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Ashura: The Hidden Ritual of Blood and Power – What the Global Elite Don't Want You to Know

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Ashura: The Hidden Ritual of Blood and Power – What the Global Elite Don't Want You to Know

Ashura: The Hidden Ritual of Blood and Power – What the Global Elite Don't Want You to Know

The world spins, and the mainstream media feeds you the same scripted narratives: hurricanes are just weather, wars are just politics, and religious holidays are just harmless cultural expressions. But when you start connecting the dots, when you look at the deeper patterns, you see that nothing is what it seems. Today, we're drilling down into Ashura—the Islamic day of mourning that millions of Shia Muslims observe every year. But here's the kicker: It's not just about the 7th-century Battle of Karbala. It's about bloodlines, power, and a hidden timeline that the global elite orchestrate from the shadows. Stay with me, because this gets dark.

First, let's break down the surface story. Ashura commemorates the martyrdom of Imam Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, who was killed in 680 AD in the desert of Karbala (modern-day Iraq) by the forces of the Umayyad Caliph Yazid I. For Shia Muslims, this is the ultimate tragedy—the unjust murder of a righteous leader by a corrupt tyrant. They mark it with self-flagellation, chest-beating, processions, and passion plays. It's raw, it's emotional, and it's a powerful symbol of resistance against oppression. The mainstream narrative will tell you it's a solemn religious observance. But that's the surface, the cover story.

Now, wake up. Look at the date: Ashura falls on the 10th day of Muharram, the first month of the Islamic lunar calendar. The word "Ashura" itself means "tenth." But here's the first wormhole: Why the tenth? In Western esoteric traditions, the number ten represents completion, the return to the source, the fulcrum of the zodiac—the 10th sephirot on the Kabbalistic Tree of Life, Malkuth, which is the material world. The elite love their numbers. They embed them in everything—from the 10 commandments to the 10 plagues of Egypt. Ashura is a cosmic reset button, a ritualized death and rebirth cycle. But whose rebirth? Not yours.

Consider the timing. Ashura occurs at the beginning of the Islamic year, which is a lunar calendar. The lunar calendar is tied to the moon, which has been a symbol of secret societies for millennia—from the ancient moon goddess cults to the modern Illuminati variants. The moon controls the tides, the cycles of women, and the occult timing of rituals. The Islamic calendar is not solar like the Gregorian one the globalist banking system uses. It's a deliberate throwback to an older, more esoteric timekeeping system. Why would the elite allow such a calendar to persist unless it serves their hidden agenda? They control the Gregorian calendar, but they let the lunar calendar run parallel—a shadow network of time.

But the real meat is in the blood. Imam Hussein's death is said to have been a massacre where 72 of his followers were killed alongside him. Seventy-two. That number is everywhere in occult lore. The 72 demons of the Goetia. The 72 names of God in Kabbalah. The 72 hours of the three days of darkness. The 72 languages of the Tower of Babel. The 72 members of the Sanhedrin. The elite are obsessed with 72. It's the number of the Merkaba, the divine light vehicle. In Ashura, you have a ritual where blood is spilled—symbolically through self-flagellation, but historically through real martyrdom—to generate spiritual energy. This is not just mourning. This is a massive, global, synchronized energy sacrifice.

Think about it: Every year, millions of Shia Muslims gather in huge crowds, chanting, beating their chests, cutting their scalps with swords, and drawing blood. Why blood? Because blood is the currency of the spiritual realm. The elite know this. They've been using blood rituals for centuries—from the Aztec sacrifices to the Satanic panic rituals of the modern deep state. Ashura is a sanctioned, religiously approved bloodletting event that generates a massive spike in spiritual energy, which is then harvested by forces you can't see. The elite don't want you to know that your religious devotion is being co-opted into their energy grid.

But wait, there's more. Look at the geopolitical angle. The largest Ashura observances happen in Iran, Iraq, India, Pakistan, and Lebanon—all regions that are hotspots for the "controlled opposition" narratives of the globalist agenda. Iran is the head of the Shia Crescent, a geopolitical alliance that the US and its allies have been trying to destabilize for decades. Why would the elite allow a ritual that supposedly promotes resistance against tyranny? Because they use it as a pressure valve. They let the people release their anger and frustration in a controlled, religiously sanctioned way, so they don't actually rise up against the real tyrants in Washington, London, and Tel Aviv. It's a classic divide-and-conquer strategy: pit Shia against Sunni, let them mourn their ancient dead, while the modern-day Yazids are laughing all the way to the bank.

And what about the Sunni perspective? Sunni Muslims also observe Ashura, but differently—they fast, they don't self-flagellate. The elite love this division. They've engineered the Shia-Sunni split over centuries, using Ashura as a wedge. The Battle of Karbala was a political struggle for the caliphate, a power grab. Sound familiar? The same forces that pitted Hussein against Yazid are still at work today, pitting nation against nation, sect against sect. Ashura is a reminder that the game is rigged from the top. The elite play with bloodlines. Hussein was a blood descendant of the Prophet. The elite are obsessed with bloodlines—the Rothschilds, the Rockefellers, the Royals. They claim divine right through blood. Ashura is a story of a bloodline being cut down, which is why it's so dangerous to them. They want you to mourn the loss of a righteous bloodline, while they continue to nurture their

Final Thoughts


Having spent years covering the intersection of faith and social upheaval, it’s clear that 'Ashura' transcends mere religious ritual; it is a visceral, living narrative that binds collective memory to contemporary defiance. For Shia Muslims, the tragedy of Karbala isn't just history—it's a charged lens through which they process injustice, from medieval caliphates to modern political oppression. Ultimately, the enduring power of Ashura lies not in its grief, but in the uncomfortable question it forces upon the powerful: how much are you willing to sacrifice for a truth that stands alone?