Founder of Dianic Wicca, Founder of the Susan B. Anthony Coven
Zsuzsanna Emese Mokcsay (born 1940) is a Hungarian-American writer, activist, playwright and songwriter living in America who writes about feministspirituality and Dianic Wicca under the pen name Zsuzsanna Budapest or Z. Budapest. She is the founder of the Susan B. Anthony Coven #1, which was founded in 1971 as the first women-only witches' coven.[1][2] She founded the female-only style of Dianic Wicca.[3]
She is the founder and director of the Women's Spirituality Forum, a nonprofit organization featuring lectures, retreats and other events, and was the lead of a cable TV show called 13th Heaven.[4] She had an online autobiography entitled Fly by Night, and wrote for the religion section of the San Francisco Examiner on subjects related to Pagan religions. Her play The Rise of the Fates premiered in Los Angeles in the mid-seventies. She is the composer of several songs including "We All Come From the Goddess".[5]
Budapest emigrated to the United States in 1959, where she studied at the University of Chicago, with groundbreaking originator of the art of improvisation, Viola Spolin, and the improvisational theater group The Second City.[6] She married and had two sons, Laszlo and Gabor, but later divorced. She realized she was a lesbian and chose, in her words, to avoid the "duality" between man and woman.[7]
Career
Budapest's first job in television was as a color girl for the CBS Network in New York, and was assigned to The Ed Sullivan Show.
Activism
Budapest moved to Los Angeles from New York City in 1970, and became an activist in the women's liberation movement. She was on the staff of the first Women's Center in the U.S. for many years,[8] and became the founder and high priestess of Susan B. Anthony Coven #1, the first women-only witches' coven, which was founded in 1971.[6][1][2] She was responsible for the creation of an Anti-Rape Squad[9] and the Take Back the Night Movement in Southern California, and facilitated many of their street marches.[10]
Tarot reading and arrest
In 1975, she was arrested for "fortune telling" at her candle and book store in Venice, California following a "sting" by an undercover policewoman, Rosalie Kimberlin, who received a tarot reading from her. Subsequently, Budapest was charged with violating a municipal by-law, Code 43.30, which made fortune telling unlawful. Budapest and her defense team described her as "the first witch prosecuted since Salem,"[11] and the ensuing trial became a focus for media and pagan protesters. Budapest was found guilty.[11]
Duly, Budapest and her legal counsel set out to establish Wicca, and more specifically Dianic Wicca, as a bona fide religion. The state's Supreme Court reversed the guilty verdict as unconstitutional and in violation of the Freedom of Religion Act.[12]
Following her conviction, she engaged in nine years of appeals on the grounds that reading the Tarot was an example of women spiritually counselling women within the context of their religion. With pro bono legal representation she was acquitted, and the laws against "fortune telling" were struck from California law.[12]
Later career
In the 1980s, she created the TV show 13th Heaven, which ran on syndicated cable in the San Francisco Bay area for seven years.[citation needed]
She has organized the Goddess Festivals, which take place every other year, since 1991 where women gather for workshops and ritual in the Redwoods of California (see website goddess-fest.com).
Works
Books
The Feminist Book of Lights and Shadows. Feminist Wicca. 1975. OCLC38697963.
Selene, the Most Famous Bull-Leaper on Earth. Diana Press. 1976. ISBN0-88447-010-5.
The Grandmother of Time: A Woman's Book of Celebrations, Spells, and Sacred Objects for Every Month of the Year. HarperOne. 1989. ISBN978-0-06-250109-7.
The Holy Book of Women's Mysteries: Feminist Witchcraft, Goddess Rituals, Spellcasting and Other Womanly Arts. Wingbow Press. 1989. ISBN978-0-914728-67-2.
The Aquarian Holy Book of Women's Mysteries: Aquarian Rituals and Spells for Present and Future Witches. lulu Press. 2022. ISBN978-0-137714407.
Grandmother Moon: Lunar Magic in Our Lives—Spells, Rituals, Goddesses, Legends, and Emotions Under the Moon. HarperSanFrancisco. 1991. ISBN0-06-250114-3.
The Goddess in the Office: A Personal Energy Guide for the Spiritual Warrior at Work. HarperOne. 1993. ISBN978-0-06-250087-8.
The Goddess in the Bedroom: A Passionate Woman's Guide to Celebrating Sexuality Every Night of the Week. HarperSanFrancisco. 1995. ISBN978-0-06-251186-7.
Summoning the Fates: A Woman's Guide to Destiny. Three Rivers Press. 1999. ISBN978-0-609-80277-9.
My Dark Sordid Past as a Heterosexual: The Autobiography of Dr. Zsuzsanna E. Budapest, First Destiny. CreateSpace Independent Publishers Platform. 2014. ISBN978-1500988906.
Berger, Helen A.; Leach, Evan A.; Shaffer, Leigh S. (2003). Voices from the Pagan Census: A National Survey of Witches and Neo-Pagans in the United States. University of South Carolina Press. ISBN978-1-57003-488-6.
Chesler, Phyllis; Rothblum, Esther D.; Cole, Ellen (1995). Feminist Foremothers in Women's Studies, Psychology, and Mental Health. Haworth Press. ISBN978-1-56023-078-6.
Creeden, Sharon (1999). In Full Bloom: Tales of Women in Their Prime. August House.
Davis, Erik (2006). The Visionary State: A Journey Through California's Spiritual Landscape. Chronicle Books. ISBN0-8118-4835-3.
Drury, Nevill (2000). The History of Magic in the Modern Age: A Quest for Personal Transformation. London: Constable. ISBN0-09-478740-9.
Eller, Cynthia (1993). Living in the Lap of the Goddess. Crossroads Press. ISBN978-0824512453.
Endres, Kathleen L.; Lueck, Therese L. (1996). Women's Periodicals in the United States: Social and Political Issues. Greenwood Publishing Group.
Carson, Anne (1999). Caretaking a New Soul: Writing on Parenting from Thich Nhat Hahn to Z Budapest. Crossing Press. ISBN978-1-58091-018-7.
Feraro, Shai (October 20, 2020). "'The Goddess is Alive. Magic is Afoot.': Radical and Cultural Feminist Influences on Z Budapest's Dianic Witchcraft During the 1970s–1980s". Nova Religio. 24 (2): 59–79. doi:10.1525/nr.2020.24.2.59. S2CID226967657.
Goldenberg, Naomi R. (1980). Changing of the Gods: Feminism and the End of Traditional Religions. Beacon Press. ISBN978-0-8070-1111-9.
Kimball, Gayle (1981). Women's Culture: The Women's Renaissance of the Seventies. Scarecrow Press. ISBN978-0810814967.
Parsons, Susan Frank (2002). The Cambridge Companion to Feminist Theology. Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-0-521-66380-9.
Wessinger, Catherine Lowman (1993). Women's Leadership in Marginal Religions. University of Illinois Press. ISBN978-0-252-06332-9.
Eller, Cynthia (1993). Living in the Lap of the Goddess. Beacon Press. ISBN978-0807065075.