This is posted in the waiting room of an Irish hospital. Interesting glimpse into their culture.

The full text of the poster

This symbol has been developed by the Hospice Friendly Hospitals Programme to respectfully identify the End of Life.

This symbol is inspired by ancient Irish history; it is not associated with any one religion or denomination.

The white spiral represents the interconnected cycle of life, birth, life and death.

The white outer circle represents continuity, infinity and completion.

Purple has been chosen as the background colour as it is associated with nobility, solemnity and spirituality.

In this hospital the symbol may be displayed on a ward to add respect and solemnity during end of life or following the death of one of our patients.

    • velma@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      4 days ago

      Yeah I was a bit surprised at that line since I had always understood it to be a Celtic pagan symbol.

      Can’t upset the Christians I guess -_-

      • AeronMelon@lemmy.worldOP
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        4 days ago

        It’s possible they meant their symbol and its use isn’t tied to any single belief. The symbol’s original meaning might be why they went out of the way to say so.

          • Skua@kbin.earth
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            4 days ago

            It has been in general use across loads of areas of Europe - not just Celtic ones, even accounting for how widespread Celtic cultures used to be - and also since thousands of years before Celtic cultures emerged as a distinguishable group. I don’t think it’d be reasonable for any one group to claim ownership of it at this point

            • typhoon@lemmy.world
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              3 days ago

              As far as I remember, it represents the grandma, the mother and the daughter. Some type of cult to woman and generations. It was associated with Celtics and reprieved by Christian religions, specially because introduces importance to matriarchs.

      • velma@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        4 days ago

        Celtic Paganism does in fact refer to a particular pagan religion and set of beliefs/roots of those beliefs.

          • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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            4 days ago

            You can’t be serious. Have you never heard of a “pantheon” before?

            Also, horribly ironic, since Christianity is actually a family of individual religions. Have you seriously never heard of Roman Catholicism, Methodism, Southern Baptist, Greek Othrodox, etc. ?

            Also, various pagan gods often have a central group of worshipers usually referred to as “cults”. Examples would be the Cult of Odin or Cult of Athena. Members of cults primarily worship their chosen deity most people in a given culture wouldn’t be as selective and worship gods when appropriate, like asking Thor for a good harvest.

            Granted, this doesn’t exactly apply to Celtic Paganism, but I’d be surprised if a practice common to the Greeks/Romans, Norse, Egyptians, Hindus, Zoroastrians, etc. didn’t also apply

          • velma@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            4 days ago

            It depends on the coven/group. Celtic pagans call themselves that or sometimes Celtic Wiccans or just pagans.

            It’s the pagan beliefs that are rooted in Irish and Welsh history specifically. Then you have different pagan beliefs that are rooted in Norse theology or Greek mythology.

            My mom raised me as Wiccan. There’s about as many denominations as there are in the Christian religion.

            Edit: Sometimes they’ll even call themselves Druids or follow Druidism.

            • Domino@quokk.au
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              3 days ago

              Wiccans and Neo-Druids are not Celtic Pagans. They are new age spiritualist nonsense.

              Celtic Reconstructionism is the only “authentic” Celtic Pagan religion, based on surviving historical information rather than making up bits and using Celtic flavouring.

            • ohulancutash@feddit.uk
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              4 days ago

              All of that is about as relevant to celtic paganism as Scientology is to Buddhism.

              We don’t know a lot about Celtic paganism, what we do know comes through the filter of the Roman invader and is cursorary. Anyone building a halfway coherent belief system and claiming it as Celtic Paganism is a fraud.

            • Thank you for the informative response. It seems that in this context, “pagan” is less of a religion name and more of a category of otherwise unrelated religions characterized by a mystical connection to nature.

                • No I’m not missing that, I’m arguing that it’s the equivalent to saying “American Monotheism” when you mean “Christian”. It strikes me as strange that there’s no, like, actual Celtic word for their belief system/way of life that we could use instead of [Region][Category]

      • illi@piefed.social
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        4 days ago

        Paganism is incredibly diverse, I will give you that. “Pagan” is more of an umbrella term for many different beliefs with some common elements.

