AristocraticDragon666
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Slavic Fairy Tales
Baba Yaga
The G letter in Russian and other Slavic languages is oftenly associated with Sanskrit J or Y it also can be found in English J or Y. Russian word "бог" («god») is then derived from Russian word bojan or bajan, also known in Ancient Slavic as Badyan, Badnyak, Bayan (Boyan, Bayan or Bayun). This all comes from Sanskrit root bhaj. You can read about it more in the article:
Xians stole our God
So there is this Yadj root in Sanskrit that in Slavic languages turned into Yag, which later was used in the word Yaga in «Baba Yaga» and the alchemical meaning of which is best laid out in the Vedic creation myth, where the world is created from the four elements, for details look here:
Four Casts: the Secret of the Scolots
Iranian Yasa or Yasna comes from the root Yadj as well, because g / j or y are often changed by z or s in Slavic languages, and this makes it familiar to such names as Yessa or Jessa, from which the jewish kleptomaniac on the stick was later stolen, see more about this in the chapter:
Div / Jason’
Yag and Yez, G and Z accordingly, and also S in this root are interconnected among the Slavs themselves. Jessa or Yeiza are just different versions of pronouncation of Yaga. Baba-Yaga (Yaga the Old Lady) holds the same root and can be easily substituted by the Serpent names such as Yeznik (Есизник), who is also known as Znik (зник) and Propal (пропал). The last ones are how the Polish called the Div (in Roman: Divus, in Sanscrit: Dyaus, who is our Devil), while Div IS a Serpent and Divian people are Serpents and Shining Ones. Yesiznik (Есизник) => Yezi-baba (Ези-баба) => Jessa (Джесса).
Baba-Yaga was known as the Mother of all Serpents. Iranian word Yezidi or Yasidi came from the same root (which means Devil-worshippers), and the word Oozh (the name of the little harmless snake in Russian), originates from the word Ooshas (With Oo as in root) Ooshas is the name of the Vedic Goddess of Dawn.
Yaga is more etymologically problematic and there exists no clear consensus among scholars about its meaning. In the 19th century, Alexander Afanasyev proposed the derivation of Proto-Slavic *ož and Sanskrit ahi ('serpent'). This etymology has been explored by 20th-century scholars. Related terms appear in Serbian and Croatian jeza ('horror', 'shudder', 'chill'), Slovene jeza ('anger'), Old Czech jězě ('witch', 'legendary evil female being'), modern Czech jezinka ('wicked wood nymph', 'dryad'), and Polish jędza ('witch', 'evil woman', 'fury'). The term appears in Old Church Slavonic as jęza/jędza ('disease'). In other Indo-European languages the element iaga has been linked to Lithuanian engti ('to abuse (continuously)', 'to belittle', 'to exploit'), Old English inca ('doubt', 'worry", 'pain'), and Old Norse ekki ('pain', 'worry'). - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baba_Yaga
*The hairy caterpillar or worm is also a well-known code word for the Serpent that "eats" mortal flesh in Western tradition. The image of Baba-Yaga is very close to the Western understanding of the "Witch" flying on a broomstick, her astral flight is a symbol of her spiritual freedom.
«Baba-Yaga, the oldest of all witches» is the same Russian traditional description of her as the «Serpent, the oldest of all serpents» or «Bee-mother, the mother to all bees» and many other word combinations like “someone, oldest of his rtibe” or “someone, father to his tribe” - is the code word to some spiritual allegory connected to this. In Mahabharata there are a lot of such things such as Kadru – the mother of all serpents. Traditionally Baba-Yaga was one of the group of beings that «concealed the celestial bodies» (i.e. Chakras). That’s why she is associated with the Flood that raised its waters so high that they concealed the celestial bodies, see more information in the chapters:
Female Side
The Whale-fish
The End of the World Is Stollen
Baba Yaga has the hypostasis of the "Woman on the Beast 666" in the image of Kozloreisa (Kozl = goat in Russian, raiz = raid = to ride, to travel using a transport, rune raido, Redi-, Reda- or Rado-gast, the Sun, the Sun-God ruling his Chariot, the Black Sun), who rode on a goat similar to the way Ivan (the traditional name of the hero of Russian fairy-tales) rides the Grey Wolf, Baba Yaga flies on a stupa or numerous characters of oriental fairy tales fly on a magic carpet. Any object she rides on represents the Black Sun, it is the Wheel of Fortune, and she herself is Fortune.
Some Tarot decks has this personal for the Chariot card and some – even for the Wheel of Fortune:
The Wheel of Fortune, Mary El Tarot
Baba Yaga is also constantly associated with the number three. The way to her hut traditionally passes through the crossroads of three roads. Hecate is also associated with the number three.
The three assistants of Baba Yaga are three horsemen - black ("My Dark Night"), red ("My Red Sun") and white (My Clear Dawn [the phenomenon that unites the sun and night]), there is Ida, Pingala and Sushumna uniting them, respectively. Channels of feminine (black), masculine (red) and the energy uniting them (white).
Illustrations by Ivan Bilibin for the fairy tale Vasilisa the Beautiful.
Here the channel of male energy Pingala is depicted in yellow color and is called the Solar channel. My Red Sun. My Dark Night is called the Moon channel.
Red, Black and White are the traditional colors of Nazi Germany and Ancient Egypt for this very reason.
The flag of Germany 1933-1935
The flag of Germany 1935-1945
The flag of Egypt
The Crossroads of Three Roads is the Moon Chakra in the center of the head where all three channels intersect.
Baba Yaga's conduit club is in many fairy tales of many nations and signifies the Black or Alchemical Sun, which rolls counterclockwise or "rises in the West". It is also her stupa, in which gold or immortality is traditionally ground. Stupas, millers and blacksmiths grind or forge all sorts of good things such as happiness, health, life and more. Also, the image of the ball or kolobok as a rolling ball often overlaps with the image of the Philosopher's Stone and its journey through the human soul. For more on these allegories, see the articles:
The Undivided Chervonets or Pentacle
Flying ship / flying carpet
Mill of immortality
The Feminine Side (about the stupa)
And also the image of a ball leading to other worlds is associated with Ariadne's ball and the astral thread connecting the astral traveler with his body.
Author: Edward Lonsa
Translator: Edward Lonsa (translated from Russian into English by Edward Lonsa)
Sources:
https://blacksun.deathofcommunism.com/wp-content/uploads/BSS.pdf