Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Leif Eiriksson Day

In 986, Norwegian-born Eirik Thorvaldsson, known as Eirik the Red, explored and colonized the southwestern part of Greenland. It was his son, Leif Eiriksson, who became the first European to set foot on the shores of North America, and the first explorer of Norwegian extraction now accorded worldwide recognition.

The date and place of Leif Eiriksson's birth has not been definitely established, but it is believed that he grew up on Greenland. The Saga of Eric the Red relates that he set sail for Norway in 999, served King Olav Trygvasson for a term, and was sent back to Greenland one year later to bring Christianity to its people.

There are two schools of thought as to the subsequent course of events. One of these is that Eiriksson, en route for Greenland, came off course, and quite by chance came to the shores of northeastern America in the year 1000, thus preceding Columbus by nearly 500 years. However, according to the Greenland Saga, generally believed to be trustworthy, Eiriksson's discovery was no mere chance. The saga tells that he fitted out an expedition and sailed west, in an attempt to gather proof of the claims made by the Icelandic trader Bjarni Herjulfsson. In 986 Herjulfsson, driven far off course by a fierce storm between Iceland and Greenland, had reported sighting hilly, heavily forested land far to the west. Herjulfsson, though believably the first European to see the continent of North America, never set foot on its shores. Leif Eiriksson, encouraged by the current talk of potential discoveries, and the constant need of land to farm, bought Bjarni's ship and set off on his quest of discovery.

He appears to have followed Bjarni's route in reverse, making three landfalls. The first of these he named Helluland, or Flat-Stone Land, now generally regarded as having been Labrador. The second was Markland, or Wood Land, possibly Newfoundland. The exact location of the third, which was named Vinland, is a matter of scholastic controversy, but it could have been as far north as northern Newfoundland or as far south as Cape Cod or even beyond this.

Eiriksson and his men spent the winter in Vinland, at a place they named Leifsbud-ir, returning to Greenland the following year, 1001.

It was left to Eiriksson's brother, Thorvald to make the next voyage to the new-found territory, for strange as it may seem, Leif Eiriksson never returned there. Subsequent attempts at settlement of Vinland were unsuccessful, due to strong friction between the Viking settlers and the native North Americans.

Though many still regard Christopher Columbus as the discoverer of the New World, Eiriksson's right to this title received the stamp of official approval in the USA when in 1964 President Lyndon B. Johnson, backed by a unanimous Congress, proclaimed October 9th "Leif Ericson Day" in commemoration of the first arrival of a European on North American soil.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

In Defense of the Folkish View



Stephen A. McNallen

Biology, culture, and spirituality are all intimately connected, and  any attempt to separate them is doomed to frustration. The ancestry   of the group, what the group does, and the spiritual perception of the group are not three different things, but only aspects of a greater whole.

This Folk-centered essence of Ásatrú often comes under attack from those who are new to our ancestral ways, or who have not shaken off the conditioning of modern culture. The idea that religion, culture, and biology are intertwined runs against the political dogma of our day, and is sometimes labeled "racist" by those who do not understand the deeper truths involved. Sometimes, those who consider themselves Ásatrú are the first to criticize the Folkish view. Since these are people who, like us, follow the Aesir and Vanir it is all the more important to respond fully to their objections.

Four Arguments
Their criticisms take several fairly predictable forms. I have summed up some of their arguments in the paragraphs that follow, and provided some possible answers.

1. "The Vikings spread their seed far and wide on an equal opportunity basis, with no regard to race, religion, or culture."

First of all, this is not really true. The Viking colony in Greenland left many skeletons which have been exhaustively studied by scientists who marveled that the Greenlanders seem not to have intermarried with the natives. Back home in Northern Europe, it is true, Nordics and Celts married and intermingled rather freely, and the genetics of Iceland shows very strong Irish intermixture. However, the Scandinavians and the Celts are two very closely related branches of the Indo-European family. Biologically and culturally, they are very much kin.

