Special guest article: the festival of Onam

Special guest article: the festival of Onam

image: Vamana, an avatar of Vishnu, taking his three tremendous steps which measure the entire cosmos, and in the process sending King Mahabali of Kerala to the netherworld. Wikimedia commons (link).

image: Vamana, an avatar of Vishnu, taking his three tremendous steps which measure the entire cosmos, and in the process sending King Mahabali of Kerala to the netherworld. Wikimedia commons (link).

Note: My most recent book, Star Myths of the World, and how to interpret them, Volume Four: Norse Mythology, was officially published on August 1st of this year, although it is still taking some time to make its way to all the various book-selling channels and book-stores. Just a few days after its official publication date, and well before any actual copies of the book could have made their way to local book-sellers here in the united states, let alone to book-sellers in India, I received an email from an interested reader in Kerala, India, who had noticed many celestial aspects within the traditional annual celebration of Onam, which is particularly associated with Kerala and which is akin to Chinese Lunar New Year in its significance to the Malayali community in India and around the world. 

Intriguingly enough, the ancient mythical foundation of Onam, which the festival commemorates, each year involves an encounter between a powerful Asura, Mahabali (a beloved king who ruled Kerala during a mythical Golden Age) and the deity Vishnu -- and I had actually discussed some of the aspects of this Vishnu myth in the chapter on Ragnarok in this recent book on Norse mythology, without even being aware of the festival of Onam which is connected with this particular myth and which is commemorated every year among the people of Kerala.

The following essay, written by Kamala Nayar of Kerala, India, was sent to me on August 6th, and I was planning to post it during the month of August during the traditional celebration of Onam (which typically spans ten days and which would have been observed beginning on August 15th this year), along with commentary and perhaps some photos from this year's festival, but the state of Kerala was devastated by historic floods which caused the observation of Onam to be canceled or at least postponed and greatly restricted this year (see this previous post).

In this essay, Kamala provides arguments linking aspects of this annual festival to the sun's annual passage through Leo and Virgo during the Malayalam month of Chingam (which corresponds to the August-September period), and gives some insight into rituals and traditions associated with this complex and extremely significant traditional celebration. 

I have edited Kamala's original text only lightly -- at the end of the article, I will provide some additional observations based on my understanding of the celestial language of the world's Star Myths and thoughts about some aspects of the festival in light of my own experience in studying the system of metaphor which forms the foundation of myths and sacred traditions around the world and which certainly seems to be involved in the structure underlying some of what takes place each year in the celebration of Onam.

During the text of Kamala's article, I will have occasion to interject a couple of comments to note points where I might suggest a different celestial interpretation -- I will place these "editor's notes" within brackets [brackets], in italics, and will explain more fully in my own comments on Onam which will follow Kamala's article.

The connection between the world's myths are remarkable, and overwhelming in their abundance and richness. Here we find a celebration in Kerala, India which has as its mythical origin an episode involving the god Vishnu which has strong connections to episodes in Norse mythology (as well as to other important Star Myths from other cultures around the world). 

These connections, I am convinced, are due to the fact that the world's ancient myths, scriptures and sacred stories can be shown to be built upon a common system of celestial metaphor. It is apparently a very ancient system -- there is no need to believe that the culture of the Norse in far northern Europe and the culture of the Malayali in southern India were in direct contact with one another at some point. It is far more likely, I believe, that their ancient myths and sacred traditions descend from some common predecessor culture, probably of extreme antiquity and now forgotten and unknown to conventional history, as do the myths and sacred stories of virtually every culture around the world.

It is fascinating to me that Kamala would be moved to write to me about the celestial aspects of the Onam festival (which I did not know about) but which celebrates an episode involving Vishnu which I did write about in Star Myths of the World, Volume Four: Norse Mythology, just a few days after the publication of that book (which discusses the "three steps" of Vishnu in relation to specific aspects of the Ragnarok accounts, some of them suggested in a 1965 article by Georges Dumézil which is referenced in the book), and before Kamala or anyone else could have known that my book discussed this episode in the sacred stories surrounding the god Vishnu. 

Below is the essay by Kamala Nayar:

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"Chingam: When the constellation Leo heralds the mother goddess wielding the sickle"

by Kamala Nayar          August 6th, 2018

Chingam, the first month of Malayalamera resounds with festivity and gaiety in the small south Indian state of Kerala, popularly known among the people as "Gods own country." Chingam, which corresponds to the period of English months from early August till early September, is the reminder of the arrival of the bountiful harvests from the lush green rice fields that once upon a time sprawled throughout the state. Although at present agriculture has dwindled to a great extent in Kerala, there is still no dearth in the rejoicement of the harvest festival "Onam" that falls during this month. It is the festival of bounty produced by the seeds sown during the middle of May, with the first fall of rains and which nourished by the heavy rains during the following months attain their full elegance, through the bounty of the land. The prosperity of this month is considered as a precious boon from Mother Earth for the hard work rendered on her soils. In return, as a mark of gratitude to Mother Earth (addressed as "Amma"), many offerings were traditionally made from the harvests -- usually in the form of rice puddings, since rice is the main staple crop of Kerala. 

There is more to describe about this significant month of the Malayalam calendar, called Chingam, which is pronounced in a way that sounds like yet another Indo-Asian word: Simham, meaning "Lion". The etymology of Simham, when analysed, reveals its common usage in many of the Indo-Asian countries, particularly in Indonesia, for the majestic animal that holds its head high; including in the name of the small prosperous country, Singapore. One wonders what prompted the ancient people of Kerala to name the first month after this proud king of the jungle: was it because it is the foremost among the animals, even though Kerala has always been home to tigers in the Sahyagiri region from very ancient times, rather than lions? What, then, might be the reason behind the choice of this animal's name for the month?

Let's turn to archaeo-astronomy to help crack the puzzle of the naming of this prime month of the Malayalam calendar after the lion. Astronomy certainly influenced the day-to-day activities of our Malayalam ancestors. In Kerala the Malayalam calendar from very ancient times appears to connect the names of the months to the constellation in which the sun is traveling during that period. Thus during the period of Onam which marks the harvest of the staple crop -- rice -- the sun reaches the constellation "Leo". It is therefore evident that our forefathers shared the same knowledge of stars and constellations with people of other cultures such as Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, Morrocans, and even Mayan, even through the dark ages when communication between different parts of the world was very negligible. 

 A constellation is an apparent configuration of stars when seen from Earth, formed in a pattern with mythological associations. Though it appears to have been recognized by the ancient Egyptians, the constellation of Leo was first catalogued in a surviving text by the Greek astronomer Ptolemy in the 2nd century, along with all the other constellations of the zodiac. 

Leo is a star formation resembling a crouching lion facing westward. It has a distinctive head and mane formed by a sickle-shaped set of stars with bright Regulus, marking the handle of the sickle. The sickle of stars looks like a reverse question-mark and the star Regulus serves as the handle of the sickle. Behind the sickle, toward the horizon in the east, three stars form a small triangle that marks the rear of the Lion. Leo has always been associated with the Sun and was thought to regulate the seasons. 

