far in a book of holidays, seasonal religious and cultural celebrations for my own personal path. :)
honestly.. dream witch's cabin right there. "La maison acadienne" in the Annapolis Royal Historic Gardens.
as a trans man who feels a loving presence in my transition and in my faith, I needed to share this đłïžââ§ïžâ€ïž
today in church one of the priests referred to trans people as "those who are growing into the gender they were called to be" and i'm kind of enjoying the idea of like....divinely ordained top surgery
Good morning, from my freshened up altar to yours!
Bonjour and Hello!
My name is Laurence and I am a Heritage Witch. I chose this path in 2019 after research into my genealogical roots and heritage from Quebec and Acadia. I wanted to create a path for myself that was relevant to my experience growing up in my Quebec family and in the surrounding landscape around me. I have another Tumblr account, showing some French Canadian witch material, but I decided to hone the focus and create a new account just for this.
I research French Canadian and Acadian folk ways and history, using archive and scholarly sources to gain knowledge for my practice. I also aim to write a book about these practices for the modern witch. I want to have the information I gathered to be accessible to the wider witchcraft and Pagan community, for anyone that would be interested in adding these tidbits to their path.
As the book is being written, I am going to post some blog entries about my findings, and little tidbits of knowledge I've found.
This blog is a safe space for all witches and everyone that comes with an open mind. While French Canadian and Acadian culture is beautiful, I recognize the colonial aspects of the history and culture, and I aim to dismantle that. I will not entertain or tolerate Quebec nationalism, racism, xenophobia, homophobia, etc. I support active reconciliation efforts with indigenous cultures and peoples, and while I recognize that French Canadians and Acadians have a shared cultural history with indigenous peoples, this blog will not post or teach indigenous practices. It is not my place to do so. This practice focuses on folk Catholicism as practiced by my ancestors. I do not support the Catholic Church and I want them to be held accountable for all the wrongs they have committed. This is a place of love and acceptance.
Stay tuned and I look forward to exploring and sharing further.
-Laurence
Holy Week (April 13-April 19th 2025) â movable festivities
My favourite week when it comes to spirituality and activities to do!Â
I started observing Holy Week in earnest in 2020, during our lockdowns. I remember my first observance as being one of anxiety, and a need to feel comfort. My practice helped me get through it, and Iâm happy to share this special week with all of you this year.Â
âAlleluia, Alleluia, LâcarĂȘme sâen va, Il reviendra, Ă Mardi gras.âÂ
-cantique acadienne du Samedi Saint. (Halleluiah, Halleluiah, Lent is leaving, only coming back on Shrove Tuesday)
Palm Sunday (picture above: my front door's palm frond set up)
The week begins with Palm Sunday! I have memories of visiting my grandmother in Saguenay and sheâd bring back palm fronds for us to weave. We usually wove them up in little beehive shapes and pinned them to our front doors for protection all year long, since they were blessed with Holy Water at the church service. Most churches have a basket where you can deposit the palm fronds of last year. These are burned and provide the ashes for the next Ash Wednesday. The fresh palm fronds can be used to weave little baskets, little beehives, or they can be cut to the proper length for a bookmark for your devotional books or Bibles. You can paint on them too!Â
(features Acadian dialect terms for plants) Historically, Acadian communities like ChĂ©ticamp didnât receive palms, it being troublesome to export to this isolated community in the Cape Breton Highlands. So, the faithful would bring cedar branches (thuya), club-moss (sĂ©vigny), juniper (chenave) or pine twigs (pruce) from the Highland mountains nearby. After being blessed at church, these tokens would be placed at the entrances of all buildings or assets on the property (fishing boats, cars, barns, and all rooms within the family home, even the cellar) for protection all year-round (1). If you want, feel free to find those plants responsibly and use them in your practice instead of palm fronds!