Secondly, the Vikings are hardly ideal role models for Asatru. The Viking Age is very late in the history of the Germanic people. It was a time when our traditional culture was being eroded by outside forces, a time of change and cosmopolitanism. To judge Asatru by the behavior of a Viking adventurer in Byzantium, for example, makes as much sense as judging Christianity by the actions of an American sailor on port leave in Manila. Neither is likely to epitomize the religious values practiced in Norway or Nebraska, respectively. A fire in the loins should not be mistaken for spiritual enlightenment.

2. "All men and women are descendants from Ask and Embla, the primordial man and women who were found, as tree trunks on the strand, by Odin, Hoenir and Lodur and given life. Thus, Asatru is the legacy of all humans."

This is part of the lore of the Northern people. There are thousands of such stories told by cultures both ancient and modern, from the Old Testament to the interior of the Amazon today.
Humans in their tribal state were extremely ethnocentric, and often their various groupings bear names that mean something like "the true people" or "the real human beings" to distinguish themselves from their neighbors. Likewise, their creation myths tend to be ethnocentric and to pertain only to themselves - not to all of humankind, with which they are not particularly concerned.

To argue that all humans are descended of Ask and Embla is to say that the myths of every other native culture are wrong, and that only ours is right. From the Australian Outback to the depths of Africa, groups have their own explanations for how they came to be. It is the height of arrogance to assume that our stories apply to them, and that the sacred tales of their own people are false. Unless we assume that their lore is inferior and inaccurate, we are forced to the logical conclusion that each group is right - so long as it speaks to its own people, and no other.

Indeed, to say that our creation story is the only true one is to deny the existence and validity of other peoples' Gods - for it imposes Odin, Hoenir, and Lodur upon these other folk, shoving their Gods rudely out of the picture and negating their own religious explanations for the nature of things. Most Asatruar would not support such religious imperialism. To say that ours is the "one, true" story of human origin smacks not only of religious intolerance but...well, racism!

3. "The Gods and Goddesses have sex with all sorts of beings - dwarves, giants, and the like. This is more evidence that discrimination, particularly in the realm of relationships, sex, and marriage, has no basis in Norse culture!"

The stories of our Gods and Goddesses are written down in the Prose Edda and the Poetic Edda. The Eddas are valuable resources, but they are symbolic, not historical. Their contents were subject to all sorts of factors that affect the way we use them religiously - human interpretation and bias being the main ones!
Nothing in our lore suggests that the Eddas are meant to be taken literally, and to do so puts us in the same category as those fundamentalist Christians who take the Bible, word for word, as the exact and infallible word of their God. To take the tales of our Gods and Goddesses as lessons urging us to mate outside our kind (or outside our species!) is as wrong as the Christian who argues that the Genesis creation story should be taken as scientific truth. Myth is bigger than that.

4. "Asatru is a religion, and joining it is no different than becoming an Episcopalian, a Muslim, or a Wiccan. Asatru is no more 'European' than Islam is 'Arabic' or Buddhism is 'Asian.'"

This is a modern fantasy. No indigenous group really believes that its religion is just a set of practices and abstract concepts, separate from membership in the community, to be adopted or set aside at will by outsiders. People may decide to become a Baptist or a Lutheran, but no one looks in the mirror while brushing their teeth in the morning, and thinks "Hey, I'm tired of being a Catholic. I think I'll become a Lakota Sioux."

Native religion is not something apart from the life of the tribe. Religion, politics, economics, values and customs are all part of one thing. There is no real separation among them. Taken as a whole, this aggregate is the "Way" of the group; religion becomes one particular fraction of "the way the tribe is in the world, and what the tribe does."

Some religions, in contrast, are not based on the experience of a particular group, but on abstract philosophy or a revelation divorced from any tribal or national group. The monotheistic religions are the best examples of these. One can drift from Methodism to Mormonism, or from Catholicism to Islam, based on abstract reasoning or emotional attachment. It is here, not in indigenous belief, that the proposition of our critics finds its natural home. Those who attack Asatru because of its Folkish basis still carry with them the mental assumptions of Christianity and the other philosophical, universalist sects. 

