785 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
785 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
1. What do you mean by Odinism?
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Odinism is the indigenous religious faith of the
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Scandinavian, British and other peoples of Northern Europe;
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it is an amalgam of attitudes, ideas and behavior, both a
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personal faith and a communal way of life. In its beginings Odinism is
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probably as old as our race. Historically it may be divided into three
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periods:
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A. Before the coming of Christianity
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B. Its gradual merging with Christianity and the ensuing Period of
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Dual Faith, and
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C. Its efforts in the present century to free itself of Christian
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influences and to reassert its ancient independence.
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2. How have the tenets of Odinism been preserved?
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Is there an Odinist holy book?
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The ancient oral traditions of Odinism were during the Middle Ages
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embodied in writings, the Odinist books of wisdom, the principals of which
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are the Eddas. The poetic Elder Edda presents the Odinist cosmogony, the
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mythological lays and the heroic lays, including the story of Sigurd and
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Brynhild which were in later times moulded into the Lay of the Nibelungs.
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The Younger Edda is a prose synopsis of the Odinist faith.
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3. When did Britain and the rest of Europe cease to be Odinist?
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The first of our Northern countries to succumb to the false promises of
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the new religion were the Goths, in the fourth century of the Christian
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era; the Icelanders became Christians by official decree in the year
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1000 CE, to be followed by the Scandinavian countries over the next two
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hundred years. England was "converted" between 597 and 686 CE and Scotland
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somewhat earlier (although some of the people of Ross-shire were still
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worshipping the old Gods as late as the seventeenth century). Ireland,
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when Patrick the Proselytizer landed there in the year 432, was decribed
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as "a heathen land"; Dublin and the other principal Irish towns were
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actually founded by Odinist Vikings, who dedicated the country to the god
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Thor.
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4. Well, the people were converted to Christianity.
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Would you have denied them their freedom of choice?
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They had no choice. Most of those who were "converted" had little
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knowledge of Christian doctrine; the new religion was imposed on them by
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sword and sermon. The Revd S. C. Olland's Dictionary of English Church
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History is explicit: "The adoption of Christianity generally depended
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upon State action: the king and his nobles were baptized and the people
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largely followed their example. . . . .The wholesale conversions. . . . .
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could not have implied individual conviction." On one day alone in the
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year 598 more than ten thousand English "converts" were baptized in a mass
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ceremony; it is unlikely that they had received a great deal of instruction
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in the Christian faith. Even in the twentieth century the vast majority of
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Christians are still quite ignorant of Christian doctrine. It was always so.
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5. Why do you say that Odinism was practiced in the Church
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during what you have called "the Period of Dual Faith"?
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We can see the evidence everywhere, even today. When the foreign
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missionaries subverted Britain, they repressed what they could and what
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they could not they ignored or adopted. The ancient spring renewal festival
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of Summer Finding was transformed into the Christian feast of the
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Resurrection; the Mid-winter festival of Yule became Christmas. Not only
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the folk festivals connected with the great changes of season - May Day and
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Midsummer and Harvest - but numerous customs associated with life's
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milestones, birth and marriage and death, all showed that the old Gods
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lived on in the life and in the language of the people. Many of the external
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signs of the ancient faith were retained: water was consecrated and wood
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was blessed. A Christian writer, Professor P. D. Chantepie de la Saussaye
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DD, has said, "We recognize in this folklore a form of historical
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continuity, the bond of union between the life of the people in pagan and
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in Christian times." Even today when we say, "Touch (or, knock on) wood!"
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we are recalling the sacred nature of an important symbol of our ancient
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religion; and how many people are aware that they are paying unconscious
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tribute to the Gods of Odinism when they light their Christmas or Paschal
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candles or their bonfire on the fifth of November? Or that the very
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"Christmas tree" is itself the World Ash of Odinism? Even the sign of the
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cross is really the sign of Thor's hammer!
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6. How lond did the Period of Dual Faith last?
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The period during which Odinism was actually practiced within the Church
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extended in Britain from about the seventh century CE right down to the
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1930's, when the purity of ancient worship was revived by a number of
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groups working outside the Church for the first time for more than a
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thousand years.
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7. But the adoption of Christianity, a creed that preaches peace on earth
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and the equality of all men was, surely you must agree, a step forward
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in the civilizing of our people?
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Odinists were happy enough to put up with the new doctrines so long as
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they were allowed to go on practicing their own faith in peace. But
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the inherent contradiction at the heart of Christianity is that it
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denies in action the faith that it professes verbally. There is no
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history of religious warfare in Europe before the coming of
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Christianity. It is ironic indeed that the message of peace on earth
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has been propogated with so much bloodshed. As for the equality of all
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men, we just do not believe in it; and even the Christian god has his
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"chosen people".
