Hungarian Zuism providing mankind with the hoe, thus initiating them to the practice of agriculture. The earliest organised Zuist movement was established by the
Hungarian Assyriologist Ferenc Badiny Jós (1909–2007), together with the historian Ida Bobula (1900–1981) and other authors, including Tibor Baráth, Victor Padányi, and András Zakar, between the 1960s and the 1970s, among those Hungarians who sought to relate the origins of the Hungarians to the ancient Sumerians, especially based on the shared, common features of the
Hungarian and
Sumerian languages, notably
agglutination. Ferenc Badiny Jós, who emigrated to
Buenos Aires, in
Argentina, when Hungary became part of the
Soviet sphere of influence, and after the latter's collapse returned to his home country, founded a "Hungarian Church" () following the Sumerian tradition, the legacy of which continues to this day among Hungarian Zuists. An important bequest of Badiny Jós is his
Magyar Bible of the Sumerian tradition. Among the Hungarian Zuist organisations that continue in the wake of Badiny Jós' teachings there are the "Hungarian Religious Fellowship" () and the "Old Hungarian Church" (). Another Hungarian Zuist group that follows Sumerian traditions is the "Bolyanest". Hungarian Zuists interpret
Hungarian runes and symbols as deriving from Sumerian
cuneiform, the
Turul bird of Hungarian mythology as being the same as the Sumerian
Anzû, and they equate the Hungarian term
Isten ("God") with the
Akkadian Isten ("One"), as well as the Siberian
Tengri ("God-Heaven") — the Hungarians and the Sumerians are considered within these circles, which espouse
Turanist ideas, to have remoter Siberian origins — with the Sumerian
Dingir–
An ("God-Heaven"; Akkadian
Ilu). The
Lebanese cedar, a holy tree in ancient Middle Eastern religious cultures, is revered as a means of connection with the divine by Hungarian Zuists; during the solstices and equinoxes, they gather near cedars and light candles, offer
libations, dance around the trees while singing and reciting prayers to the Sumerian gods. Badiny Jós Ferenc sírja, 2010.jpg|The grave (942/2-1-105) of Ferenc Badiny Jós at the
Farkasrét Cemetery in
Budapest,
Hungary. Carven onto the tombstone is the symbol of the Hungarian Zuist Church. Cskt-zarandoklas a cedrusokhoz libanonban (1907).jpg|
Pilgrimage to the Cedars in Lebanon (1907) by
Tivadar Csontváry Kosztka. Some Hungarian Zuists make pilgrimages and perform rites at a giant Lebanese cedar on the edge of a forest in the mountains surrounding
Budapest.
Mardukite Zuism . Mardukite Zuism takes inspiration from the Babylonian phase of ancient Mesopotamian religion. Mardukite Zuism is a Zuist doctrine established by the
American mystical and esoteric philosopher Joshua Free in 2008 and incorporated by the "Founding Church of Mardukite Zuism". File:Apricot blossoms at the Mardukite Zuist Borsippa HQ.png|Blossoms of
apricot tree at the
Borsippa Headquarters of the Mardukite Zuist Church in
Monte Vista,
Colorado,
United States.
Iraqi Zuism and other divine figures, by a Zuist practitioner from
Nasiriyah,
Iraq. The
Russian Assyriologist V. V. Yemelyanov documented the rise of a Zuist movement in
Iraq at the beginning of the 2010s, with the dissemination of prayers to the Mesopotamian gods in the
Arabic language. Among the
Assyrian-speaking people and their
diaspora across the world, there is a distinct Akkadian-
Assyrian Zuist movement, also known as "Ashurism", that focuses on
Ashur as the utmost god above
An, incorporated since 2023 in
Australia by the "Assyrian Creed Founding Council" of the "Zuist Church of Australia".
Canaanite Zuism , representing the
Canaanite goddess equivalent, in both function and name etymology, of the Mesopotamian goddess
Ishtar.