Shedding the Psychic Remnants of Christianity
Most of the lore-based arguments against our Folkish worldview are based on the four presented above. In general, they show a common thread - namely, Christian thinking!
First, the idea that all humans spring from Ask and Embla may be appealing from a simplistic viewpoint, but it implies the non-existence of other peoples' Gods and thus reflects the same religious imperialism we find in historical Christianity.

Likewise, to propose that the Aesir and Vanir have sex outside their "race" (species?) is to use the Eddic texts in the literal way
that fundamentalist Christian uses the Bible.

Finally, to suggest that religions can be chosen in the same way one chooses a hat or a new car is to divorce the group of people from their Way, which is characteristic of the monotheistic religions.
Those who reject the Folkish viewpoint often accuse us of not really being true to the Aesir and Vanir. Ironically, though, a closer look shows their arguments against us to be much more in line with Christianity than with the inherently tribal and ethnocentric nature of indigenous religions!

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Freyfaxi

Freyfaxi marked the time of the harvest in ancient Iceland. Today the Ásatrú observe this date as a celebration of their harvest with blot to Freyr and a grand Feast from the gardens and the fields.

Today the Hall of Hammerhof will hold a blot to celebrate the harvest and commemorate the harvests of the past. We shall bake bread and drink ale. We will be cooking on the fie and enjoying the day.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Stikklestad Day: Olaf the Lawbreaker

Stikklestad Day: Olaf the Lawbreaker (“St. Olaf”) was killed at the battle of Stikklestad on this date in the year 1030 AD. Olaf acquired a reputation for killing, maiming, and exiling his fellow Norwegians who would not convert to Christianity, and for carrying an army with him in violation of the law to help him accomplish his oppression. Today honor the Ásatrú martyrs who died rather then submit to gray slavery. Also honor the warriors who brought justice to the Lawbreaker.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Ásatrú Community Center

YAC Community Center Logo Idea
Most religious organizations have some sort of community center. I live in the City of Providence in a mixed race neighborhood, and on every street corner there is some sort of Christian community center. Some of these centers take the form of a church, others are old storefronts that have been turned into christian missions. There are also religious bookstores selling Christian propaganda to the masses. Christians, Jews, and Muslims have community centers, even Buddhists have community centers, why don't we? 

The Ásatrú community has taken on the idea that promoting religion is bad. This is due to the fact that most of us were raised as Christians or without religion because Christianity was "forced" upon us. My parents were and are Christians, Episcopal to be precise, and they took me to church. They did not make me go because they are evil people, it was because it was their belief and they wanted me to be a part of that. It was their way of promoting their religion. When I was old enough to think for myself I told my parents why I did not think Christianity was right for me. Luckily I had understanding parents who allowed me to find my own path.

As Ásatrúar we should teach our children about our beliefs and bring them into the folds of Ásatrú. We should be proud of what we believe in and wear our religion on our sleeves. We should promote and be present within our communities. Now I am not saying to go knocking on people's doors on Saturday mornings pushing the Ásatrú version of the Watchtower, but we should feel open enough to talk to non Heathens and those interested in Ásatrú. We should be beacons in the community for those who are trying to find their way back to their Trú Gods. 

The YAC does not have a community center. The idea has always been on the table, but community centers are expensive to open and maintain. The first thing that needs to be done is to get non-profit religious status from both the State and Federal government. This can be costly and complicated. You will need capital, and possibly a lawyer, accountant, or someone to cipher the government forms! The YAC is in the process of doing just this. 

I have proposed that we start planning for a future Ásatrú community center. A center that will be a model for Ásatrú centers throughout the the United States. It is my belief that these centers should be a place were Ásatrúar can come together to worship and volunteer their time in support of their community and Folk. We could have a rec-room, worship center, a conference hall, and a small store the possibility are endless.