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8. Why is it now necessary to reassert what you describe as Odinism's
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ancient independence? Why can you not, in the present unsettled state
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of society, leave well alone. Surely we should be getting together,
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not creating more divisions amongst ourselves?
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First of all it is necessary to state that because of its organic
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origins and development Odinism is a religion of visual truth.
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Nevertheless, for just so long as Christian and Odinist ethics
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coincided - even superficially - it was possible for Odinists to
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worship the Gods under their Christian designations; but only for so
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long as they remained adequate interpretations of the true divinities
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of Odinism (the nature of a god being of greater importance than his
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name).
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The Churches are today opposed to many of the things that Odinists hold
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sacred: they sin against nation and people by espousing causes whose
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ultimate aim is the destruction of our personal freedom;. . .
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they encourage criminal activities by calling for the exemption from
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punishment, or even prosecution, of whole categories of lawbreakers;
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they provide financial aid for revolutionary propoganda and even
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terrorist activities against our own people; they remain totally
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indifferent to the rape of our countryside in the short-term interests
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of economic gain and technology; and they have successfully divided the
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people of our own islands against themselves (eg, in Ireland). Life in
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Northern Europe is today, after fifteen hundred years of Christianity,
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almost entirely concerned with material wealth and self-indulgence and
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the Christian clergy have largely forsaken their spiritual vocations in
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order to preach the causes of subversion and revolution.
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The people yearn for spiritual bread but have been offered by the
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Churches only a political stone. It is no longer possible for anyone
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who has concern for the future of our nation and race to remain within
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the Christian Church. This must not, however be taken to imply that
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Odinists bear hatred towards Christians; we recognize that there are
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many good and sincere people within the Christian community from whose
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example Odinists themselves could not fail to profit. But the Church is
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itself largely responsible for the "present unsettled state of society".
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Odinists see it as their duty to oppose those who menace the things that
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they regard as holy. If we cannot in justice always blame the sheep we
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should and do attack the shepherds.
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9. But surely it would be preferable to have one god for all mankind?
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Why? One god or many gods, it really does not matter. Our true Gods are
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actually worshipped by peoples all over the world, using their own
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mythologies and adapting their worship to local cultures and conditions.
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We prefer to worship the Gods in our own way with people of our own
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kind. And we respect the right of others to their own beliefs. It was
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an Odinist gothi (priest), Sigrith, who told the foreign missionaries,
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"I must not part from the faith which I have held, and my forefathers
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before me; on the other hand I shall make no objection to your believing
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in the god that pleases you best."
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10. You have mentioned the "Gods of Nature". Does this mean that Odinists
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are nature-worshippers?
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Odinists recognize man's spiritual kinship with Nature, that within
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himself are in essence all that is in the greater world, which perform
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within him the same functions as in the world. Thus there are in man the
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four elements, the vegetative life of plants, an ethereal body - the god-
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soul - corresponding to the heavens, the sense of animals, of spiritual
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things and reason and understanding. Because in this way man comprises
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all the parts of the world within himself he is thus a true image of the
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Gods.
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Also containing the essence of the universe within themselves, the Gods
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are everywhere and in everything: they show themselves to us as fire, as
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a flower, as a tree. Odinists believe that all life should be lived in
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communion with Nature and with. . .the Gods. Christianity turned
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away from Nature and concentrated its adherents' attention on the human
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soul and became obsessed with the fall of man, by which it was implied
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that man had brought all Nature down into sin with him. Christian
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teaching encouraged man to see Nature only in her physical form whereas
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Odinists regard Nature as a true manifestation of the divine. "We and
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the cosmos are one," wrote D. H. Lawrence, "The cosmos is a vast living
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body, of which we are still part. The sun is the great heart whose
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tremors run through our smallest veins. The moon is a great gleaming
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nerve-centre from which we quiver forever. . . . Now all this is
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literally true, as men knew in the great past and as they will know
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again." Whoever shall properly know himself and all things in himself
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shall know the Gods. The Odinist, because of his awareness of his
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relationship with Nature, is able to feel a consanguinous kinship with
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plants and animals and the land - a complete oneness.
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11. You speak of "the Odinist mythology". Do you really expect anyone to
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believe in a myth?
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Every religion is mythical in its development. Mythology is the
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knowledge that the ancients had of the divine; it is religious truth
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expressing in poetical terms mankind's desire for personal and visible
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gods. The mythology of Odinism consists of a group of legends, fables
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and tales relating to The Gods, heroes, demons and other beings whose
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names have been preserved in popular belief. Our object must be to
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discover, with the help of our mythology, the Gods who manifest
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themselves throughout Nature: in the streets and in the trees and in
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the rocks, in the running streams and in the heavy ear of grain, in
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the splendor of the sun by day and in the star-strewn sky at night.
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But it is not the myth that Odinists believe in but the Gods whom that
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myth helps us to understand.
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12. What, then, is the Odinist mythology?
