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Perceived "As the One who Jumps" during fighting, Skanda was mentioned in the Puranic texts; as well as, the Mahabharata and Ramayana epics. Also depicted in bronze and stone sculptures, he was known to have balanced his Sakti Divine Feminine side Karttiki with his Divine Masculine side Karttikeya. He is also one of the nine Pleiadian brothers known as the Kumaras, who have been shepherding the Earth over the millenium. They have also been called the Kurmavatars or "Tortoise Avatars". Kasyapa Agni was the Hindu Vedic tortoise god Kasyapa, he was the immortal personification tree heartwood and a source of "primordial" creativity. He was the benefactor mentor of all the Devic aspects of nature including air, earth, fire, and water elementals. Mentioned in the Vedas and other Hinduism writings, he was portrayed in the guise of a tortoise guardian who helped resolve difficulties and brought forth munificence. A Solar son of the Pleiadian Ra lineage, he was known briefly as the Hindu god Kasyapa, before he left the Earth to soujorn in Orion and the Pleiades and literally faded from Vedic traditions. As Agni, he was a Hindu sacred fire progenitor god and guardian of the Dikpala southeastern quarter.
He was mentioned in the
Rig Veda and other Hinduism texts. Revered from about 1500 BCE. until the
present day, he was depicted in reliefs and sculptures with a chariot drawn by
either parrots or red horses. Agni was portrayed in ancient hymns as being the
epitome of the celestial fire inherent in all plants and trees. Hindus believed
that this embryonic lifeforce emerged when pieces of wood were rubbed together..
Saravati was an Early Tamil, Hindu, Vedic, Puranic white swan triple mother and fecund discrimination goddess, who was revered throughout India from about 1700 BCE until present times. She was the Hindu great white swan mother goddess of lotus discrimination, fertility, and wealth. Mentioned in the Rig Veda and other Hinduism texts as a pure river waters and fertile prosperity goddess, she was depicted in sculptures as the embodiment of a speech Vagdevi and a wisdom Brahmi. Sarasvati was portrayed riding a lotus, a peacock, or a swan. She was also portrayed with an arrow, bell, book, conch, lute, lotus, prayer wheel, rosary, and water jar. All of the early Hindu deities were Pleiadian Shamans who eventually relocated to the Pleiades. After they left, the Sirians recycled their Sacred Sites in India, Egypt and other places on the planet. Since the Sirians had much longer life spans than the average Hindu, the Hindus began to revere them as acceptable replacements for the Pleiadian immortals. As time passed, the earlier goddess and gods were supplanted by the Sirians goddesses and gods who were known by different names For instance, Rudra who was no longer living on the Earth became known as an earlier embodiment of Siva. That was why writings about Vedic goddesses and gods often mention that a particular goddess or god was an incarnation or another aspect or manifestation of an earlier Vedic deity. The Sirians helped as best they could, but, the reason they remained behind on the planet was because they were not able to live on either of the new fifth or sixth dimensional home worlds of the Lemurians in Orion and the Pleiades.
Some of the ancient Vedic
goddesses and gods like the Asvins, Chandra, Durga, Kasyapa, Parvati, Rudra,
Skanda, Surya, Vac have recently returned to the Earth to continue mentoring the Hindus, as well as, the Sirians
and other peoples of the planet. To read more about the Hinduism goddesses and gods please see
Hindu Deities Goddesses Gods...Go back
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