Archaeological evidence suggests that Mesopotamians had a constellation similar to Leo as early as 4000 BC. The Persians knew the constellation as Shir or Ser, Babylonians called it UR.GU.LA (“the great lion”), Syrians knew it as Aryo, and the Turks as Artan. Babylonians knew the star Regulus as “the star that stands at the Lion’s breast,” or the King Star. This evidence reveals that the leonine outline of the constellation Leo was well known to the different ancient cultures in an age when communication is conventionally held to have been absent between different regions of the world.   

Goddesses who wield the sickle

The sickle shape of the constellation is very interesting in this context particularly due to the sickle's association with agriculture as a tool for harvesting rice and other cereals. Could there be any link between the constellation's sickle-shape and its association with ancient farming rituals? It is in this context that the role of religious deities in ancient agriculture is important. 

Many cultures around the world, including in ancient India, associated goddesses with natural phenomena such as fertility, the harvest, rivers, mountains, animals, and the earth itself. On account of the importance of the harvest in sustaining the people, gods of agriculture were highly revered from very ancient times as these earth gods were believed to bring fertility to the fields of their worshipers. Prominent among these goddesses were Demeter, Ceres, Aphrodite, Parvati, Innana, Ishtar and a long list of others. They were mostly "goddesses of grain" who shared kind and benevolent qualities -- the Roman Goddess of agriculture, Ceres, is the typical of them. She was invoked on a daily basis as the true nurturer of humanity, and revered to such an extent that the Romans had a common expression "fit for Ceres," which meant "splendid." 

Thus agriculture around the world was often associated with a female divine element, and this association is reflected in Indian villages as well, which historically have been primarily agriculturally based. Female deities of the villages are referred to as grama-devatha, meaning "goddess of the village." These female deities of the village often display fickle and fiery temperaments, while the male village deities, when present, are often worshipped as subordinate to the goddess, and whose role is primarily the protection of the village from outside forces. In many stories about the origin of a female deity of the village, she is described as once being a mortal woman, to whom injustice is done and whose wrath then unleashes her power, and causes her to take on a Goddess form. Her worship then might serve as a reminder to uphold ethical standards, and might serve to instill the fear of being punished otherwise. The grama-devathas are considered to be the guardian deities of the village and the local places where they are worshipped. 

The less localized Hindu Gods such as Siva and Vishnu are more universal and "idealistic" Gods, taking care of the Universe as a whole, and only descending to Earth in times of desperate need, perhaps once in thousands and thousands of years. The grama-devathas, on the other hand, are considered to be the villagers' own deity, concerned solely with the welfare and day-to-day needs of the local people. And the fact that grama-devathas are not specific to religion or caste makes their worship open for all. Perhaps it is these grama devathas who were later consecrated in the famous Bhadrakaali temples of India. 

Now, a common feature noticed in all these deities or grama-devathas is the sickle they carry in their hands and this sickle symbolizes harvest. The tool is believed to have a dual purpose, harvesting  physical crops or human souls. As mentioned previously, these female dieties were understood to guard the prosperity of the villagers and also to unleash punishment for an injustice meted out upon the devotees of the goddess, and these devotees are primarily the local women. This power of the "sickle" is portrayed in Goddesses of agriculture world over, as seen in Goddess Artemis who also wielded the sickle both for harvest as well as in her role as Virgin Huntress of retribution. In fact the ancient agricultural model, Ceres, is portrayed holding a scepter in one hand and a basket of flowers, fruits and grains in the other. Her name has become the root word for cereal, describing all manner of grains.

Is it possible that the sickle that represents Leo's head also connects to the one that the revered "Amma"or Mother Earth holds in her hand, as is seen in her images? 

The Hand that holds the scythe mounts the lion

There is no doubt that the mother goddesses or grama-devathas in India are depicted as holding the sickle, and we have already seen that the stars of the constellation Leo contain a sickle-shaped outline in the night sky. Thus, the fact that goddesses in India are also frequently depicted as mounted on the king of beasts, argues that these goddesses are closely associated with Leo, and that the sickle may thus connect to the same constellation as well. The association with lions is especially notable in the deities of the north Indian temples, perhaps because the lions in the northern regions are portrayed as a symbol of prosperity or strength an are referred to as Sakthi. The most popular monument is that of  the goddess Durga Mata who came riding the fearsome lion on the occasion to slay the the vile demon Mahishasura. Clearly, then, goddesses in India can be shown to be connected to lion imagery and thus likely to Leo.

It’s quite noteworthy that this powerful beast was also the bearer of Goddesses from many other ancient cultures throughout the world. David Mathisen, for example (2012), has discussed various manifestations of the Great Goddess and their association with lions, citing numerous examplesof images from various cultures. Many goddesses in mythology are described as riding on a lion, riding in a chariot that is pulled by a lion, or sitting on a throne flanked by lions. In ancient Greece, the goddess (or Titaness) Rhea was often shown seated on a throne flanked by lions. The same goddess known as Cybele in Anatolia or Phrygia (often called the Earth Mother) was also associated with lions and closely identified with Rhea by scholars. The Babylonian goddess Ishtar was also closely associated with lions, and the Ishtar Gate features lions. The Sumerian goddess Inanna is often identified with Ishtar and thus would be associated with lions as well. 

four serpents 01.jpg

Mathisen further explains that if we take a look at the sky chart above, we can see  that the the large and important constellation of Virgo, the Virgin (Kanya in the Indian language) is rising behind Leo. He discusses that in spite of the great volume of literature written about these extremely important goddesses in the ancient world, very few historians appear to make the connection of the fact that Virgo following Leo probably accounts for the image of the goddess either riding in a chariot pulled by a lion or riding on a lion herself.

In the great temple at Hieropolis, the Syrian Goddess Atargatiswas supported by lions and she held a scepter in one hand and a spindle in the other (Johanna Stuckey, 2009). August is shared by the astrological signs of Leo the Lion and Virgo the Virgin, and is sacred to the following Pagan deities: Ceres, the Corn Mother, Demeter, Lugh, and all goddesses who preside over agriculture (Witches Of The Craft -- Lammas).

Goddesses and antelopes

Many goddesses in mythology are therefore connected to agriculture as symbolised by the sickle and sheaves of grains they hold -- and their association with lions seems to portray their strength, justice and connection with prosperity. The association of goddesses with antelopes, however, particularly in India, requires further analysis.

Apart from the connection to the lion, archeological depictions and rituals of ancient cultures of Kerala, Tamil Nadu, and other parts of northern and southern India portray goddesses flanked by a deer or antelope. Goddess Durga also has a black buck as her vahana or "vehicle," as indicated in the Tamil Thevara hymn (Pathikam 921) that praises Durga as Kalaiyathurthi, or "the one who rides a deer". 

