Wotanism

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this article is about the white supremacist movement; see Wotanism (Guido von List) for the Germanic mysticist concept of Guido von List.

Wotanism is the name of a racial religion promulgated by David Lane. Wotan is the German name for the Germanic god known in Norse as Odin. Lane's Wotanism is distinctly different and separate from Odinism which is one of the names for Germanic neopaganism.

Based on the essay entitled Wotan by Carl Jung, the term Wotanism in modern times heavily emphasizes white supremacy and National Socialism (NS). W.O.T.A.N. is an acronym for Will Of The Aryan Nation, used by some Wotanists.[1] Unlike Germanic neopagans, most Wotanists emphasize dualism and view the Gods as Jungian archetype. [2] [3]

Wotanist groups include the Gambanreidi Statement, WotansVolk and the Temple of Wotan. WotansVolk and the Temple of Wotan were both founded under the direct influence of David Lane, by his wife Katja Lane (Katuscha Maddox) and Ron McVan, a former high ranking member of the World Church of the Creator.

The Temple of Wotan organization was inspired by the book Temple of Wotan. Lane recently authored a short story entitled KD Rebel, a fictional account of a colony of Wotanists who live up in the mountains and kidnap young girls and women from urban areas and force them into polygamy as breeding stock.

Currently, it is not known whether David Lane is involved with the Temple of Wotan organization, which seems to have distanced itself from the emphasis on racial and violent ideologies.

WotansVolk and the Temple of Wotan were known for having prisoner outreach ministries. In 2001 there were prison kindreds linked with Wotansvolk in all federal states of the USA and the groups supported more than 5000 prisoners. Research by Mattias Gardell indicated "a pagan revival among the white prison population, including the conversion of whole prison gangs to the ancestral religion.".[4]

The Temple of Wotan dissolved and reformed into the National Prison Kindred Alliance, (NPKA) which has no relation with Wotanism.

Wotansvolk and the NPKA are not the only groups active in prisoner outreach, however in 2001, "Wotansvolk seem[ed] more successful in its outreach efforts than other Asatrú/Odinist programs." [5] The racist women's group Sigrdrifa, which has chapters in the United States and Canada, runs a special "Odinism in Prison" project. The Odinic Rite and the Asatru Alliance also have extensive prisoner outreach programs.

In an Interview [6] about the role of race-based gangs and other extremists in America's prisons, the historian Mark Pitcavage came to the conclusion that, "[n]on-racist versions of Asatrú and Odinism are pretty much acceptable religions in the prisons." But, materials from racist variants of these religions, may be prohibited by corrections departments.

From the beginning, Wotanism has been distinctly different from, and even antagonistic to Germanic neopaganism. Adherents of Asatru and Odinism have rejected what they perceive as an attempt to appropriate their religion for political and racial ends.[7] Lane explains:

So, I first chose the name Wotanism over Odinism. First because W.O.T.A.N. makes a perfect acronym for Will Of The Aryan Nation. Secondly because he was called Wotan on the European continent and only called Odin in Scandinavia. Therefore Wotan appeals to the genetic memory of more of our ancestors. And finally because a split had to be made with the game players, deceivers and universalists who had usurped the name Odin.[3]

Ron McVan and Katja Lane have also repeatedly stated their antipathy for Germanic neopaganism, and stated that they reject even the "folkish" Asatru as not being militant enough.[8]

  1. ^ Wotanism (Odinism) - By David Lane[1]
  2. ^ see: Gambanreidi Statement; Wotanism by Professor Carl Gustav Jung Compiled by the late, Jost Turner [2]
  3. ^ Gardell (2003), p. 270
  4. ^ Gardell (2003), p. 217
  5. ^ Gardell (2003), p. 217
  6. ^ Interview with Mark Pitcavage - Behind the Walls
  7. ^ see: Gardell (2003), 273-283
  8. ^ Focus Fourteen, Issue #2008

  • McVan, Ron; David & Katja Lane (1997). Creed of Iron - Wotansvolk Wisdom. 14 Word Press. ISBN 0-9678123-0-5. 
  • Serrano, Miguel; Ron McVan, Katja Lane (2000). Temple of Wotan - Holy Book of the Aryan Tribes. 14 Word Press. ISBN 0-9678123-3-X. 
  • Gardell, Matthias (2003). Gods of the Blood: The Pagan Revival and White Separatism. Duke University Press. ISBN 0-8223-3071-7. 

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