24 November  2006

3 Azar 1385 


The Ancient Magian Bloodline of the Shi'a Clergy and the Religion of the Black Sun - 24 November 2006

It is commonplace to hear talk of the foreign-blooded origins of the Shi'a clerics in Iran, such as Ayatollahs Ruhollah Khomeini and the current Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. It is assumed that they are not of Iranian origins, but rather of Arab origins, or even, as in the case of Khomeini, of Indian descent. However, what all these speculations have in common is their ignorance of one basic fact: that all the mullahs of Iran are related to each other and share a common bloodline.

If we investigate the genealogical histories of each and every notable Shi'a cleric, we discover that there is indeed no escape from this fundamental truth. Like the royal families of Europe, the clerical families of Iran do not marry outside their clique, but rather intermarry with each other. You will not find a single mullah of any worth or influence who has ever married a woman from a non-clergy family. And each and every one of these mullahs, whether mid-level clerics such as Rafsanjani and Khatami or higher-ranking ones such as Montazeri and Shirazi, are descended from the same exact ancestors.

And thus we arrive at the inevitable, "Where do the mullahs come from? Who are they and what they do want?" But the answer is not one that most of us are prepared to hear, let alone accept. But the fact remains that any serious and critical study of the genealogical roots of the Shi'a clergy of Iran will bring us to these very shocking and earth-shattering truths.

These are the truths that the mullahs have sought to protect and keep hidden for so long. Truths that are so dangerous and controversial that any investigator in Iran who dares to print them risks a fate worse than death in the secret dungeons that exist deep underground, where the most dissident of dissidents are held. What we share with you here is only a fragment of the larger equation that we have been able to verify, and as such this is only the tip of the iceberg.

The truth is that the bloodline of the Shi'a clergy is indigenous to Iran, extending deep into the prehistory of our land, long before Islam or even Judaism ever came to be. In history it is recorded that the ancient Magians were a tribe of Media. The Medes, of course, were the first founders of an indigenous Aryan empire, the precursor to the Persian Empire which was established much later by Cyrus the Great. The Magians were a priestly tribe who at that point were principally responsible for the religious and funerary observances of the Iranian peoples. This is all very well mentioned in the history books.

But what is not commonly acknowledged is that the Magian bloodline predated the Aryan arrival, and can actually be traced back to the ancient land of Sumer to the west of the Iranian plateau in Mesopotamia. The civilization of Sumer, the peoples of which were not likely to have been indigenous to the region, had an immense impact upon the neighbouring civilizations of Elam, Kassu, Assyria, and Babylonia, all of which are recognised to have been indigenous to southwest Asia.

From Sumer the bloodline originated, and to Elam it came to transferred, and from Elam they travelled to the north of Iran whereby they came under the domination of the Aryan Medes. It is at this point that the Magian bloodline came to be "Aryanised" but only in the sense that they adopted Aryan language and social customs. Their religion and traditions remained the same, and it is precisely for this reason that they remained a separate ethnic group from all the others. The Magians forbid their own to marry outside the group, which would have resulted in the dilution of their bloodline.

And we come to the crux of the matter here, the issue of the purity of bloodlines and why this is of paramount importance. Throughout the world, it is increasingly being confirmed via genetic analysis that the most pure bloodlines - no matter the racial type - are immune to diseases and illnesses that afflict the vast majority of humanity whose bloodlines are extensively mixed. We also find, through sociological observation, that those who belong to pure bloodlines are not prone to behaviour that is more commonplace amongst the less pure groups. Criminal and violent and sexually deviant behavior, for instance, has been verified to afflict certain groups more than others, and when we study which groups these sorts of behaviors are common amongst, we should not be surprised to find that they are far from being pure bloodlines.

But with the Magian bloodline there is the additional issue of actual supernatural power being concentrated within the bloodline, which is to say the genetic stream itself. We should not automatically assume that this power exists, but only that the Magians believed that they had supernatural abilities and that these abilities were passed on from generation to generation. It should not be surprising to find that the Shi'a mullahs of today also have similar beliefs about the sanctity and purity of their bloodlines, and that due to this they have abilities and powers that are not granted to other bloodlines, let alone the mixed ones.

Throughout the centuries the Magians were renowned for their abilities and miraculous powers. And with this power came a notorious reputation for political intrigue and manipulation. During the reign of the Achaemenids, the Magian priests came to hold such influence in the Imperial court that it was often whispered that they had the power to make or break a monarch, and this held to be true during the invasion of Persia by Alexander the Great, when Darius led a disastrous defence based upon a strategy formulated by his Magian advisers. After Alexander's conquest, the Magians quickly came to assert their dominance over him as well, converting him to their religion, much to the shock of his generals. It has often been rumoured that not only were the Magians responsible for the demise of Darius, but also for the death of Alexander at the age of thirty.

