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Aiyy Faith
(Айыы итэҕэлэ)
Formation2015 (9 years ago) (2015)
FounderLazar Afanasyev (Téris)
TypeReligious organisation
HeadquartersYakutsk, Sakha Republic (Yakutia)

Area served

Sakha Republic (Yakutia)

Main organ

Council Body
AffiliationsTengrism

The Aiyy Faith (Yakut: Айыы итэҕэлэ, romanized: Aiyy Iteghele) is a neo-Tengrist Yakut religious organization that has been registered since 2015 in Yakutsk, Sakha Republic (Yakutia), Russia. It was established by the philologist Lazar『Téris』Afanasyev [sah] and has a precursor in the organization Kut-Siur, founded in 1990.

History

[edit]

The philologist Lazar Afanasyev [sah] (Russian: Лазарь Андреевич Афанасьев; 1952–2017), also known by his ethnic name "Téris", studied shamanism in the Soviet years. His teaching is a monotheistically modernized Yakut version of Tengrism and is set forth in the book Teachings of Aiyy.[1] Afanasyev's organization Kut-Siur (Yakut: Кут-сүрHeart-Soul-Mind) was founded in 1990 and established in 1993 in Yakutsk.[2][3]

Kut-Siur collaborated closely with the Yakut national movement "The Future of the Yakuts" (Sakha Kaskile) led by Ivan Ukhkhan. Together they requested from the beginning of the 1990s permission to construct the temple: in 1999, by a decree of the republican authorities, the House of Purification (Archie Diete), a wood, glass and metal wonder composed in the form of three gigantic yurts, was laid down and opened in 2002.[4][5] In 2001, the local Orthodox archbishop sharply criticized the construction of the "pagan temple" (kapishche). After the new President of Yakutia was elected in 2002, the pro-Orthodox course of the authorities began, and so representatives of ethnic religions ceased to be invited to inter-religious meetings. The House of Purification was taken away and transferred to the city, which turned it into a house of culture. Religious and political activists demand its return, as well as the "Three Birch" National Park promised by the authorities and a pagan school in Yakutsk.[6][7] However, the authorities stopped trying to prevent the spread of Aiyy Faith at the grassroots level in the villages.[8]

Afanasyev's new organization Aiyy Faith was registered in 2015 in Yakutsk, Sakha Republic (Yakutia), Russia.[7]

Teachings

[edit]
Lazar『Téris』Afanasyev in 2015

Aiyy (Tangra)—the Creator God—lives in the 9th Heaven. All the other 63 deities of the Yakut pantheon are his manifestations (compare avatarsinHinduism). "White shamans" serve him (while it is forbidden to turn to the "black shamans" of Yakut paganism). Man consists of three souls (Kut): the soul-earth, soul-air, and soul-mother, which return to Aiyy upon the physical body's death.[9] When some traditionalists ask about the sources of this teaching, he replies that he received such teachings from a "white old spirit".[10]

The main posts, or offices, of this organization are the Philosopher and the Toyon (Tribal chief). It has the Aiyy houses and urasas (birch-bark dwellings) in the villages in which common prayers and bloodless sacrifices with fermented mare's milk are performed. The doctrine influenced the content of teaching national culture in schools and especially on the training of personnel at the local College of Culture.[3][11]

See also

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ Vorontsova & Filatov 2006, pp. 134, 142.
  • ^ Vorontsova & Filatov 2006, pp. 134, 142–44.
  • ^ a b Balzer 2005, p. 62.
  • ^ Balzer 2005, pp. 58–59.
  • ^ Vorontsova & Filatov 2006, p. 145.
  • ^ Vorontsova & Filatov 2006, p. 149.
  • ^ a b Popov 2016.
  • ^ Vorontsova & Filatov 2006, p. 147.
  • ^ Balzer 2005, p. 61; Vorontsova & Filatov 2006, p. 142; Tomski 2014, pp. 3–109; Popov 2016.
  • ^ Balzer 2005, pp. 62–63.
  • ^ Vorontsova & Filatov 2006, p. 142.
  • References

    [edit]

    Primary sources

    [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aiyy_Faith&oldid=1210311023"

    Categories: 
    Tengriism
    Modern pagan organizations based in Russia
    Modern pagan organizations established in 2015
    Religion in Siberia
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Articles containing Yakut-language text
    Articles containing Russian-language text
    CS1 Russian-language sources (ru)
    CS1 French-language sources (fr)
    CS1 foreign language sources (ISO 639-2)
     



    This page was last edited on 26 February 2024, at 00:45 (UTC).

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