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North Shore Sunday
October 31st, 2003
Front Page
Knocking 'em Dead?
by Dinah Cardin
A funky, irreverent 'celebration' of death inaugurated
its first edition in Salem this year - but not without a few spooky speed
bumps.
Just when local officials were beginning to feel safe
that Salem's Halloween festivities were headed in a more family-friendly
direction, those mischievous
witches have gone and shaken things up again.
The witches concede it's been a cauldron's worth of work to consecrate this
first annual Festival of the Dead, a 10-day celebration of our own deaths
and of those who've already crossed into the next world.
So much for pumpkins, cornhusks and trick or treating.
The masterminds behind the Festival of the Dead are shrewd.
They have to be, they say, in waging a constant battle to market Salem as a
spooky
witch
city
that celebrates Halloween 365 days a year, rather than what they claim
is some local officials' current mission to spin Salem as a quaint
maritime village.
The whole idea behind the fledgling yearly Festival of the
Dead is to show mere powerless mortals what the Halloween season is really
all about:
taking
the time to contemplate mortality, poking fun at it (even if for a
moment), confronting personal fears of death and emerging on Nov. 1
the stronger
for it.
As Shawn Poirer, high priest of the Salem Witches, puts
it: "Death
is the most ardent lover we will ever have who pursues us relentlessly,
until
the day he can embrace us in his cold arms. From the moment we are born,
death pursues us more than any lover. Sometimes it stalks. Sometimes he
comes too
soon and his greed and haste will cut a life short. Or when he sees an
old body that's been here too long, he will kiss that person and transform
them
to the next world."
Oh, and did we mention the festival is way sexy? An easy
concept to grasp from the look and feel of the Web site (www.festivalofthedead.com).
For
those who
don't like having their wits scared out of them, there's always the
S&M
side to the Witches Ball and the Vampires and Victims Ball, where corsets,
leather collars and "slave auctions" titillate, if not terrify.
The more spiritual side of the festival, however, is about
embracing the darkness and bringing it to the surface to again see the light.
"
We sleep in the dark," says Poirier. "The dark can be a terrifying
place if we're not aware of our surroundings. The dark gives you solace and
a time for rejuvenation. That's what Salem is - allowing the darkness to take
you over and strengthen the soul.
The politics of haunting
Festival
organizers generally agree that Salem's Haunted Happenings has dwindled in
substance with each passing year, leaving visitors
wondering
why they
traveled to Salem in the first place. With a diverse sprinkling
of posters advertising
the festival about town, the group pokes at Haunted Happenings
with one slogan that reads: "Here's a happening that's really haunted."
Dissention among the ranks is almost always the name of
the game in Salem - the Wiccans not approving of those who practice darker
witchcraft,
and those
so accused, in turn, countering that the Wiccans are too tame.
Many residents
dislike the "kitschy witchy" side of the shops altogether.
And specific to the festival, certain witches, area organizations
and town
officials have
expressed doubt about this whole honoring-dead-folks thing.
Propped up inside a gauzy tent at Pickering Wharf's Crystal
Moon shop, local witch Christian Day takes time from doing psychic readings
to
relay the ongoing
battle with the town.
He begins by saying a town official recently told him that
the people he and his friends bring to town are "T-shirt wearing zeros." Day thinks
the town's mantra of "a quaint and beautiful maritime village" is
overdone on the North Shore.
Day, who studied political science at Brandeis, explains
that he often dresses very un-witchy in Old Navy and Structure duds. Lately,
he sports
a top hat
and black frilly shirt, black eye liner, face glitter and skull
rings on his hands.
"
Shawn said this is the year I find my inner witch - I put this together and
now I look like something from 'A Christmas Carol,'" he rolls
his eyes theatrically.
Witch history, however, is unique, Day says. Making it particularly
meaningful when witches walk down the streets of a city that once
put people to
death in the name of "witch."
Salem's Bob Murch, creator of a local Salem spirit board
game, agrees.
"
People aren't coming to Salem to see the Friendship (the local historic ship)," he
says. "They are coming to see the witches."
The city has become a single slice of pie, he adds, that
everyone perceives as way too small.
"
They are pushing each other out and silencing the witches' party when there's
enough for everyone," says Murch.
Festival organizers feel they've gotten a major runaround
by the town, claiming the rules changed daily about whether they were
permitted to hang banners
on Old Town Hall or use certain kinds of signs to advertise.
"
I have to talk to this person who has to talk to this person who has to talk
to that person and we'll call you back," says Day. "They
don't come out and say we hate what you're doing, but they let
it be known in
a subtle
way. It's a battle to fight the city. It's horrible to feel like
they don't want you here."
It must be that examining death is just not something the
town officials want to do, Day says.
"
They may not know the specifics of the events, but they understand it's a festival
of the dead and they are afraid of death," offers Day. "We're
ripping the Band-Aid off and saying, hey, look at this. It shows
them that despite
all their wealth and grandness, they will die."
But in the end, no matter the dramas, says Day, when it
mattered, the Old Town Hall proved to be the perfect place for last weekend's
Psychic
Fair
- the marathon
tarot readings and setup of witchy vendor booths easy and effortless.
However,
there have been other hardcore obstacles.
Festival organizers had to scramble to move an event because
they heard the state chapter of the Knights of Columbus threatened
to pull the
local chapter's
charter if a scheduled festival event called "Death and Rebirth - Ritual
Transformation" took place at the chapter hall on Nov. 1.
This came as a shock, since the hall has often been rented for
witch events, says
Day.
