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The Assembly of The Elder Troth would like to welcome you to our website. Please click on the links to the left to enter the relevant area of our site. Heil and welcome to the Articles section of the Assembly of The Elder Troth website. Here you can find items written by many wide and varied folk. The idea is to provide a venue for discussion, debate and education amongst the folk by giving people an individual flavour to the information provided. Every article here is the work of its' author. The Assembly of The Elder Troth DOES NOT endorse the words or anything that is found herein as being official Assembly of The Elder Troth policy, it is purely the work of the author as provided in each case, and Copyright rests with the Author, reproduction is prohibited without the authors permission. The Vessel of Our Dreams - by Böðvar Ásbjörnsson occult adj. 1. Of, or pertaining to, dealing with, or knowledgeable in supernatural influences, agencies, or phenomena. 2. Beyond the realm of human comprehension; mysterious; inscrutable. 3. Available only to the initiate; not divulged; secret: occult lore. (American Heritage Dictionary) What exactly is the Northern European Folkway in Vinland? Thats open to interpretation, and sometimes is anybodys bet. It is, for some, the vessel of their dreams. Some see it as an extension of their secular politics. Just as there are those who resent the Abrahamic faiths (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) for being Abrahamic, that being the ethic of the Sons of Abraham, whom they dont particularly like; there are also those who are feminist of one extreme or another who plot a course through Northern European heathenism as a non-patriarchal social system; and those of the Left or the Right who see AllFather either as an ethnic expression of Ronald Reagan or of Bill Clinton. Some just like to drink mead. Then, there are the fiddlers. Not content with luck as it presents itself, they seek to learn hidden knowledge, to visit Oz to see if they can see what the man behind the curtain is doing. Not content with their luck, they seek to know not only how the Game of Life is played, but how to exploit any loopholes they might uncover. These people seek the source and strength and nature of the supernatural influences, agencies, or phenomena of the first definition above, and wish to visit and study those things (b)eyond the realm of human comprehension in definition two. Humans are curious animals, and who wouldnt want to have an in? Still, the time spent trying to spot the puppeteers strings might be better spent trying to figure out the simple ins and outs of daily life. Wisdom, as Ive often counseled, is a knowledge not of sprites, wisps and bogeymen, but of people. There are still more who trade in being the initiate, for whom the occult or secret and hidden, and therefore powerful, lore is the goal. They see the Folkway as a religion, and more, as a mystery religion, akin to Mithraism or Zoroastrianism. Furthermore, they see certain aspects of it as interchangeable with like aspects of other peoples folkways. That, and they see no harm in picking and choosing from amongst the components of our spiritual and cultural heritage to combine them with other spiritual tools and toys. They are the Dumbledores amongst us. They seek nothing less than the manipulation of luck. Knowledge of the inner workings of this clock we call Life, being able to name the gears, to shake hands with the Gods, is one thing. Some, however, seek to manipulate the hands and tweak the mainspring. Todays knowledge of the runes, for instance, owes a debt to Guido von List, the 19th Century magus and author of The Secrets Of The Runes. He was, though, more than a runester. He was an occultist. Along with the runes, he studied the Kabbala, Rosicrucianism, Masonic ritual and history, and delved into the seedier aspects of Pan-Germanic neo-heathenism of his time, involving racial purity to retrieve the psychic powers once held by the Aryans, and avid anti-semitism. Atlantis and invention were components of some of his notions, borrowed from Helena Blavatskys theosophy and given a Viennese accent. Part of what he advanced involved levels of initiation, classes of believers, and an aristocracy of achievement amongst the spiritual elite. Herr von List was well-regarded in his day, and is opinion amongst our Folk today ranges from Guido Who? to near worship. It is well to remember that witches were once sewn up in sealskins and rolled down rocky hills into the sea FOR A REASON. People of the Saga Age understood a good bit of the mechanics of the spiritual better than we do today, having an uninterrupted history living amongst the ethics of the Lore were only today rediscovering. If they would rather snuff someone who might be able to produce a whammy that would give them winning lottery numbers, they mustve had good reason (beyond there not having been lottery in Tenth Century Iceland). Maybe what they understood were the ways of luck. It is something to consider. The Folkway of our people, and its laws as we come together to reconstitute them, are very human and accessible things. Our chieftains serve a very real and very practical, day-to-day ethic. They seek to help people through the affairs of life, of marriage, of interpersonal conduct, and to deal with disputes. Some might posit that such dealings might benefit from a well-crafted spell or a cosmic mickey poured generously into and over the altar, but that is suggesting that right and judicious conduct isnt enough. Why is addressing occultism apropos here? It is because too many, over the years, have dabbled when they shouldve committed. In a discussion of heathen life one soon encounters the law, and attempting to manipulate luck is an attempt to circumvent the law. It is the act of a cheat, of a thief bent on picking lucks locks, of an outlaw. Some would add to luck, some others circumvent it, not by actions according to the rules of the game, but by invocation, invention and recitation of arcane formulae. The Folkway, for some, is a vessel for their dreams of secret wonders. This may be so for some. I wish them luck. HOME | Articles Home | Top Of Page Images and Contents Copyright © Assembly of The Elder Troth 2002 - 2007 or as specified. For communications regarding this website please e-mail webmaster@aetaustralia.org Page maintained by Schmitt Services Last Update: Tuesday, November 6, 2007
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