From time to time, a spiritual or worldly giant of unprecedented power appears on the world stage to bring order and harmony. About a thousand and a half years ago, a man of glorious, miraculous power and immeasurable might was born in the Hun Empire. He conquered many peoples, established peace and the spirituality of the non-dogmatic inner path of Eurasia. He was Atila, king of the Huns.
Mission of Atila
In your nature you are the embodiment of omniscient wisdom.
In manifestation you are the heavenly king of the world.
In ancient times you were Nemrót, the great wise Universal Master.
In the present, you are the Mighty Lion King, the Desire Fulfilling Gem, the Vanquisher of Enemies, the Dragon Slayer, the Demon Exorcising God’s Whip – Atila.
In our hearts you are the essential goodness, the universal love, compassion and all-knowing wisdom.
Atila, the King of the Huns, declared himself the Mighty Lion King, the Wish-fulfilling Gem, the Vanquisher of Enemies, the Divine Messenger, the Whip of God, who, with the crack of his whip, guides the erring to the right path. He has seized the golden throne of the Hun Empire. He donned battle armour and possessed a divine sword, bow, arrows, spear, helmet and shield, all adorned with dazzling jewels.
Atila’s main mission on Earth was to defeat the enemies of his people’s peace, and to spread and uphold the doctrine of the doctrine, the spirituality of the Eurasian non-dogmatic inner path. For his enemies, the latter was the greatest threat.
Atila came to Europe to help. He and his wise elders saw that the rulers of Europe had strayed far from the path of true spirituality. Spiritual doctrines were being turned into dogma and used to consolidate their worldly power. Therefore, they did everything in their power to prevent the spread of the non-dogmatic inner path of Atila and his Huns, which was a vivid and non-dogmatic way for the spirit to soar. This is the background to the demonic image of him and his people painted by the West.
The armies under his command have won many major wars. These wars caused great turmoil not only in the enemy camp but also in the lives of the Huns and their allies, but it is believed that the wars eventually brought happiness and peace to many, and spread and consolidated the non-dogmatic inner path teachings of Eurasia for a long time to come.
Atila was the earthly manifestation of the Universal Spiritual Master. He trained hundreds of thousands of heroic men and women warriors. His commanders-in-chief were also believed to be enlightened beings who appeared on Earth for the sole purpose of benefiting the world. Atila was constantly receiving teachings and prophecies from the Universal Master, as well as clear visions directly from deities and heavenly fairies.
Practitioners of the Eurasian non-dogmatic inner path see the whole universe, in its true nature, as unified with the qualities of peace, openness, happiness and enlightenment, which are the qualities of the essential basic goodness present in all beings. However, we unenlightened beings, because we are entrenched in a web of dichotomous beliefs rooted in an alienated ‘I’ and trapped in negative emotions, live a nightmarish life of strife, pain and fear.
In order to serve a person, a community or the beings of an age, the power and quality of essential basic goodness takes many forms – for example, beings, teachings or natural phenomena – that are symbols and sources of peace and joy. Therefore, any person or source that embodies a state of peace and joy and brings peace and joy to human beings – such as the coming of Atila to our Earth – is nothing other than a manifestation of essential basic goodness, universal love and wisdom.
The Universal Master, who lives in the heart of each one of us, sometimes appears in wrathful manifestations of form, voice and actions. These wrathful manifestations and actions are not motivated by hatred, attachment, or selfish desires, and are not intended to harm or cause suffering to anyone. They arise from love and compassion and are powerful manifestations that destroy and eliminate negative forces, the sources of suffering.
Atila’s wars were not expressions of anger, revenge or confusion, but of serving the needs of beings and the principle of justice. They were wars that brought victory to good over evil, peace over enmity, happiness over suffering, freedom over oppression, and non-dogmatic openness and tolerance over exclusionary dogmatic tyranny – that is, they were expressions of compassion in the form of war.
The armies of the Huns fought many wars, killed many people and plundered many treasures through their fighting skills and magical powers. But their only goal was to eliminate the sources of suffering and oppression of the people, and to spread and protect prosperity, peace, freedom and an open, tolerant spirit of the inner path for all.
In Atila’s time, warriors fought according to the art and morality of heroes. The heroic Hun knights stood motionless in the face of their opponents, listening to the songs of war and bravely awaiting the poisoned and flaming arrow, the spear, the sword or projectile. In the fight between the heroic Hun knights and their opponents, it almost never mattered which one struck faster or ran faster. They overcame their enemies – or fell victim – by skill, the power of their weapons, or divine protection. If they survived the battle, they sang battle songs with battle cries.
The soldiers of Atila always began their war chants with the sacred words of the inner path and the invocation of the Universal Master or other deity. This was followed by an introduction of the warrior and a description of the battlefield. Then they sang of the causes of the battle, the dangers of the weapons they used, the evils of the enemy, and the consequences the enemy had to face. Only at the end of such a monologue did they raise arms against the enemy. We know of no case of a Hun warrior trying to escape, to save his life.
Atila’s wars not only brought peace and happiness to the Huns and their enemies, but also deliverance to the fallen heroes and enemies. For example, it happened that a commander of a Hun army saw that if he challenged an opposing prince, he himself would lose his life. But he also realised that because of his karmic connection with the prince, if he died in a duel with him, his consciousness would be able to lead the prince’s consciousness to the kingdom of heaven. Other Hun warriors could have killed the prince without any harm, but none of them could have freed the prince’s consciousness. So he deliberately undertook to fight and die on the same battlefield as the prince.
Atila’s influence on the spiritual and social life of our people is still decisive today. His example, his spiritual strength, his generosity, his love, his wisdom and his heroic deeds continue to inspire us, inspire courage in our hearts and remind us of the glory of our ancestors. They give us a strong impulse to practice the non-dogmatic Eurasian inner path, to realize our basic goodness in our hearts – universal love, compassion and omniscient wisdom.
Prayer to Atila
Across the sky, amidst rainbow lights, dawns
My Father Atila, the Exalted Triumphant Gem,
with a blessed, inspired, happy smile on his face.
Protector! Embodying all the Enlightened
Great Compassion, the glorious Nemrót’s apparition,
Great Lion King, Father, with devotion
Implores thee, thy child, from the depths of his heart.
In the sky of thy light-wisdom consciousness
The great clouds of goodness-compassion ever wafting,
And shower of blessing with compassion thou showerest.
A mere thought of Thee, brings great blessings.
The one awakening the spirit of devotion
Don’t forget, don’t forget, give him thy blessing!
Let my body be the heroic fortress of thy heavenly soldiers,
By magic power empower my word,
Awaken in my heart the spirit of salvation and openness.
Grant that I may become inseparable from you.
Exalted Master, Wish-fulfilling Gem, look upon me!