In Tamil Nadu, the blackbuck (Kalaimaan) is considered to be the vehicle of the Hindu goddess Korravai [6][7]. Korravai (Korṛawai) or Korravi was the goddess of war and victory in the ancient Tamil pantheon. She was considered the mother of Murugan, the Hindu god of war, now the patron god of Tamil Nadu,[1]. The earliest references to Korravai are found in the ancient Tamil grammar Tolkappiyam, considered to be the earliest work of the ancient Sangam literature. Korravai is identified with the goddess Durga, especially in early iconography where she is presented as fierce and bloodthirsty. Harvest and war were important aspects in the life of the ancient Tamils and they worshiped Korravai for the success in both the fields and upon the battlefield. Later Korravai was adopted into the Hindu pantheon and connected to the goddesses Durga, Kali and Parameswari.

At the Mukteshwar temple at Bhubhanehwar in Orissa, a goddess is depicted as dancing on a black buck (10th century) and this goddeess dancing frantically on the antelope's back is reminiscent of the southern martial goddesses of victory Korravai. In Tamil Nadu, the connection between the blackbuck (Kalaimaan) and the goddess Korravai is indicated in the stone carving at Mamallapuram, where the goddess is seen flanked by both an antelope and a lion.

So the association of the antelope with the grama-devathas or goddesses of agriculture needs to be analysed. Could there be a connection to the goddess's role in farming rituals?

When Goddesses ride through the seasons

In Greek mythology the Horae were the goddesses of the seasons. They were originally the personifications of nature in its different seasonal aspects, but in later times they were regarded as goddess of order in general, and of natural justice. Traditionally, they guarded the gates of Olympus, promoted the fertility of the earth, and rallied the stars and constellations. The course of the seasons was also symbolically described as the dance of the Horae, and they were accordingly given the attributes of spring flowers, fragrance and graceful freshness. 

The story of how the four seasons came to be, originates with Demeter, the Greek mythological goddess of the harvest. She was the goddess who blessed the earth and made sure that everyone had a great harvest. However, according to the stories, whether or not the harvest would be good depended largely on her moods. The myth of Demeter and Persephone explains the origins of the seasons. Demeter is assigned the zodiac constellation Virgo the Virgin by Marcus Manilius in his first century Roman work Astronomicon. In art, the constellation Virgo is often depicted holding Spica as a sheaf of wheat in her hand and sitting beside the constellation Leo the Lion.

During the month of August, the Great Solar Wheel of the Year is turned to Lammas, one of the four Grand Sabbats celebrated each year by Wiccans and modern Witches throughout the world. Lammas marks the start of the harvest season and is a time when the fertility aspect of the sacred union of the Goddess and Horned God is honored. This union may help in our analysis of the antelope connections among goddesses in India.

A parallel symbolism of seasons can be observed in the ancient culture of Kerala based on the extensive research which highlights that many of the goddesses of the Kerala region, who are now enthroned in grand temples, were in previous times local village deities (gramadevathas) who -- like Demeter, Ceres and Ishtar -- were worshipped for protecting their crops. With the encroachment upon rice fields and other agricultural lands due to urbanization, the goddesses were enshrined in larger abodes which became the present popular temples such as those at Kodungalloor, Atukaal, or  Chottanikkara. The main deities of all these temples, Bhadrakali or Kali Devi are therefore closely linked with seasons as indicated by the annual festivals and associated rituals which are celebrated mostly during the Malayalam months from Kumbmam through Meenam and up to Medam (corresponding to English months from mid-February through mid-May). The Malayalam month Kumbham which coincides with the lapse of winter, marks the initiation of productive phase in plants, when they get ready for fertility soon after their hermitage in the previous period of chilly nights. 

According to Nair (2016) when the Sun reaches at the tenth degree of  the constellation Aries (pathamudayam in Kerala -- late April of the Medam month corresponding to spring in Europe), it is a festive occasion in many of the Bhadrakali temples of Kerala, especially in the villages which were the once rice bowls of the region. On this occassion a kanyaka (virgin) carries the sacred antler of a deer in the belief that Goddess Parvathi is riding on the antelope. The temple where the antler is worshipped in reticence is opened only on the eve of pathamudayam to facilitate the annual ceremonial offering -- puja and ponkala -- to the Goddess of the temple, after which the temple remains closed during the rest of the year.  This day on pathamudayam when the temple is opened is very auspicious as the sun passes on this day into Aries at the vernal equinox, a solar event that is believed to be an appropriate time for commencing rice cultivation. It is on this day that farmers plough a few yards and sow a pinch of paddy seeds to mark the begining of the agricultural year following which the seeds sprout and the rice plants flourish in the seasonal monsoon showers that unfailingly visit the region during that time of year.

The sun's entry into the constellation of Aries in Medam (the corresponding Malayalam month) thus marks the begining of the advent of the glorious Sun up the starry vault of heaven to reach His golden throne during Chingam (mid-August to early September) in the constellation of Leo, when  rice is harvested from the fields, thus paving the way for a sumptuous Onam (Nair, 2016). 

Therefore the ceremonial procession of the gramadevatha or Goddess Bhagavathy mounted on an antelope may reference the zodiac sign Aries (associated with the symbol of a horned ram), during the patahmudayam in Medam. Aries transports Her through the forthcoming seasons, finally to see her mount the Lion during the harvest of rice in the month of Chingam which represents the constellation Leo; while the benevolent Sun smiles at Her all the time. So we see the  transition of the Goddess from zodiac sign Aries, on the antler / antelope which may be an ancient ritual of worshipping the agricultural cycle, because according to Nair (2010), the antler was the first plough to be used by the ancient people of India [editor's note: I will present some discussion following this article upon the possibility that the antler in these traditions and rituals represents a constellation other than Aries]. And then at last the kanya or virgin arrives for the grand festival of Kerala, Onam, during the month of Chingam Singam, when she has finally reached the constellation of Leo. The rise of Virgo closely following Leo was celebrated in many other ancient cultures as seen in the association of Demeter and Lammas Sabbat with this time of year, thus revealing the importance of the goddesses in ancient agriculture.

The mingling of the seasons with Mother Earth can be seen clearly through these rituals and ceremonies of the goddesses or grama devathas. Mother Earth after her hibernation during the chilly nights of the Makara season of the Malayalam calander  (mid-December to January) gets ready for her productive phase in Kumbham season (February to mid-March) when she is anointed with much pomp while the festivity continues up to the Meenamseason (March to mid-April ) with the arrival of Vasantham (spring). 

During Medam (early May) the fields are getting ready with the first ploughing on the auspicious day of pathamudayam, which is symbolised by the virgin gramadevatha, often represented in traditional ceremonies by a young girl who has not attained puberty, crowned by the antler, who is taken in a ceremonial procession. The antler, reminiscent of the first tool to be used for ploughing, is kept as an object of worship in certain temples. 

