Tag: animal sacrifice

  • The Role of Animals in Ancient Human Religion – Part 4


    Isis, Astarte, Diana, Hecate, Demeter, Kali, Innana…
    Thus chant the feminine priestesses invoking several deities at once …deities of power riding the lion, bearing weapons, taming the animals around them, shooting bow arrows at birds and deers to kill them, demanding sacrifice of goats, bulls and oxen in their name, to save humans and benefit them…perhaps at times sparing female cows just because cows are raped to produce babies and milk for human consumption – something is clearly not right here.

    We all have proudly narrated the sentiments of the divine feminine across the world, in modern times to assert female liberation. But what about the liberation of the animals in general, not just human animal or females but of all sentient beings as equals? Why do we idolise deities who hunt other animals, and kill them, or to whom animal were ritually sacrificed in history. Male or female, the fact is that we are all sentient like any animal can be, and unlike some others who are carnivores, we humans are aware of and capable of abstinence from murder.

    However different they may seem to be, one thing is common among our ancient deities as described in the previous articles, Part 1 of Wicca and neo-Paganism , Part 2 Power animals and tribal or native religions and Part 3 Kemitic, Mesoamerican and related cultures. The fact that carnivore animals are regarded as smart, special, respomsible, respectable, loved, admired, imitated, powerful, sacred, while the kind ones who do not harm others are regarded as lower beings, slaves, food and sacrificial objects, including human children and women at times. Look at our fascination with cats and dogs for instance. Once the idea that human animal is a carnivore or omnivore who can and should consume other sentient beings just as another unconscious or unevolved beast would, holds foot, we see violence permitted everywhere. Religion or spirituality are rarely exceptional, although the idea of religion and spirituality should ideally be a promotion of moral values or positive behaviors of kindness and love among humankind. On the contrary, religions seem to have become but a historically trendy display of grandeur, power, authority and might of the Stronger over the Weaker ones, the Gods or Lords over the Slaves, the Masters over Servants, the Carnivore or Omnivore over the Non-violent and the Criminal over the Innocent. Deity in such practices of religion and spirituality is rarely anything but the Devil in symbolism.

    GRECO-ROMAN, CELTIC, NORSE AND SEMITIC RELIGIONS

    Omophagia
    Because of the idea of imitating carnivores such as panthers and lions, that were considered sacred to deities such as Zeus and his son Dionysus in proto-Roman religions the ancient practice of spargamos or tearing-apart a live animal such as goat or bull as it cries for mercy in pain, is described along with eating the flesh raw ‘omophagia‘.

    According to Greek legend Dinoysus (connected with Roman deity Bacchus), was son of a mortal lady Selene and Zeus God of Greece (just as Jesus too was born of a mortal woman Mary and God of Israel). His worshippers were called Maenads, humans who tear apart raw flesh of sentient beings just as carnivorous animals do, a violent way of being in ‘communion’ just as Christians, followers of Jesus who consume his body and his blood in rituals at churches, called Mass. Humans have also been similarly devoured in Greek ‘Oprphic’ mysteries involding tearing apart and consuming other human beings by worshippers of Dionysus.

    Pentheus being torn by maenads  ISBN 3-7630-2266-X

    Satyrs
    The Pan archetype of wildnerness and promiscuity was symbolised by goat-headed deity as they believed goats to be virile. Consuming an animal was seen as a way of imbibing the traits from the animal onto yourself and the sex hungry public certainly desired virility. In noted historical research papers sacrifice of goats is described in honour of Pan in ancient Greek plays called satyrs, which were comedy as well as tragedy being of a goat being dragged as a sacrificial victim to the last rites as he is useless having been used enough for breeding purposes and the ritual suggesting a ‘doing away of the old so that the new can be created’.
    Killing of goats, bulls and other victims this way is a vile spiritual practice or superstition connected with false deities and imaginary empowerment of the person in whose name the sacrifice is conducted and a passing of energy to the consumers.
    The animal, goat or ox is first made to eat something from the god’s altar such as Zeus, and then blamed for the action to justify its stoning, humiliated step by step and then killed as a symbol of punishment of innocent in these violent acts.

    Satyr – Silenus and billy goat. Metropolitan Museum, Department of Greek and Roman Art

    Sacred Trees and Wish Bones
    The bones of the victims since stoneage or paleolithic traditions be hung on sacred trees or in sanctuaries dedicted to deities or offered to gods at times are another exposure of violence stemming from the disgraceful practice of killing and eating someone as food and then placing their bones on altars for wish fulfilment or hanging the wish bones upon sacred trees for deities to bless you.