Making a strong community presence for our Folk is highly important if we want to grow as a community.Our Folk need a place to gather and celebrate our heritage and beliefs.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Friga, the Mother Goddess

Frigga (Frih-gah) is the matron goddess of the home and of the mysteries of the married woman. She is the goddess of motherhood, fertility, love, marriage and housework. Particularly concerned with keeping social order. She is called on for blessings when women are giving birth and for help in matters of traditional women's crafts (spinning, weaving, cooking, sewing) and the magic worked thereby. Mothers who want to protect their children can also call on Frigga. In olden days, this was especially the case with sons going out to battle, for whom their mothers would weave or sew special protective items. Matron of good, strong marriage, childbirth and child rearing, as well as the various necessary crafts of the home- spinning is especially attributed to her care, hence the distaff/spindle are long-held symbols of the beloved Goddess from Heathen times. She is also a seeress, who knows the destiny and fate of all, although she seldom reveals it. While Freyja seems to enjoy the greatest popularity within preserved sources, it is undoubtedly Frigga who is highest of all Goddesses. And despite the likeness of names and a somewhat similar relationship to Odin, Frigga should not be confused with Freyja, who shares none of her essential traits. 

Monday, July 2, 2012

Mythology - Eddas and Sagas

What is mythology and why do we as Ásatrúar use the word to describe our religion? The word myth has come o represent a body of lies, a tall-tale like Paul Bunyan  and his blue ox or Johnny Appleseed. This is not to say that myths are just stories devoid of any truth. Oral histories passed down for generations, long before hey were written, tend to become exaggerated and a bit skewed over time (I think we have all played the telephone game as children.). This does not mean that they are any less valuable to the listener than the 100% truth. The ancient orators who told the histories to the people used poetry, artistic license, and other means in order to educate and entertain.

The Eddas of Ásatrú were written in the 13th century by Christians. Based upon this they are corrupted with Christian influence and we must take that into account when using them. They are NOT an Ásatrú bible. The 13th century was not a time when Christians were kind to heathens and "devil" worshipers. Snorri Sturluson (1179 – 23 September 1241) author of the Poetic Edda was an Icelandic historian, poet, and politician. From what we know of him he was concerned with the truth of his ancestry, but this does not mean he truly discovered it or interpenetrated it.

The Sagas, which are so often used as biblical like texts in our troth, are no different than that of the Eddas. These stories were orally passed and eventually transcribed into manuscripts by Christian in the 13th century. In many cases the heroes convert to Christianity. This conversion makes for many contradictions within the sagas. A Heathen hero leaves his home in  search of glory and returns to his Heathen homeland a Christian and no-one seems to care. What? Why are so many of our heroes converting? Because these stories were written down by Christians.

I do not believe that a myth is necessarily a bad thing. The myth of Ásatrú are no different than that of the Christians, Jews, and Muslims. The Christian Bible, the Torah, and the Koran are all mythology and no different than our Eddas and Sagas. Myths are unsubstantiated stories based upon oral histories that have been transcribed. As Heathens we need to remember this. We need to take each of the Sagas and the Eddas as what they are and try to examine and remove the Christian influenced elements. Read the Sagas and the Eddas but do not try to make them into biblical texts, they are not. They are stories, mythology, from the days of yore that can help us understand history.

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Saturday: Family Adventure Day

Family are the key to building strong Ásatrú communities and bonds with the Gods and Goddesses. In the book  A Heathen Family Devotional: Odinism Begins at Home by Wyatt Kaldenberg he suggests ways in which o build strong family bonds that create strong bond within Ásatrú. One way he suggests is by making Saturday a family adventure day.

Take the day to spend time doing fun stuff with your family. Go for a bike ride, go on a hike, go to the zoo or a museum, have fun with them. You will find it helps to create bonds, communication, and a strong sense of family, self-worth, and love.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Ásatrú and Odinism


