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At the first "Witch-In" in New York City.
Dr. Leo Louis Martello
By Lori Bruno
Used w/Permission
As appears in Llewellyn's 2002 Magical Almanac
Reprinted with the permission of Lori Bruno
Born September 26, 1930
Born into the Summerland June 29, 2000
Where do I begin to write about a legend? A man who
gave tirelessly of himself for the fight for human
rights, animal rights, gay and lesbian rights, and for
Witches worldwide to worship in complete freedom?
Leo Martello was an amazingly compassionate man. He
never turned away anyone who genuinely needed his time
and effort in the pursuit of a just cause. He fought
long and hard for the freedom of Witches and Pagans. He
coined the very phrase: "Out of your broom closets and
on to your brooms!" He was always humorous, but in that
humor there were always wise lessons. He was fond of
saying: "The coward finds a way out; the brave find a
way." And he was himself brave and always in the
forefront of a controversial or difficult movement. It
is to his credit that he stood up in the initial
movement for gay and lesbian rights in New York City's
"Stonewall Riots" in the 1970's. A spirit of light
imbued the mortal body of Dr. Leo Louis Martello.
He was equal to a million Suns and was crucial to the
craft's beginning in this country. He was not one who
jumped on the bandwagon because it was the "in" thing to
do. Many write about the craft; however, Leo possessed
an inner fire--the "heart fire" of the true Witch.
To have known Leo Louis Martello was an honor, and ever
a challenge. Leo was a loving man, yet sometimes
caustic. Leo taught this way. Sometimes he was a tough
teacher, but it was to make you strong, and he did it
with love. I soon learned I could never hide myself from
him. He could see right into me and knew me for who and
what I was. If at times he was critical, it was never
intended to hurt, but rather to help me grow to my true
potential. He once said these wise words to me: "Never
let your failures poison your heart, nor your successes
poison your disposition." With Leo you could make no
excuses and take no shortcuts. To him, only cowards made
excuses.
To me he was a beloved teacher, high priest, and
father. After my own father died, it was Leo who taught
me. He was there for me, a beloved mentor. No one can
ever take his place. Leo Martello now sits with the
Ancient Ones, and they surely are telling him: "Welcome,
our son. You did well. Join your ancestors, all those
who paid with their lives to bring the Ancient Ways back
to a breeding Mother Earth."
As I write these words, it is with great respect and a
very sad heart. There isn't an hour of the day or night
that I do not miss him.
My comfort is knowing he walks now in the Elysian Fields
and the Summerland with his beloved pets and all of his
animals. Tears well up in my eyes as I remember the
dream I had in August (2000), at Lammas, when he came
and asked to kiss my beloved Tasha, a snow-white Samoyed
(dog) who lived eleven years by my side. I awoke to find
Tasha not her old self. She refused food and would only
drink water. We took her to the veterinarian, and after
tests discovered she had cancer of the pancreas and
liver. There was no hope. As I held her close to me, I
knew that he had come from the other side to take her to
run with him in the beautiful fields before she would
suffer on this earthly plane.
Tasha passed away in my arms, and that night, in my
dreams, I ran with Tasha in a beautiful wheat and
poppy-filled field, and we came to a wooden bridge. How
I wanted to cross that bridge as Tasha ran ahead of me,
but my legs could not move. And as I looked across where
Tasha ran, there was my beloved high priest, second
father, mentor and wise one, waving to me saying, "Go
back and do what you have to do."
THE BIOGRAPHY OF LEO MARTELLO
There have been many times since Leo's passing that his
spirit has been made known to the members of Our Lord
and Lady of the Trinacrian Rose Coven. If it were not
for him in 1992, we would not be the coven we are today.
We are a Sicilian coven, whose beginnings stem from
ancient Sicily. Our name comes from the ancient name of
Sicily--Trinacria, meaning "three capes." We are all
priests and priestesses of the ancient secret Sikelian
Goddess. The Sikels were the first inhabitants of
Sicily. Primarily, we are all a sacred priest and
priestesshood. To the people of my tradition--the Mago
and Maga, Strega and Stregone--Leo had a true heart, and
heart is the true magic, and anything else is technical.
