The books fundamental to the Anastasian movement, deemed the "Bible" of the Russian New Age, are
The Ringing Cedars of Russia written by Vladimir Megre. According to the Anastasian belief, their content was transmitted to Megre by Anastasia, a prophetess, "bearer and keeper of ancient knowledge" living in
Siberia. The books do not expound doctrines in a systematic way, and are characterised by "adogmatism and variability". A book giving more clearly teachings of religious mythology is the sixth one in the series,
The Book of Kin. This book expounds the history and wisdom of the "Vedrus", an ancient kin who populated
Eurasia and lived in full awareness of God and
harmony with the cosmos, presenting them not merely as progenitors of the modern
Russians and
Slavs but of the peoples of the whole world. God is
Rod, i.e. continuous "Generation", "Nature", and the reconstruction of society on the basis of the "ancestral", "tribal", or "genealogical" (родовой,
rodovoy) community, the central idea of the Anastasian movement, is proposed for all the peoples of the world. The seventh book
The Energy of Life then defines Anastasia herself not just as a "Vedrussian", but as a "Pagan" (язычница; the Russian word is more accurately rendered as "Gentile") of the Russian Slavic tradition. Regarding the ancient Vedrus and their descendants, Anastasia, in
The Book of Kin (p. 93), says: Then, in
The Energy of Life (p. 136) Megre says: Yashin and Kostin defined Anastasianism as a "kind of puzzle" of communities of which it is "impossible to form a holistic picture", given that, despite being undergirded by the shared framework represented by Megre's books, each community develops its own varying beliefs. Studying the beliefs of the Anastasian community Inberen ("Ginger"), in
Sargatsky District,
Omsk Oblast, the oldest and largest Anastasian settlement in Russia, they found that the members, apart from Megre's books, drew religious beliefs from the doctrines of a variety of
Rodnover organisations and authors, from Aleksandr Khinevich's
Ynglism, from
Roerichism, and even from
Orthodox Christian and
Tibetan Buddhist sources.
Theology and cosmology '' at an Anastasian settlement
God and the gods Anastasianism may be described as a
nature religion, since Anastasian spirituality emphasises the sacredness of nature or generation, conceived as manifested divinity and as the means of communication with the supreme God (
Rod); the scholar Rasa Pranskevičiūtė characterised this vision as
pantheistic, and noted how it is a fundamental influence in Anastasians' social project. They stress the importance of harmony, that is to say giving and receiving love and respect, appropriate reciprocal cultivation, good thought and good word, between individual and between the community of individuals and the divinity of all nature, since nature is the manifestation of God, and it reads, and is actively shaped, by the thought and word of humans. A Lithuanian Anastasian defined God as follows: God is an energetic entity, and everything is born of its essence. Anastasians believe that nature is the "materialised thought of God", or the expression of the "divine power of God". All living things, and superior living beings or gods, are believed to be thoughts of God, and therefore by communicating with them humanity may communicate with God. The "divine thought" or "divine design" is reflected in the eternal cycle of birth, growth, maturity, death and rebirth, as well as in the cycle of the day and the seasons of the year; God is the spiral of time expressing itself in physical (natural) cycles, it is the year itself, and the "Kingdom of God" is not a transcendent dimension or an afterlife but is immanent and attainable in the physical dimension, "Heaven on Earth" is attainable in the "here and now". According to the words of another Anastasian: In Anastasian doctrines, the supreme God expresses itself as many gods or
deities, who are "more or less concentrated energy clots in space", and influence the world on the energetic plane, and in turn the conscience of supreme God is the "unified conscience of all living creatures". God and the many gods are generally held to be impersonal and are not regarded as objects of worship. Megre's books also recognise the existences of "dark forces" associated with the Earth, which emerged when God created it as opposites of his action. These dark forces were used by the priests who invented the
global religions and the modern technocratic system in order to subjugate the consciousness of mankind, hampering men's direct communication with God and projecting instead their consciousness towards the worship of the priests and of the dark forces themselves.
Anastasia and the ringing cedars ,
Tomsk Oblast Some Anastasians consider Anastasia a deity, or the incarnation of a deity, while some others regard her as the
archetype of the perfected human being. According to the books written by Vladimir Megre, she received the knowledge reported in the books themselves directly from the supreme God, through the ancestors. Megre describes her as a prophetess with various spiritual abilities, as being able to understand all the languages of the world, as being aware by intuitive knowledge of all what happens in the urban world, and as having the appearance of the typical "Russian beauty", with "golden hair" and "smooth skin". Anastasia would be living in the Siberian taiga as a hermit, and, according to the books, her role would be to instruct humanity about the righteous way of living. She, or her divine form, would have been known by different names in different cultures, for example as
Persephone in
ancient Greece. However, Megre emphasises that Anastasia is a human, and she would have given birth to a son and a daughter from him, named Vladimir and Anasta, who would be living with their mother in Siberia and would have spiritual abilities like her. The scholar Anna Ozhiganova reported to have "never met" any Anastasian doubting that Anastasia truly exists as a woman living in the Siberian forests, but that many consider Megre's works to be an imperfect version of Anastasia's original teachings. Anastasia, especially in her name meaning "resurrection", is also seen as personifying the
tree of life, representing the never-ending spiritual flow of life emanated by God of which all entities, and men themselves, are part, the kins representing the branches of this never-ending whole; it also implies that in truth there is no eternal death, but eternal life and rebirth. The theme of the "ringing trees" is central to the Anastasian system of beliefs, and the ringing trees are identified as those of the
Siberian cedar (
Pinus sibirica) species. According to the first of Megre's books,
Anastasia: Anastasians believe that cedars which "ring" are those that during a lifetime of about five hundred and fifty years accumulated and never dispersed a great amount of energy. When they reach this age, they emit a barely audible ringing to give a sign to humans to take them, cut them down and use their energy for the benefit of the Earth. According to Megre's books, if the ringing cedars are not cut down within three years, they stop ringing and they begin to burn internally from the accumulated energy, dying painfully over the course of years. For this reason, the Anastasians try to find and save the ringing cedars. It is also believed that under the canopy of any cedar is good to practise meditation and easy to receive divine revelations.
