Survive the Jive: All-feed
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This narrative is outrageous and absurd.If Sami are to be classed as indigenous, then so must all the other European peoples, since as the video below shows, the Sami are one of the LEAST indigenous peoples of Europe!!
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Mattias Jakobsson professor of genetics at Uppsala University explains that Sami have Asian DNA - it comes from Asia, not Europe, so no they are not indigenous in the strictest sense, although they do also have indigenous European DNA too.
"This isn’t a battle you can sit out or cover up with a veneer of neutrality. The choice is Left or Right, tradition or upheaval. Institutions cannot be left to their own devices,"

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/03/01/culture-war-power-struggle-institutions/
Might be dropping the Anglo Saxon paganism video this weekend
Comparative mythology ands folklore reveals an ancient Indo-European anxiety about snakes stealing milk. The erroneous belief that snakes like milk is widespread from Europe to India! https://survivethejive.blogspot.com/2018/05/the-milk-drinking-serpent.html
Forwarded from Wäinölä 🇫🇮
An integral part of the Finnish yard and village community was a tree known as pitämyspuu. They were sacred trees that brought good luck to the household and foretold future events, hence sacrificial offerings were made to them.

It was also customary to build the #sauna close to a tree, or plant one next to it. This served the practical purpose of shielding the users of the sauna from curious eyes, and it also helped the building blend in with the surrounding nature.
Forwarded from PRIMAL NOISE (D.W. McDonnell)
There is direct evidence of Saxon conceptions of the elvish race mentioned in several medical texts as the causes of illnesses, mainly internal pains or mental disturbances. Elf-shot’ was a recognised cause of disease in later times and was a major diagnosis in the Saxon texts such as Lacnunga. A selection of herbs were employed in treating both humans and livestock afflicted with these maladies.  The medical texts also refer to aelfsogetha- which appears to be something like bronchitis or heartburn- and to aelfsidenn, which literally means elf-enchantment and seems to be a night fever or nightmares. There is too a cure for waeteraelfaedle (water-elf sickness) which is characterised by the patient’s livid nails, watering eyes and downcast looks.
Cool post but it is incorrect to state that halig was not used in pagan contexts.
Forwarded from PRIMAL NOISE (D.W. McDonnell)
Weoh” from Proto-Germanic *wīhą‎ ("sacred place or thing"), from *wīhaz ("holy"), from Proto-Indo-European *weyk- ("to choose, separate out, set aside as holy, consecrate, sacrifice").
Linguists tell us confidently that “weoh” denotes both a shrine and an idol. The underlying sense of weoh is of something 'holy', an object of devotion. And bear in mind that the Old English word halig (the origin of the modern English 'holy') only appears in Christian contexts – so, seemingly, nothing pre-Christian could be halig. Weohs may have ranged from wooden carved idols, marked graves, corn dollies, phallic pillars, and burial mounds. The sacrality of the concept of weoh is intertwined with blessings of protection. As far as we can tell there would have been a weoh on many, perhaps all, graves and burial mounds.