Following the ceremonious ploughing and land preparation, rice (the main staple crop of Kerala) is sown in the fields during early period of the Malayalam month Edavam (mid-May) with the rains arriving to nurture them during mid-Edavam (late May to early June) and taking them to maturity. The crop then becomes fertile as the rain recedes and the wind dances briskly among the stalks during Mithunam to Karikkidam seasons (late June to mid-July). By this time the productive earth stands proudly adorned by golden sheaves rustling in the strong breeze and thereafter the smiling sun takes her hand to start his ascent towards the constellation of the king of beasts, the Leo, where we see the shy Virgin Mother Earth joining the radiant sun in a waltz of seasons, as the constellation Virgo rises closely behind Leo.     

Thus the puzzle of the "Lion" after which the harvest month Chingam is named, its association with the benevolent Mother earth who is also the Mother of Agriculture as a  symbol of prosperity or harvest, and the question of association of the antelope or deer with its elegantly branched antlers which was apparently used as a plough by the first farmers of our fields, are all answered, while from above, Heavens blesses the virgin mother who has become productive with the arrival of the Chingam-Kanni, corresponding to the English months from early August to early September. Only the question of sickle remains to be answered as to whether the sickle outline found in Leo's is connected to the harvesting tool used by women in agriculture and symbolized in the depictions of the gramadevathas and goddesses, holding them in their hands. 

So with renewed awareness of our connection to generations stretching back for thousands of years, and their connection to the cycles of the heavens, we can get ready to welcome the arrival of the Virgin Mother of Earth crowned by antlers and riding on her mount, the king of beasts, towards the constellation of Leo, as we prepare to celebrate the festival of Onam during the month of Chingam.

Bibliography

1.    Horae  in https:/en .wikwipedia.org/wiki/ Horae

2.    JohannaStuckey (2009)  Beltane Vol.8-3

3.    Koravi. http common.wikimedia.org/wiki/File: Durga-Korravai.jpg

4.    Mathisen (2012). The Mathisen Corollary-January 2012, MatriFocus –Cross-Quarterly For the Goddess Woman

5.    Nair, V.S. (2016). History-Straight From The Horse’s Mouth; The State Institute of Languages, Kerala pp.268

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My comments on this subject:

I am grateful to Kamala Nayar for her insights into the festival of Onam.

In fact, this important festival (the existence of which I was previously unaware) is absolutely overflowing with connections to the worldwide celestial system which underlies the Star Myths of many other cultures, including the myths of ancient India.

The time of year surrounding the point of the September equinox is associated in the ancient system of celestial metaphor with the soul's plunge out of the realm of spirit and into the "lower realm" of the   incarnate condition. Note, for instance, that the famous Eleusinian Mysteries of ancient Greece (whose origins stretch back far into the centuries prior to the "classical" period) were also celebrated at this particular season each year (around the beginning of September), and were closely associated with the goddesses Demeter and Persephone, as well as with the understanding of our situation during this incarnate life as a soul that has been plunged into the lower realm, taking on a body.

The festival of Onam is traditionally associated with the legend of King Mahabali, who was a benevolent ruler of a mythical Golden Age in ancient Kerala. Concerned that Mahabali has acquired too much power, Vishnu takes on his avatar of the dwarf Vamana, and attends a great sacrifice festival which Mahabali is holding as a means of consolidating and demonstrating his great earthly power. 

Disguising himself as a mendicant holy man, Vamana requests a boon from the king, which was customary at such formal rituals. Mahabali asks what boon Vamana would have Mahabali give, and Vamana requests as much land as Vamana can cover in three paces. Amused, Mahabali grants the wish, at which point Vamana (who is in fact the god Vishnu) grows to enormous size and begins to take his three universe-encompassing strides.

With the first step, Vamana covers the entire earth. With the second step, he strides across the heavens. For the third step, the king offers his own head, and Vamana steps upon it, sending Mahabali to the underworld. 

Thus, the prosperity of the Golden Age is ended -- but Mahabali is permitted to return once each year, at the festival of Onam, during which the abundance of that mythical time is again celebrated, with feasting, ritual dances, decorations of flowers, the wearing of new clothes, and other similarly symbolic activities.

I am convinced that this myth, which has echoes in myths found around the world (including in Norse myth, as discussed in my latest book) has a celestial origin. This celestial origin, in fact, explains the many parallels of this important episode. 

As touched upon in my latest book, the various avatars of Vishnu (and the other gods of ancient India) often relate to nearby constellations in the vicinity of the constellation most commonly associated with that god. This pattern, in fact, is similar to the transformations of the god Zeus in Greek myth, for example -- Zeus is most closely associated with the constellation Hercules in the heavens, but he takes on different "avatars" during different mythical episodes, often while in the process of seducing mortal women, such as when he takes on the form of a Swan (see the nearby constellation of Cygnus), or the form of a celestial shower (the nearby column of the glorious Milky Way itself), or even the form of a Bull (during the abduction of Europa).

Similarly, the various avatars of Vishnu can be shown to be associated with various different constellations (some of which are discussed in Star Myths of the World, Volume Four: Norse Mythology). The avatar of Vamana, which is the dwarf avatar of Vishnu, is almost certainly associated with the constellation Hercules, a constellation which can be shown to play the role of a dwarf in many myths from around the world, including the god Bes of ancient Egypt, as well as dwarf-figures in the Norse myths (also discussed in the new book).

Note that the constellation Hercules appears to be taking mighty strides across the heavens -- and that indeed the forward leg of the constellation (as outlined by H. A. Rey) appears to be stepping on the "head" of the constellation Ophiuchus, just as Vamana steps upon the head of Mahabali in the Vishnu mythology:

four serpents 01.jpg

See again the image of Vamana stepping upon the head of Mahabali in the image at the top of this post. Below is another depiction of Vamana stepping upon the head of the king:

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

Note that the banishing of a benevolent figure (often one associated with a Golden Age) to the netherworld for a period of time (but with a promised return) is an extraordinarily important and widespread mythical pattern. The authors of Hamlet's Mill (1969) spend some time tracing out this myth pattern around the globe, and note that it is found in the story of the Titan Kronos (banished to the underwater cave of Ogygia by Zeus), and the myth of Saturn, of Jamshyd, of Osiris, of King Arthur, of Prometheus, and of many others (we could also add the descent of Christ to the underworld for a period of time before returning).

The banishing of the benevolent king or ruler of the Golden Age to the underworld has important parallels to our own condition in this incarnate life -- as Alvin Boyd Kuhn explains throughout his masterful 1940 text Lost Light, the image of the god sleeping beneath the waves (for example) is a figure of our own slumbering divine spark, buried within our incarnate body which is composed primarily of the lower elements of earth and water (the mortal "clay"). See for instance pages 159, 182 and 564 through 567 of that text.

The festival of Onam, and the myth with which it is associated, thus reminds us of the reality of this "sleeping divinity" -- and of the multitude of blessings which are available when we reconnect with that Infinite channel. We have, in fact, access to unlimited abundance in our connection to the divine realm, although most of the time we live and act as though we do not.

