What Does The Indian Vajra Do On Orthodox Crosses? - Alternative View

What Does The Indian Vajra Do On Orthodox Crosses? - Alternative View
What Does The Indian Vajra Do On Orthodox Crosses? - Alternative View

Video: What Does The Indian Vajra Do On Orthodox Crosses? - Alternative View

Video: What Does The Indian Vajra Do On Orthodox Crosses? - Alternative View
Video: The Russian orthodox cross 2024, March
Anonim

One of the mysteries of ancient India is the objects common on its territory, in the form of the legendary weapon of the ancient gods - the vajra. According to the Indian epic, the vajra is a powerful weapon of the god Indra that can kill without missing. But after all, the ancient Indian god Indra is the Slavic god Perun - a thunderbolt and patron of the military class. In Orthodox Christianity, it corresponds to Ilya the prophet.

So, maybe it is not by chance that we can find the image of a vajra on the most ancient crosses of Orthodox churches? For example, it can be clearly seen on the crosses of one of the oldest Orthodox churches in Russia - St. George's Cathedral of St. George Monastery.

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There are similar images on the crosses of some other Orthodox churches, although not all.

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And this fact allows us to assume not only the already proven connection between India and Russia, which have common Aryan ancestors, but also their common Vedic tradition, which the Aryans during the "Little Ice Age", which caused a cold snap in Siberia and on the Central Russian Plain, fleeing the cold brought to the land of northern India. When, with the beginning of climate warming, part of the Aryans returned to their lands, their descendants created Vedic Russia, where the cult of Indra eventually turned into the cult of Perun. These common cultural roots are evidenced not only by the common Vedic tradition, but also by the similar architecture of India and Russia.

But then how could the weapon of Indra-Perun end up on Orthodox crosses? It's very simple. If we assume that long before the arrival of Christianity in Russia there were Vedic temples, then everything falls into place. After all, the image of the vajra must have been present on the temples of the thunder god Perun. Consequently, St. George's Cathedral of St. George Monastery, like some other Orthodox churches, is the former Vedic temple of Perun. Hence, on it there is the characteristic symbolism of the weapon of Indra-Perun.

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And this means that many ancient Orthodox churches were built even before the arrival of Christianity in Russia, and therefore, upon careful study, one can still find Vedic symbolism and even symbols of Vedic (not pagan) gods on them. And it is no coincidence that the historian A. Fedorov asserts that the word “temple” itself has a pre-Christian Vedic origin and, for example, among the same Poles the concepts of “temple” and “church” are clearly distinguished.

For example, what he said about this:

Thus, the dispute about whether the Vedic Rus had their own Vedic temples dedicated to their gods, and not some primitive pagan temples with idols, as “traditional” historians are trying to instill in us, can be considered over. Undoubtedly, there were Vedic temples in pre-Christian Russia, although most of them were made of wood and it is quite natural that they have not survived to our times. For example, the wooden Temple of Lada, which stood on the shores of Lake Ladoga. It was he who gave the name to this lake "Ladoga", ie belonging to the goddess Lada.

But on the other hand, their stone "brothers" have survived, which can now be identified by the Vedic symbols preserved in such Orthodox churches. You just need to take a closer look at it and then, perhaps, it will even be possible to determine to which of the Vedic gods this temple was previously dedicated. And all this does not fit at all with the usual picture from the official history, which claims that before the advent of Christianity, the Slavs and the Rus were "wild barbarians" who lived almost in the trees.