The gods see the human heart, and here alone you are
truly judged in your rites. Leo Martello was one of the
blessed ones with his endless and boundless heartfire.
To understand this heartfire, I must say something
about Leo's history. For this we go back to the 1930's
America, during the time of the Great Depression.
Poverty was rampant in the United States. Joblessness,
homelessness, and hunger were prevalent. It was a most
terrible time for anyone to come into this world.
Leo sprang from a Sicilian immigrant father who had a
farm in Massachusetts. Leo was baptized a Catholic. In
his book Witchcraft: The Old Religion, he states that
many of the Strega and Stregone hid under the very eyes
of the Roman Catholic Church. His parents divorced when
Leo was very young; consequently, Leo's father put him
in a Catholic boarding school. The six years he spent at
the boarding school were the unhappiest of his life.
Needless to say, he did some mischief there and got into
no little trouble. However, through this experience, at
a very young age, Leo became strong and determined to
move forward and never looked back, and never let
sadness poison his spirit--as we Sicilians and Italians
say, "Avante!"
Leo had many psychic experiences as a child. In his
early teens, he began his study of palmistry and tarot
with a Gypsy woman. Aside from being a Sicilian Stregone
and Mago, Leo also in time became a learned hypnotist,
graphologist, publisher, and author. His publications
included works on the craft, as well as books on
hypnotism and handwriting analysis. When he was sixteen,
he began making radio appearances, and giving
handwriting analyses and selling stories to magazines.
Later, he made television appearances. At the age of
nineteen, he won a gold medal for the best fiction
written by a teenage author in New York City.
Leo was educated at Assumption College in Worcester,
Massachusetts and at Hunter College and the Institute
for Psychotherapy in New Your City. He managed all of
this on his own, supporting himself with a variety of
odd jobs.
Leo's grandmother on his father's side, Maria Concetta,
was a well-known Strega Maga and high priestess of the
secret Goddess of the Sikels, in her hometown of Enna,
Sicily. Enna is the place where the sacred Lago Pergusa
and the cave from which Hades took Persephone to the
underworld are located. Maria Concetta was reputed to
have helped many people in Enna. It was also said that
Maria Concetta, who loved her husband very much, was the
cause of a local evil Mafiosi's death when he threatened
to kill Maria Concetta's husband if the husband did not
pay protection money to him. The Mafiosi dropped dead of
a heart attack. We can only speculate whether this was
Maria Concetta's doing--after all, what goes around
comes around. This may seem terrible to some, but in
those days, sometimes it was necessary for the Strega to
take justice into their own hands, and Maria Concetta
was a Maga. She protected her own.
Leo's father said that Leo physically resembled
grandmother Maria Concetta. He surely had her
temperament and psychic abilities. Leo's father also
told Leo there were cousins in New York City who were of
the Ancient Ways, and who wished to meet him. Thus began
the journey tat was to change his life forever.
Leo met his cousins and they told him they had been
watching him for years for hi potential in the Old
Religion, or as it is know, "La Vecchia." On September
26, 1951, Leo was given initiation into his cousins'
secret Sicilian coven; he then became a Mago, a
Stregone, or male Witch. The initiation involved a blood
oath never to reveal the secrets of the coven or its
members or any of the secret teachings. In any and all
of Leo's books, he has never revealed the secret
Sicilian teaching to which he was privy. He was never an
"Infamia," or "Oath-breaker."
In 1955, Leo Martello was awarded a Doctorate of
Divinity degree by the National Congress of Spiritual
Consultants. He became a minister of
Spiritual-Nonsectarian, and served as Pastor of the
Temple of Spiritual Guidance from 1955 to 1960. He left
his position there to pursue his interests in
witchcraft, parapsychology, psychology, and philosophy,
thereby no longer accepting the theology of the National
Congress of Spiritual Consultants.
He also used his talents as graphologist, or handwriting
analyst, to examine handwriting for various corporate
clients. He was founder and director of the American
Hypnotism Academy in New York from 1950 to 1954, and was
treasurer of the American Graphological Society from
1955 to 1957.