    Animal bones in ancient pagan altars

    Atonement
    An ancient ritual of Artmeis of Munichia is also depicted in the course of time with the comparitives between this and the made up Abrahamic sacrificial tale of Bible and Koran quite apparent instantly. The Greek fable goes that to atone the killing of a bear belonging to the goddess and young girl needs to be killed at the altar around Easter time, but a female goat was instead substituted from above, sent by Artemis, therefore illustrating that other animals including hundred of goats can be killed in place of humans at one time to atone for sins.

    1st century AD (Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli) Iphigeneia carried to the sacrifice (centre). In the sky, Artemis appears with a hind which will be substituted to the young girl

    This is a very pagan concept of sin atonement through sacrifice, whether by way of Abraham and his young son who was to be killed for God at God’s commnd, but a lamb substituted at last minute, or the sacrifice of several bulls, goats and birds at Biblical temples and that of the ultimate sacrifice of Jesus, the so called Lamb of God who was killed as an atonement of human sins, sent by his father God himself to be murdered shamefully by humans as God ‘loved humans so much’.

    Asatru and Norse Blot

    Did you know that the term Blessing, according to Oxford dictionary actually arises from the ancient ritual of Blood sprinkling of sacrificed victims (Old English blod and bloedsian), from ceremonies of animal sacrifice including that of human animals? Upon reading this, perhaps you might reconsider blessing someone or asking to be blessed, or even saying ‘Bless you’ if someone sneezes.

    The significance of Blot, festival with sacrificial rituals within the annual farmer’s cycle of Asatru or ancient Norse religions derives from the meaning of the term ‘blood sacrifice’. The eight sabbats of the wheel of the year of paganism are celebrated through Blot, Yule (sacred to Odin old God of the Wild hunt) and return of Baldur the young God from Kingdom of Hel when days begin to lengthen, as a feast of animal sacrifice, followed by the others nameley Imbolg of the Celts as the February new moon Nordic sacrifice, Easter time or Ostara as the Equinox of Spring for slaying the innocent Hare, Walpurgis or May Day which is Beltane to Celts, Midsummer for the death of Baldur when days start to shorten, Freyfeast or Lammas, Fallfeast or Autumn Equinox, Harvestfeat for starty of winter, and several lesser feasts dedicated to myths of legendary heroes besides life event ceremonies or rites of passage of birth, mating and death.

    According to Astaru community, blood is offered to various Holy Powers or spirits in ancient Norse paganism in Blot ceremonies, God or deities such as Odin (later on he became Santa Clause in modern times), to Alfrs (Elf or Elves) and Wights (living dead humans). Non blood rituals are called Fainings instead of Blots which are considered ‘powerful rituals’. In the video below the Ribe Viking centre explains symbolically how a Volva (priestess) sacrificed horses, sprinkled blood on holy stone, and conducted Blot feasts, displayed the hide to proudly show how big the sacrifice was to the gods (Aesir) and how human life could be the biggest sacrifice yet.

    All kinds of living creatures including humans were killed and hung from trees in dedication to deities or placed in wells, including young children between 4 and 7 years of age as discovered at Trelleborg’s wells.

    Inter-Cultural Parallelisms of Deities

    The secret initiatory cult of Roman Mithras from pre-Hellenistic era (similar to Mitra of Vedic and meaning friends) involved the slaying of a Bull to establish law and order. The Cretan myth of Minotaur, a bull-man captive born of union of Bull and King’s wife who was slayed in the dungeons of King Minos also established the tradition of bull slaying. To date hideous bull slaying festivals continue in various parts of the world such as Spain. Parallelisms are similarly noted of how bulls were sacrificed to Zeus as they were to Egyptian deities in the past. Greco Roman, Semitic and Celtic deities have simialrities with Egyptian or Kemitic divinities, for example Baal the God of Thunderstorms of Cannanites, is similar to Zeus of Greece and Thor of Norse mythology and Hapi of Egypt. Human child sacrifices to the Lord/ God known as Hebrew Baal and the fearsome Cannanite Moloch are also mentioned in religious sacred texts.

