About
I'm Elie Sireth.
I was raised in France in a family where magic was never treated as something mysterious. It was simply part of life. Our family tradition traces its roots back to ancient Thessaly, where ritual was preserved as discipline, responsibility, and a way of understanding the unseen.
My mother was the first to teach me. She introduced me to ritual, the language of plants and stones, the importance of timing, and the patience that real magic demands. As a child, I never questioned any of it. It was simply how I was raised.
As I grew older, I wanted a different life.
I was drawn to medicine because I admired its discipline, its precision, and its ability to help people. For a while, I stepped away from magic almost entirely, convinced that my future belonged elsewhere.
Everything changed when someone I loved needed my help.
I turned back to the only thing I had truly known since childhood and performed a ritual. What followed forced me to question everything I believed. It wasn't only the result that changed me. It was the realization that I had spent years trying to walk away from something that had never left me.
From that moment on, I stopped asking whether magic was my path. I already had the answer.
I returned to my family's tradition with a renewed sense of purpose. I wanted to understand not only what had been passed down to me, but why these methods had endured for centuries. That search led me into years of studying ancient ceremonial magic, particularly the Greek Magical Papyri and the Greco Egyptian ritual tradition, as well as Solomonic ceremonial magic and other historical systems that continue to shape my practice today.
For more than twenty years, I have devoted my life to this path.
Today, I perform rituals for those seeking change in love, influence, power, prosperity, protection, or justice. Every ritual is prepared individually. Nothing is improvised. Every operation is chosen according to the situation and performed with the discipline these traditions require.
Hekate remains at the heart of my practice. She represents the crossroads, the place where one path ends and another begins. Through her guidance, and through the ancient ceremonial traditions that shape my work, every ritual is performed with clarity and purpose.
I believe magic is one of the oldest disciplines humanity has preserved. The more I studied it, the more I understood that it demands discernment. It asks you to know when to act, when to wait, and to have the discipline to recognize the difference. That understanding shapes every ritual I perform.
If you've found your way here, perhaps this is the crossroads you were meant to reach.
So Let It Be Written, So Let It Be Done.

Elie Sireth