Here
is the fourth
of
our Novenas for the Fallen Through, which for this month are devoted
to Brigid and to seeking justice and healing for the victims of the
Grenfell Tower fire. If you would like to read more about this work
please pop
and have a look here.
Today
we
weave a
gentle Sunday prayer of holy wells and healing.
I
have
written a lot about Goddess-Saint Brigid’s connection to Fire, but
she is also intimately
associated with Water and holy wells, and through them to healing.
Many
wells throughout Ireland are dedicated to her, most
famously in her home of Kildare where there were once said to be
thirty healing wells flowing
with sweet water.
These often
carry the legend that Brigid once stopped there during her travels
through
the British Isles, blessing and healing
people at the site. These
holy wells are repeatedly
associated
with sacred
trees, sometimes
known as ‘rag trees’, many
having a hawthorn or a rowan growing beside them and often these will
have ‘clooties’, strips of cloth used in healing prayers, tied in
their branches. These
rag trees and clootie wells are held in high regard and there is
great distress amongst those close to the land if they are harmed.
There
are also rivers named for her, for example the Bride
in Ireland, the Braint in Anglesey,
North
Wales, and the Brent in
England. Brean
Down in Somerset, a promontory high above the Bristol Channel, once
known as the Severn Sea, and
the setting of Dion Fortune’s book, ‘The Sea Priestess’, is
named for her. Another
of her aspects is as a ‘mid-woman’ or midwife and so she watches
over birth and its own breakwaters.
In this way, she brings a powerful balance to the heat of the fire.
In this way, she brings a powerful balance to the heat of the fire.
“History says, don't hope
on
this side of the grave.
But
then, once in a lifetime
the
longed for tidal wave
of
justice can rise up,
and
hope and history rhyme.
So, hope for a great sea change
(Seamus Heaney)
So, hope for a great sea change
on the far side of revenge.
Believe that a further shore
is reachable from here.
Believe in miracles
and cures and healing wells.”
Offering at Swallowhead Spring, the source of the Rover Kennet, Avebury, Wiltshire |
Novena
for the Fallen Through ~
Justice,
healing, and wholeness for the people of Grenfell, and for us all.
This
prayer begins with water.
Blessed
Brigid,
Holy
Woman,
Saint
and Goddess,
Mother
of Water.
Brigid
of the mantles,
Brigid
of the peat heap,
Brigid
of the twining hair,
Mary
of the Gaels.
We
ask for the blessings of your waters
to
cool the wound that the Grenfell Fire
has
left on our land and our hearts,
on
families and friends, on community and country.
We
ask for the blessing of your healing wells,
beside
which so many in pain have stood
for
generations, making their own prayers
and
petitions to the holy waters that flow
from
deep underground in our land.
May
the tide of feeling that has
risen
in sympathy, empathy, love, and sadness,
be
like a healing well to the people of Grenfell,
cool
water for the living, the dead,
and
those who love them, to sit beside.
Blessed
Brigid,
Holy
Woman,
Saint
and Goddess,
Mother
of Water.
Brigid
of the mantles,
Brigid
of the peat heap,
Brigid
of the twining hair,
Mary
of the Gaels.
May
each of us be like a strong tree
growing
beside the well of healing
for
the people of Grenfell and their community.
May
we be rooted in sweet waters
to
soothe and bring comfort to
scorched
earth and scarred people.
And
may all flow at the meeting place
of
healing, justice, and deep peace.
May
our prayers become clooties
tied
to the tree of memory,
the
memory of love made and children born,
the
memory of laughter and joy,
the
memory of lives lived and moments shared,
and
may none of these memories
be
debased or defiled by the heat of the fire.
Blessed
Brigid,
Holy
Woman,
Saint
and Goddess,
Mother
of Water.
Brigid
of the mantles,
Brigid
of the peat heap,
Brigid
of the twining hair,
Mary
of the Gaels.
We
ask that the mixture of Fire and Water;
the
elements of your forge,
the
heat of transformation,
the
cooling into a new form,
be
harnessed in an alchemy of hope,
a
new form where justice sings
songs
of wild joy for truths heard
and
wrongs righted,
an
alchemy of hope in which
all
peoples see through the things that divide us,
elements
coming together, melting into each other,
to
make something stronger, more beautiful.
We
ask this in memory of Mohammed
Neda, Ali Yawar Jafari,
Karen
Bernard, Lucas James, Rania Ibrahim and her daughters,
Fathia
and Hania, Stefan Anthony Mills, Ligaya Moore.
We
ask this in memory of Zainab Dean and her son,
Jeremiah,
Khadija
Saye and her mother, Mary Mendy, Gary Maunders,
Mohammad
Alhajali, Hesham Rahman, Tony Disson, Sheila Smith.
We
ask this in memory of Mariem Elgwahry and her
mother, Suhar,
Jessica
Urbano Ramirez, Deborah Lamprell, Steve Power,
Dennis
Murphy, Amal Ahmedin and Amaya Tuccu, Isaac Paulos.
We
ask this in memory of Marco Gottardi, and
Gloria Trevisan,
Mohammed
Nurdu, Fouzia el-Wahabi, her husband, Abdul Aziz,
Nur
Huda and Mehdi, Yasin.
We
ask this in memory of Nadia Loureda, Maria Del
Pilar Burton,
Berkti
Haftom and her son, Biruk, Nura Jamal, her husband, Hashim,
their
children, Yahya, Firdaws, Yaqub, Kamru Miah.
We
ask this in memory of Fatima Afrasehabi, her
sister, Sakina,
Nadia
Choucair, her husband, Baseem Choukair,
their
children, Mierna, Fatima, Zainab,
their
grandmother, Sirria, Raymond Bernard.
We
ask this in memory of Majorie
Vital and her son, Ernie,
Joseph
Daniels, Logan Gomes, Khadija Khalloufi,
Abdeslam Sebbar,
Fathia
Ahmed and her son, Abufars Ibrahim. Of Omar Belkadi,
Farah
Hamdan, Malak, Leena, and Tamzin who lived.
Of
Mohamednur
Tuccu, Husna and Rebaya Begum,
Mohammed
Hanif, Mohammed Hamid, Vincent Chiejina, Hamid Kani,
a
‘woman’ unnamed, all the unnamed, the disappeared.
Blessed
Brigid,
Holy
Woman,
Saint
and Goddess,
Mother
of Water.
Brigid
of the mantles,
Brigid
of the peat heap,
Brigid
of the twining hair,
Mary
of the Gaels.
We
thank you for our land of
sweet
rivers and holy wells,
we
thank you for the flow
of
different cultures and peoples
who
come to our shores,
knowing
that you watch over all
who
make long journeys.
Let
none be held in a shape
that
is not their own,
or
which is no longer needed,
and
may the dead of Grenfell
move
beyond form,
flowing
like water, feeding on sunlight and moonlight,
radiant
as the stars in the night sky,
free.
This
prayer ends with water.
Let it
be the water of healing.
For
this we pray.
Aho
mitake oyasin, amen, blessed be. Inshallah.
Sacred Waters, a prayer for protection of the trees, Oaken Wood |