The association of the festival with the local goddess and with the harvest, which are highlighted in Kamala's article above, are also extremely important. The goddess in these rituals is clearly associated with the constellation Virgo, who is associated with the time of harvest and with the plunge down into the "lower half" of the year which takes place at the fall equinox (the sun passing through the sign of Virgo just prior to the point of September equinox). The sun's descent into the lower half of the year was also associated with the descent of the divine spark into the "lower realm" of this incarnate life.

It is very noteworthy that Kamala points out a connection between the goddess and a horned antelope, in addition to the fairly well-established connection between the goddess and the lion (which can be seen in ancient artwork from many cultures). Kamala suggests that this may indicate a connection to the zodiac sign of Aries, and while that is a possible explanation, I believe that it is much more likely that the nearby constellation of Centaurus is being indicated in these myths and rituals. The constellation Centaurus is located in the immediate vicinity of the constellation Virgo, and (as I first discussed in my 2014 book The Undying Stars and in all of the Star Myths of the World books since then) can be envisioned as a great stag with sweeping antlers just as easily as it is envisioned as a Centaur. 

The constellation Centaurus (especially in its role as a deer or stag) is closely associated with Virgo in many world myths, including in the story of the sacrifice of Iphigenia (ancient Greece), as well as in the Native American myth of the Old Man and his Daughter. I would argue that it is very likely that the connection between some of the goddess figures of India and the antelope or blackbuck which Kamala Nayar discovers in her article, as well as the rituals and worship involving antlers (and in one case, a virgin carrying or wearing an antler or antlers) find their foundation in the constellations Virgo and Centaurus (as does the myth of the goddess with the Horned King, to which Kamala also makes reference in her article).

These connections which Kamala has found are very important. 

There are many more celestial connections in the Onam festival which could be profitably explored -- enough, in fact, to fill an entire book. Most will have to await examination and discussion at another date. However, we should briefly mention another traditional aspect of the Onam celebration with echoes in many other cultures: the serpent boat races, or Vallam Kali. The shape of these boats is reminiscent of the great war canoes (or waka) of the Maori, and the sleek ocean-going canoes of the Native Americans of the Pacific Northwest. They are also reminiscent of the famous Viking longships, the dragon boats used in festival races in the Chinese culture, and even of the reed boats used by the Indigenous people of the Lake Titicaca region, and the ships buried at Giza in Egypt and depicted in ancient artwork from the Egyptian civilization.

Below are snake boats used in India for the traditional Kerala snake boat races:

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

I would argue that these boats may also reflect a celestial original: the constellation Scorpio, which can be shown to play the role of a boat or ship in many myths around the world, from the myths of ancient Japan to the myths of the ancient Norse. The constellation Ophiuchus, which almost certainly plays the role of King Mahabali as discussed above, stands directly above Scorpio, and in some myths is envisioned as standing in the "boat" or "ship" formed by Scorpio (when Scorpio is envisioned as a boat or ship).

Finally, the Onam festival features elaborate costumes in which men and women dress up as gods and goddesses -- and indeed take on their identities. It can be shown that many of the characteristics of these costumes (and the deities they represent) have celestial origins and connections to specific aspects of certain constellations. 

A detailed examination of each of these costumes and deities could easily fill an entire book. Some of them are more difficult to decipher, but others are quite self-evident. Perhaps the most important point to make about the parading deities who appear during the Onam festival is the message that Onam (like other ancient rituals and festivals around the globe) reminds us of our connection to the divine realm, and indeed our own inner divine spark. Many previous posts have explored the concept, depicted in the ancient myths, that the gods stand ready to help us, and even to "act through us," if we are attuned to their presence.

The modern world, it seems, wishes to sever the connection of men and women to the Infinite Realm, the Invisible Realm, the realm of abundance and pure potential, the source of all blessings . . . the realm of the gods. But the ancient myths, and the world's surviving ancient festivals, remind us of our connection to that realm, and remind us that even if the divine spark is "banished" to the netherworld (which, as Alvin Boyd Kuhn would argue, represents this lower realm of the incarnate life), there is the promise that the sleeping divinity will return or re-awaken.

We have access to that abundance, and the world's ancient myths -- and rituals -- point us towards that truth.

Introducing Star Myths of the World, Volume Four: Norse Mythology

Introducing Star Myths of the World, Volume Four: Norse Mythology

vol four front cover 02.jpg

Norse mythology has always had a very special place in my life.

My father's side of the family comes from Norway, my father's father and all his ancestors having been born there, as well as my father's mother's parents and all their ancestors.

I grew up reading the wonderfully-illustrated Norse Gods & Giants by Ingri and Edgar Parin D'Aulaire (1967). As I've said before about some of the books which influenced me growing up, I had these books available at such a young age that I cannot remember ever not having them to read.

Because Norse mythology has always been so important to me, I waited to write a book which would delve into the Norse myths until after I had already written Star Myths of the World, Volume Two (Greek Mythology) and Star Myths of the World, Volume Three (Star Myths of the Bible). I wanted to increase my understanding of the celestial language used by the world's ancient myths before approaching the numinous world described by the Norse myths.

I'm glad that I waited, because the connections to the stars uncovered during the exploration of the myths of ancient Greece, and the stories and characters in the scriptures of the Bible -- as well as the celestial connections in the myths of ancient India, and ancient Egypt, and ancient Japan, and the cultures of the Pacific, among others which were examined in Star Myths of the World, Volume One -- proved to be absolutely vital for grasping some of the celestial connections in the myths of northern Europe and the Norse.

I am therefore very pleased to introduce 

Star Myths of the World, and how to interpret them, Volume Four: 

Norse Mythology

This book is just now beginning to make its way to the various sales channels such as Barnes & Noble or Amazon.com. You should be able to request a copy from your favorite local bookseller (if you are fortunate enough to still have one in your area), or request that your nearby library order a copy for you to check out when it arrives.

You can also see sample content from this latest book, and from all my previous books, in the "Books" section of my main website, starmythworld.com. On that same page, you can find a link (near the bottom of the page) to a page where you can order signed copies directly (be sure to specify the name or names you'd like in the inscription, in the window provided, prior to placing the order).

I think you will be astonished at some of the connections between the Norse myths and the myths from other cultures -- connections which show that they are all using the same world-wide system of celestial metaphor, and that they are thus all in some way related.

Even though I was already quite convinced that the world's ancient myths are all related through this celestial system, I myself was surprised by some of the connections that came to light as I explored the Norse myths during the writing of this book.

And I believe your life will be positively benefited by the ancient wisdom that the Norse myths want to tell us, once we begin to listen to them in the language that they are actually speaking . . . the language of the stars.

 

Video link.

Seeing the Star Myths: Aquila, Cygnus, and Delphinus

Seeing the Star Myths: Aquila, Cygnus, and Delphinus

I've just posted a new video entitled "Seeing the Star Myths: Aquila, Cygnus, and Delphinus."