(light blue) and argaman (purple), and the golden symbol in the centre is a stylised version of the Semitic first letter aleph'' (𐤀) in the
ancient Hebrew script, representing both the horns of a bull and the rising sun. Canaanite Zuism, or Levantine Zuism, constitutes a small community in the region of the
Levant (
Canaan), most notably in
Israel, trying to revive the ancient Canaanite religion. It has antecedents in the cultural and literary movement of
Canaanism among the
Jews of
British Palestine during the 1940s. Fostered by the discovery of the site of
Ugarit in 1928, which demonstrated the common origins of ancient Canaanite and Isralite cultures, Canaanism, whose members took inspiration from Canaanite mythology for their productions, sought to forge a new shared, and religiously non-Jewish, "
Hebrew" ethnic identity for both Jews and other peoples residing in British Palestine, and later in the newly established state of Israel. The founding ideologue of Canaanism was the poet and journalist
Yonatan Ratosh (1908–1981), who was born under the name of Uriel Heilperin in
Warsaw,
Poland, and changed his surname to Shelach upon settling in British Palestine. Between 1942 and 1943, Ratosh founded the "Committee for the Consolidation of the Hebrew Youth", consisting at first of a dozen intellectuals and artists, followed in 1951 by a public group named the "Centre for Young Hebrews". Although thenceforth Canaanism rapidly declined, the thought and literary production of its members have a lasting influence among Israeli Zuists. Another influence for Canaanite Zuists is the Hungarian Jewish historian and anthropologist
Raphael Patai (1910−1996), particularly his book
The Hebrew Goddess. The Canaanite Zuist movement is also known as
Natib Qadish, an expression in the
Ugaritic language that means "Holy Way" and was first used by the
American practitioner Tess Dawson at the beginning of the 2000s. Dawson established a theoretical and practical framework for the movement, mostly based upon the
Ugaritic texts and the
Gezer calendar, which is often used by Canaanite Zuists, either in whole or in part. In Dawson's terminology, followers are sometimes called
Qadish in the singular and
Qadishuma in the plural, and the priests, male and female, are called respectively
kahin and
kahinat. In order to integrate their beliefs and practices, Canaanite Zuists also take inspiration from Mesopotamian and Western esoteric and ritual models (such as Sumerian-Akkadian divine hierarchies and
Wiccanate ritual systems), and also ancient Hebrew traditions (the
Hebrew calendar and the liturgical use of ancient forms of the
Hebrew language). They celebrate eight yearly festivals, most of which occur near the equinoxes, solstices, full moons, and new moons. In the early 2010s, the Israeli Zuist adherent Elad Aaron formulated a cultural and political ideology called "Re-Zionist [] New Canaanism", which includes the rediscovery of the ancient Canaanite religion, interpreted as theologically
pandeistic, and distinguishes itself from Ratosh's earlier Canaanism by being aimed at Jews alone, and not at other peoples of the Levant. Aaron published two manifestos, namely
The Hidden Hebrew and the Visible Hebrew (2012) and
Hear Our Call: The Re-Zionist Manifesto (2013, co-authored by Ya'akov Hevroni), to detail his views.
Icelandic Zuism , the "Heavenly Eagle", main divine patron of the ancient Mesopotamian city of
Lagash. The Icelandic Zuist movement was at first also associated with this figure by the press. The "Faith Fellowship of Zuism" () of the Sumerian tradition was established in
Iceland in 2010 by Ólafur Helgi Þorgrímsson (who left it shortly afterwards) and the two brothers Ágúst Arnar and Einar Ágústsson, originally as a branch of a mother church located in the state of
Delaware, in the United States, and was registered by the Icelandic state in 2013. In Iceland, all citizens, on a yearly basis and regardless of whether they are believers or not, have to pay a tax on religion, the , which is then allocated by the government to religious organisations in proportion to the number of their followers. In 2015, some people, disapproving of such a system, and under the leadership of Ísak Andri Ólafsson, took control of the Zuist organisation with the aim of using it as a tool for
tax resistance: in their plan, the portion of the religion tax allocated to the movement by the government was to be redistributed to each of the followers, who would thus find a way to bypass the system. The
Zuism trúfélag of Ísak Andri Ólafsson intended to fight against not only the imposition of the religion tax, but also the maintenance of the Icelandic national registry of the citizens' religious affiliations. This protest was part of a broader movement within the Icelandic population in those years asking for a complete
separation of church and state, to such an extent that even some well-known politicians, including
Birgitta Jónsdóttir, joined the organisation. Given that the
Zuism trúfélag was used for clearly stated tax purposes and not for religious reasons, some Icelandic elected officials requested its removal from Iceland's national registry of recognised religions. Nevertheless, a spokesperson of the
Zuism trúfélag answered to such a request by claiming that one can neither precisely define the religious nature of an organisation nor measure the sincerity of the religious belief of people. As of 1 January 2015, the
Zuism trúfélag had only four registered adherents, but their number grew very rapidly over a few weeks at the end of 2015, reaching 3,000 to 3,500 followers, or 1% of the Icelandic population in 2015–2016. The majority of the followers were young, connected to the
Internet, and already disaffiliated from
Christianity (then Iceland's major religion). After a legal struggle for the leadership of the organisation, in 2017 the Ágústsson brothers regained control of it. In 2020 the leaders of the organisation, still the Ágústsson brothers, were accused of tax fraud and embezzlement; they were later acquitted of all charges in 2022, but were indicted again and convicted in 2025. Zulogo44.png|2010–2015 Zuist Church logo (December 2015).svg|2015–2017 Zuist Church logo (December 2017).svg|2017–2025 == Gate-Walking rituals ==