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Briefly, our mythology unfolds in five acts (which may be compared to
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the evolution of the seasons of the year):
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A. the Creation (spring)
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B. the time preceeding the death of Balder (summer)
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C. the death of Balder (summer's end)
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D. the time immediately after the death of Balder (autumn)
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E. Ragnarok, the decline and fall followed by the regeneration of
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the world (winter and spring)
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The first effort of speculative man has always been to solve the
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mystery of existence, to ask what was in the beginning. The condition
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of things before the world's creation is expressed in the Eddas
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negatively; there was nothing of that which sprang into existence:
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Nothing was
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Neither land nor sea,
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Nor cool waves.
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Earth was not ,
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Sky was not,
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But a gaping void
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And no grass.
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Ymir was a frost-giant, eg chaotic matter:
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From Ymir's flesh
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The world was made,
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And from his blood the sea.
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Mountains from his bones,
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Trees from his hair,
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And the welkin from his skull.
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There were as yet no human beings upon the earth when one day as the Gods
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Odin, Hoener and Loder (the latter two being probably hypostases of Odin)
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were walking along the seashore they saw two trees from which they created
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the first human pair. Odin gave them life and spirit,
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Hoener endowed them with reason and the power of motion and Loder gave
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them blood, hearing, and a fair complexion. The man they called Ask (ash)--
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and the woman Embla (elm). As their abode the newly-created pair received
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from the Gods Midgarth and from them is descended the whole human race.
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Balder is the god of the summer, the favourite god of all Nature and a son
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of Odin; he is one of the wisest and most eloquent of the Gods and his
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dwelling is in a place where nothing impure can enter. The story of Balder,
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well-known in the Northern countries, finds explanation in the seasons of
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the year, in the change from light to darkness; he represents the bright
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and clear summer and his death is the impermanent victory of darkness over
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light, of winter over summer, of death over life. When Balder is dead, all
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Nature mourns. His death presages the disaster of Ragnarok, the consummation
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of the world, followed by its cleansing and return to the primal state.
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Ragnarok, the Twilight of the Gods, represents a great conflict between
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. . .lawful and chaotic powers. The idea is already suggested in the
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story of the Creation in which the Gods are represented as proceeding from
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giants, that is from an. . .unconscious and chaotic force. And whatever can
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be born must surely die. In the seasons and activities of Nature we see a
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constantly recurring picture of the necessity for death and the equal
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certainty of its being over-come. At Ragnarok all the worlds of Nature will
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be destroyed and even the giants must die. But from that catastrophe will
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emerge a renewed world and the Gods themselves will be born again. We see
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this drama enacted every year in minature when autumn heralds the period of
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decline and decay until with the spring we witness the magic of resurrection
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and new life.
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This, briefly told, is the myth that explained to our ancestors their
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origin and the origin of the world, the creation of life from chaos and the
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emergence of evolution and harmony.
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13. Who is Odin?
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Odin is the first and eldest of the Gods, the all-pervading spirit of the
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sun, the moon, the stars, the hills, the plains and of man. With his help
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were made heaven and earth and the first man and woman. All knowledge came
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from him; he is the inventor of poetry and discovered the runes; he governs
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all things, protects the social organization, influences the human mind,
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avenges murder and upholds the sanctity of the oath. He is well named
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Allfather. And because he chooses to surround himself with a bodyguard of
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those who have fallen in battle he is also known as Valfather, Father of
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the Slain.
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In the mythology Odin's single eye (the other he sacrificed in exchange for
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wisdom) is the sun, his broad-brimmed hat the arched vault of heaven, his
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blue cloak the sky. A conspicuous passage in the Edda is Odin's sacrifice
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of himself to himself:
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I know I hung
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on the windy tree
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nine nights through:
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I know I hung
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I know I hung
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myself to myself,
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on the tree
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that springs
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from roots unknown.
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Order is the basis of Odin's government. Nature the garment by which he
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manifests himself. Odinism says: study the natural laws...
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14. Who are the other Gods of Odinism? What kind of Gods are they?
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We have already spoken of Odin and Balder. Of the other Gods the best-known
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is Thor, the most famous story concerning whom tells of this Warrior-God
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crushing the powers of chaos. He rules over clouds and rain and makes his
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presence known in the lightning's flash. He is the protector of the farm
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worker, the chief god of agriculture, a helpful deity who makes the crops
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grow and who also blesses the bride with fertility. In the words of
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Professor P. V. Glob, "He wishes all men well and stands by them in face
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of their enemies and against the new God, Christ." Tyr is the God of
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martial honor, the most daring and intrepid of the Gods. He dispenses
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justice in time of peace and valor in war. He it was who sacrificed a hand
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when overpowering the evil Fenris Wolf, showing us that we ourselves must
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be prepared to make sacrifices in order to protect ourselves and our kin
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from those who seek to cast our society into anarchy and chaos.