This is the fourth video in a series intended to help more people to become familiar with the outlines of the constellations, to find the constellations in the night sky, and to more easily recognize the references to specific constellations in the world's ancient myths, scriptures and sacred stories.

Previous videos in this series include:

and

This video describes the outline and location of the mythologically-important constellations of Aquila the Eagle, Cygnus the Swan, and Delphinus the Dolphin, as well as touching briefly upon some ancient myths in which one or more of these constellations plays a role, such as some of the episodes in the cycle of myths surrounding the god Dionysus.

I hope these videos will be helpful for seeing the constellations in the night sky -- and in your mind's eye -- and for better understanding the celestial language being spoken by the world's ancient myths, scriptures and sacred stories, and thereby to better understand their vital message for each of us today.

Please feel free to share with friends and family who may benefit from the information in these videos, and to sign up for the YouTube channel in order to receive notifications whenever new videos are published.

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

Everybody look what's going down

Everybody look what's going down

Apparently, the Guns & Butter program will continue as a web-broadcast program and as a podcast, even after KPFA and the Pacifica Radio Network abruptly cancelled the show, thus removing it from radio circulation on a nationwide network of affiliate stations.  

While that of course is good news, the removal of the show from the radio drops the curtain on one of the last remaining pieces of broadcast journalism on the public airwaves willing to explore "forbidden" topics, including the evidence that the "official" story of historical events such as the September 11, 2001 attacks and the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and Martin Luther King, Jr. (among many other examples) is built on a framework of lies.

KPFA and its affiliate stations have completely scrubbed the show from their websites, including all of the archived shows going back for nearly two decades. However, the archived shows on the Guns & Butter website itself are still available -- and the decision by KPFA to cancel the show and remove all mention of it should spur listeners to go back through the archived shows and revisit them. I personally went back and downloaded many of the archived shows, and am of the opinion that they offer an extraordinary valuable matrix of perspectives and "data points" which are necessary when trying to piece together the complex situation we are facing at the present juncture of history.

As the Guns & Butter theme song, a remake of the famous Buffalo Springfield anthem "For What It's Worth" (the original of which first aired in December of 1966), declares: "There's something happening here -- what it is ain't exactly clear," the pattern which runs through the events of the past seventy-plus years since the end of World War II reveals the presence of "something happening," although what it is not only is "not exactly clear" but is in fact quite mysterious and defies easy categorization or simplistic explanations.

That's why shows such as Guns & Butter are so extremely critical: by providing a wide array of different voices and perspectives from serious analysts who are examining what is "happening here," we have an opportunity to see shapes emerge which would be extremely difficult to perceive or detect based on the carefully limited perspectives allowed within the current un-free press. 

Some of the "data points" or perspectives offered by the hundreds of voices who appear on Guns & Butter will be flawed, erroneous, or even deliberately misleading, as a matter of course -- but this is no reason to switch off the project altogether and dissolve the framework of perspectives that Bonnie Faulkner has spent so many years constructing through her tireless efforts to seek out and interview disparate researchers who are wrestling with the question of "what's going down."

In the course of listening to the archive shows over the past few days, since hearing the news that KPFA had dropped the program, I came across this prescient interview from September 15, 2010 (Guns & Butter show #214) with Peter Phillips and Mickey Huff of Project Censored, in which they describe the outright hostility of media outlets which call themselves "left" or "progressive" towards investigating  (or even mentioning) "controversial" topics such as the obvious lies and violations of the principles of physics in the "official" explanation of the events of September 11, 2001, for example.

At about the 11: 30 mark in the interview, while discussing the outright censorship of a heavily-footnoted and well-sourced article they submitted to a supposedly "progressive" outlet (the Institute for Policy Studies) with whom they had a contract to provide journalistic articles, Mickey Huff and Peter Phillips make the following statement (Mickey Huff is speaking -- this particular quoted portion begins at about 12: 56 in the interview file):

The fact that there was a topic at the 'progressive' IPS that just could not be discussed -- and if you have a free press, there is no subject that cannot be discussed. [ . . . ] One of the claims was that it was a 'divisive' issue -- and, I mean, that's rubbish. It's a divisive issue, for sure, but it's contentious for a reason. And these are the very kinds of subjects that in a free-press structure we ought to be ferreting out and having the debates -- I mean that's the purpose of a free press. [ . . . ] And we're expecting, they're gonna want to do this, it's a power-elite story, it's a story of mass potential propaganda and deception that gets us into two illegal wars, eviscerates Constitutional liberties, bankrupts the society both economically and morally the world over: you'd think this is a huge thing to debate on the merits of science and fact. We were hard concrete scientific reports and peer-reviewed journal articles, and we're saying 'What's the deal with this? Why can't we talk about this?' and they said, 'Well, you're going to alienate readers in the Heart Land.' I'm not kidding. [ . . . ] And then when Peter submitted a piece a month later, they said: 'You're no longer writing for us.'

Listeners to this interview should think very carefully about the statement that "If you have a free press, there is no subject that cannot be discussed," and ask how many subjects absolutely "cannot be discussed" in the un-free press which we have today. Even those who completely accept the "official" story of the events of September 11, 2001 might want to ask themselves if they agree that any discussion about September 11 should be "off limits" for any discussion in any broadcast media. 

And yet that is precisely the situation we have today.

And the removal of Guns & Butter from the airwaves pulls the plug on one of the last shows available on broadcast stations (as opposed to being available on the internet, which is a very different medium for reasons mentioned in my previous post) which upheld that understanding of freedom of the press to investigate and explore important subjects, under the understanding that if you have a free press, no topic should be off limits for discussion.

Those wishing to purchase the Project Censored annual volume of suppressed stories for 2011, which was being discussed in the above interview (and which has since been followed by seven more annual volumes ranging from 2012 to 2018, as well as an eighth for 2019 which will begin shipping in mid-September of this year) can go to this web-page on the Project Censored website, and specifically to this product page for the Censored 2011 volume.

Another archived Guns & Butter show from about the same timeframe is this interview with frequent guest Professor Michael Hudson dated June 16, 2010 and entitled "Europe's Class War against Labor" (Guns & Butter show #204) The interview, which is also embedded at the end of this post (just as the previously-discussed interview is embedded at the top of this post), may well be one of Professor Hudson's clearest and most systematic explanations of the forces which actively seek to reduce living standards, social services, and industrial and economic output in economies -- in order to privilege  and maximize debt service instead.

Such a policy, of course, will ultimately result in Killing the Host (which is the title of a book Professor Hudson published in August of 2015, some years after this interview was recorded) -- and will also have the effect of reducing populations to a state of "neo-feudalism," as he says in this interview.

