Question --
WHAT IS ASATRU ?
The Short
Asatru FAQ by Gamlinginn
Answer --
Asatru is a living religion,
currently practiced by a growing number
of people in the United
States, Canada, and elsewhere. Asatru is
separate from, and not
connected to, any other religious faith
(although there may be
superficial similarities in some respects).
The word Asatru means Faith in
the Aesir and the Vanir, who are best
known to most people as the
Gods and Goddesses of the Old Norse
legends, although these same
Deities were once worshiped by most of
the peoples or pre-Christian
Europe, and others as far east as India
(they are the Deities of the
Rig Veda). However, because the Old Norse
legends provide the best
knowledge of them, we usually refer to them
by their Old Norse names --
Frigg and Odinn, Tyr and Zisa, Sif and
Thorr, Freyja and Freyr, and
so on. Traces remain in modern English:
Tuesday means Tyr's day,
Wednesday means Odinn's day, Thursday means
Thorr's day, and Friday means
either Frigg's day or Freyja's day
(scholars debate which).
Asatru is open to everyone,
and there are many different sorts of
Asatruers (members of the
Asatru Religion). Anyone who wants to join
Asatru can do so -- regardless
of gender, race, color, ethnicity,
national origin, language,
sexual orientation, or other divisive
criteria. Asatru today is no
more "European" than Christianity is
"Jewish" or Islam is
"Arabic" etc.
Asatruers often form local
groups for the same reasons that people of
other religions band together.
These Asatru groups are sometimes
called Hearths, or Kindreds,
or other names. However, many Asatru
believers live too far away
from any of their coreligionists to be
able to join such a group.
The Asatru Way of Life
esteems: courage, honor, hospitality,
independence (and liberty),
individuality (with self-reliance and
self-responsibility),
industriousness (and perseverance), justice
(including an innate sense of
fairness and respect for others),
loyalty (to family, friends,
and the society of which one is a part),
truthfulness, and a
willingness to stand up for what is right.
An Asatru religious ceremony
is called a Blot. (Note: Linguistically,
the Old Norse word Blot means
a blessing, and has nothing to do with
blood.) Eight major Blots are
celebrated by Asatruers each year. These
are listed below, with the
modern English name of each given first,
followed by its Old Norse name
in parenthesis, and the date --
although the usual practice is
to hold the Blot on the nearest
weekend.
Disfest (Disablot) 31 January
Ostara (Ostara) 21 March
May Eve (Valpurgis) 30 April
Midsummer (Midsumarsblot) 21 Jun
Freysfest (Freysblot) 31 July
Fallfest (Haustblot) 23 Sep
Winter Night (Vetrnaetr) 31 Oct
Yule (Jol) 21 December
Other Blots are held for
special events, such as weddings, or on
occasions such as the Feast of
Vali (14 February). Besides the Blot,
there is another kind of
Asatru ceremony, called the Sumbel, which is
a kind of formalized religious
toasting. Sumbels are held whenever
people want to hold them.
There are also numerous social and cultural
activities.
For more information about
Asatru, write --
THE TROTH, P.O. Box 25637,
TEMPE, ARIZONA 85285 U.S.A.