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Frey is God of the harvest and is therefore also a God of fecundity and
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growth; some authorities believe that he and Christ may have become blended,
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in England at least, in the new religion of Christianity. Freya is a
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Goddess of love and the sister and lover of Frey: barren women may invoke
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her and she is also the Goddess of death for all women. Another God, Vali, is
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called the Avenger because when he was yet only one night old he avenged
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Balder's death, thus demonstrating the moral obligation we have of punishing
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society's enemies. Other Gods include Bragi, Heimdal, Vidar, Frigg and Forseti.
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The Gods of Odinism are the ordaining powers of Nature clothed in
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personality. They direct the world which they themselves created. They are
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referred to collectively as the Aesir, of whom every living thing forms a
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part (thus not all the Gods are necessarily good ones). Objects and
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phenomena that are regarded as greater or lesser. . .divinities are
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qualities such as thought and memory, and natural things such as the sun,
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rivers, mountains and trees as well as animals and ancestral spirits. There
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are also the guardian Gods of the land, of skills and occupations and the
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spirits of national heroes, the Einherjar and other men and women whose
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outstanding deeds and virtues have contributed to our civilization, culture
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and well-being.
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15. Is there a table of commandments that sets out the rules to be
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followed by Odinists?
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Some guidelines. . .of Odinist conduct are:
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1. To maintain candor and fidelity in love and devotions to the tried
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friend: though he strike me I will do him no scathe.
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2. Never to make a wrongsome oath: for great and grim is the reward for
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the breaking of plighted troth.
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3. To deal not hardly with the humble and lowly.
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4. To remember the respect that is due great age.
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5. To suffer no evil to go unremedied and to fight against the enemies of
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family, nation, race and faith: my foes will I fight in the field nor
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be burnt in my house.
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6. To succor the friendless but to put no faith in the pledged word of a
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stranger people.
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7. If I hear the fool's word of a drunken man I will strive not: for many
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a grief and the very death groweth out of such things.
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8. To give kind heed to dead men: straw-dead, sea-dead or sword-dead.
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9. . . .To bear with courage and fortitude the decrees of the Norns.
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The Charges are based on the rules of life indicated by the High Song of
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Odin and in the Lay of Sigurd in which the Valkyrie gives counsel to Sigurd.
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They may be summarized as demanding in the struggle for life a self-reliance
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which should be earned by a love of learning and industry, a prudent
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foresight in word and deed, moderation in the gratification of the senses
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and in the exercise of power, modesty and politeness in intercourse and a
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desire to earn the goodwill of our fellow men.
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16. The first four Charges seem fairly innocuous, but I must say the
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Fifth Charge sounds rather sinister! Isn't it all very violent and
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retributive?
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"To suffer no evil to go unremedied," does appear to run contrary to the
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trends of modern progressive thinking. And the idea of fighting "against
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the enemies of family, nation, race and faith" would be anathema to many
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people. Unlike the Christian, whose duty it is to "turn the other cheek"
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(advice that is more often observed breached than otherwise) and to be
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patient and long-suffering under the most grievous attacks, it is the duty
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of the Odinist to punish wrongs and above all those wrongs offered to his
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own family and kin. Society's enemies already know the basic law of life:
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that the race is to the strong and that the meek will inherit the earth only
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when the earth inherits them dust to dust. Others should also learn to
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recognize this truth.
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17. What do you mean by "kinship loyalty"?
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We must of course give loyal service to anyone or any concept to whom or to
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which loyalty is due. But we owe our loyalty in the fullest degree to our
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immediate family and to those who are related to us by blood-ties or blood-
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brotherhood. A husband owes loyalty to his wife, for instance, and vice
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versa, just as a son owes loyalty to his parents to a greater extent than
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to anyone outside the immediate family circle. . . .
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This concern for kin is an essential part of Odinist teaching. More than
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twelve centuries ago the Christian proselytizer, Boniface, wrote of the
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Odinists, "Have pity on them, because even they themselves are accustomed
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to say, "We are of one blood and one bone". Filial love, patriotism and
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kinship loyalty are religious principles still adhered to by Odinists. In
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the words of the Edda:
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We shall help our kinsmen as foot helps foot. . .
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If one foot stumbles then shall the other restore balance.
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18. You seem to have an exaggerated respect for things like law and order!
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What about unjust laws?
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No, not an "exaggerated respect for law and order"; just regard for the
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rules by which civilized man must live. But laws, to be just, must apply
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equally to all citizens and groups without discrimination. Odinists
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certainly have a duty to oppose what they regard as unjust laws but in doing
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so they accept the consequences of their oppostion and do not expect to be
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given exemption or favorable treatment.
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19. What view do Odinists take of modern, enlightened substitutes for
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traditional, repressive forms of punishment? Do you agree that the
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wrong-doer in our society is more often than not the victim of his
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environment and that we are thus all guilty?