During this extremely important interview, Professor Hudson sounds a note which resonates with the cautions voiced above in the Project Censored interview, regarding the critical importance of an informed public in order to have any hope of imposing democratic governance over the financial sector, instead of the inverted situation we face today in which financial interests have taken control of and subverted democratic governance. Beginning at about the 21: 00 mark in the interview, Professor Hudson says, in response to Bonnie's question of how the European Union could have been structured in order to allow democratic governance over the central banks:

It would have first of all permitted central banks to do what they do in America, England and other places -- it would have had the national Treasury able to monetize the deficit, or create the credit, by government spending. It would have made the Central Bank and the Treasury subordinate to the political arm of democratically-elected governments. But when you have democracy itself undercut, by the financial power of right-wing parties to convince populations to vote against their self-interest, then it's very hard to know how to re-structure things. Once the population doesn't understand what's happening economically, or financially, it's not able to act in its self-interest, and it's in the position of becoming a victim.

According to Professor Hudson, economics and specifically finance is being employed as a weapon against populations of men and women who have deliberately been kept in the dark about financial and economic matters, to the point that many even begin to believe arguments for policies which sacrifice the best interest of the population and indeed the economy itself to the interests of financial speculators and rent-extractors.

As he explains at about 48: 10 in the same interview:

The crisis is an offensive by the vested interests, by the wealthy interests, to shift the taxes off themselves, onto labor, and to say, 'Wait a minute: now is the time to really drive the nail into the coffin of the class war. Now we're gonna mount an offensive to get rid of social security, to get rid of the welfare state. We're gonna get rid of public health, get rid of social security, get rid of medical care, get rid of public spending, and run the government so that -- ' they tax labor and industry and agriculture, basically, to bail the banks out of the bad loans that are extracting so much interest that they're shrinking the economy. So the financial interests in Europe are willing to see the economy shrink, willing to see the economy de-industrialize, to force the governments to say, 'If you pay your pensions and social security, you have to sell off your public enterprises, you have to sell off any land or mineral resources or anything else in the public domain to the bankers. You have to sell your roads, for us to buy, to turn into toll roads. You have to sell everything you have, and we'll privatize it.' And what this is, is a return to feudalism. 

Once again, one need not agree with every single position held by Professor Hudson to realize that the network of data points he lays out in this interview is extremely valuable to anyone who is trying to come to grips with things that are "going down" whose impact is certainly felt by everyone trying to make a living or raise a family today, even if the great leviathan-like forces beneath the surface which are causing those effects are often rather difficult to detect (especially because they are never mentioned with any sort of clarity by the current un-free press).

Note that in the passage quoted immediately above, Professor Hudson explains that the goal of this "offensive" is to force governments (which are supposed to represent the people) to sell off land and mineral resources and other valuable parts of the public domain for privatization by a select few (the very opposite of the public). Many previous posts have laid out a systematic argument showing that the ancient wisdom of the world unequivocally ascribed the riches of the land, the sea, the ports, the forests, the soil, the minerals under the earth, and even the realms of the air and of the electro-magnetic spectrum to the domain of the gods. It should not be difficult to name the Greek gods, for example, to whom belonged the bounties of the sea, the riches under the earth, or even the electro-magnetic waves which move through the air.

Thus, the seizure of the public domain is a seizure of the domain of the gods. It is part of a centuries old conspiracy against the gods. There is no contradiction between realizing that what we call the public domain was seen by the ancients as the bounty of the divine realm: as other previous posts have endeavored to explain, the ancient myths illustrate that the gods bestow their gifts upon all men and women -- and indeed that the gods are present inand work out their will through men and women. When Athena bestowed the gift of the olive tree upon the ancient city of Athens, for example, it was a gift that was intended to benefit all of the people, and not just a privatized few. For more on this discussion, see previous posts such as this onethis one, and this one.

In light of this fact, it should be no surprise that the oppressive, exploitive and benighted economic paradigm we refer to as "feudalism" descended upon Europe like a plague following the deliberate destruction of the ancient wisdom by the proponents of literalist Christianity (collaborators against the gods) -- and that Professor Hudson describes the current scheme to sell off and privatize the mineral resources and everything else in the public domain as a "return to feudalism."

These kinds of perspectives and data points are absolutely invaluable in the quest to make sense of the great tectonic forces operating below the chatter of the controlled media, which can only be understood by examining topics which are now "off limits" to our un-free press (and, indeed, pretty much off-limits for discussion or examination in academia as well). Guns & Butter, and certain other important shows, have done humanity a tremendous service by assembling a galaxy of different voices and views which can assist us to see "what's happening here."

It should come as no surprise that certain interests would seek to restrict access to such a valuable public resource.

Let's all do what we can to support Bonnie and Guns & Butter and to tell others to tune in, especially now that her show will no longer be available on the broadcast airwaves.

I'm happy to see that a new interview featuring Professor Robert Schoch has appeared on Guns & Butter, immediately after the news of KPFA's decision to drop the show. I am of the opinion that the story of our "censored" ancient history ties directly in to the difficult question of "what's going down" in our much more recent history as well.

There's definitely something happening here.

"Guns & Butter" abruptly shut down

"Guns & Butter" abruptly shut down

guns and butter.jpg

Bonnie Faulkner's long-running radio show Guns & Butter has been abruptly cancelled by its home radio station KPFA in Berkeley.

The weekly show has been one of the central features of KPFA (and affiliated stations) for the past seventeen years.

See this article about the cancellation of Guns & Butter, published today by Professor Michel Chossudovsky of the University of Ottawa and the Centre for Research of Globalization, at Global Research

Professor Chossudovsky has been a frequent guest on Guns & Butter, along with a constellation of other important critical voices including Professor Michael HudsonProfessor David Ray GriffinProfessor James Tracy, and accomplished civil rights lawyer William F. Pepper, Esquire -- among many other insightful researchers and authors examining issues of absolutely critical importance.

While I certainly do not agree with every assertion by every single guest who appears on Guns & Butter, the abrupt cancellation of Bonnie Faulkner's show because of assertions made by one recent guest (who was one part of a three-guest show) sends a chilling message about the freedom of the press in the united states at this time. To be even more specific: I personally do not agree with the opinion voiced by the guest in question, cited by KPFA as the reason the show was shut down, and yet I believe the termination of the show is a very serious matter and an ominous indicator of the current state of freedom of speech and the press.

Are men and women to be treated like children, as if they are unable to discern for themselves whether or not an argument has merit, and thus must be shielded from any objectionable views? Even if I disagree with a guest on a show or find that guest's views to be objectionable, I am adamantly opposed to silencing a radio program in the united states because an opinion with which I disagree was voiced by someone appearing on that show.

This removal of Guns & Butter from production at KPFA terminates one of the last remaining shows on the broadcast airwaves which dared to question the government narrative on events such as the murderous attacks of September 11th, 2001 or the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Senator Robert F. Kennedy, and many others.

I would strongly urge Bonnie Faulkner to continue her weekly show as a podcast, if at all possible, and to solicit support from listeners in order to enable that to happen. I would also urge podcast hosts  who are interested in the truth on the kinds of subjects that Guns & Butter has examined over the past seventeen years to invite Bonnie to be a guest on their shows, and to reach out to her with offers to help her launch such a podcast that can be independent of KPFA.