In 1964, Leo Martello decided to travel to Morocco in
North Africa. From 1964 to 1965, he resided in Tangier,
Morocco, to study oriental religion, magic, and
witchcraft.
In 1969, before he published his first book, Weird Ways
of Witchcraft, Leo sought permission of his Sicilian
coven to go public as a Witch. Subsequently, he
contacted and was initiated into the
Gardnerian-Alexandrian, Alexandrian, and Traditionalist
witchcraft traditions.
He was the first public Witch to champion the
establishment of legally incorporated tax-exempt Wiccan
churches, civil rights for Witches, and like all
mainstream religions, paid days off for Witches on their
holidays. To strengthen and further this cause, Leo
founded the Witches' Liberation Movement and the Witches
International Craft Association (WICA). In 1970, he
launched publication of the WICA Newsletter and
Witchcraft Digest..
Leo Martello was a very outspoken man with a colorful
way of saying things. On All Hallows Eve, in 1970, he
arranged for a "Witch-in" in New York City's Central
Park. At first the New York City Parks Department
refused to issue a permit. However, they changed their
minds when Leo secured the services of the New York
Civil Liberties Union and threatened a lawsuit on behalf
of a minority religion whose rights were being violated.
On Thursday, October 29, the permit was granted in a
most cordial manner. Leo's sense of humor became
apparent when the Parks Department wanted to change the
words "Witch-in." Leo refused, saying, "Since we will be
in the sheep meadow in Central Park, and it once had
sheep grazing in it, and since the symbolic God of the
Witches is a goat, what could be more appropriate! Shall
we call it a Goat-In?" Their jaws dropped, and he said,
"I guess it was a good thing I didn't ask for permission
for a Goat-in!"
The Witch-in was attended by 1,000 persons, and was
filmed and made into a documentary by Global Village.
The Witch-in constituted the first civil rights victory
for Witches. Witches and non-Witches held hands in the
ever-widening circle and danced the Witches reel, while
singing and old Wiccan tune, "London Bridge is Falling
Down," with new words composed by a Connecticut Witch.
Witches meet in Central Park, Central Park, Central
Park,
Witches meet in Central Park. For our Lady!
Leo always honored the women of the Craft, saying that
there had to be balance between God and Goddess.
Leo drafted a Witch Manifesto which called for a
National Witch Day parade, the moral condemnation of the
Catholic Church for its torture and murder of Witches
during the Inquisition, a $500,000,000 lawsuit against
the Church for damages and reparation to the descendants
of victims to be paid by the Vatican, and a $100,000,000
suit against Salem, Massachusetts, for damages in the
1692 Witch Trials.
Leo foresaw that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 would
enable the establishment of Wiccan temples and churches.
His definition of a Witch was: "A wise practitioner of
the craft, a nature worshipper, and a person who is in
control of his or her life." To Leo, many people entered
the craft with a great deal of hang-ups from their
Judeo-Christian upbringing. The Sicilian tradition of
the craft teaches that a wrong needs to be rectified in
this life, not left to karma in a future life. The Witch
must not condone injustices. Leo's own philosophy, as
outlined in his 1966 book How to Prevent Psychic
Blackmail, is one of psychoselfism, and sensible
selfishness versus senseless self-sacrifice.
In time, Leo founded the Witches Anti-Defamation League
[ later renamed the Witches Anti-Discrimination
Lobby-WADL], dedicated to ensuring Witches' religious
rights. By the late 1980's, chapters of the League had
been established in every state in the U.S.A.
Other major publishing credits include Witchcraft: The
Old Religion; Black Magic, Satanism and Voodoo;
Understanding the Tarot; It's Written in the Start; It's
Written in the Cards; Curses in Verses; Your Pen
Personality; and The Hidden World of Hypnotism.