    A human sacrifice to Baal – image of a painting in Sacred Books of the East

    In ancient Hindu and Vedic cultures the elements were invoked such as wind Varun, fire Agni sky and thunder, water Apas (term similar to bull headed Api/Hapi of Nile, Egypt) and the Greek god Zeus having parellelisms with Dyaus of thunder and overruled by sky father Dyaus Pitr (name similar to Egyptian father Ptah) resembling the Mesopatamian Ea or Jewish god Yah. The Cannanite name Baal to whom bulls were sacrificed was transmuted into these Vedic and Jewish deities to whom sacrificial altars were constructed with burnt offerings of bull as well as other animals whose heads were chopped up in gory rituals that were meant to please deity. Many of these deitis were bull headed as well. The Corinthians had a disagreement with the use of the Canannite word Baal for the god or Lord and preferred Yah or Yahweh to convert masses over to obedience to their tribes of Israel instead of Mesopotamian, Sumerian, Cannanite and others. The image of a bull was dropped with Moses ordering the murder of 3000 men of Cannan by the Leviite who joined him forsaking the worship of an ancient bull idol of Yahweh.While Mesopotamian deities were Ea and Ishtar, Yahweh and Asherah became the new Hebrew ones, Shiva and Shakti of Hindus associated with sacred bull Nandi, while Baal and his consort Anat were Canannite or Ugaritic and became demonised, all these male deities being loosely similar to original terrifying Lord deities with sexual goddesses as consorts that gradualy became absent while the Lord God a nameless and faceless one overshadowed the western civilisation through the new religion of Israel.

    Animal Domestication and Farming Deities
    It is reasoned that humanity’s criminal nature of killing and cannabilism is related to the unnatural way humans unlike other primates decided to hunt large animals with weapons once upon a time, to be a fashion statement of power in later years when wars were common. Later on over the years needless domestication and senseless ritual killing of animals that were tamed was performed in festivities and traditions witih invention of new deities such as Aristaeous who was connected with cheese-making and beekeeping as well as dairying, sheep shearing, butchering and leather making. He too not unlike Jesus was the shephard son of a heavenly deity Apollo and a mortal huntress virgin Cyrene. New deities of sheparding, fishing, dairy and farming gods are therefore highly reverred in forms of Jesus and Krishna common in eastern and westen cultures were next to establish new trades of futures of animal products sold to masses.

    No wonder the common symbol of luck in the stock market is the Bull, symbolic of bull headed sacrificial demonic gods of the past in to whom cattle was sacrificed and also possibly associated with another (now considered demonic) being Beelzebub or Baal-zebub connected with bulls and plundering of bees which is close to what modern animal farming based human systems rigidly constitute. (Image below Ancient Sumerian Bull god, possibly called Ea, 25 BC verus the image of bull in modern stockmarket or even supermarket symbolism). We are all in a matrix inspired by senseless selfish acts that exploit other sentient beings since ancient times binding us to core values of materialism, while our purpose must be to break free from all evil.

  • The Role of Animals in Ancient Human Religion – Part 3

    The Role of Animals in Ancient Human Religion – Part 3

    MESOPOTAMIAN, EGYPTIAN, MAYAN, AZTEC, INCAN

    A perfect man is fashioned out of clay in the image of creator god with an equal and a counterpart.
    A serpent descends from a tree to subdue a female in a garden near Euphrates river.
    A demon called Lilitu flees from the bush.
    There is a Tree of Life that is well guarded.
    A gigantic flood for six days and six nights wiped off the world.

    Sounds familiar? Perhaps like something out of the Biblical Genesis chapter? Except that it is much older, (penned well before 2000 BC) ancient Mesopotamian texts of thier fabled king and hero Gilgamesh alongside deities such as Ea (similar to the western Yah or Yahweh) who was a creator with pantheons including the now forgotten Innana/ Ishtar of sexual feminine origin who communicated with humans. The matrix of manmade religion has certainly spread far and wide in modern society since then, contrived into the popular faiths of Jewish, Christian and Muslim communities now spread the world over.

    In earlier stories Part 1 and Part 2 we examined how humans have shamelessly hunted animals for personal benefit and formed their own madeup religions to inspire them with illusory animal powers and deities. Shamans hallucinogenically projected spirits assisting them in their goals through a trance like state of delirium where they see imaginary mental simulations caused due to chemicals from carefully selected psychoactive components of plants in the name of ‘medicine’.

    As society developed from hunting and fishing to farming communities, settlements were formed near mighty rivers such as Mesopotamia, Nile, Indus and Thames to farm the land and domesticate innocent creatures, instead of moving around as nomadic huntsmen killing all wildlife. Animals were domesticated in herds by men and women who bred them, looked after them and killed them before cooking them up without any thought to the severity and immorality of these gruesome acts.

    Subduing and killing an animal and having physical or muscular power was the primary trait sought after from these brutal male dominated societies as shown in the Mesopotamian image below of a king as the lord or master of the animals. Sacrifices of human and other animal children were also conducted in Mesopitamia as this linked article describes.