Is there a difference between Ásatrú and Odinism? Well I guess that depends on who you talk to. Like any religion there are sects or divisions with in the overall belief system. Take a look at christianity; within Christendom you have the two major divisions catholic and protestant. Then each of these has their own sects, protestantism having the most. Ásatrú has its own divisions, as it did throughout history. Like all religious divides these divisions have one thing in common, a central religious base. In our case Ásatrú encompasses all of Norse/Germanic Heathenry.
The ancients had no word for their religion, it just was. It was a part of their being and their every day life it was all around them. Using the term "Asatru" in reference to heathen ways is fairly recent in origin, as the Icelandic folk chose this term for their reconstructed religion in the 1970's. Ásatrú in modern Icelandic compound derived from Áss, which refers to the Æsir, an Old Norse term for the gods, and trú, literally "faith", roughly meaning "belief in the Gods".
Odinism is a sect of Ásatrú. Odinism has a slight difference in its ‘system’ of worship than other areas of Ásatrú but at its core it is the same. Odinists are hard core Ásatrúar. They, like many Ásatrúar, believe that the Gods and Goddesses are 100% real, they are their friends, and they are their allies. I am an Odinist but I am also an Ásatrúar.
The first time I heard the word Ásatrú was in the late 1990s. I never saw the word Ásatrú in any books on the subject of Heathenry until this point. However the claim is that the word was in use.  When I rediscovered my troth in the 1980s the term Odinism was used to describe my beliefs, then the word Teutonic appeared, followed by Ásatrú. I use the term Ásatrú as blanket coverage for Norse/Germanic Heathenry.
We named ourselves Yggdrasil Ásatrú Community because we view ourselves as our own little world tree with Ásatrú Halls upon its branches. YAC promotes the growth of Ásatrú no matter the sect. Our Halls represent Ásatrú with differences in their Ásatrú beliefs and traditions. Our members all come together as kinsmen to celebrate what is collectively known as Ásatrú.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Midsummer 2012


This is the longest day and the shortest night of the year: Now Sunna begins its ling decline, sliding into the darkness which will culminate six months from now at Yule. Identifying the sun with the brightness of Baldur, we celebrate in honor of both. Hold blot to Baldur and High Feast. This was the traditional time for holding the AlThing in ancient times.

Today we hold our Midsummer celebration. The cooking fires have been lit and the meat is smokes and cooks. Ale will flow and we shall hail the day, and Sunna's light. We will fest in the early evening and enjoy the day. As the sun sets we will light the fires, hold a Blot and Sumble.

We made a sun-wreath from flowers and grapevines, which we will burn in honor or Sunna and the Gods and Goddesses. This is a glorious day for or kinsmen.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Our Heathen Children

The welfare of our children is one of many reasons I am Heathen. What is more important than our children? Yet, you have these children out there that are completely ignored by their parents. The kids grow up alienated, alone, and with no guidance. Some of them become frustrated and self-medicate with drugs and alcohol. Some build bombs and stockpile guns in their own homes without their parents even noticing – a school shooting or murder spree just on the horizon. 

It is a sign of our decaying culture that parents have abandoned their own children. Yes, they clothe them and feed them, but emotionally they withhold time and attention to pursue their own selfish goals or entertainment.

We should share what is important to us with our children. We should go to parent- teacher conferences, ask our children how school went everyday, help with school parties if we can, or volunteer in their classroom. We should take them to museums, historic locations, sporting events, fairs, festivals and learning opportunities. We should share our faith with them, and teach them Heathen beliefs and Heathen values. We should hug them, and kiss them, and cuddle up with them to watch television now and again. We should take them to Heathen events and Heathen gatherings.

The most important thing in our lives should be our children. A house can burn down. We can lose our job. People can betray us. We can wreck a car, or suffer an injury. We can survive all that pretty well if forced to do so. But children hold a special place in our lives. They are our legacy. They are the future of our Folk. Heathenry is the answer to the widespread emotional abandonment of children within our failing culture, and our children are the future of our native Folkway.

From the book Heathen Families
“Written and Copyrighted in 2011 by Mark Stinson,
Used with Permission, heathengods.com.”
Published by Jotun's Bane Kindred
Temple of Our Heathen Gods
http://heathengods.com
http://www.heathenfables.com

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Mead!

I have tried a lot of mead over the years and what I have found is that most of the commercially available mead is not very good. Some, such as the readily available Chaucer's Mead, are acceptable and now a days can be found in most liquor stores. Viking Blod is the best mead on the market, and priced as such. Let's face it good mead is going to cost more than mass-produced mead.  

The best mead I have ever had was handcrafted by a home-brewer. There is just something about a handcrafted brew made by a person who takes the time to carefully craft the perfect drink. This year year we will be crafting our own Yggdrasil mead. The honey will be from local farms and carefully selected. We hope that our first attempt at the crafting of mead will be a success.

