The Swastika and the Shatkona
These two ancient symbols are the real harbingers of the coming New World Order
Source: Reddit
When I was a kid, I had a number of Hindu classmates from the Tamil sub-ethnicity. At that time, nearly 10% of the Malaysian population was ethnic Indian, with more than 90% of them being Tamils. The Tamil language is reportedly the oldest extant functioning language in the world and its speakers often take pride in being the (much-disputed) progeny of the 8,000 year-old Indus Valley civilization.
The Indus Valley civilization however remains a mystery till this day. Its script continues to defy attempts at decipherment as it follows a logic not seen in other languages.
Instead of temples and palaces, Indus Valley cities had communal baths and town halls. The caste-ridden Tamils, on the other hand, are renowned for their temples that are literally crammed with symbols and idols representing their belief system. Furthermore, while modern India is a hellscape in terms of sanitation, nearly every Indus valley residential block was straddled on either side by a centralised sewage drain (with nearly each dwelling having a latrine) and an aqueduct for the supply of fresh water. The system was ingenious and far ahead of its time.
More pertinent to this commentary are the symbols of the Indus Valley. The presence or absence of certain symbols defines a society. The stamped artefacts of the Indus Valley featured animals such as bulls, water buffaloes, elephants, rhinoceros, unicorns and the odd swastika.
By contrast, the beliefs of ethnic Tamils of my generation were defined by two overarching symbols — the swastika and the shatkona.
You may recognize the shatkona as Judaism’s “Star of David”. You may also be surprised at how it formed a symbiont with the swastika across various cultures worldwide.
Source: "L'Univers des nombres: De l'Antiquité à Internet" (2013)
I remember bored kids in my primary (elementary) school doodling out both symbols on the margins of their notebooks (the paper ones) as they patiently waited for the final school bell to ring.
These symbols remain ubiquitous in Eastern settings such as Buddhist temples. Both symbols were subsequently syncretised into the Yin and Yang of the Far East.
Flag of South Korea (Taegeukgi)
Significance of the Shatkona
The shatkona is a six-pointed star formed from two interlocking triangles. It represents the male and female phallic organs. In India, they are graphically visible in venerated stone structures which represent the lingam (penis) and yoni (vagina). These physical objects of worship are routinely seen in homes, temples, road junctions, and even along jungle paths.
Source: varanasi.org
Along with its Ying-Yang iteration, the shatkona represents masculine and feminine forces which perpetually contend with each other in an eternal quest for harmony.
Significance of the Swastika
The swastika had enjoyed far wider geographic dispersion relative to the shatkona. Its earliest known representation, discovered in present-day Mezine, Ukraine, dates back to 10,000 BC.
It was prevalent among Occidentals and Orientals alike; South American Aztecs; North American Hopis; and ancient Ethiopians and Ghanaians in Africa, just to name a few. Just about every civilization or organised society had this symbol featured in their respective cosmogonies. Eventually, it came to represent a stylized Christian cross — under various names — from Armenia to Central Europe to the British Isles.
But it was in ancient India where both the shakona and swastika were thus named, popularised, and had their significances codified. In Sanskrit, swastika means “conducive to well-being” and broadly represents the immutability of the sun wheeling out of the sky as well as rebirth and reincarnation.
In a nutshell, this symbol was used for thousands of years across the world — way before Adolph Hitler’s ancestors learnt to till the land.
The Star of Remphan
Attributing the shatkona to the biblical King David was a latter-day fabrication. There was no mention of any such heraldic star in the Bible. There was however another star that elicited repeated condemnation in the Old Testament. This star was venerated by ancient Israelites whenever they deviated from the faith (which they frequently did). It was called the Star of Remphan and it somehow survived to symbolise modern Judaism. This star has 6 vertices (points), 6 triangles and 6 sides of an inner hexagon (six-sided polygon). I do not need to explain what 666 represents. Revelations 13:18 has this specific warning:
Here is wisdom, and whoever has a mind in him, let him calculate the number of the beast, for it is the number of a man — 666. (Aramaic Bible in Plain English).
All the conservative Jews I knew have had deep misgivings over the so-called “Star of David”. Some attribute this symbolic subversion to the “erev rav” — Jews who constitute the greatest threat to their own kind. After all, Judaism could have been represented by other biblical symbols. These include the:
Menorah: This seven-branched candelabrum remains a fixture in Jewish homes and synagogues as well as many old northern European churches — right through the Nazi Germany era and beyond. In the Christian context, the menorah represents the seven spirits of God (Revelation 4:5)
Lion: A symbol most associated with King David and his seed, the Lion of Judah
Lulav: This is the closed frond of the date palm tree. When the crowds chanted “Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord, even the King of Israel!” (John 12:13) when Jesus entered Jerusalem for the final time, He was showered with the lulav as a mark of honour.
Shofar: This is an ancient form of trumpet typically made of a ram's horn. All biblical mentions of “trumpet” in both the Old and New Testaments actually refer to the shofar.
Alternatively, the fig tree, which often symbolised ancient Israel in the Bible, could have been used to represent modern Judaism and/or the state of Israel. But it was the shatkona which somehow prevailed. According to a Haaretz report dated May 1 2019:
The Star of David as a Jewish symbol only became widespread in 17th-century Europe, when it was displayed on synagogues to identify them as Jewish places of worship.. In antiquity, the most commonly used symbol of Judaism was the menorah, the seven-branched candelabrum that stood in the Temple in Jerusalem before it was destroyed by the Romans in 70 AD.
However, this star was indeed used much earlier. It was etched on the Khirbet Shura synagogue (circa 3-4 century AD) in Galilee, and was earlier stamped on coinage issued during the Bar Kokhba Revolt (132–135 AD).
It had also made its way into ancient churches. Old Armenian churches in particular routinely featured this symbol where it was known as the Star of Armenia. An accompanying symbol was the Armenian Swastika. See how these symbols worked in tandem?
But did the swastika and shatkona ever come together in the context of modern Israel? Instead of a lengthy historical screed, I will just provide one graphic example below.
Source: Ynetnews
Coins like these were minted as part of a larger compact between Nazi Germany and the Zionist Federation of Germany in 1934. The compact was called the Haavara Agreement. The brass coins depicted above were used to promote “Zionist” articles under a series called “A Nazi travels to Palestine”. These articles were published in Der Angriff (The Attack), the official Nazi party newspaper.
I will just leave it to the reader to make sense of this pact. I have just demonstrated how both symbols co-existed in various cultures over millennia. But what was the origin of this symbiont? What are its modern implications?
Point of Origin
The universality of both symbols suggests a common point of origin. It must have been a place where people had a common language, had a unified social structure and belief system — all bound together by a single paramount figure. This place would have been brimming with high sorcery, to the extent where its citizens thought they could supplant their own Creator. This would have been the first One World Government.
That place was called Babel and its leader was the mighty hunter Nimrod who is still celebrated in various emblems, heraldries and escutcheons.
The Nimrod spirit is still alive and on the hunt, and it is pursuing those who refuse to capitulate to the emerging New World Order today. It will come after those who reject the vaccines, the WHO treaty, Agenda 2030 and so on.
Remember this when the high priests of Remphan approach your doorstep!
(Note: Articles in April will feature biblical themes. If you are able, do consider supporting the Eye Opener via paid subscriptions).
The number 666 is not three sixes. This is the "number of his name." It belongs to the gematria. You know that in those days the numbers we are used to were not used.