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Skyclad (Neopaganism) : ウィキペディア英語版
Skyclad (Neopaganism)

In Wicca and Paganism/Neo-paganism, the term ''skyclad'' is used to refer to ritual nudity. Some Wiccan groups, or Traditions, perform some or all of their rituals skyclad. Whilst nudity and the practice of witchcraft have long been associated in the visual arts, this contemporary ritual nudity is typically attributed to either the influence of Gerald Gardner or to a passage from ''Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches'', and as such is mainly attributed to the Gardnerian and Aradian covens.
Gardner's ''Witchcraft Today'' was published in 1954. The book claimed to report on the contemporary practice of Pagan religious witchcraft in England, which had supposedly survived as an underground religion for centuries. Ritual nudity was included as a regular part of Wiccan practice, and remains associated with Gardnerian Wicca. The "Charge of the Goddess", a part of Gardnerian ritual liturgy, instructs Wiccans to practice ritual in the nude. Gardner spent several years in India, and may have picked up the concept from the Digambara Jains, a religious sect in which the monks may not wear clothing.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 url=http://www.llewellynencyclopedia.com/term/Skyclad )
The origins of this instruction have been traced to Charles Godfrey Leland's 1899 book, ''Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches''.〔 The following speech by Aradia appears at the end of the book's first chapter;

And as the sign that ye are truly free,
Ye shall be naked in your rites, both men
And women also: this shall last until
The last of your oppressors shall be dead;〔Leland, Chapter I

Dr. Leo Ruickbie also notes that the traditional and artistic representation of witches cannot be overlooked as a source for nudity in Gardner's system, citing artists such as Albrecht Dürer and Salvator Rosa.
Doreen Valiente, one of Gardner's priestesses, recalls Gardner's surprise at Valiente's recognition of material from ''Aradia'' in the original version of the "Charge" that she was given.〔Valiente, Doreen, quoted in 〕 Valiente later rewrote the "Charge", preserving the lines from ''Aradia''. Valiente's version was then widely circulated and reprinted.
Accepting ''Aradia'' as the source of skyclad practice, Robert Chartowich points to the 1998 Pazzaglini translation of these lines, which read "Men and Women / You will all be naked, until / Yet he shall be dead, the last / Of your oppressors is dead." Chartowich argues that the ritual nudity of Wicca was based upon Leland's mistranslation of these lines by incorporating the clause "in your rites".
Ritual nudity is not exclusive to traditional Wicca. Amongst those groups that do, only some rituals may involve ritual nudity. The Arician tradition, as an example, practices skyclad for six months of the year, and performs their ceremonies in ritual robes for the other half of the year.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 url=http://stregheria.com/FAQ.html )〕 Within, and especially outside of, specific areas of Wicca and Pagan, reasons other than tradition may be given to explain a preference for skyclad worship. Starhawk states in ''Spiral Dance'', "The naked body represents truth, the truth that goes deeper than social custom" and "is a sign that a Witch's loyalty is to the truth before any ideology or any comforting illusions.'"
The term "skyclad" is derived from Indian religions, where the term ''Digambara'' literally means "sky-clad". England had close links with India at the time when Wicca first became public in England, so this usage could well have been familiar to English speakers with a knowledge of Far Eastern religions. In particular, Gerald Gardner, who first popularized Wicca in England, was a noted folklorist with an interest in Far Eastern culture who spent much of his adult life in Ceylon and Burma, so it seems very plausible that he could have been familiar with this Hindu term.〔
==Notes and references==


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