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Halloween post: Andras in Chinese mythology (King Yan of the Underworld)

Der Orientale 666

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May 9, 2023
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Well since Halloween/Samhain/Day of the Dead (Dia de los Muertos) is coming up, I may as well.......

I found a post from the Portuguese forum containing text on this matter, A Cultura Védica da China.

Nazista lunar said:
A divindade rigvédica da morte, Yamaraj, era adorada como Yan Luo Wang, o senhor da morte no submundo chinês.

So really, this post can pretty-much be regarded as my added commentary, or perhaps even an English attempt as I am not a Portuguese-speaker.

All Souls Day/All Saints Day Festival as most Satanists know, is another stolen festival from the Pagans. European Halloween/Samhain and Mesoamerican Day of Dead celebrations are all rooted from the ancient All Souls Day festival. Philippines is the only Asiatic nation that nativizes the the autumn-timing of this feast (as Day of the Dead, imported from Mexico), though Mexico too can count if we're considering ALL countries that Orientals inhabit given that Mesoamericans are Orientals. China's own "Day of the Dead Festival", or the Qingming Festival, doesn't occur until April this year, coincidentlly around the same time as Satanic New Year/Beelzebub's time.

So in Chinese mythology, there's many names for the realm of the dead where the souls are determine what their next reincarnation would be. Some of it, is shrouded in Buddhist garbage (the entire "tortorous oven" narrative). Diyu is a popular name in Chinese for the Underworld.

In East Asian mythology, Lord Andras is known as Yan-lo (閻羅), and known in Vedic religion by the more familiar name Yama. In a more proper form, he is known as Yan-luo-Wang or Yan-lo Wang (閻羅王) with the word Wang anywhere from ruler, prince, to even king. This is directly derived from Andras' Vedic name "King Yama".

Yan-lo is predominant in the ancient religions of the entire East Asian rim. He is the featured monarch on this "hell banknote", (please note that the term "hell banknote" is an outsider's term. In China, it is considered a "joss paper", to be burned at an altar, not sure why they burn it or make it look like currency, this could be from Buddhist anti-Demon culture).

s118442841615560566_p296_i2_w2560.jpeg


Given to the many layers of Chinese history, each and every variant differs, but they all point to the same general gist: a fierce King of the Underworld, who decides the fates of Souls in their next life. Clearly we can see....Judeo-Christianity isn't very original their concept of the realm of the dead.

According to Chinese mythology, Yan-lo is accompanied by a scribe carrying a Book containing records of a person's name, and deeds and their date of passing. Yan-lo/Yama is also accompanied by two fierce Guardians who bring the souls to him to judgement. Once-again, the Christians stole this concept for their "Great White Throne judgement" of Revelation 20:12 where "the books are opened" containing every man's deed, words and etc., and their "Book of Life" narrative, all stolen from the Truth of Akashic records.

When Souls are taken to Lord Yama/Yan-lo, they will be questioned of the awareness of the evils of their bad deeds. Once again, whether it's Chinese or Greek mythology concerning the underworld and "Judge Gods", all this was stolen by the Judeo-Christians in 1 Peter 4:5, Matthew 12:36, Romans 14:12, Romans 2:16 and countless numbers of others where "every man will answer to God for their deeds".

The answers that one gives to Lord Yama determines their fate in "Hell" and their punishment. In reality though, most of our actions, and our soul's past experiences, advancements (or the opposite, degenerations and ill-will) do and will have effects in our next life and not some baking purgatory or whatever.

Yanluo.JPG

Old Chinese painting of King Yan the Judge

The entire "fiery burning Hell" narrative has already been exposed as corrupted teaching, even if coming from non-Hebrew religions like Buddhism - sadly from which, much mainstream knowledge of Yan-lo is derived from at least in my experience. The very-first I heard of Yan-lo was from the Disney movie Wendy Wu: Homecoming Warrior...and well yeah....Disney (need I say more?), so one can imagine that the portrayal of Yan-lo was not a positive, as does all MSM against our Gods.

Blessed be King Yan-Lou/Yama of the Underworld.

450px-Nariaiji2559.jpg

Japanese statue of King Yama in Kyoto

Happy All Souls Festival, Hail Satan

https://www.timelessmyths.com/gods/chinese/king-yama/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Yan
 
All Saints day is also stolen from Roman Parentalia, as it was originally celebrated in the same period before the Church changed the date.
 
Thank you for this interesting tidbit. Europe has a few things in regaurds to this though most call All Souls Eve Nov 1st. Do the chinese celebrate it in April because of the seasons or something else that made them put it there?
With different cultures it's hard to tell especially with the variations in the seasons and reasonings.
Thanks again.

