Romuva (religion)

The official symbol of the Romuvan Church of Lithuania on a flag.
A pattern of the world tree, Austras Koks ("Tree of Twilight"), also commonly used as a symbol of Romuva.

Romuva is a contemporary continuation of the traditional ethnic religion of the Baltic peoples, reviving the ancient religious practices of the Lithuanians before their Christianization in 1387. Romuva claims to continue living Baltic pagan traditions which survived in folklore and customs.[1][2][3] Romuva is a polytheistic pagan faith which asserts the sanctity of nature and has elements of ancestor worship. Practising the Romuva faith is seen by many adherents as a form of cultural pride, along with celebrating traditional forms of art, retelling Baltic folklore, practising traditional holidays, playing traditional Baltic music, singing traditional dainas or hymns and songs as well as ecological activism and stewarding sacred places.[4] The community was organized and led by krivių krivaitis (high priest) Jonas Trinkūnas until his death in 2014.

Romuva primarily exists in Lithuania but there are also congregations of adherents in Australia, Canada, the United States,[5] and England.[6][7][8] There are also Romuvans in Norway, for whom a formal congregation is being organized.[9] There are believers of Baltic pagan faiths in other nations, including Dievturība in Latvia.[10] According to the 2001 census, there were 1,270 people of Baltic faith in Lithuania.[11] That number jumped to 5,118 in the 2011 census.[12]

Etymology

The terms Romuva, Romovė and Ruomuva came from medieval written sources in East Prussia mentioning the pagan Baltic temple Romowe.[13] The word has meanings of "temple" and "sanctuary", but, further, also "abode of inner peace".[14] The Baltic root ram-/rām-, has the meaning of 'calm, serene, quiet', stemming from the Proto-Indo-European *(e)remǝ-.[15]

History

Ancient and Medieval Lithuanian faith

Main article: Lithuanian mythology
Romuvan ceremony

Whatever religion the original inhabitants of the Baltic region had predates recorded history.[16] Mesolithic hunters, gatherers and anglers of the region practised a religion focused on their occupations. Marija Gimbutas controversially suggested that agrarian settlers of around 3500–2500 BCE were examples of earth-worshiping Old Europeans. After this, Indo-Europeans entered the area and brought with them their Proto-Indo-European religion. This religion, including elements from the religious past of the region, evolved into the paganism which is attested in the Middle Ages and later.[16]

The adherents of this Baltic religion prospered relatively unhindered until the 9th century when they began to come under pressure from outside Christian forces.[17] The Annals of Quedlinburg mention a missionary, Bruno of Querfurt, who was killed along with 18 men by Yotvingians while attempting to convert the pagans in the area of Lithuania and Prussia in 1009 CE.[18] This was the first time the name of Lithuania was mentioned in written sources.[19] Other sources suggest Bruno had been killed for violating The Holy Forest and destroying statues of gods.[20]

Beginning in 1199, the Roman Catholic Church declared crusades against Baltic pagans.[17] Grand Duke Mindaugas was Christianized with his family and warriors in 1251 so that the Crusades may be ended by the Church.[21] But Mindaugas still worshiped pagan deities as the Hypatian chronicle mentions. He sacrificed to the pagan Supreme god (*Andajus, later Dievas), Perkūnas, *Teliavelis (god of smiths), and *Žvorūna (goddess of forests and hunters). Despite any insincerity and realpolitik in his Christian faith, some subsidiary states of Mindaugas' Grand Duchy rebelled in protest. In 1261 Mindaugas renounced his Christian faith as his official conversion failed to placate the Crusaders.[22]