Catholic-related chat rooms buzzed with discussion condemning
the festival the past couple of weeks with messages like this
one found
on a Web
site for young Catholic hipsters called www.phatmass.com: "Can
you say 'Satanic Ritual' being held in a hall run by CATHOLIC men
who should KNOW
BETTER!!!!????!??!??!"
Organizers hesitated to reveal the event's new venue to
anyone but ticket holders, for fear someone would try to stand in the
way of
it again.
They received numerous
phone calls and e-mails, says Day, from people claiming to have
tickets, in hopes of sabotaging the evening dedicated to undergoing
a transformative "death," to
surrender that which needs left behind, only to awaken refreshed,
perhaps with a bonus healthy glow.
Their trouble first began when Destination Salem, a non-profit
agency made up of local businesses, refused the festival's $250
membership
fee to join
and receive advertising benefits, claiming the event didn't fit
into the "cultural
mission statement." Festival organizers asked the agency
what culture has escaped death.
The agency's director, Carole Thistle, had no other comment
other than to say the board voted to turn festival organizers down.
"I knew I was going to fight with the city," says
Day. "I
knew I was going to fight ('Official Witch of Salem' Laurie) Cabot.
I never
knew
I was
going to fight the office of tourism."
In a single day, the group went out and crafted a navigable,
competing Web site www.hauntedsalem.com, as a place where Salem
businesses
could advertise
for free. The site promotes Halloween every day of the year,
a theme for this group, which doesn't want to see Halloween trinkets
replaced
with maritime
trinkets every Nov. 1.
Eternal staying power
Some witches associated with the festival have been dreaming
big, and they're planning to give those dreams wings. Don't
expect the
kiddies
to be left
out of the fun, for example.
A goal of the festival next year is to teach a class to
help children deal with the death of loved ones and ... drum roll
please ...
to host a school
for youngsters to learn the techniques of mediumship. "Raven Moon's School
of Witchcraft and Mediumship" would teach children ages 8
to 13 how to summon spirits and reconnect with their dead ancestors.
Poirier says,
think
Harry Potter on steroids.
"
No one has ever taught children to open their spirits and allow grandma to
come in and speak," he says. "In Salem most children
are taught to make fairy wands and wear glitter dust."
These witches are more marketing geniuses than Dungeons
and Dragons castoffs. Festival organizers have brains, relentless
grit, education,
Web skills
and youth on their side. In addition to putting on the festival,
each of the
three central planners has at least a dozen other pet projects
going on concurrently.
Day, a former dot-com wiz kid, is responsible for the festival's
swanky Web site, as well as Poirier's site, where one can
have a psychic reading
using
automated Paypal. Day is also the marketer and Web designer
for Murch's Cryptique, the local Salem spirit board game,
and Day
hosts his own
site called Salem
Tarot. Like a true techie, Day is concerned with making sure
his slick sites show up on Page 1 of Google searches.
Playing to their individual strengths and keeping it in
the family is what it's all about for these guys. Murch praises
Poirier
and Day for
marketing
Salem's Halloween with more savvy than ever.
Poirier, well spoken even in the most spontaneous of situations,
is the idea guy and the face of the group. Day describes
Poirier - an
imposing
dark figure,
with long dark hair and witchy long fingernails - as just
what people want to see when they visit Salem in October.
He's the "razzle dazzle" people
are looking for, Day says, referring to "Chicago," one
of many Broadway analogies he employs.
"
When tourists come here they want to see a 400-watt light bulb. Shawn's a 400-watt
light bulb," says Day. "I'm probably a 200.
Selling
scary
Murch and Day are scary-good PR guys, with Day
specializing on the details. The group massages the media like pros. With
Poirier
often
fronting,
together they have appeared on a Showtime special, the Travel
Channel, in Playboy
Magazine and the list goes on.
Along with a collection of other talented friends, until
now they've been basically unorganized, known as Shawn, Christian,
Bob and
their musical
friend, Poirier's
roommate and "sorcerer of song," Teisan Russell,
formally of the Salem-based band Coven 13. But the festival
gives these
characters
a staging
mechanism.
Thanks to another friend who has professional printing capabilities,
festival organizers can churn out their brochures with blitzkrieg
speed. They outsource
almost nothing.
When met with the office of tourism's frosty reception,
the festival couldn't contribute to the tourism and marketing
meetings among
the members of Destination
Salem. But fortuitous diversification, owing to the fact
Cryptique is a member, offers Day and Murch a voice. A loophole
navigated.
"We may be young, we're not 50 or rich, but we have
reach," says Day. "We
develop products that have reach and we have the media."
Very little, it seems, can keep these witches under wraps.
It's worth the effort, says Day, if the witches can take
Halloween back and
start a regular
tradition
with the festival.
"
We're doing it our way," says Day. "We've always done our
way ... by necessity."
But as much as witches love drama, this is a happy story.
A certain level of cooperation from all sides is permeating the
atmosphere,
say festival
organizers.
In the examination of mortality and death, all the spooks
are getting involved, from Wiccans to voodoo priestesses
to vampires
with filed
teeth, constantly
on the hunt for eternal life. Though these factions have
not always played well together in Salem, they are seeking
commonality
under
the collective
umbrella of the new festival and by looking death square
in the face.
The famed Witches Ball and several of these events have
always welcomed brave members of the public. But not like this.
The Dumb Supper,
rumored to have
piqued the interest of music channel VH1, is a silent dinner
where spirits are conjured and where, supposedly, a scheduled
surprise
at the end will
have people talking for the next year.
So why would the witches want to share their way of life
and secrets so openly?
"If a secret is kept too long in a closet it withers
and dies," says
Poirer.
Something they simply won't allow their new festival to do.
E-mail reporter Dinah Cardin at dcardin@cnc.com.
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