    Mesopotamian king as Master of the Animals on the Gebel el-Arak Knife dated circa 3300-3200 BCE, Abydos, Egypt. Louvre Museum reference E 11517

    This time even more fantabuloustic imaginary spirits or deities that are imagined to be stationed higher up either in ascended heavens or chthonic underworld were invoked by ancient humans to assist them in their lifestyle. Naturally due to the prominence of murdered flesh, several diseases must have been caused by consuming dead remains as usual. Nevertheless humans ascribed these diseases to spirits and believed deities will cure them in return of further sacrifices to the deities. Fear of natural calamities also moved these ignorant people to kill animals and each other in bargain that the deity will not be angry with them and accept the barter of the innocent person being offered instead.

    Animals including their own children and human male and female slaves were all seen as property alongwith other day-to-day objects. Therefore humans worshipped deities to prevent wars and defeat enemies as other neighbouring tribes came to take over their property including animals and enslaved humans or children or women away. Political power and kingships developed to a higher level with great monuments such as pyramids and temples erected in a ludicrious display of wealth and grandeur to impose the might of the pharoahs and leaders upon the common men and women who were often enslaved.

    By appointing priests, sacrifice of chosen special animals including humans in the name of the political leadership was seen as a way to take away the ‘sins’ or disease of the community, to bestow more power upon the pharoahs and kings, or to ward off enemies and black-magic, lest the gods would be angry and send bad weather, deadly poisons or hardships upon them.
    Intimidating the masses into submission the nobility built mega-temple complexes and at times ascended pharohs and kings to special sacred thrones alongside gods and deities.

    Akhenaten Sacrificing a Duck, circa 1353 –1336 B.C.

    In Egyptian or Kemitic religion, several animals were eaten as well as routinely sacrificed to Gods and Tutelar deities who protected human encroachments of places of nature. Domesticated animals were mere food but carnovorus animals held a special place as usual. These such as Ibis (sacred to Thoth) were not to be killed but fed killed fish, while Cats sacred to Bast had acute reverence and their murder was a punishable offence with death penalty. Falcons sacred to Horus and Hawks to Buto were also spared their lives, snakes to Zeus, Eels to Atum and Crocodiles to Sobek. Animals depicted on the heads and wings of deities also included jackal-headed Anubis and Lions for Sekhmet, ferocious goddess of war also for energising the tribes for bloodlust.

    The imaginary gods and goddess of ancient Egypt were specially notorious for being the reason for sacrifice of real animals that are ‘sacred’ to them, except for ‘ the murder of virgin cows being disallowed for certain rituals, vaguely similar to Hindu religion that allows females to survive as long as they are sexually fertile (mothers) and provide more babies to kill and abuse for the humans who own them and sexually exploit them.

    The sacrificed victims were children, termed the ‘chosen ones’, regarded as beautiful, pure in colour often young calves are killed in evil magic rituals in thename of Isis adorned with cow antlers and Hapi (Apaphus) to whom bulls were sacrificed. Unblemished oxen were sacrificed to the most sacred Isis in horrid rituals said to tbe the highest form of worship. Disturbing descriptions of rituals of how wine is poured over the innocent and helpless child, ox or bull or even a baby calf who is then dismembered by a priest ceremonially in a temple are found in texts the full version being on the link herein in writings by acclaimed ancient historian Herodotus.

    Pigs were considered ‘unclean’ for general sacrifice and only sacrificed to the Moon deity on full moons ceremonies, while other domesticated animals sacrificed to important deities horned and adorned in statues and images or idols sometimes with various animal features. While neo-pagans and Wiccan imitate full moon rituals they have at times no idea about how deeply ingrained the concept of taking life and spirit out of a helpless creature is part of the ‘spiritual’ work of ancients that they venerate abysmally.

    A relief depicting prince Amun-her-khepeshef (left) and Ramesses II (right) from the Temple of Abydos. Amun-her-khepeshef was the ‘first born son’ of pharaoh Ramesses II

    Spirit returning to the bloodthirsty creator, gods or goddesses who are pleased by the spirit and strangely bless the killers may be simply a case of gods and goddesses being allocated human figures, manufactured in the image of the human who created them and imbibed thier own imagined qualities of personification. If humans enjoyed meat so would the creator or gods and goddesses who were bipedal humanoids as well – lords and ladies in otherworld fashioned out of clay in the image and likeness of the servants on earth. Pharoahs were naturally regarded as powerful and therefore godlike as well, deities being synonymous with power and might – taking life away from an innocent, and enslaving them an act of power.

    In many evil rites, of Egyptians curses were spoken on the dismembered caracass that is then given to enemies such as Greek, so that the maladies or misfortunes of the Egyptians be passed over via the animal’s flesh to the enemy units through the ritual sacrifice technique. This is quite similar to evil rites conducted in malefically by certain Indian black-magic and aghoric practioners.