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Odinists refuse to accept responsibility for the actions of others. Just as
|
||
it would be wrong to accept credit for another person's merits so it is
|
||
wrong to relieve the wrong-doer of responsibility for his actions. "Crime
|
||
should be blazoned abroad by its retribution," wrote Tacitus. Punishment
|
||
should be an unpleasant and memorable experience. Those in authority who
|
||
neglect to punish the criminal adequately place themselves in the position
|
||
of being accessories after the fact. Odinists believe that anyone who
|
||
seriously or continually flouts the law should forfeit for a period of time
|
||
his rights to protection under that law; enemies of the community should
|
||
not be permitted to run with the hare and hunt with the hounds!
|
||
|
||
20. The Sixth Charge speaks about putting no faith in the pledged word of
|
||
a stranger people. What is meant by "a stranger people"?
|
||
|
||
By "a stranger people" we mean those from different cultures than our own.
|
||
It is a warning that words often mean different things to different peoples,
|
||
that their standards are not always the same as our own. It is simply one of
|
||
those things in life that ought to be widely known and appreciated but does
|
||
not seem to be!
|
||
|
||
21. Please explain the Ninth Charge, which speaks of "the decrees of the
|
||
Norns". Who or where are the Norns?
|
||
|
||
The Norns are the three Fates of Northern mythology, the Goddesses of time.
|
||
They are named Urdhr (the past), Verdandi (the present) and Skuld (the future).
|
||
They watch over man; they spin his thread of fate at his birth and mark out
|
||
with it the limits of his sphere of action through life; their decrees are
|
||
inviolable destiny, their dispensations inevitable necessity. Urdhr and
|
||
Verdandi, the past and present, may be seen as stretching a web from the
|
||
radiant dawn of life to the glowing sunset, while Skuld, the future tears
|
||
it to pieces!
|
||
|
||
Man's fate must be met but the way in which it is met rests with the
|
||
individual; and by the way in which he meets his fate man is able to
|
||
demonstrate his free will. This important principle shows a man that it is
|
||
worthwhile fighting life's battles courageously while at the same time
|
||
fate's inexorable nature allows no room for careful weighing of arguments
|
||
for and against or for anxiety about the nature of things that are in any
|
||
case destined to happen.
|
||
|
||
22. What other aspects of human behavior are admired by Odinists?
|
||
|
||
The Noble Virtues are held in high esteem. They are:
|
||
|
||
Courage
|
||
Truth
|
||
Honor
|
||
Fidelity
|
||
Discipline
|
||
Hospitality
|
||
Industriousness
|
||
Self-reliance
|
||
Perseverance
|
||
|
||
The Odinist must do what lies before him without fear of either foes,
|
||
friends or the Norns. He must hold his own council, speak his mind and seek
|
||
fame without respect of persons; be free, independant and daring in his
|
||
actions; act with gentleness and generosity towards friends and kinsmen but
|
||
be stern and grim to his enemies (but even towards the latter to feel bound
|
||
to fulfill necessary duties); be as forgiving to some as he is unyielding
|
||
and unforgiving to others. He should be neither trucebreaker nor oathbreaker
|
||
and utter nothing against any person that he would not say to his face.
|
||
These are the broad principles of Odinist behavior, features of the spirit
|
||
that made our Northern peoples great.
|
||
|
||
23. You call industriousness a Noble Virtue? What is so spiritual about
|
||
that?
|
||
|
||
Industriousness is a virtue which, partly inherited, is nevertheless
|
||
acquired largely through training and self-dicipline; it is at once
|
||
something we owe to ourselves, to our family and to the community. There is
|
||
a time for relaxation as there is a time for most things but it is not, for
|
||
instance, during our working hours; neither should it be at the expense of
|
||
other members of the community by way of the so-called welfare state.
|
||
|
||
24. What about material possessions?
|
||
|
||
A principle of Odinism is the realization of the worthlessness and fleeting
|
||
nature of worldly possessions. Enough should be enough. Adam of Bremen, a
|
||
Christian, remarked how Odinists with whom he had come into contact "lack
|
||
nothing of what we revere except our arrogance. They have no aquisitive
|
||
love of gold, silver, splendid chargers, the furs of beaver and marten or
|
||
any of the other possessions we pine for". One thing alone is worth while
|
||
in this life: the stability of a well-earned reputation. "Goods perish,
|
||
friends perish, a man himself perishes," says the Edda "but fame never dies
|
||
to him that hath won it worthily."
|
||
|
||
25. You describe self-reliance as one of the Noble Virtues. Surely even
|
||
you must admit that none of us is, or can be, self-reliant in these
|
||
days?
|
||
|
||
Self reliance does not, as you appear to suggest, imply selfishness or mean
|
||
that a man must live in isolation from his fellows. We recognize that man
|
||
is dependent upon Nature and on the community of which he forms part; he
|
||
has obligations to that community as well as to his employer or employees.