Holy Monday, Holy Tuesday and Holy Wednesday:Â usually has church services relating specific stories from the Gospel. I donât tend to do much on those days. Honestly, I usually use those days to do some spring cleaning, prepare myself for the coming dayâs rituals and festivities, and take some quiet time for myself to read passages, or bake for the coming holiday.Â
Maundy Thursday (picture above, my own Holy Oils)
The beginning of the Paschal Triduum (begins on this evening, into Holy Saturdayâs Vigil). This day commemorates the Last Supper. The Chrism Mass is celebrated on this day, where the Holy Oils are blessed for the surrounding parishes. While this Mass is celebrated privately by the clergy in the Catholic Church, I like to celebrate in my own way. In the way that this celebration brings together all twelve apostles, as a Christian witch, I spend time with my meal that day, pondering on the apostlesâ gifts they each possess, I contemplate what that Last Supper must have been like, and I bless my own oils for my folk magic purposes. Holy Oils: the Oil of the Sick, the Oil of the Catechumens, and the Holy Chrism Oil. The Oil of the Sick is pure olive oil and is used to anoint a sick or elderly person on the forehead and hands with a cross, paired with special prayers. They can be administered in any time and place. This can have a powerful impact on the placebo effect of faith on healing and bring courage and strength to the ailing person. The Oil of the Catechumens, also olive oil, is used for many things. It is used to anoint those about to undergo the Sacrament of Baptism, both infant and adults. This is to allow to receiver to be prepared to receive the wisdom and strength to learn Christian lessons during their religious quest. It is also used as a protection oil to ward off evil spirits on a baptism initiate. The Holy Chrism Oil is olive oil mixed with balsam. This oil represents strength, and the balsam is known as âthe aroma of Christâ (2 Corinthians 2:15). This oil is meant to give the receiver the gift of the Holy Spirit, and to devote something to Godâs service. This oil is also used to anoint the altar and vessels used during Mass, as well as during the ordination of a priest. Already, these oils can have many uses within an individual folk practitionerâs spiritual habits, such as dedicating oneself to a path, blessing the altar, the working tools for rituals, and yourself when you need to reset your faith. During Holy Week on Holy Thursday, otherwise known as âThe Chrism Massâ, the local bishop blesses enough new oils for every parish for later distribution. To bless these oils, the bishop does them in order as listed above, says a prayer to bless them individually. To bless the Chrism Oil, the bishop mixes oil from the balsam plant with the olive oil, breathes on the mixed oil to signify the presence of the Holy Spirit, and then says a prayer to consecrate it. For the individual practitioner, if you want officially blessed oils from the church, many Christian shops sell amounts of them, but if you want to individualize your practice, feel free to bless them yourself for a day where youâre feeling sick, need extra protection, or need to bless your space once more.Â
Good Friday
On this day, we commemorate Jesusâs crucifixion and death on the cross. Itâs a day of sorrow and reflection. For my part, I like attending Good Friday services in my area, and I wear all black on that day.Â
It is tradition to remain silent from noon till 3pm, to commemorate Jesusâs last moments of life, as he is noted to have died at 3 oâclock in the afternoon. Families with young children would encourage the kids to pray or to go to bed for a nap, to ensure they remained quiet. My great-grandmother has memories of going through that silent vigil with impatience! For myself, I like to take time to light a candle at 3pm, while doing my best to remain quiet without distractions from noon until that time. In church, the priest would ensure the Sanctuary where the Tabernacle resides is empty of the Host, and the candle extinguished. The altar is laid bare of dĂ©cor. I do the same. I empty my Tabernacle lantern of the Host and make sure I donât light candles near it. I take off my altar cloth and dĂ©cor, and lay a black pall over the entire cabinet.Â
In some Acadian communities, if bad weather prevented the family from traveling to church, the family would set up a white cloth on the kitchen table, place the crucifix on it, and each family member needs to kiss it. Afterwards, the head of the family would recite from the Roman Missal. They also read their Way of the Cross (chemin de la croix) at home or in church. (2) It was also imperative to avoid butchering farm animals or go out hunting wild game on this day. Fishermen out at sea would do their Passiontide readings and note the direction from which the wind came from, for they knew that if they did so, the windâs direction would remain faithful for the remaining year.Â
Holy SaturdayÂ