Even in the face of Crusaders, by the time of Grand Duke Gediminas, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania expanded its influence until it formed the political centre of a vast and prosperous "pagan Empire".[23] Lithuanians thus survived late into history as appreciable representatives of ancient European paganism, preserving this tradition as the official, state religion until the late 14th and early 15th centuries when Christianity was finally accepted by the states of the Grand Duchy, again for political reasons.[24] Lithuanians were thus the last non-nomadic people in Europe practicing pristine Indo-European polytheism.[17][25] The Sami, who remained nomadic, were the exception, but they did not form a state of their own or speak an Indo-European language. Unofficially, Lithuanians continued in their adherence to traditional paganism.[17]

Revival

The Romantic epoch started in the 19th century. This led Lithuanians to look back to their past for both intellectual and spiritual inspiration. The national revival started and Lithuanian intelligentsia idealised ancient paganism and folklore.[26] Some historians wanted to prove the beauty of ancient polytheism and even started creating new aspects of Lithuanian mythology. One of the most famous of these was Theodor Narbutt who edited Ancient Greek myths and created new Lithuanian ones.[27]

In the beginning of the 20th century, ancient pagan traditions were still continued in folklore and customs.[28][29] People were celebrating ancient pagan festivals mixed with Christian traditions.[30][31] Such festivals include Vėlinės (day of dead souls, common with Celtic Halloween), Užgavėnės (festival when winter ends and spring begins), and Rasos or Joninės.[30][32] For Užgavėnės, people in Samogitia may dress in costumes including masks and burn an idol of an old lady, called Morė or Giltine, goddess of death.

Modern folk religion

The late Romuvan krivis (high priest), Jonas Trinkūnas, at 2009 feast of ancient martial arts Apuolė-854

The philosopher Vydūnas is taken as a sort of founding father of Romuva.[33] He actively promoted awareness of and participation in pagan festivals.[33] Vydūnas saw Christianity as foreign to Lithuanians, and instead he brought his attention to what he saw as the spiritual vision of the adherents of the traditional Baltic religion. He ascribed to this a sense of awe in their cosmology, as they saw the universe as a great mystery, and respect for every living being as well as the earth in their morality, as they saw the whole world and every individual as a symbol of life as a whole.[34] The Divine was represented by fire, which was as such used ritually to worship the divine and itself held sacred. Vydūnas had given special treatment to this religion of the Lithuanians in his drama Amžina ugnis (An Eternal Flame). Among this and other works, Vydūnas exalted the faith as being on the highest level of spiritual expression, along with other forms which he recognized.[35]

Domas Šidlauskas-Visuomis (1878–1944) began to create Vaidevutybė (Baltic paganism) in 1911. At the same time the Latvian folk religion movement Dievturi was started by E. Brastinis. The main problem was that the first movements were based on limited folklore sources and influenced by Far Eastern traditions such as Hinduism and Buddhism. Even so, the idea of Romuva didn't die during the Soviet occupation of Lithuania.

Soviet suppression

The Lithuanian pagan movement was stopped by Soviet occupation in 1940. The Soviet Union forcefully annexed Lithuania in 1940 and renamed it the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic. Due to the nationalist nature of Romuva, the faith was suppressed during the Soviet occupation and many practitioners were executed or deported to forced labor camps in Siberia. After Joseph Stalin's death the cultural life became more free.

A clandestine Romuva group is known to have existed within a labor camp in Inta, Russia. After the members were released and returned to Lithuania around 1960, some of these practitioners, along with Jonas Trinkūnas, formed the Vilnius Ethnological Ramuva and began organizing public celebrations of traditional Lithuanian religious holidays, starting with Rasos festival in 1967. In 1971 the Soviets expelled the members from the university they attended and exiled the leaders.[36] By 1988, when the power of the Soviet Union was waning and Lithuanian independence was on the horizon, Romuva groups began reorganizing in the Baltic nations and practising their religion in the open.[10]

Independence

Romuva was recognised as an Ancient Baltic faith community in 1992 after independence in 1990. Under the auspices of the Law on Religious Communities and Associations which was passed in Lithuania in 1995, Romuva gained recognition as a "non-traditional" religion. Lithuanian law requires a minimum of 25 years of existence before such a religion can receive the state support reserved for "traditional" religions. In 1990, Trinkūnas created Kūlgrinda, a band that performs in many Romuva festivals.

