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⚫ | '''Phyllis Curott''' is a pioneering spiritual teacher, a [[Wiccan]] [[High Priestess]], an activist attorney, and the bestselling author of ''The Love Spell'' (Gotham Books 2005), ''Book of Shadows'' and ''WitchCrafting''. She has been honored by Jane Magazine as one of The Ten Gutsiest Women of the Year, and New York Magazine has called her one of the city's most intellectually cutting edge speakers. A member of the esteemed Assembly of World Religious Leaders, an interfaith and First Amendment activist and member of the Lady Liberty League (see [[Circle Sanctuary]]), Phyllis Curott is an outspoken advocate for [[Wiccan]]/[[Pagan]] religious freedom in the media and the courts. She has successfully won the right of Wiccan clergy to perform legally binding marriages and rituals in public parks and has consulted on many religious liberties cases. Curott is founder of the Temple of Ara, one of the oldest Wiccan congregations in America, a shamanic tradition dedicated to the experience and ethics of immanent divinities. |
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⚫ | '''Phyllis Curott''' is a pioneering spiritual teacher, a [[Wiccan]] [[High Priestess]], an activist attorney, and the bestselling author of ''The Love Spell'' (Gotham Books 2005), ''Book of Shadows'' and ''WitchCrafting''. She has been honored by Jane Magazine as one of The Ten Gutsiest Women of the Year, and New York Magazine has called her one of the city's most intellectually cutting edge speakers. A member of the esteemed Assembly of World Religious Leaders, an interfaith and First Amendment activist and member of the Lady Liberty League (see [[Circle Sanctuary]]), Phyllis Curott is an outspoken advocate for [[Wiccan]]/[[Pagan]] religious freedom in the media and the courts. She has successfully won the right of Wiccan clergy to perform legally binding marriages and rituals in public parks and has consulted on many religious liberties cases. Curott is founder of the Temple of Ara,{{fact}} one of the oldest Wiccan congregations in America,{{fact}} a shamanic tradition dedicated to the experience and ethics of immanent divinities. |
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[[Category:Living people]] |
[[Category:Living people]] |
Revision as of 15:11, 21 August 2006
Phyllis Curott is a pioneering spiritual teacher, a Wiccan High Priestess, an activist attorney, and the bestselling author of The Love Spell (Gotham Books 2005), Book of Shadows and WitchCrafting. She has been honored by Jane Magazine as one of The Ten Gutsiest Women of the Year, and New York Magazine has called her one of the city's most intellectually cutting edge speakers. A member of the esteemed Assembly of World Religious Leaders, an interfaith and First Amendment activist and member of the Lady Liberty League (see Circle Sanctuary), Phyllis Curott is an outspoken advocate for Wiccan/Pagan religious freedom in the media and the courts. She has successfully won the right of Wiccan clergy to perform legally binding marriages and rituals in public parks and has consulted on many religious liberties cases. Curott is founder of the Temple of Ara,[citation needed] one of the oldest Wiccan congregations in America,[citation needed] a shamanic tradition dedicated to the experience and ethics of immanent divinities.