        But christianity for example is also an umbrella term - you have catholicism (whis then has the many different orders and stuff under it), evanjelical christianity (with its many denominations) and orthodox church (which may or may not have different groups under it, I don’t really know). And even two different people within one denomination of the larger group of christianity may hold a slightly different set of beliefs.

        Paganism is just a larger umbrella. I also went with Celtic paganism as it narrows it down a little more, that’s why I went for that rather than simply saying “paganism”.

        Now I get what the hospital tried to go for. But saying it is not tied to a religion is I think a little unfortunate.

        • XeroxCool@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          Really close, but off by one part: paganism is not an inclusive term. It’s an exclusive term. Rather than groups (originally) agreeing they are pagans, Christians decided anything not Christian is pagan. The modern meaning of pagan is euro-centric because that’s where Christianity took hold. The Norse and the Celtic and the Baltic and the Germanic “pagans” likely would not see themselves as on the same side of the argument against Christians. Grouping pagans together is like grouping barbarians together across the world. Literally, because barbarian is also a derogatory term. (bar-bar was the racist interpretation of foreign language by the Greeks and then Romans)

          The meaning is shifted now because of 2000 years of Christian erasure. So sure, it might now be that Pagan is an equivalent type of term as Christian, covering many groups that identify themselves as their parent term, but that’s not the historical context. That makes a difference when talking about the actual history.

          • illi@piefed.social
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            3 days ago

            You are right about that. But I didn’t talk about history and how it effectively was deragotary term, as didn’t find it relevant in this context.

            “Pagan” became to mean non-christian, but afaik originally it meant “person from the countryside” - lat. paganos I believe (also see: heathen - person from the heath) - so people living in vilages and such, who took longer to convert from the old faith.

            Anyway, as other commenter said somewhere here, these religions usually didn’t have names historically that we know of. It was simply the religion to the people. Moreover, the religion was not centralized. The various tribes, even villages could have differences and their local gods that were worshipped. So yeah, christians came up with the umbrela term and yeah, it was developed as an insult basically. But it’s what we have as a name for these religions.

            I didn’t find it relevant as modern day pagans mostly embraced the term and I don’t think it holds same negative conotations as it did in the past.

  • Lushed_Lungfish@lemmy.ca
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    3 days ago

    I learned that in children’s hospital’s, the symbol is a butterfly. I could never look at a butterfly quite the same way after that.

  • velma@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    4 days ago

    The Celtic Triskele! My mom had a bunch of these in her jewelry and house decorations. We always honored it as a symbol for the maiden, mother, and crone.

    If you visit Boyne Valley, one of the cultural highlights in ‘Ireland’s Ancient East’, you’re likely to find the Celtic Triskele symbol at the entrance of the 5,000-year-old Newgrange Passage Tomb. It dates back to the Neolithic era, and boasts true beauty in a serene location. However, that’s not the only place it can be found.

    Markings and artifacts have been located in various ancient sites, which also show us that the Celtic Triskele became popular with the Celtic culture from 500 B.C. onwards. These artifacts can be discovered in Ireland, as well as Europe, and across America.

    The Celtic Triskele was a symbol that had various meanings for the early Pagans. One of them was linked to the sun, triadic Gods, and the three domains of land, sea, and sky. As we mentioned above, the Triple Spiral was also believed to represent the cycles of life, as well as the Triple Goddess -the maiden, mother, and wise woman.

    • one_old_coder@piefed.social
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      4 days ago

      Triskelion/trisquel and I really wonder why they appropriate and add bullshit meaning to a religious symbol. That’s really weird.

      • Wildmimic@anarchist.nexus
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        4 days ago

        I’d say - since that is an Irish hospital and a Celtic symbol - that they knew where they took the symbol from, but wanted to be inclusive of other belief systems, which is the right thing to do when talking about hospice care. Why invent everything from scratch if you don’t have to?