The mead of poetry is a mythical beverage that whoever "drinks becomes a skald or scholar" to recite any information and solve any question. Mead is especially associated with Odin who gained the the Mead of Poetry through deception from Gunnlöð. Given this mead is used in many Ásatrú blóts and rituals.
Gunnlod sat me in the golden seat,
Poured me precious mead:
Ill reward she had from me for that,
For her proud and passionate heart,
Her brooding foreboding spirit.
What I won from her I have well used:
I have waxed in wisdom since I came back,
bringing to Asgard Odhroerir,
the sacred draught.
Hardly would I have come home alive
From the garth of the grim troll,
Had Gunnlod not helped me, the good woman,
Who wrapped her arms around me.
 
~Havamal


Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Preparing for Midsummer

Midsummer takes place at the Summer Solstice (around 21st June) and serves as the highpoint of the year.  Midsummer is the longest day of the year and the shortest night - a time to celebrate life and love before the nights begin to grow in length once more. It is a powerful night to perform magic to win love and is a night where many bonfires should be lit. Sometimes true folk who wish for a blessing leap over these fires. Modern heathens tend to dedicate their Midsummer festivals to Tyr (as God of the Irminsul), Balder the Shining God and Sunna the Sun. 

Some celebrate Midsummer by remaining awake all night to mark the shortest night of the year, then at sunrise perform a "Greeting of Sunna" and a blot to her. Another midsummer custom is the rolling of a flaming wagon wheel down a hill to mark the turning of the wheel of the year. If fire would otherwise be a hazard, one could parade a wheel covered with candles for similar effect. It is also a time for general merriment and in the Scandinavian countries many of what we know as the traditional May Day rituals such as May Poles and Morris Dances were celebrated at Midsummer.

We mark this day as sacred to the Goddess Sunna, who is literally the sun.  We will spend the day preparing along with playing period games, and hold period competitions. Followed by our AlThing, blot, sumbel, feasting and drinking.

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Day of Remembrance for Sigurd the Volsung June 9


Sigurd is the model Germanic hero. His wooing of the Valkyrie Brynhild, the winning of the treasure of the Nibelungs, and the constant theme of Odinic initiation that weaves itself throughout his story are priceless parts of our Ásatrú heritage, that provide endless material for contemplation and inspiration for action.
June 9th is the heathen day of remembrance for Sigurd the Volsing, the great and noble Teutonic hero. Sigurd wooed the valkyrie Brynhild and won the treasure of the Nibelungs. He is noted for the constant theme of Odinic initiation that weaves itself throughout his story. His heroic lore is a valued element of Asatru heritage, provides cause for contemplation and inspiration for action-based life on this day.

Friday, June 8, 2012

Lindisfarne Day


Lindisfarne Day June 8 2012
"This year came dreadful fore-warnings over the land of the Northumbrians, terrifying the people most woefully: these were immense sheets of light rushing through the air, and whirlwinds, and fiery dragons flying across the firmament. These tremendous tokens were soon followed by a great famine: and not long after, on the sixth day before the ides of January in the same year, the harrowing inroads of heathen men made lamentable havoc in the church of God in Holy Island, by rapine and slaughter." 

The popularly accepted date for the Viking raid on Lindisfarne is June 8, a much more favorable time of year for a Viking sailing expedition. The AD 793 attack on Lindisfarne monastery was the first recorded Viking raid on the English coast and marked the beginning of the end of Northumbria’s Golden Age. 

On this day in the year 793 CE many heathens commemorate the three Viking ships that raided the Isle of Lindisfarne, officially opening what is the Viking Age. Toasts are made to the brave warriors who began the noble resistance of the alien invasion of the Northlands and sought rightful revenge for the slaughter of the Saxons by Charlamange.

There are many theories to why the Viking raiders chose Lindisfarne for this first attack. The most reasonable explanation is that it was unprotected and held great wealth. Under this theory we would have to assume that the Norsemen had some inside information about their target. As heathens we must always remember that in our celebration of this day the overall goal of our Viking brothers was to return home with treasure.