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#Civilization

Selected Kandlus essays, editorial analysis, and long-form perspectives connected to #Civilization.

Six Mystery from Ancient Persia

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Six Mystery from Ancient Persia

You undoubtedly know that the color of love is red. But few ever ask why. Long before novels, long before poetry, the meaning of red was shaped within an ancient Persian tradition known as Mehr, later called Mithra. In this worldview, love was never a fleeting emotion. It was a sacred bond. A cosmic force that bound worlds together just as it bound one soul to another. To love was not to wish or desire, but to swear an oath to truth under the light. Each human being was understood as a world unto themselves, layered, hidden, and mysterious. For thousands of years, the followers of Mithra believed that the deepest truths of existence were never found on the surface of the world, but beneath it. In caves, in mountains, and in forgotten places. To seek truth was to descend. Iran, one of the oldest lands on Earth, stands as a crossroads of civilizations. Kingdoms rose and fell here, myths were born and buried, and secrets were layered beneath history itself. Beyond textbooks and tourist sites lies another Iran, one rarely spoken of. A land where history and mystery walk side by side.

Omid Deiminiyat7/4/20265 min read
Get acquainted with Hermes Trismegistus, the most mysterious and wise character in history

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Get acquainted with Hermes Trismegistus, the most mysterious and wise character in history

The secrets of Freemasonry are a mystery that everyone seeks to discover. Or hermetic science and hermetic wisdom has amazed everyone for centuries. But have you ever thought about the Achaemenians?

Omid Deiminiyat6/25/20269 min read
Why read the Book of Aquarius?

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Why read the Book of Aquarius?

The Book of Aquarius explores the idea that true alchemy was a natural practice rooted in observation, patience, and hidden knowledge. Rather than offering formulas or promises, the book challenges modern assumptions about ancient wisdom and invites readers to rethink humanity’s lost relationship with nature and transformation.

Omid Deiminiyat6/24/20262 min read

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