My all-time favourite spiritual and religious experience of the calendar year! I love it because I donât think thereâs any other day in the liturgical calendar where parishioners are expected to participate in as much as this day. It is meant to take the believer from the times of Genesis with the creation of all that exists in this world, to the first fire and the first waters, and translate that into the renewal of baptisms, the lighting of a new Easter fire, and the gradual lighting of all candles in the chapel to symbolise the growing victory of light in the face of so much darkness and death. All lights and church candles were extinguished since Thursday, and the only candle that will be lit is the Paschal candle, inscribed with this yearâs date. I like to attend the University of Kingâs College Chapel services in Halifax, Nova Scotia, for this ritual, given the intimate chapel venue, the vibes of the clergy, and how lively it gets. We bring the Paschal candle outside and bless it with the fire from the Holy Spirit. We bless the baptismal font and the Holy Water inside, and a series of litanies and chants are done, as everyone holds a little candle in their hands, lit from that Paschal pillar. Once it hits midnight, the entire chapel lights up again, and all the bells chime loudly, announcing Christâs resurrection. The choir bursts into joyful song, and it really is the most lively and impactful service. Partying ensues until dawn for us, with a feast of lamb and an array of dishes brought in from a multicultural scene.Â
In Acadian communities, Holy Saturday celebrate their first midnight mass of the year (the other one being Christmas eve). From a small fire at the church entrance, parishioners light their own candles. Hymns of Halleluiah and joyful rhythms take the choir and congregation in song. I definitely want to see how these services are done in French, and one day, if Iâm lucky, Iâll attend.Â
Easter Sunday (photo above: the Saguenay River)
On Easter morning, before the sun comes up, many faithful in communities in QuĂ©bec and some in Acadie would wake up and head over to the nearest brook to collect âlâeau de PĂąquesâ (Easter Water). This coveted water would be known to heal certain ailments and protect against lightning. Often, it was noted as having the same virtues as Holy Water provided by a priest. It needed to be collected against the current of the brook, before sunrise. To do this journey was known to âvoir danser le soleil de PĂąques et aller au ruisseau quĂ©rir de lâeau de PĂąques.â (to go see the Easter sun dance, and go seek out the Easter Water.) It was told that on Easter morning, the sun performs a dance as it rises, and that everyone should witness it at least once in their lifetime. (3) The sun is reputed to be brightest on that sunrise than any other time of year. In the south-west of Nova-Scotia, a formula needed to be recited while collecting this special water, âBĂ©nie soit cette eau, qui guĂ©rit tous les maux.â (Made holy may this water be, to heal all ails.). This tradition still is practiced in the north-west of New Brunswick today. In regions of QuĂ©bec and Acadie, it is paramount that parishioners and believers take at least one Eucharist mass between Ash Wednesday and la Quasimodo (the 2nd Sunday of Eastertide). It is known in those regions as âFaire ses PĂąquesâ (Attend your Easters). Otherwise, youâd run the risk of becoming a loup-garou or have a damned soul if you skip seven years in a row. Â
Feasts for Easter in Acadian communities ranged from a breakfast of as many eggs as one could eat if they were available, right down to home-grown chicken, wild game or salt meat. After a long March of dwindling cellar stores and not much meat left, families often made due with the remains of their provisions. (4)Â
Sources:
PĂšre Anselme Chiasson. ChĂ©ticamp, Histoire et Traditions Acadiennes. Ăditions les Aboiteaux. 1972. p.214
Jean-Claude Dupont. HĂ©ritage dâAcadie. Ăditions LemĂ©ac. 1977. p.77Â
Ibid.,308
Jude Avery. Joie de Vivre â Love of Life: Isolated Acadians celebrate their culture through traditions and folklore. New World Publishing, 2021. P.28
I bought the book HĂ©ritage d'Acadie by Jean-Claude Dupont, one of my favorite books on Acadian folk ways, and Luc Dupont sent me so many other books for free â€ïžâ€ïžâ€ïž my heart is so happy! Moonshadow is enjoying my scholarly spoils. I'm especially thrilled to receive the book on traditional Acadian medicine. That book is almost impossible to find still in print, and has been on my wishlist a very long time.
Lesson of the day: talk to your favorite authors and publishing houses. Especially in Acadian and French Canadian small print houses. They show so much generosity and openness in providing resources if you reach out.
Out of all the cats in the house, Meringue is always on the altar, loafing, not even playing with the dangly things. What a well-behaved cutie who covets the altar cloth đ§Ą
I painted a boat-shaped key holder into a wall shrine to St. Anne today, as her saint day is coming up soon.
I incorporated a canoe and a sash, as St. Anne was a protective saint of voyageurs during the fur trade. Red, green and white felt like her signature colors, and she is near the ocean, as she was a treasured saint among fishermen and sailors.
I'll try to find a little tea light platform to glue to the bottom of the shrine for a fake candle to rest.
"Totentanz/Danse Macabre" Probably one of my most well known & and most fitting for the season piece is once again available as a tapestry print!
I am a heritage witch of Acadian and French-Canadian folk catholicism. My practice stems from my family knowledge, scholarly research, and artistic hobbies. This is a safe space for 2SLGBTQIA+ folks, people of every non-judgmental spiritual calling. I will block anyone who tells me to repent.
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