Hail Father Satan
 
Meow2023 said:
Thank you for this interesting tidbit. Europe has a few things in regaurds to this though most call All Souls Eve Nov 1st. Do the chinese celebrate it in April because of the seasons or something else that made them put it there?
With different cultures it's hard to tell especially with the variations in the seasons and reasonings.
Thanks again.

Hail Father Satan

Sadly, I don't have an answer as to why Chinese celebrate their "Day of the Dead" festival in the spring, it just doesn't align with the seasons well in my opinion and more research on my end must be done on it.
 
Maxis Orientis said:
Meow2023 said:
Thank you for this interesting tidbit. Europe has a few things in regaurds to this though most call All Souls Eve Nov 1st. Do the chinese celebrate it in April because of the seasons or something else that made them put it there?
With different cultures it's hard to tell especially with the variations in the seasons and reasonings.
Thanks again.

Hail Father Satan

Sadly, I don't have an answer as to why Chinese celebrate their "Day of the Dead" festival in the spring, it just doesn't align with the seasons well in my opinion and more research on my end must be done on it.


Thank you. I look forward to what you can find. Maybe one of the gods can help you find the info?

Hail Father Satan
 
Maxis Orientis said:
Meow2023 said:
Thank you for this interesting tidbit. Europe has a few things in regaurds to this though most call All Souls Eve Nov 1st. Do the chinese celebrate it in April because of the seasons or something else that made them put it there?
With different cultures it's hard to tell especially with the variations in the seasons and reasonings.
Thanks again.

Hail Father Satan

Sadly, I don't have an answer as to why Chinese celebrate their "Day of the Dead" festival in the spring, it just doesn't align with the seasons well in my opinion and more research on my end must be done on it.

Their five elements are a little bizarre, as are the associations with seasons. Sure, they make some sense in context but not in principle.
 
Stormblood said:
Their five elements are a little bizarre, as are the associations with seasons. Sure, they make some sense in context but not in principle.

The issue is that Chinese mythology has thousands upon thousands of years of layers on it. I often get really overwhelmed when doing research and trying to meditate on the issue. I'm still trying to do research and refining on Feng Shui - which is the Chinese tradition that often talks about the 5 elements, or the 5 elements according to Chinese tradition. I know it's Satanic in origin, but the nuances of it you hear everyday seem rather New Agey, Buddhist and "trendy". Nothing more but some catchy slogan you'll see in the signage of Chinese restaurants or on some package of soy sauce, a huge problem facing Chinese people is the over-commercialization of spiritual terms like Feng Shui, zen, lotus, yin-yang or dragons, thereby making everyone oblivious to the true meanings behind these.

Some of the so-called "rules" of Feng Shui house placement just seem like common sense rather than anything energy-related, like closing the door to your bathroom/toilet if the construction workers happened to build a bathroom next to your kitchen or if it's an apartment. I certainly wouldn't wanna cook or sleep next to an open bathroom that I (or anyone for that matter) just took a massive dump in. Then again, one can argue to simply spray Lysol or air freshener everywhere, but Lysol and air sprays are flammable and can be a fire hazard and those plug-in oil dispensers take some time to rid the air of the odor.

Truly, I don't really believe it's the "end of the world" either if one stores things under their bed. I haven't heard of situation where someone attracted foul spirits just because they stored a couple things under their bed.

In regards to their 5 elements, this is what I found, it forms a pentagram too:
600px-Wu_Xing.png


They even worshiped them as literal Gods, though I must stress....from all the research I've done, and from what STanBlank confirmed to me, the only God on there recognizable as one our Demons is the "Huangdi" since Chinese records (and I mean REALLY ancient records) regard Saturn as his planet, the Eagle as his symbol, and Huangdi being a God of Light and Karma/justice as well as esoteric arts. Some of the later Chinese records are incorrect (as you'll see in the diagram below).

800px-%E4%BA%94%E6%96%B9%E4%B8%8A%E5%B8%9D.jpg


The Chinese also use this diagram, however it's incorrect in regards to the Huangdi or Azazel, his element according to JoS is air and not earth - very likely due to some distorting of info over the couple thousands of years thanks to Buddhism, Christianity and Communism. Not even STanBlank could figure out who the others outside of Huangdi are.

1920px-Wufang_Shangdi---Five_Forms_of_the_Supreme_Deity_color.svg.png


This tablet in a Beijing temple, written in both Chinese and Manchu seem to also have lots of astrology integrated into it, from Wikipedia "Tablet in the Temple of Heaven of Beijing, written in Chinese and Manchu, dedicated to the gods of the Five Movements. The Manchu word usiha, meaning "star", explains that this tablet is dedicated to the five planets: Jupiter, Mars, Saturn, Venus and Mercury and the movements which they govern."
VM_Mu-Huo-Tu-Jin-Shui_zhi_Shen_4594.jpg


Crazy stuff, but lots to be discovered.
 

Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Satan

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