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Slavic Gods and Satanism

Jarovit1389

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Sep 8, 2022
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Hello, I am very new to JoS and began looking into website quite recently. I have been a Slavic Pagan for around 2 years, and I was compelled by the proof and information put forward on the JoS website. I created this account to ask for the opinions of Satanists on the "true" identities of the Slavic gods.

The Slavic gods are the following:

Dazhbog/Dabog: The Slavic sky father, said to be the creator of all other Gods and spirits, concerned only with celestial affairs. He carries the role of a fatherly and ancestral figure.
He is almost unanimously misinterpreted as the Solar deity, however evidence suggests that he wasn't.
Interesting detail: He was called the "leader of the demons" in Serbian folklore.

Perun: The second most important god, the thunderer, bringer of rain and the one who controls all celestial phenomena. He is said to fight with Veles, the cthonic deity. He is a god of order and justice.

Veles: The cthonic god, ruler of the underworld or the land of the dead, imagined as a green meadow in an eternal state of spring. He is also the god of wealth, chiefly livestock, cattle, and grain. He is associated with forests and caves, and his animals are the snake/dragon, the bear and the wolf.

Jarilo: The God of spring/summer, plants and fertility, said to come to the earth from the underworld and unlock the spring, as well as spread fertility and good health on the earth, and cause animals to mate. He is also connected to love and sexual fertility and reproduction, as many of the rituals performed on his day are of erotic nature.

Mara/Morana: At first a Goddess of the spring, abundance, and fertility, consort of Jarilo. Their marrige and love is at it's peak on the summer solstice. However at the end of the harvest Jarilo dies, and Mara turns into Morana, goddess of death and winter, only to be reborn the next spring, with the ritual of burning, tearing or drowning an effigy of her.

Mokosh: Mother and earth goddess, consort of Perun and protector of females and a goddess who presides over woman's works.

Rod/Usud and Rozhanitse/Sudjenice: Sudjenice/Rozhanitse are comparable to the Greek fates or the Norse Nornes, they are spirits imagined as three women that create a man's fate upon his birth. Rod/Usud does the same, being imagined as an old man who lives at the end of the world

Hors: Likely the Slavic god of the Sun. His particular functions are unknown, but we will just list him as the Slavic Solar deity for simplicity.


More important spirits:
Vile: Essentially fairies, feminine spirits which inhabit forests and the wilderness, which may do beneficial or harmful things to people.
Gazdik/Domovoy: Spirit of the progenitor of the family, said to watch over the people in the house, imagined either as a white snake (Gazdik) or as an elf-like creature (Domovoy)
Voden/Vodanoy: Spirits which inhabit the waters
Bes: An evil spirit of any kind

So what are the Satanic equivalents to the Slavic gods/goddesses and spirits?
 
Jarovit1389 said:
Hello, I am very new to JoS and began looking into website quite recently. I have been a Slavic Pagan for around 2 years, and I was compelled by the proof and information put forward on the JoS website. I created this account to ask for the opinions of Satanists on the "true" identities of the Slavic gods.

The Slavic gods are the following:

Dazhbog/Dabog: The Slavic sky father, said to be the creator of all other Gods and spirits, concerned only with celestial affairs. He carries the role of a fatherly and ancestral figure.
He is almost unanimously misinterpreted as the Solar deity, however evidence suggests that he wasn't.
Interesting detail: He was called the "leader of the demons" in Serbian folklore.

Perun: The second most important god, the thunderer, bringer of rain and the one who controls all celestial phenomena. He is said to fight with Veles, the cthonic deity. He is a god of order and justice.

Veles: The cthonic god, ruler of the underworld or the land of the dead, imagined as a green meadow in an eternal state of spring. He is also the god of wealth, chiefly livestock, cattle, and grain. He is associated with forests and caves, and his animals are the snake/dragon, the bear and the wolf.

Jarilo: The God of spring/summer, plants and fertility, said to come to the earth from the underworld and unlock the spring, as well as spread fertility and good health on the earth, and cause animals to mate. He is also connected to love and sexual fertility and reproduction, as many of the rituals performed on his day are of erotic nature.

Mara/Morana: At first a Goddess of the spring, abundance, and fertility, consort of Jarilo. Their marrige and love is at it's peak on the summer solstice. However at the end of the harvest Jarilo dies, and Mara turns into Morana, goddess of death and winter, only to be reborn the next spring, with the ritual of burning, tearing or drowning an effigy of her.

Mokosh: Mother and earth goddess, consort of Perun and protector of females and a goddess who presides over woman's works.

Rod/Usud and Rozhanitse/Sudjenice: Sudjenice/Rozhanitse are comparable to the Greek fates or the Norse Nornes, they are spirits imagined as three women that create a man's fate upon his birth. Rod/Usud does the same, being imagined as an old man who lives at the end of the world

Hors: Likely the Slavic god of the Sun. His particular functions are unknown, but we will just list him as the Slavic Solar deity for simplicity.


More important spirits:
Vile: Essentially fairies, feminine spirits which inhabit forests and the wilderness, which may do beneficial or harmful things to people.
Gazdik/Domovoy: Spirit of the progenitor of the family, said to watch over the people in the house, imagined either as a white snake (Gazdik) or as an elf-like creature (Domovoy)
Voden/Vodanoy: Spirits which inhabit the waters
Bes: An evil spirit of any kind

So what are the Satanic equivalents to the Slavic gods/goddesses and spirits?
Hello brother, welcome here :)
The pagan Gods must not necessary be a real entity, but an allegory too. Ever heard of a story of Perun (sky, thunder) fighting Veles (earth, nature)?

Dogodine u Prizrenu!
 

Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Satan

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