|
||
He receives from society and he owes a debt to society. Odinism teaches
|
||
that people must be encouraged to stand on their own feet and not to ask
|
||
continually, "When is somebody going to do something for me?"
|
||
|
||
26. Do Odinists believe in prayer?
|
||
|
||
Odinism is not a philosophy invented to ease mankind's comfort or to
|
||
assuage his fears; that kind of religion acts against rather than in man's
|
||
interests because it takes from him his independence and self-respect and
|
||
makes of him a humble supplicant by encouraging him to shed his
|
||
responsibilities. The person who prays to a saint or God asking for help or
|
||
guidance is seeking to shift the responsibility from his own shoulders,
|
||
surrendering his own faculties of thought and physical action, unless he
|
||
also does something to help himself. To pray is to beg and plead; it is self-
|
||
abasement ("we worms of the earth"). That is not the object of true religion
|
||
which, as Carlyle has told us, is "trancendent wonder": wonder without
|
||
limit or measure, reverent admiration alike for the immensity of creation,
|
||
the inspiration of the human heart and the capability of the human brain.
|
||
|
||
Odinists in their inveitan ("praise"; singular, inveita) call upon the Aesir
|
||
to approach them in their thoughts as they themselves strive towards the
|
||
Aesir. Through increased understanding is achieved wholeness, a unity with
|
||
the Gods that helps us to think out our problems and how they may be
|
||
overcome. We project the Gods within ourselves and that, externally realized,
|
||
speaks to the divine in others. Through their inveitan Odinists express
|
||
gratitude for life and the world they live in and resolve to try to make it
|
||
better - not just to leave it to "someone up there" or hope for something
|
||
better in the next world.
|
||
|
||
27 How do Odinists regard good and evil?
|
||
|
||
Evil of itself cannot originate in man but must always be regarded as an
|
||
intruder, like an illness or an affliction; as such it must be opposed and
|
||
expelled. Good and evil are relative: there can be no absolute norm and
|
||
actions must depend upon circumstances and motives as well as time and
|
||
place. The ethical standards relating to custom and tradition are flexible
|
||
and responsive to the specific demands of different ages, so that moral
|
||
judgements of what is right and wrong cannot be placed in a fixed system of
|
||
standards but must vary according to time and situation. Just as the
|
||
world is constantly changing so are values constantly changing, so that
|
||
nothing can be regarded as unconditionally good or evil in all ages. In
|
||
general, that which disturbs the social order and peaceful evolution and
|
||
causes unhappiness - including such natural disasters as floods and
|
||
earthquakes, disease and pollution - obstructs the natural development of
|
||
the world and must be regarded as evil. As for sin, Odinism knows but two
|
||
major sins - perjury and murder: that is sin against the Gods and sin
|
||
against one's fellow man.
|
||
|
||
28. Do you believe in Original sin?
|
||
|
||
Man is inherently good and the world in which he lives is good. There is no
|
||
sin in man which has been inherited from his first, or any other, ancestor;
|
||
it is enough that he should be held responsible for his own actions. But
|
||
although his spirit is good, his flesh and his senses may succumb to evil,
|
||
especially when by neglecting his own spiritual well-being he has left his
|
||
defenses weakened. So it is necessary for him to be able to distinguish
|
||
between what is good and what is evil.
|
||
|
||
|
||
29 What do Odinists believe about marriage - and divorce?
|
||
|
||
Odinists support the institution of marriage and marital fidelity. But a
|
||
broken marriage is an unhappy marriage and traditional Odinic law allows
|
||
great latitude to separation of husband wife, at the will of both parties,
|
||
if a good reason exists for the desired change. It is recognized that the
|
||
worst possible service is rendered to those who are forced to live together
|
||
against their will; but it must be borne in mind that marriage is basically
|
||
a solemn exchange of vows between two people and as such can only be ended
|
||
by agreement between the same two people.
|
||
|
||
30. Does Odinism offer salvation to those who believe?
|
||
|
||
Odinism offers no salvation in the sense in which that term is used by
|
||
Christians. Instead, the Odinist seeks liberation by bringing the Aesir
|
||
into the world of man and into his daily life - whether at home or at work.
|
||
. . .It is not, "the kingdom of God which is within you," but the Gods
|
||
themselves which exist within man.
|
||
|
||
31. Does man possess an immortal soul? Is there a life after death and
|
||
will people go to Odin in heaven?
|
||
|
||
Odinists believe that man consists of body (i.e. matter) and spirit or soul.
|
||
Physical man is born, produces young and eventially dies. But the whole of
|
||
Nature shows us that death is not final: the material body decomposes and
|
||
recombines, it is regenerated and lives again. As it was in the beginning
|
||
so it is now; every atom continues to exist and must exist as in the
|
||
beginning. There is nothing new under the sun and what we call death is
|
||
really nothing more than transformation.
