I wonder if a lack of faith and the concomitant growth of materialism can also be attributed to a certain race?
And what about the Zoroastrian religion, which is based on Aryan scriptures but contains important dualist facets which essentially predate the three main monotheistic - and Semitic - religions of the modern world?
Savitar Devi <savitar_devi@...> wrote:
And what about the Zoroastrian religion, which is based on Aryan scriptures but contains important dualist facets which essentially predate the three main monotheistic - and Semitic - religions of the modern world?
Savitar Devi <savitar_devi@...> wrote:
II am inclined to agree that religion and race would be associated on some level. Along similar lines, I have begun speculating that if the corruption of race begins in its spirit, then does this not also imply that that it begins in a dwindling of belief or religion? This of course then implies that any racial disagreements are also religious/cultural/spiritual ones. I don't see how associating religion and race nullifies any argument against the Jews - Judeo-Christian religions are totally alien to those traditions that follow an Aryan lineage - the Indo-European belief systems all have common factors which permits one to trace their mythological ancestry.
evola_as_he_is <evola_as_he_is@...> wrote:
In ancient Rome, 'religion' was indissociable from race : "This
religion could be propagated only by generation. The father, in
giving life to his son, gave him at the same time his creed, his
worship, the right to continue the sacred fire, to offer the funeral
meal, to pronounce the formula of prayers. Generation established a
mysterious bond between the infant, who was born to life, and all the
gods of the family. Indeed, these gods were his family - theoi
eggeneis ; they were of his blood - theoi sunaimoi" (Fustel de
Coulanges). This "domestic religion was transmitted only from male to
male". No one ever 'converted' to the Roman religion. No one would
have been allowed to do it. W don't think that we are going too far
in saying that it wouldn't even have occurred to anyone to 'convert'
to it, nor would it have occurred to any Roman to let anyone convert
to it. The same thing applied to any other 'religion' in the Nordic-
Aryan world.Three heavens there are; two Savitar's, adjacent:In Yama's world is one, home of heroes.As on a linch-pin, firm, rest things immortal:He who hath known it, let him here declare it.- Rig Veda I.35 (Griffith)
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