I’ve noticed that most online spaces for witches and covens—like:
Mandragora Magika,
JaguarMoon Cyber Coven,
Inked Spirit Coven,
Missing Witches,
Lunar & Wild Coven,
Witchcraft Academy Coven (Patreon),
Reddit r/Wicca
Wiccan Whispers,
Various Discord/Facebook groups,
etc.
—are centralized or rely on closed platforms.
Even the more “community” oriented ones, such as WitchBook or PaganSquare, are siloed and not interoperable with each other.
Given the rise of the Fediverse and its ability to host decentralized, community-driven platforms (Mastodon for microblogging, Pleroma for lightweight social feeds, PixelFed for image sharing, Lemmy for Reddit, PeerTube for video, etc.), has anyone ever thought about potentially attempting a federated network specifically for witches, covens, and pagan practitioners?
Some possible use cases:
Federated coven “instances” where each group can moderate its own space but still connect with others
Resource sharing (spells, rituals, book clubs, event calendars) via ActivityPub
Privacy and inclusion features for marginalized practitioners
Integration with platforms like PixelFed for sharing altar photos, PeerTube for ritual videos, and Mastodon/Pleroma for discussions and announcements
Does anyone know of any ongoing projects like this, or have thoughts on how such a network could be structured?
What challenges do you foresee (moderation, privacy, drama, etc.), and what features would be most valuable to the witch/pagan community?
I’d love to try building or contributing to something like this, but unfortunately I lack the ability and energy.
Still, I think the idea is worth discussing.
Wicca, witchcraft, and similar are generally are types of legitimate religions. I personally belong to a coven despite the fact that I'm atheist. These types of groups are generally focused more on community and connecting with the natural world than the supernatural or gods like modern monotheistic religions. Though many practice spells and other supernaturally rooted ceremonies similar to how many Christians prey, use rosaries, or take communion which are all types of supernatural ceremonies. And most have a huge amount of traditions from "pagan" religions to choose from to practice and have very little strict dogma forcing them to be prejudiced or exclusionary, so they tend to attract a wide variety of interesting people and thus have to be very welcoming of those who are less conformant like neurodivergent people, LGBTQ+ people, ethically non-monogamous people, etc. Many of whom are excluded from most modern monotheistic religious communities.
Huh. Seems a bit odd, but if you're having a good time and not hurting anyone then more power to you
As an atheist, it's no more odd than any other religion to me. And since it's more connected to nature, which I can see and touch, rather than fully supernatural like Christianity, it's more interesting to me.
Well yeah, all religion is a bit odd. It's great when it provides community, charity, or meaning to the lives of individuals, but it's very easy to slip into the bad stuff