|
||
|
||
Spiritual man is divided into at least two distinct souls: one passive,
|
||
the other active, the divine and the human, which we call God-soul and
|
||
human-soul. The first is in the fullest sense a divine being, contemplating
|
||
a past eternity and a future immortality, occupying itself in contemplation
|
||
ratherthan in action and to be regarded as a kind of guardian spirit. Although
|
||
the God-soul and the material body are associated in this life, the former
|
||
is not bound to man in the way that, say, a limb is (it may indeed absent
|
||
itself from his body during sleep or periods of unconsciousness). Without
|
||
the spirit there can be no motivation: when the physical change
|
||
(i.e. death) takes place the God-soul passes to another living organism -
|
||
a human being, a tree, an animal, perhaps a bird. This is the element that
|
||
gives man his mystical attachment to a particular district or country
|
||
(which is what we call patriotism): because it is where the God-souls of
|
||
countless generations of ancestors dwell. It is because of this that man is
|
||
compelled to nurture, love and defend his country, which is, in the purest
|
||
sense, a holy land. The philosopher Fichte said, "Death is the ladder by
|
||
which my spiritual vision rises to a new life and a new nature." This is
|
||
also the reason why Odinists regard all life as sacred and unnecessary
|
||
violence as criminal.
|
||
|
||
The human-soul (or self-soul), is essentially individual to a particular
|
||
person. It may be likened to his personality, his fame or his infamy.
|
||
Because the whole of man's life is a continuing struggle of the good and
|
||
light Gods on the one hand and the offspring of chaotic matter (the giants,
|
||
Nature's disturbing forces) on the other, the human-soul is extremely
|
||
active. It is involved in a struggle that extends to man's innermost being:
|
||
both the human-soul and the God-soul proceed from the Gods; but the body
|
||
belongs to the world of giants and they struggle for supremacy. If the human-
|
||
soul conquers by virtue and courage then it goes after death to Valhalla,
|
||
to fight in concert with the Gods against the evil powers. If on the other
|
||
hand the body conquers and links the spirit to itself by weakness then
|
||
after man's death the human-soul sinks to the world of the giants and
|
||
joins itself with the evil powers in their warfare against the Gods. Long
|
||
after his individual identity has been forgotten a man's human-soul,
|
||
absorbed into the corporate spirit of the regiment, college, village,
|
||
nation or other group, continues to demonstrate its immortality by
|
||
inspiring future generations to noble deeds - or to acts of degradation.
|
||
|
||
32. If the God-soul migrates to other living things after death, how can
|
||
you square this with, for example, the need to slaughter livestock in
|
||
order to sustain human life? Isn't it rather like killing a God?
|
||
|
||
The God-soul must not be confused with the being that it inhabits. Animals,
|
||
birds and trees have always been regarded by Odinists with respect; it is
|
||
indeed probable that the domsestication of some sreatures arose from their
|
||
former sacred character. Every living thing is a manifestation of the
|
||
divine and its spirit is immortal: every time a tree is felled or an
|
||
animal slaughtered it is indeed a kind of sacrifice. But the tree or the
|
||
animal is only a temporary dwelling-place for the immortal God. Everything
|
||
in Nature has a purpose and it is necessary in order that life may be
|
||
sustained in others for such "sacrifices" to be made. Such an attitude
|
||
encourages consideration and reverence for Nature and discourages its
|
||
wanton despoliation. It is the unnecessary, cruel or unnatural killing of
|
||
animals (or of human beings), the unjustifiable destruction of trees or
|
||
landscape and the defiling of natural resources, that is wrong.
|
||
|
||
33. You have mantioned "ancestral spirits". Does this mean that Odinists
|
||
believe in ancestor-worship?
|
||
|
||
The human-souls of one's own family ancestors provide us with moral
|
||
strength and inspiration. Just as we received our spirit from Odin, so we
|
||
received our physical being through our parents and our ancestors from time
|
||
memorial. Our respect for ancestors maintains the continuity of the family,
|
||
the kin and the race. . . .Life is a continuing process:
|
||
we must try to visualize ourselves as ancestors;
|
||
for ancestors and descendants are genealogically one. Edmund Burke once
|
||
remarked that society was a partnership between those who were living,
|
||
those who are dead and those yet to be born; past and present and future
|
||
are seen as a continuing evolvement and must be looked upon as complete
|
||
being.
|
||
|
||
34. What kind of status do women have within the Odinist community?
|
||
|
||
Odinists do not need reminding of women's rights! Our religion anciently
|
||
held women in high honor: not only are Goddesses included in the Odinist
|
||
pantheon, but, when the Odinist priesthood is restored, all offices will be
|
||
open to women just as they were before the Christian usurpation relegated
|
||
them to permanent backbenches of religious life.
