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Druidry recognised as a religion in Britain

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The Druid Network has been given charitable status by the Charity Commission for England and Wales, the quango that decides what counts as a genuine faith as well as regulating fundraising bodies.

It guarantees the modern group, set up in 2003, valuable tax breaks but also grants the ancient religion equal status to more mainstream denominations. This could mean that Druids, the priestly caste in Celtic societies across Europe, are categorised separately in official surveys of religious believers.

Supporters say the Charity Commission's move could also pave the way for other minority faiths to gain charitable status.

Phil Ryder, Chair of Trustees for The Druid Network, said it had taken four years for the group to be recognised by the regulator. "It was a long and at times frustrating process, exacerbated by the fact that the Charity Commissioners had no understanding of our beliefs and practices, and examined us on every aspect of them. Their final decision document runs to 21 pages, showing the extent to which we were questioned in order to finally get the recognition we have long argued for," he said.

Emma Restall Orr, founder of The Druid Network, added: "The Charity Commission now has a much greater understanding of Pagan, animist, and polytheist religions, so other groups from these minority religions — provided they meet the financial and public benefit criteria for registration as charities - should find registering a much shorter process than the pioneering one we have been through."
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- Source / Full Story: Druidry recognised as religion in Britain for first time, Martin Beckford, Telegraph, Oct. 1, 2010 -- Summarized by Religion News Blog

Druidry to be classed as religion by UK's Charity Commission

The Charity Commission has accepted that druids' worship of spirits arising from the natural world could be seen as a religious activity.
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The commission says the network's work in promoting druidry as a religion is in the public interest.
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BBC religious affairs correspondent Robert Pigott says that with concern for the environment growing and the influence of mainstream faiths waning, druidry is flourishing more now than at any time since the arrival of Christianity.

Druidry's followers are not restricted to one god or creator, but worship the spirit they believe inhabits the earth and forces of nature such as thunder.

Druids also worship the spirits of places, such as mountains and rivers, with rituals focused particularly on the turning of the seasons.

After a four-year inquiry, the Charity Commission decided that druidry offered coherent practices for the worship of a supreme being, and provided a beneficial moral framework.
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- Source / Full Story: Druidry to be classed as religion by Charity Commission, BBC, Oct. 2, 2010 -- Summarized by Religion News Blog

See Also

• Druids: Worshippers of nature who were said to sacrifice humans
• What is Duidry?
• Neo-Druidism (Wikipepia)

Full story: Druidry recognised as a religion in Britain


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