Thulean Archives

Who is Santa Claus?

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Description#Yule #Christmass #Christianity #Paganism #Odinn
CollectionsVisualPaganism, Mythology and TraditionsChristianity
Uploaded2025-12-24
Santa Claus. Who is it? Where does the idea come from? And why do people cling to it today? Well, let's find out.

Who is Santa Claus?!

In English, they call it Santa Claus because of a Christian saint from what is today Turkey. If you are historically illiterate, you probably think that the Saint Nicholas is a Turkish saint. If you have a little bit more understanding, you know that what is today Turkey used to be Greece. And the Central Asians came there and took the land from them. So, in fact, Saint Nicholas is a Greek saint. If you are a little bit more historically literate, you know that Christianity took all these pagan symbols and celebrations and festivals and everything and rebranded them. And I'm going to introduce you to the truth in this context. Namely, the fact that Saint Nicholas, Santa Claus is, of course, a pagan symbol. And it is a symbol of your ancestors. The sum of your ancestors is what we call Óðinn,[1] the pagan god Óðinn. So, yes, Saint Nicholas is just a rebranded Óðinn. And what on earth is he doing giving you presents and coming down the chimney and stuff? Well, let's find out.[2]

When you are about 7 years old in Europe, you're supposed to understand that the ancestors don't actually descend through the chimney. We reincarnate. And the gifts that you receive from the ancestors are, of course, your genetic heritage and your qualities and yourself. And in order to remember yourself. You are reminded of these qualities, and you are reminded of them by means of physical gifts. If you receive something physical that you used to own or that is linked to something you were very good at, for example, in the past, you remember and you reclaim this ability.

And the fact is that if I give gifts to my children, then the ancestors are doing it, because I am my ancestors and I have descended through the chimney. I have been reborn. I am these ancestors incarnated, reincarnated.[3] We are all our ancestors. We are Óðinn. So when we give gifts to our children, the ancestors are doing it. Óðinn is doing it. And then the question, why on earth do Christians, a Judaic cult, practice this pagan festival? Let's find out.

Well, you see, when Christianity was by force, and threats and bribes spread out in Europe, Europeans, in the end sort of like "okay, we'll pretend to accept it and we just keep on practicing our paganism in the meanwhile". And they did, and the Pope was very frustrated, and the bishops were very frustrated, and they argued a lot back and forth.[4] And some of them argue that they should banish it, and others realise that, you know, why don't we just pretend it's Christian? Like they did with everything else that is pagan, by the way,[5] they just incorporated into their religion. And from now on, well, we pretend it's a part of Christianity, dude. Because no matter what they did, the Europeans refused to stop practicing their paganism. They kept on doing it.[6] And the Christians participated in these pagan festivals, which is kind of ironic. You had Christians bishops participating in pagan festivals. Because they wanted to put in some Christianity into it. And in the end, they pretended to, you know, "Oh, it's about the birth of Christ" and everything, and "Oh, no, no, It's not Óðinn, it's a saint from Greece".[7] And, of course, the utterly pagan tree worship - "Nah, that's just something... we can't really explain what it is, but it's Christian.

I may add that the tree is there because the tree is a symbol of the placenta, which is very central to you being born. If you don't have a placenta, you're not being reborn. And it is the placenta in your womb, in the womb of a mother, that teaches the child what to be. So the Christians just rebranded it, stole it, and pretended it was a part of Christianity. It's not. Your celebration is about reincarnation, and we being our ancestors. And when we are being reborn, we reincarnate as our ancestors.

And the idea of giving gifts to awaken memories from previous lives, so to speak, is something they do today when they treat people who suffer from amnesia. When they have forgotten something, they present to them different items. That are supposed to make them remember again. And this is what paganism was about. That's what the gifts were all about.
The Christians destroyed as much as they could of our European heritage. I bet this reminds of you something? What they could not destroy they rebranded and pretended it was "Christian" to begin with. Anyone objecting to their cultural vandalism and cultural appropriation was "dealt with".
Merry Yuletide, and Happy New Year! And am I add that if you want to reincarnate as your ancestors, you have to have the "hardware" of your ancestors, so to speak. Probably goes without saying, but in this day and age, a lot of people don't seem to understand that. Thanks for watching.
  1. That is, other Europeans call him by other names. But it is the same deity.
  2. The evidence proving that Óðinn is the sum of our ancestors is presented in this book.
  3. The sum of them all.
  4. This is around year 300 to 400 in our time of reckoning.
  5. For the same reason: The "Christianized" Europeans refused to stop practising their pagan festivals and rituals.
  6. Even atheists still practise these Pagan festivals.
  7. As previously said, Óðinn is just the Norse name for this pan-European deity. Other Europeans call him by other names.