|
||
|
||
35. What are the chief festivals of the Odinic Rite?
|
||
|
||
In ancient times there were three great festivals: Yule (the Mid-Winter
|
||
Festival), Summer Finding (or spring equinox) and Winter Finding (autumn
|
||
equinox). To these we nowadays add the Midsummer Festival.
|
||
|
||
Yule, the popular Festival of Mid-Winter (sometimes called the Festival of
|
||
Light), heralds the beginning of the Odinist year. It is the birthday of
|
||
the unconquered sun, which at this time begins to new vigor after its
|
||
autumnal decline when, having descended into darkness, it pauses, kindles
|
||
the fire of germination and ascends renewed with the fruit of hope. The
|
||
Mid-Winter Festival includes the Twelve Nights of Yule, encapsulating the
|
||
twelve months of the year in miniature, and culminates in the celebration
|
||
of Twelfth Night.
|
||
|
||
Summer Finding, in March, is the Festival of Odin. It celebrates the
|
||
renewal, or resurrection, of Nature after the darkness of winter. It was
|
||
transformed by the Christians into their Easter (named after the Odinist
|
||
Goddess of the Saxons, Ostara), Rogation and Whitsun and was also recalled
|
||
in folk custom by the festivities of May Day.
|
||
|
||
The Midsummer Festival, the Feast of Balder, is the great celebration of
|
||
the triumph of light and the sun.
|
||
|
||
Winter Finding mourns the death of summer and heralds the coming of autumn.
|
||
It is dedicated to the god Frey, patron of the harvest, and is also
|
||
sometimes called the Charming of the Fruits of Earth, when we render thanks
|
||
for the years supply of life-giving foods.
|
||
|
||
|
||
36. What other Odinist festivals are there?
|
||
|
||
Besides the great festivals there are a number of secondary festivals and
|
||
also some commemorations of local Gods or various aspects of life.
|
||
|
||
The secondary festivals of the Odinic Rite are:
|
||
The Charming of the Plough, January 3
|
||
The festival of Vali, Febuary 14, which commemorates the family and is an
|
||
occasion for betrothals, the renewal of marriage vows and vows of kinship
|
||
loyalty.
|
||
|
||
The festival of the Einherjar on November 11, known as Heroes' day, which
|
||
honors the dead.
|
||
|
||
37. What is the Odinist Committee?
|
||
|
||
The committee for the Restoration of the Odinic Rite (to give its full
|
||
title) was set up on April 23, 1973 with the limited objects of restoring
|
||
Odinist ritual and ceremonies, to define Odinist faith and doctrine and to
|
||
constitute a teaching order of gothar (singular: gothi, meaning priest or
|
||
teacher). When these immediate objects have been achieved the Committee
|
||
will disband. In the past not a great deal of attentiion was paid to
|
||
systemizing the doctrinal aspects of Odinism and consequently the body of
|
||
writing on the subject has remained limited and uneven. The Odinist
|
||
Committee will place the worship of the Aesir on a more formal and
|
||
permanent basis.
|
||
|
||
38. How do I go about becoming an Odinist?
|
||
|
||
First of all by understanding, then by believing. You do not have to "be
|
||
born again" but you are expected to live your whole life according to the
|
||
Odinist precepts. There is a ceremony of reception (or initiation) into the
|
||
Odinist community for those who wish it. The secretary of the Odinist
|
||
Committe, 10 Trinity Green, London, E1, will be able to tell you whether
|
||
there is an Odinist group in your neighborhood or, if there is not one, how
|
||
you may form one.
|
||
|
||
39. Can the Odinist Committee supply me with a list of Odinist temples
|
||
and shall I be permitted to attend some of the inveitan?
|
||
|
||
There are at present no Odinist hofs (temples) in Great Britain open for
|
||
public worship. Odinism starts with the individual and extends, through the
|
||
family, to the communtiy and the world. So with worship, which is at
|
||
present practiced mostly at family level, the festivals of the Odinist year
|
||
being celebrated in the home, with friends and other Odinist sometimes
|
||
being invited to participate. But it is expected that various regional
|
||
meeting places will be authorized when eventually the ritual of Odinist
|
||
worship has been fully restored and gothar licensed by the successor body
|
||
to the Odinist committee.
|
||
|
||
|
||
These things are thought the best:
|
||
Fire, the sight of the sun,
|
||
Good health with the gift to keep it,
|
||
And a life that avoids vice.
|
||
|
||
The High Song of Odin *
|
||
|
||
|
||
* The verse from The High Song of Odin is from Paul B. Taylor and W H
|
||
Auden's translation of The Elder Edda and is reproduced by permission of
|
||
Messrs Faber and Faber. Other quotations from the Eddas in the foregoing
|
||
pages are from the translation by Rasmus B. Anderson.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
FOR MORE INFORMATION WRITE:
|
||
|
||
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|
||
P.O. Box 256
|
||
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|
||
|
||
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|
||
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|
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