    Many historians have described an annual sacrifice of a young female child, termed ‘Virgin’ to Nile river to please a god called Hapi who they believed will bring the annual flooding leading to rich deposits of soil for plantation. As humans used to abuse females and regarded virgins or young child females as more sexually desirable, they selected little girls as victims for their false gods as well.

    SACRIFICE TO GOD HAPI: “The Ancient Egyptians throwing a Virgin into the Nile.” (1884) Electronic version published by Rice University, Houston, Tx: https://hdl.handle.net/1911/21497

    Retainer Sacrifice of Slaves: Besides sacrificing animals including at times human beings to deities to please them or to atone for sins, there is some evidence as per this research paper linked herein on sacrifice of slaves, termed ‘retainer sacrifice’ by which noble or rich masters went to heaven along with their possessions including women and children who served them as their slaves, concubines and peasants.

    Other ancient cultures with similar traditions included Mayan, Incan and Aztec cultures where temples and pyramids were similarly used for animal and human sacrifice involving violence. Apus were great an powerful spirits of the mountains such as Machu Pichu where animals and children were killed, while the famouos Chichen Itza a massive human animal sacrifice site including human victims in a massive stinkhole (sinkhole).

    Mayan temple sacrifice sculpture

    Vast racks of skulls have been discovered in the inhuman temples and glorious pyramidal temples of Aztecs where they decapitated humans and removed their still beating heart to worship their chthonic and superficial false gods and goddesses using obsidian crystal weapons as described in a Sciencemag article.

    Virgins of the Sun were primarily child female victims of rape and exploitation, specially chosen as ‘beautiful’ brides of deity and isolated away from their family and from society, they were as young as 6 to 8 years old being trained for serving the masters. Many were forced to work as concubines or sexual slaves to the kings and some sent as sacrificial victims to walk thousand miles to be killed brutally in vast temples after decoration with a special headdress.


    National Geographic had recently reported a heartbreaking mass sacrifice evidenced by archaeologists. The ritual conducted over 550 years ago in Peru involved cold blooded murder of hundreds of baby Llamas with little human children, as part of a Chimu civilisation. As reported by the researchers excavating the site, ‘many of the children had their faces smeared with a red cinnabar-based pigment during the ceremony before their chests were cut open, most likely to remove their hearts. The sacrificial baby llamas appear to have met the same fate’ as the children who haplessly held on to them.

    Possibly the biggest recorded human child and baby animal ritual sacrifice site in Peru

    Hope that this discussion on the often admired deities and rich traditions of the past opens our eyes to the truth about how unnatural and dystopic our history and heritage have been. While the matrix of media and spiritual organisations, teachers, masters and modern classical networks such as Gaia sell you information, media, tours and courses to make money through your initiations into these mystery of occult rites and rituals, it may be important to keep in mind that the truth of ancient as well as modern religions is seldom positive. Media uses terms such as ‘breathtaking’, ‘grandeur’, ‘genius’ and ‘wonders’ to describe ignorant materialistic adn hedonistic cultures of ancient archaeology adn religion that our modern western and global society epitomises and holds as essential to success, building ever new gigantic artificial human constructs that reach the skies and abuse nature.

    In all the glory and magnificience of the architecture, the splendour, gold, beauty, sexuality and astrological symbolism we confuse these Egyptian, Mesopotamian, Aztec, Mayan, Incan and other reputed civilisations with, we must remember that Ascension is not about worshipping or being fascinated by these structures or dark practices, but about distancing from the evils of materialism, violence, hedonism and corruption throughout human history and widespread in present times. By imitating ancient Egyptian, Mesopatamian, Mayan and other deities in your chosen names, ritualistic initiations or behaviors you may be invoking presence of pride, ego and evil demonic beings or manifestations instead of elevating your consciousness towards truth.

  • The Role of Animals in Ancient Human Religion – Part 2

    The Role of Animals in Ancient Human Religion – Part 2

    POWER ANIMALS

    The sound of the native shamanic drums soothe your soul with beautiful beats that mesmerise you….your kundalini energy dances inside your body. You are taken into a sleep like state of dreaming and mental relaxation. You feel the rhythms vibrating inside you as you close your eyes, connecting with the powers of the animals whose skin was used for the drum. Was it a buffalo, a bison, camel, a cow or a deer, perhaps a loose horse who was killed for healing your soul. Its dead remains now used for healing your soul with the spirit or power of the animal, who is lonely energy now….Sounds a bit wrong doesn’t it? Afterall the hide and skin could have been yours too, or a friend’s. What is the difference anyways?

    In part 1 of this series we examined a revival of neo-paganism, Wicca and a belief that connects to ancient wild customs within the modern world in secret rituals of white men and women merely imitating the original tribes and natives and their customs and rituals.