The Magians also held great sway over the Seleucid rulers, but their era of influence came to an end with the rise of the Parthians who practiced the pure Aryan religion of the Sun, called Mithraism. This religion of the Sun was diametrically opposed to the religion of the Magi, which was a faith of the Night and the Moon, or the Black Sun as they called it. As such, they were literally cut out of the loop and forced to the fringes of the empire, unable to exert any influence whatsoever. But upon the collapse of the Parthian Empire and the rise of the Sassanids, the Magians were once again able to reassert their position in the society and they quickly came to dominate the Imperial court. This time, in order to prevent the dynasty from operating independently as the Parthians had done, the Magians devised a strategy to ensure that they would never be cut out of the loop again. This they did by establishing for the first time in Iran an actual state religion. Nominally, this was Zoroastrianism, but it was certainly not the religion of Zarathustra, who himself had been vehemently opposed to the Magian cult and their non-Aryan practices.

As has been extensively documented, the Zoroastrianism of the Sassanid Empire, which is the ancestor of modern-day Zoroastrianism, is not true Zoroastrianism, but rather an imposter religion. It has absolutely no connection to the true faith of Zarathustra himself, which was not so much a religion, but rather a spiritual philosophy and way of life, not unlike Buddhism which would develop much later.

The Magian cult exerted extreme influence over Sassanid Persia, and it has been said that it was for this reason that Persia had become so powerful and nearly invincible. At least for awhile. By the time of the Islamic Arab invasion and occupation, the peoples of the empire had had enough of the Magian cult and their tyranny, and this disaffection and disillusionment severely weakened the Imperial infrastructure which was not able to withstand the Arab onslaught. Some have theorised that this was what the Magians had intended, and that it was the Magians who directed the catastrophic strategy which led to the Persian defeat.

Whatever the case might have been, the Magians gradually and slowly converted to the new faith of Islam, but as before with Zoroastrianism, it was in name only. Their true practices and traditions remained intact, but always kept secret. It was these very same clerics that were able to exert enough influence upon the Safavids to compel them to establish Shi'a Islam - for all intents an Iranianised form of Islam developed by the Magian cult - as the new state religion, thus propelling them once again to the centre of the Imperial court. And there they remained for centuries until the rise of Reza Shah. For the first time since the Parthians, the Magians once again found themselves displaced and dispossessed, this time at the hands of a single man who made it his mission to completely eliminate the Shi'a clergy and end their reign of terror once and for all.

Unfortunately the enlightened rule of Reza Shah came to an end in 1941 with the Allied British-Soviet invasion of 1941 which forced Reza Shah into exile in South Africa and propelled the Shi'a clergy back into positions of power and influence. But it would not last. By the 1960s Reza Shah's son, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, had begun to cut them out of the loop and attempting to bring them under his control. This, of course, led to the rise in popularity in the ideas of Ruhollah Khomeini, who proposed that the monarchy be overthrown and replaced by an Islamic Republic dominated by the clergy. From that point on the clergy came to covertly orchestrate the burgeoning revolutionary movement, which although beginning as a grassroots secular nationalist movement, came to be dominated by Communist and Islamist students and militants by the late 1970s. By the time the Shah fled the country, the Khomeinist faction had entered into a close alliance with the Communists in order to attack and destablise the Revolutionary Provisional Government which finally collapsed after Islamist students with the People's Mujahideen (at the time loyal to Khomeini) took over the US embassy and took the Americans hostage. By early 1980 the Khomeinists had consolidated their position and established the new Islamic Republic and went around executing their opponents and allies, including the Communists and Mujahideen. And the rest, as they say, is history.

As we have clearly demonstrated, there is a clear line of blood succession from the prehistoric Magian priestly caste that originated in Sumer to the Shi'a of clergy of today, and this is verified through both genealogical data as well as clerical historical records which reveal the legends of the origins of their bloodlines. Comparative analysis of genetic testing has also shown that clerical families share a distinct bloodline that is clearly and unusually distinct from that of the rest of the population. Those who have dared attempt to publish and disseminate this information in Iran have paid the price with their lives and the lives of their families. And as we have stated before, this is only the tip of the iceberg.

What we wish to ask of you is this: how far down does the rabbit hole go, and if you were able to find out, would you want to?

The Aryan League gratefully acknowledges the cooperation and expertise of the biology and sociology students from two very prestigious Iranian universities, which we will refrain from naming for the sake of privacy and safety, who have shared with us these incredible truths, and who are attempting to securely compile together all the necessary concrete evidence and documentation for public distribution.

BACK

 

 
1