Rituals

Aukuras

The Baltic aukuras or "fire altar" is a stone altar in which a fire is ritually lit. Participants wash their hands and face before approaching the aukuras, and then they sing dainas or ritual hymns as the fire is lit. Food, drink, grasses and flowers are offered to the flame as the group sings the dainas. After the primary offering, participants offer their own verbal or silent contributions which are carried to the Gods with the smoke and sparks of the flame.

Romuva centres

Žemaičių Alka

Žemaičių Alka was originally planned to be rebuilt on Birutė hill in Palanga but was not agreed to by the mayor of Palanga. Instead, it was built on a hill near Šventoji which also has 11 sculptures of pagan gods. There are four main festivals in a year:

Interfaith relations

Romuvan and Hindu groups have come together on numerous occasions to share prayers and participate in dialogue. These events have taken place in Lithuania,[37][38] Atlantic City, New Jersey,[39] Boston, Massachusetts,[22] Epping, New Hampshire,[22] and elsewhere. Close relations are maintained with various Hindu groups.[40]

See also

Historical background
Other Neopagan movements

Notes

  1. Dundzila (2007), pp. 279, 296-298.
  2. Dundzila and Strmiska (2005), p. 247.
  3. Ignatow (2007), p. 104.
  4. Dundzila and Strmiska (2005), p. 244.
  5. Dundzila and Strmiska (2005), p. 278.
  6. Saulėgrįža Londono Romuvoje
  7. Londono Romuva kviečia
  8. Rasos šventė Londone
  9. Baltų Krivule Kurtuvėnuose 2011.06. 5.
  10. 1 2 Dundzila (2007), p. 294.
  11. Lietuvos gyventojai pagal tikybą 2001 m.
  12. Gyventojai pagal tautybę, gimtąją kalbą ir tikybą, p. 13
  13. Dundzila & Strmiska (2005), p. 246.
  14. Ignatow (2007), p. 102.
  15. Indo-European roots
  16. 1 2 Dundzila (2007), p. 280.
  17. 1 2 3 4 Dundzila (2007), p. 287.
  18. Georg Heinrich Pertz et al. (ed.): Scriptores (in Folio) 3: Annales, chronica et historiae aevi Saxonici. Hanover, 1839, pp. 80 (Monumenta Germaniae Historica, 80 digitalised)
  19. Clark (2004), p. 196
  20. Alfredas Bumblauskas, "Lietuvos tūkstantmetis".
  21. Dundzila (2007), pp. 287-288.
  22. 1 2 3 Dundzila (2007), p. 288.
  23. Dundzila & Strmiska (2005), p. 242.
  24. Dundzila (2004), p. 290.
  25. Waldman & Mason (2006), p. 492.
  26. Dundzila & Strmiska (2005), p. 244.
  27. Barr (2010), p. 179.
  28. Dundzila (2007), pp. 279 & 292.
  29. Dundzila & Strmiska (2005), pp. 245-246 & 258.
  30. 1 2 Dundzila (2007), p. 321.
  31. Dundzila & Strmiska (2005), pp. 258-270.
  32. Dundzila & Strmiska (2005), pp. 258-260.
  33. 1 2 Dundzila & Strmiska (2005), p. 361.
  34. Dundzila (2007), p. 292.
  35. Bagdonavicius (2000), p. 96.
  36. For most of the claims in this paragraph thus far, see Dundzila (2007), p. 293. For Trikūnas' involvement with Ramuva, see Dundzila & Strmiska (2005), p. 246.
  37. Faith-based organizations | Education | United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. Unesco.org. Retrieved on 2013-07-28.
  38. Romuva movement
  39. Indo Romuva Cultures Conference Announced
  40. Turning to the East: The Influence of Eastern Religions on New Religious Movements in Lithuania

References

External links

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