    Humans have long been fascinated by a variety of power animals (symbols or totems of energy), although the right term should be ‘poor animals’. The word Anima or Animus represents your soul or dream persons as they move with you in your life. They are people who are animated, not still or calm but running, playful, energetic and emotional beings. Humans are animals just like any other animal is, and just like we experience life, emotions and pain so do other animals too. If humans are people so are other animals too.

    Hunting of other animals by human animals should be seen as a crime. Instead it is seen as necessary for survival by tribes of ancient earth that are still existing in some parts of the planet. The behavior of tribals who hunt various animals is no different from the historically accounted stoneage folk who hunted sentient beings for food instead of surviving on plant based life. The fact that they are not able to feel the pain of the animals and focus only on thier primitive instincts to kill and eat someone as any carnivore does, seems to be of no consequence as the acts are justified and glorified by environmentalists and western media who enjoy carnivorism and connect it with their own stoneage ancestral heritage with aplomb.

    Westerners who are educated and clever manipulate audience by justifying the hunting and killing process stating they are ‘uniting with the energy or spirit of the animal’ by consuming the poor victim and ‘honouring them’ by eating them up and using up all of their body parts for consumption, to make items from them. In this video they justify the acts for profit, by partnering with hunting tribes who are allowed to hunt animals in national parks and those terrified animals who try to escape unsuccessfully from the perimeters or boundaries within which they are bound in these national parks are killed mercilessly with either hunters who pay a fees or native tribals who commit the violent act for free because the land once belonged to them and they have arrived at a pact or agreement with the tribesmen who want their land and rights to hunt animals to be re-given to them as entitlement. Land afterall belongs to humans – an unjust system since millenia routinely followed, whether by tribes fighting with each other for right to kill animals in their ‘territory’ or politics of modern territorial governments who are corrupt and violent, acquiring land through colonisation and warfare and taxing people, selling land and charging rent from them. Animals have no rights.


    Ancient tribes, native americans and shamans used these totems to connect with animal spirits, possibly in preparation of hunting and wars, panthers, tigers, wolves and snakes held their imagination as they role played their behaviors in colourful rituals and rites aided by trance and hallucinogens. Vying to take life of kind animals who run from them, hunters go around pretending to be snakes, cheetahs and camouflaging chamelons, owls and eagles who soar high. Humans in various native customs have devoured the spiritual essense of canivores to hurt herbivores, whom they see as ‘lesser animals’ – as food. Hunting native humans also dress up and imitate behavior of herbivores to fool the innocent victims who are then killed by them. This is the secret behind the ideology of power animals animal totems and the imitation of behavior of other animals by tribes originally.

    The diseases humans acquire through the life of carnivorism are identified as bad spirits that have come into them to be released using hallucinogenic drugs, lovely songs in high voices, drums or other musical instruments and social products to alter their mind via trance states. Naturally western media and fans of culture would support the use of drugs and hallucinogens by themselves, other humans and children simply because it is also their way of living and partying and they too consider this as a remarkable healing experience of mind-alteration, numbing your pain, escaping from the actual cause of your illness by simply altering your state of mind ritually instead of dealing with the reason for the problems, your food, your own negativity, your own evil behavior.



    Tribals found motivation in the spirits of power animals, the wild beasts who have a sense of purpose – the one who can murder another one survives, the other sadly dies for them, helplessly as the victim fails to escape the clutches of the powerful one. Thereby aping carnivores, with the intent of enhancing their survival and territorial rights, tribal huntsmen even used the skins, bones and feathers of their victims in rituals for the display of their own power over them. Dresing up in fabulous costumes and headresses made of feathers, skins and bones of the victims is considered stunning to make a social statement and impress others.


    Demonic or wild immoral spirits that are carnivorous help tribes in killing their victims. Skins of victims are beaten in a hideous display of energy, drumming to assist in invocation as bodies move to the rhythms in trance with aid of hallucinogens. Vibrations of the killed animal, someone who was terified and hurt painfully and then eaten up and every part of his or her body usurped by the killer…would heal someone?

    The truth is that commercial glamourisation of animal skin and hide products in the name of shamanism in the west is as popular as animal meat industry and consumers form a profitable market, both spiritual, semi-spiritual and simply fancy dress. Skins and hides sourced either from so called ‘ethical’ slaughterhouses of partially stunned and heavily raped or abused adult or children become belts, clothes, fur or leather as well as drums and other shamanic paraphernalia in most cases, simply because they are byproducts of meat industry. Original shamans kill their own victims for meat by hunting in the wild and use the animal’s hide for healing each other in their own communities unperturbed by what happened to the animal. In some cases we are made to believe they thank the animal’s spirit first over their dead body similar to Jewish and Christian customs of thanking the creator for the animals farmed and killed after tremendous abuse to be served upon their plates. On top of that all body parts of the victim are used including for ritual healing purposes for ancestral healing and proud to not ‘waste anything’ and being eco-friendly.