Dr. Leo Louis Martello took a lot of important stands in
the early days of the craft, and enabled those who came
later to have it a little easier. However, Leo would now
more than ever want us to continue creating an air of
respect for the craft, never to allow our detractors to
destroy our sacred faith. The craft is a sacred priest
and priestesshood. No matter how holy and sacred you try
to appear--how many books you write, or lectures you
give at festivals--if you are not sincere and
respectful, then you have failed. You are not a Witch,
and the God and Goddess see you down to your naked
bones.
The following are Dr. Leo Louis Martello words from his
book,
Witchcraft: The Old Religion:
"In the Craft, there is no hard dogma. Hard drugs are
forbidden. Mindless morons can't be a compliment to our
Mother Goddess. Sex is sacred, not something to be
exhibited at a peep show. Power is something personal,
not to be used over others, which is contrary to Craft
ethics. Those who think the Old Religion will make them
masters over others are slaves to their own self
delusions. A happy person is always a powerful person
and is hated by those who aren't. A happy person is in
many ways selfish; in the Craft we must protect our best
interests and ensure that the power that comes from joy
remains constant, knowing that none of us are immune
from the vicissitudes of life, but that our Old Religion
will help us handle any adversity. The Craft has
survived for thousands of years. After everything else
has come and gone, it will remain. And one day, in the
coming Age of Aquarius, there will once again be
magnificent temples to the Goddess."
If you, as a Witch, allow wrongful acts in your midst and
say nothing, you are as guilty as the perpetrator of the
wrong. Leo believed in justice, and he detested
cowards.
He was the honorary father and elder of our coven. Our
people miss him a great deal. Mere writing cannot tell
how much we grieve for Leo. Within each and every one of
us, he still lives. As Leo profoundly surmised:
"The Craft is an underground spring which has existed
for centuries and predates the Judeo-Christian and
Muslim faiths, and occasionally rises to the surface in
small streams and lakes. The modern craft movement
reflects a worldwide rising of this underground spring
coming with such force that it cannot be dammed by our
enemies. The force behind this tidal wave is the
murdered souls of the Witches condemned by the
Inquisition! We are back and are going to stay to guide
people to truly know what peace and respect of humanity
is. Hail to our Goddess and God."
We remember Leo--your light will never be extinguished.
Bless you for being a light unto the great light. May we
meet again and walk the Elysian Fields with you. And may
you return to help this mortal world when the need
arises for the voice of justice to be heard.
Saluto, Papa!
Rev. Lori Bruno is a High Priestess of the same branch
of Witchcraft from which Leo Martello came and was a
close personal friend and confidante. She is also the
executrix of his remaining estate.
Copyright © 2006 Trinacrian Rose
Church and Grove
Somerville / Boston, Massachusetts, USA
www.trinacrianrose.org
Used w/Permission by Rev. Lori Bruno
Author
of:
Weird Ways of
Witchcraft
It's Written in the Stars
How to Prevent Psychic Blackmail
It's Written in the Cards.
Witchcraft the Old Religion
Hidden World of Hypnotism
Satanism, Voodoo and Black Magic
Reading the Tarot
and many more unpublished books, articles and
commentaries....

To Papa.
Ye are
our Magi both here and beyond,
We strive
each day to keep Your Spirit and Magick alive.
Your
voice we hear, your wisdome we seek,
Knowing
to always look "just beneath".
Ye taught
us a very valuable verse,
"The
Strong Find a Way ...the Weak find an Excuse"!
As the
Owl, Raven and Eagle fly by night and day,
We
remember your gentle eyes upon us lay."
Noi Amare
Tu.


Witches Vow
By: Dr. Leo L. Martello
Hear me, help me, Holy
One,
My Witch life has just begun.
I dedicate myself to Thee;
My faith shall be fierce and free.
Make me worthy, make me wise,
Liberate me from all lies.
Guide me in thy Goddess light,
Illuminate each dark night.
I light the candle, I taste the wine,
I purify the Air with incense fine.
I make the Pentagram with my knife,
I declare my Witchhood with my life.
I offer myself in naked truth.
Grant me wisdom and the joy of youth.
Upon thy altar my soul is bare,
I leave myself in thy loving care.


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