Monday, May 04, 2020

HITLERS HIGH PRIESTESS 
SAVITRI DEVI AND HER SOLAR 
A fascist fan boy collection of her works with the introduction being Nicholas Goodridge Clarke's excellent biography. He uses former German Canadian Anti Semite propagandist Ernst Zundel as a source as does the fan boy who created this collection. Zundel himself published some of the work here

Do I really have to give a Trigger Warning

I first came across Devi in an obscure basement used bookstore in Vancouver in the eighties and picked up her book on her Solar Religion especially when I saw she linked her Hindu Nationalism to Hitlers Star and called him a Man God. She was not unlike any other European adopting India as the truth the way and the Light of the East or Asia or of the Secret Chiefs, not unlike Madame Blavatsky, Anne Besant or that British plumber
Lama Lobsang Rampa of Tibet, was none other than Cyril Henry Hoskin, a native of Plympton, Devonshire....


And of course that is why I research this stuff I am a Heresiologist, google it. 


https://archive.org/details/SavitriDeviCollectionHinduOccultNaziHitlerPriestess/page/n1/mode/2up
Savitri Devi — A Warning to the Hindus — Contents
IN HER OWN PRESCIENT WAY SHE PREDICTED OR DID SHE EVOKE THE CULT OF MODI, AND HINDU NATIONALISM WITH HER BOOK A WARNING TO HINDU'S

Part of her research and then focus on solar deities was on Akhnaton the Egyptian Pharoh who introduced monotheism into Egypt in particular the worship of the Sun God Ra as his father making him the first son of god.

Velikovsky another heretic has his own interpretation of this Akhnaton myth which he wrote after Devi's privately published work, which lay in obscurity. 


Oedipus and Akhnaton | The Velikovsky Encyclopedia

Oedipus and Akhnaton

(1960) is Velikovsky’s fourth book, and second in the series following Ages in Chaos. Velikovsky explains that he:
“… read Freud’s last book, Moses and Monotheism, and was prompted to read more about Akhnaton, the real hero of that book. Soon I was struck by some close parallels between this Egyptian king and the legendary Oedipus. A few months later I found myself in the libraries of the New World, among many large volumes containing the records of excavations in Thebes and el-Amarna. This study carried me into the larger field of Egyptian history and to the concept of Ages in Chaos – a reconstruction of twelve hundred years of ancient history, twelve years of toil. ..”
“… it properly follows Ages in Chaos, Volume 1, which covered the time from the great upheaval that closed the Middle Kingdom in Egypt to the time of Pharaoh Akhnaton. The present short book tells his story and that of the tragic events at the end of the Eighteenth Dynasty. In its wake, another volume of Ages in Chaos, too long postponed, will be concluded, bringing my historical reconstruction to the advent of Alexander.”[1]



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