    Ogouns and Orishas of African tribal communities as well as Indian or Asian gods and goddesses are usually spirits believed to be assisting humans with hunting, abuse or killing of domesticated animals and praying for welfare and wealth of the tribes. Rituals involving brutally murdering animals are supposed to make spirits happy in rarely recorded communities of tribals such as this one.


    Legends of fictional reptilian or draconian deities who dream up and create our world abound in aboriginal myths. From Philipines to Chinese spirits and deities that assist in hunting and fishing abound in eastern as well as western mythologies. Divination or fortune telling called Haruspicy, performed by examining the disgusting entrails of the poor victims is also part of Shamanic practices in a few parts of the world having been performed for augury since neolithic times.

    Cannibalism is also found in tribes – wilfully accusing and killing a friend or community member of being ‘evil, a sorceror, a witch’ (as somebody simply must be blamed if anyone else dies of a prionic or deadly disease caused possibly by germs and animal protein of killed bodies). The idea is that any misfortune is due to spirits and the spirits are sent by someone else from their tribe and the accused done away with and his body eaten. They usually feel no remorse on killing their own cousin or friends for them killing someone and eating them up is a a normal act, animals and humans alike.

    Little children are also brutally murdered on strange suspicion that they caused evil or misfortune to their family or community in case someone dies of a natural cause.

    While neo-pagans and Wiccans at times imitate the native and tribal ritual methodology they may leave out or not even be completely aware of the actual tribal customs, imagining they are helping the planet and wildlife by a return to ancient systems that were hunting based and therefore preventing deforestation. Sadly some people such as heartless media persons actually like these customs and justify them because they like carnivorism and look actively for validation of their belief that killing someone for taste or pleasure is good simply because it is ancient.

    Similar violent traditions of hunting, killing and eating animals and thanking creator or God continued on as human civilisation developed consequently and white men drove out the original poor tribes of natives and aboriginals and usurped all the land using uncivil or criminal means to unceremoniously grab land and prosperity for the new kingdoms of their God and religion, spreading pollution and horrors of animal farming everywhere and building vast monuments and industrial legacies of crimes against nature.

    Be it tribal folk customs or modern ways of living and praying, westerners, especially whites have severely exploited ancient tribal and native shamanic cultures, taken away their land and then used them for the purpose of selling their own ‘spiritual’ products or services through popularising borrowed ideas and widely market the symbols that actually belong to the tribes. While it is right to sympathise with natives for the loss of their primitive land to the exploitative capitalists, imitating ancient tribals blindly by hunting, drumming on skins or using thier personal totems also seems unecessary. The natives are after all merely singing songs, dancing, playing their beats, celebrating rituals and rites of nature to serve them with hunting, calling upon spirits to assist them in hunting and to help themselves be the surviving tribe in the area. They were poor and unable to find food easily being untrained in plant based agriculture, health, hygeine or spiritual ethics. Their healing was not really about loving the animals or being kind to the rest of nature for healing other innocent beings, but for personal survival as this acclaimed documentary conveniently elucidates.

    We hope this article and videos help you demystify ancient cultures of tribes and native customs. Human world is highly unconscious and it can be hard to find a spirituality that liberates you or leads to an ascension of consciousness, awakening you to think about how you can discover your true self in this matrix of mumbo-jumbo all around hell.

  • Were Stone Henge and Circles Neolithic Slaughterhouses?

    Were Stone Henge and Circles Neolithic Slaughterhouses?

    From alien spaceship landing pads to veneration of dead relatives of human beings, marking of the solstices to astronomical forecasts, several explanations of the purpose of erection of massive ancient stone circles and henges have been invented. While Stonehenge at Salisbury, Great Britian enjoys the number one spot in the hall of fame, Avebury follows a close second along with many others across Cornwall, Scotland and globally. If images of solemn gatherings of magical priests at beautiful altars of rituals that healed the planet with love and light upon consipiring with aliens and gods or higher beings come to mind, you might want to stand corrected immediately.

    Latest research papers about the famed Neolithic stone circles of U.K. confirm the following as documented in Science Advances journal March 13, 2019 and featured by Live Science video and news reports including the largest published multi-isotopes study using five systems. Pigs were moved several miles from their birthplaces to the Neolithic monuments including areas next to Stonehenge and several other stone circles, where they were then slaughtered en-masse and feasted upon. The study claims that pigs were the main domesticated species of late Neolithic times and gatherings to trap them in massive enclosures and kill them were likely a feature of stone circles.