However, there are numerous reasons why the removal of Guns & Butter from the airwaves is a huge blow to independent examination of critically important political and economic subjects at this juncture in history -- not least of which being the fact that consumption of digital media can be monitored and tracked much more closely and much more easily than can the similar consumption of a radio show by listening to that show on one's radio, at home or in the car. Additionally, it is much easier to suppress or obscure the existence of a website, or slow the traffic going to that website to a trickle, using a variety of techniques such as those described herehere and here

For these reasons, men and women who believe in freedom of speech and freedom of the press should flood KPFA with indications of disapproval of their high-handed cancellation of Bonnie Faulkner's weekly show, using the addresses provided in the Global Research article linked above.

In addition, I would strongly recommend visiting the archives of Guns & Butter and downloading as many shows as possible, in case those shows are removed at a future date. Those archives go back fifteen years, to 2003. 

The possibility that access to those archived shows could be removed appears to me to be fairly likely, especially given the fact that the video showing Bonnie Faulkner voicing her displeasure at the termination of her show in a room full of supporters carrying signs condemning censorship, which was embedded in the article posted earlier today on Global Research, has already been removed in the short time that it has taken to write this blog post.

I myself met Bonnie Faulkner in my hometown of San Mateo in 2014. There is no indication that she has ever harassed anybody or called for the harassment of anybody. However, as the article posted today in Global Research points out, while the banning of Alex Jones has received enormous media attention, the termination of Guns & Butter has been completely ignored by the monopoly media (the so-called "mainstream media") which shapes the opinions of the large segments of the population who do not avail themselves of other sources of information.

The termination of Guns & Butter, about a month following the Alex Jones incident, removes yet another avenue of information outside of the controlled media monopoly. My personal suspicion, based upon evidence and not just intuition, is that Alex Jones is likely a provocateur whose role is to behave in a deliberately objectionable and offensive manner in order to discredit more authentic independent voices while at the same time sucking up all the media attention given to the many voices critical of the official media line on important and suspicious events, and whose antics make the censorship of such voices easier for the general public to accept. 

In other words, I strongly suspect he is deliberately playing the role of a raving "conspiracy theorist" in order to discredit more deliberate and less objectionable voices who question the mainstream narrative on certain subjects. I strongly suspect that some of the more vocal and visible proponents of the "flat earth" movement could be playing a similar role in order to jump in front of and distract from more serious lines of investigation, while attempting to discredit anyone else who questions certain narratives through a form of "guilt by association."

The fact that Bonnie Faulkner's show has suddenly been terminated without any media attention approximately one month after the much-publicized Alex Jones dust-up would appear to lend some credence to that possibility.

I believe that the termination of Guns & Butter is an extremely troubling and serious sign about the current status of the freedom of the press and freedom to express opinions in an era of increasingly rigid control over the media, the airwaves, the general discourse among the citizenry, and the ability of men and women to gain access to research, evidence and analysis which reveals some of the glaring inconsistencies in the official narrative of critical events. 

I would recommend immediately downloading many (or all) of the available Guns & Butterarchive, and placing them on an external hard-drive, mobile device, or series of CDs, and then listening to them while driving to work, riding on the bus, doing the dishes, or working in the garden. I would recommend going right back to the beginning of the archive in 2003, and working forward -- and after several shows, asking yourself if you really believe Bonnie Faulkner is someone whose views are objectionable or outrageous.

And, after you have asked yourself that question and answered it, you might also ask yourself why the framers of the Constitution put the protection of the unabridged freedom of speech and the unabridged freedom of the press at the very beginning of the Bill of Rights -- rights which they correctly described as being inherent in all men and women, and not granted by anyone else, and rights which they accurately perceived as being essential to democratic government by the people, just as they clearly saw the silencing of free speech and a free and independent press to be an essential aspect of tyranny.

New video: Seeing the Star Myths -- Sagittarius, the Southern Crown, and Ara the Altar

New video: Seeing the Star Myths -- Sagittarius, the Southern Crown, and Ara the Altar

I've just published a new video entitled "Seeing the Star Myths: Sagittarius, the Southern Crown, and Ara the Altar." It is intended to help you find those constellations in the night sky -- and in the ancient Star Myths of the world, in which Sagittarius plays an especially important role.

This video is the third thus far in a series that also includes:

and

In order to perceive and understand the overwhelming evidence which shows that the world's ancient myths, scriptures and sacred stories are all built upon a foundation of celestial metaphor, it is necessary to be able to envision the various constellations which those ancient myths are referencing. 

Sadly, due to a variety of factors, most people today are not able to envision the constellations of our night sky, and are not familiar with their various distinctive features and characteristics.

In this video, we examine the mythologically-important constellations of Sagittarius, the Southern Crown (Corona Australis), and Ara the Altar. We also examine a piece of ancient artwork which shows that the ancients most definitely appear to have been employing the same constellational outlining system which the famous author H. A. Rey (1898 - 1977) published in his excellent guide to the night sky entitled The Stars: A New Way to See Them (first published in 1952).

I hope the video will be helpful to you in your efforts to see the constellations in the night sky -- and in your mind's eye -- and to understand the celestial language spoken by the world's ancient myths, scriptures and sacred stories, in order to hear their timeless message.

Please feel free to share on social media and with friends and family who may appreciate the information in this video, and to sign up to my YouTube channel in order to be notified when new videos are published.

Please offer prayers and encouragement for those impacted by historic floods in Kerala, India

Please offer prayers and encouragement for those impacted by historic floods in Kerala, India

image: Indian Express (link).

image: Indian Express (link).

The annual festival of Onam which is observed most especially in the state of Kerala in India would have commenced on August 15 this year. However, the observance of the festival has been canceled this year due to devastating flooding.

I had been contacted some time before by a reader in Kerala who has been working on an article about the celestial connections of the annual Onam festival. That article has now of course been postponed.

The unprecedented flooding is the worst in at least a hundred years, and has already claimed over three hundred lives in Kerala, with more rains continuing to fall even now. 

The rains are an annual feature of the monsoon season, but this past week they were so heavy that engineers at nearly all of the numerous dams in the area had to begin releasing water to prevent the dams from bursting altogether.

Readers may remember that the Oroville dam in northern California was letting off water from its spillway in the spring of 2017 when the spillway failed due to lack of necessary infrastructure spending, which is one of the signature characteristics of neoliberalism, privatization, and the siphoning-off of public resources to enrich private interests, discussed in previous blog posts such as:

Please pray for those in Kerala affected by the deadly flooding, and please let others know about the situation there, which does not appear to be receiving much media coverage at least where I live. 

And, if you are moved to do so, please help the men, women and children of Kerala in any way you can (while at the same time being sure to look into the trustworthiness of any agency through which you might choose to donate funds).

Let's do what we can to reach out and offer encouragement, prayers and assistance during this catastrophe.

image: Indian Express (link).

image: Indian Express (link).