This article builds the spine of Tengrist theology by passing through contemporary physics. Across a reading that runs from the observable universe through a 13.8-billion-year depth, the 10⁻³⁵-metre Planck threshold, the cosmic background radiation, the principle of Spiral Vibration, and the double helix of DNA, the measure of the sky and human conduct are joined within a single Töre-bound reason. Tengri is read here not as a distant human-shaped figure but as the great principle of the sky that gives measure, sets direction, and leaves traces with light.
The fourth article in the “Turk Reclaims Time” series searches for a starting year for the Tengrist Turk. Joining the monumental threshold of Göbeklitepe with the rock-painting, tamga, and Kün-Ay memory of Turkistan, it proposes the “Göbeklitepe Root Age” (GRA), with the starting line set as 17000 BCE = GRA 1. A dual-display roadmap then carries the calculation rule — the Christian year + 17000 — into public order.
The third article in the “Turk Reclaims Time” series takes up the festivals. The Day of the Ancestors, Artuk, Nardugan, the Diriliş Festival, the Yeşeriş Festival, and the Doğa Festival are each opened in turn — with name sequences, Töre-bound content, and date lines built. Then a nine-phase roadmap for institutionalising the festivals is offered across the state, school, municipality, media, and software lines.
All seven of today's Turkish day names carry foreign roots. This article opens each day's origin and the sediment of power and belief it carries, then builds a Pure Turkish week through the series Öngün, Üretgün, Ayargün, Denggün, İlgün, Toygün and Özgün.
A child by the evening fire learns the place of their Budun — this is how Töre-bound memory is passed on. Global Turkdom has lost this line across many geographies. The article reads the rupture and shows how New Tengrism rebuilds the core.
The calendar is one of humankind’s most insidious instruments of power — the map draws borders, the judiciary distributes authority, money measures value — and the calendar sets the daily rhythm of all these, constructing a Budun’s memory along that same line.
Explores why people carry a belief that has not fully settled in their heart for many years — from rhythm and hearth to identity and emotional burden — and shows how the Tengrist line takes root as a ground of lived belief.
In the first light of morning, before the rush of the day begins, a quiet opening forms. The order Tengri established does not advance in a straight line — the universe moves in a Spiral. Certain moments teach, without uttering a single word.
Spiral vibration and cosmic order in Tengri consciousness. A universal organizational pattern extending from quantum physics to fractal structures of nature, and the ancient Tengri worldview.
A belief system is not long-lived when it is merely a narrative that "makes people believe." No matter how high the words spoken, if they cannot pass through the narrow corridors of life, they are scattered by the first harsh wind.
New Tengrism is the endeavour to rebuild the wisdom inherited from the past with the consciousness of today. The name KOR rises upon three fundamental pillars: Kut, Od and Ruh. These concepts become guiding principles that find their counterparts in everyday life.
New Tengrism first gives a person a place to stand. It offers ground on which to position oneself in the cosmos, an order in which to carry one’s questions, and a path on which meaning need not be postponed.
"Every individual can be a Kam" is one of the heaviest responsibility sentences that New Tengrism carries. This sentence does not distribute a ready-made rank; it points to a capacity that exists within every individual.
For tens of thousands of years, every link of the Turkic Budun carried life forward. Each ancestor managed to sustain their existence, forge bonds, and pass them on. Ancestral Memory is the living form of that devotion.