    In another Stone Circle Theory by Simon Hedger it is explained using video and pictures how the theorist experimented with trellis and concluded that the purpose of giant stones at Stone Henge could have been fulfilled by using them to enclose victims sacrificially using something like trellises arranged between stones. Infact we also know that in many cases trenches were dug around the site, which could be also to prevent escape and lead victims to slaughter. No wonder a ‘slaughter stone’ is featured as one of the main stones on Stonehenge itself.

    But did you know that stone circles all over the world, some even older than the U.K. ones have been discovered, from Pakistan to Japan, Syria and including those predating Stonehenge of Britain by over 7000 years such as the Turkish Gobekli Tipi? This one at Turkey is a massive collection of stone circles incredibly illustrated over each giant stone with images of animals. Upon examination of the images carved upom each stone it becomes clear that sacrifice and killing of animals is the chief ritual we are talking about. One of the famous stones pillar 43 or vulture stone, has a carving of a larger vulture offering what appears to be the head of a sacrifice victim to a baby vulture, the victim’s body lying below along with a scorpion which of course could be something they additionally used as a weapon for killing. Rows if large hollow arches upon rectangular stones are depicted on top of the stone that could represent the sacrificial altars to hang bodies upon, each one depicting one animal.

    As pictographic evidence depicting animal slaughter and not just the usual animal bones are found this time in an even more massive and ancient site than Stonehenge, the purpose of Neolithic stone circles is finally becoming clearer.

    In Russia a huge stone circle made entirely of massive animal bones has also been found.

    While theories of human sacrifice abound in connection with U.K stone circles, the usual victims are of course animals as with majority of ceremonial religious sites. Ancient Jerusalem is already known to be a great slaughterhouse according to reports stating the economy was powered by animal slaughter supposedly to please their god through burnt offerings by priests who kneeled in blood and remaining dead bodies of victims offered to people to feast upon, numbers speculated to be of over a million animals at a time according to the Talmud, a Jewish religious text. Now are you not glad you are not allowed into the ‘Holy Site’ unless you belong to that land?

    Even with the well-known Mecca, the sought-after Islam sacred site with the Kaaba stone, to this date slaughter of countless innocent animals for money and feasting is conducted constantly and everyday. A large black stone features as a main piece of this site for pilgrimage, kissing the stone and circumabulation, by pelting of stones and dragging choicest animal victims for slaughter as the guts of sheep are disposed off cruelly in bloodtained garments and meat delivered to eager pilgrims for feasting.

    We all know of the slaughter at Eid of goats and sheep raised and bred for the purpose, even on streets of Asia streming with blood in religious festivals. From Jewish to Muslim, modern Christian, pagan, Wiccan hunting deities, Shamanic ceremonies, Aboriginal rites, and even Vedic festivities and rituals, animal sacrifice has been featured in the top of texts of major religions throughout history and breedings.

    Hunting, horrific slaughter and consumption of the victims has been considered holy, sacred and a way to please ‘god’, thank ‘god’ enjoy food to distribute to ‘hungry’ humans and pray for myriad wish-fulfillment or curiously the ‘atonement’ of sins and peace offerings even in the Bible. The entrails of the victims used for divination or augury is another disgusting feature of ancient religious animal sacrifice and spirituality. The discovery that stonehenge and other sacred Neolithic sites were abused by ancient humans to kill other animals or even human animals should come as no surprise.

    The next time you feel enchanted by religious stories, myths and stone circle fantasies to spend time in meditation or trance, dance to fancy drums of killed animal skins, and celebrate rituals within these so called sacred pilgrimage cites in Cornwall, Stonehenge or elsewhere, please think again! Do you really feel wonderful and at peace in a place of deadly murder and torture of the poor victims whose bodies were were and infact are still feasted upon? What sort of healing or magical energy are we raising anyways through this?

    Every single day in majority of households across the globe sexually abused in jail and horrifically killed, innocent victims are served upon plates of horror as food? How does it really make you feel to now someone felt horrible, pained, suffering and crying for life, trapped and unable to escape the evil blade so calmly rendered amidst empty cheers of jolly and rivers of blood beneath the feet of heartless humans, just for taste?

    It is aptly stated by Einstein – “The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing.” Please spread the message and share this article over social media to educate others. Let us all go vegan and stay awake, disenchanted by the snare drums of modern religion, ancient myths and new-age ritualism that together have us fooled, entranced and captivated for millenia with their so-called sacred music, ceremonial robes and constant chanting.