Welcome to our New Forums!

Our forums have been upgraded and expanded!

The Black Sun of The Slavs by Edward Lonsa (Slavic Fairy Tales. The Waters of Life and Death.)

AristocraticDragon666

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 2, 2022
Messages
1,078
Location
Großdeutscher Reichstag
Website
www.satanisgod.org

Slavic Fairy Tales

The Waters of Life and Death

Now. Extremely popular among the tales of the peoples of Russia and Siberia is the theme of dead and living water. According to Russian legends, they pour dead water on the wounds of the hero and pour the living water on himself, so that his wounds die and he himself gets up alive. They can“t use only living water because hero will get resurrected in his wounded body which will torment and eventually kill him, first they need to pour the wounded parts with dead water so that wounds died. Then his body will became livable and habitable again for his soul to return into it.

Living water, aka the elixir of life, is found in all peoples, and there are two of them: produced by the sacral chakra and produced by the lunar chakra, the pineal gland chakra. The xians stole it, and it surfaced here:

Vv. 37-38 On the last great day of the feast Jesus stood and cried out, saying, "Whoever thirsts, come to me and drink. Whoever believes in me, as the Scripture says, out of his womb will flow rivers of living water.

"From the Womb"-whoever has stolen, knows where immortality comes from. The Sacred and Lunar chakras generate, the Tsar (or Tzar i.e. King) Chakra 666 (known in Russian folk tale as Tzar (i.e. King) Bird because birds symbolized chakras) collects in itself the elixirs, becoming the true Grail containing the drink of immortality.

King Chakra or Tzar Bird is called so because of the connection of birds, swastikas and chakras in Russian mythology going back to neolithic times. Swastika is the ancient symbol of a spinning chakra seen from above as swastika. And the faster it spins the brighter is human’s soul and the higher plans it can achieve, which is symbolized by a flying creature – a bird. The bird can thus “fly away” from death.

See more in the Symbolism of the bird article series in this book.


1734901932378.png

Paleolithic artifact

Here is a picture of the two "waters" in ancient Egyptian frescoes and Tarot cards that go back to ancient Egypt:

1734902042928.png
1734902076729.png
1734902105503.png

Left - Image of the zodiac sign Aquarius from the ancient temple in Dendera (Upper Egypt), center - Tarot card Temperance, right - Tarot card Star

The resurrection of a hero from the dead, the second birth with the Hindus, the mysterious "longevity" with the Chinese, etc. - these are all code words for gaining immortality.

Dead waters you can very well find mentioned in Satanic Alchemical grimoires such as The Secret Book of Artefius, as a fountain of death and youth, youth got after death. Two, man and woman, king and queen lay down into the bath of their death and die, to be resurrected from it forever young. These are waters of death of mortal matter, which is symbolically «wounded» in those Russian legends (wounded meaning mortal, spiritually non-cleansed yet). Usually these heroes are betrayed by evil humans (rotten non-fair elements) and get killed when they are sleeping (unconscious). Then their mystical friend or bride comes to resurrect them.

Slavic Waters of Life and Death are mentioned in Sumerian and Greek legends, as is the symbol of the Sun and Moon. And everywhere they are - again, like the symbol of the Sun and the Moon - associated with the return / resurrection from the dead. "From the dead to the living" is code for "from man to God.

Read more about them in European legends https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Water_of_Life_(German_fairy_tale)


Author: Edward Lonsa
Translator: Edward Lonsa (translated from Russian into English by Edward Lonsa)

Sources:
https://blacksun.deathofcommunism.com/wp-content/uploads/BSS.pdf
 
Very interesting, thank you for translating this article.
 
Another great post. It reminded me of fairytales collected by Alexander Afanasyev that I read as a child, some of which mentioned this living and dead water theme. Thanx, now I have to find them for my kids (unfortunately they don't understand neither Russian nor Serbian [sigh]). It was a huge collection of brown hardcover books with some kind of plushy material.
 
Another great post. It reminded me of fairytales collected by Alexander Afanasyev that I read as a child, some of which mentioned this living and dead water theme. Thanx, now I have to find them for my kids (unfortunately they don't understand neither Russian nor Serbian [sigh]). It was a huge collection of brown hardcover books with some kind of plushy material.
When I was a little kid, my parents used to read me bedtime stories.

In Russia, Serbia, and other Slavic countries, especially our parents' generation, there was a tradition of reading bedtime stories to children, especially when there were no new gadgets.
 
When I was a little kid, my parents used to read me bedtime stories.

In Russia, Serbia, and other Slavic countries, especially our parents' generation, there was a tradition of reading bedtime stories to children, especially when there were no new gadgets.
Indeed, some of the fondest memories from early childhood that slowly start to fade away.

Can't help but feel nostalgia for that world sometimes. It quickly passes though.
 

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

Back
Top