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INDIANAPOLIS
(Associated Press) -- - September 25 - 2:40 a.m. - Amid the swirling cigarette smoke
in a downtown coffeehouse, the ancient pantheon of pagan deities comes alive, conjured up
over coffee in the conversation at two adjoining tables.
The Indiana Asatru Council, a group of modern pagans who worship old Norse deities and a
smattering of other gods, has gathered for its weekly meeting.
Between drags off cigarettes, the talk meanders from Thor -- the lightning-wielding god of
thunder -- to the mysteries of the universe and then to the Internet, the medium that's
helping this tiny religious community to grow.
Wiccans, Druids, shamans, goddess-worshippers and people who revere members of the ancient
lineup of Roman, Greek, Egyptian and Celtic deities are showing up online and in public
more often these days.
Modeling their emergence after the gay pride movement, many pagans say they are ``coming
out of the broom closet'' -- a wry reference to the witches among them.
``We're everywhere. We could be your neighbor or co-worker and you wouldn't even know
it,'' said James McCoy of Kokomo, Ind., a computer software designer who spends hours
online each day with fellow pagans.
Not long ago, most pagans preferred to keep their beliefs secret, fearful of the public's
mistaken belief that they are devil-worshippers. There were no coffeehouse meetings for
them.
Brenda Brasher, an assistant professor of religion at Mount Union College in Alliance,
Ohio, says the cyber-realm has allowed isolated believers to connect with like-minded
individuals as never before. It also
provides a way to wage an inexpensive public relations campaign to burnish their beliefs'
reputations.
``The Internet has given these minority religious movements a public forum to say, `We
don't do evil things, we don't cast spells and we are environmentally minded,''' Brasher
said.
Going online also allows pagans to foster Pagan Pride events, such as last Friday's
autumnal equinox. At such public gatherings, pagans gather in the full regalia of their
particular groups, frequently eager to engage the
general public.
Suzanne and Duke Egbert, an Indianapolis couple who serve as high priestess and high
priest of a coven of about three dozen people, run an Internet site that helps plan pride
gatherings nationwide.
The Egberts, both 32, started the Web site in 1998 and that year they organized about 20
pride events. Last year, that rose to about 55; this year about 70 Pagan Pride events are
slated in Canada and 36 states.
That includes Pagan Pride Day on Saturday in Indianapolis' Broad Ripple Park that's
expected to attract hundreds. Admission is a can of nonperishable food that will be
donated to a local food pantry.
The Egberts, who have two children, were both raised in traditional religions, she a Roman
Catholic and he an Episcopalian.
By their early 20s both had found Christianity lacking in many areas, particularly
tolerance, as their intrigue grew in pagans' reverence for nature and emphasis on the free
will of the individual.
``Most religions will tell you that their beliefs are right and everyone else is wrong,''
said Duke Egbert, who goes by the pagan name Dagonet. ``We believe we are right for
ourselves. My religious path is exactly right for me. Other people's religious paths may
be right for them. I can't judge that.''
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