Eschatology Anastasian doctrines about the crisis and degeneration of modern civilisation are inspired by thinkers of the
Traditionalist School, such as
René Guénon. In the Ringing Cedars' books, Anastasia teaches a cyclical eschatology, according to which time develops through three phases: a "Vedic" (of vision) period when humanity lives in harmony with Heaven; an "Imagic" (of image) period when knowledge starts to be codified and concentrates in the hands of progressively fewer holy men; and an "Occultic" (of hiding) period in which knowledge is totally "hidden" and humanity's consciousness severely downgrades. The Vedic "Golden Age" lasted 990 thousand years, during which humanity directly possessed the awareness of God and lived in perfect harmony with the universe, and the bearers of righteousness and of the highest wisdom were the Vedrus, who populated an area spanning from the lands near the
North Pole to the
Mediterranean Sea. Then came the Imagic era, lasting nine thousand years, when the highest knowledge was no longer directly perceived and was therefore codified into figurative means and transmitted by castes of priests who
reincarnated over the generations. The Occultic era, lasting just one thousand years, is the current epoch in which the highest knowledge has become completely hidden, "occult", and humanity has degenerated and is prey to dark forces. According to Anastasian doctrines, the last descendants of the Vedrus inhabited the territory of modern-day Russia, and they are about to start a new disclosure of the original Vedic wisdom. Anastasians believe that they are at the forefront of the rebirth of a Golden Age, and their appeal to go "back to nature" implies to go back to the original awareness of God and to reawaken the connection with the ancestors. These ideas are expressed in Ringing Cedars' books as follows: The Anastasians believe that with their practices of good childbirth, good education and good living, they are giving rise to a "new mankind" (нового человека,
novogo cheloveka), harmonious and perfect, which will overcome the decadent existing civilisation.
Love space and reincarnation fields and andulin-roofed house and bathhouse in the Anastasian settlement of Korenskiye Rodniki According to Megre, when a man lives in harmony with his own kin a "love space" (пространство любви,
prostranstvo lyubvi) is established as a field where God is
present,
immanent, and which constitutes a "Heaven on Earth", where kindred people grow together with the surrounding world; it is not merely a geographic concept—the actual "ancestral homestead" (родовое поместье, ''rodovoye pomest'ye''), the land of at least one
hectare in size owned and inhabited by the kin— but it is first of all the web of relationships between kindred people and includes any good creation of the spirit of mankind. The "love space" mirrors the modality of God's work through nature; God is "dissolved" in nature and each "love space" is a parcel of God. In the kinship homestead, the concretisation of the "love space", a man is capable of building a house with natural materials, growing plants and domesticating animals, creating an ecosystem. As such it is perceived as a holy land, a
microcosm reflecting the macrocosm, wherein individuals may "co-create" with kindred people and with God. According to Anastasians' own experiences reported by Julia O. Andreeva and Rasa Pranskevičiūtė, the new social organisation represented by the kinship homesteads helps people to leave the unnatural and decaying urban technocratic system, which they conceive as a close system which smothers human creativity ensnaring it in meaningless behaviours. A Russian Anastasian described her experience of the kinship homestead as follows: In the Anastasian movement the family or extended kin (
rod) is conceived as an entity, embodied as the "love space" and its ancestral homestead, whose aim is the projection of itself in the future as a lineage of descendants of its original progenitors. A kin may be constituted by people already related by blood, or by like-minded people who come together to create a new web of blood relations. The "love space" is always a both transcendent and immanent space, where an individual may be reborn: the Anastasians believe in
reincarnation, that it may be consciously planned, and that it mainly occurs within the kinship lineage and its spatial dimension because all reality and humans themselves are energy of thought, and therefore ancestors may reincarnate in the same lineage that they produced if they are remembered, thought and loved by their descendants. The soul constantly returns to its living relatives in the "love space"; as the latter is a parcel of God, the soul always returns to its divine source, to its "paradise" (рай,
ray), in both transcendent and immanent terms. ==Ethics and practices==