What Is Zuism, Iceland's Fast-Growing Pagan Religion?

While Iceland already has a substantial membership count in its Nordic pagan religion, members of a new pagan religious movement in Iceland based on ancient Sumerian beliefs are reportedly looking to build a temple in Reykjavik for their congregation to accompany the growing members.

209440076_dc04491d41_z.jpeg

According to the Iceland Monitor, they are calling themselves Zuists – not to be confused with Zionists – and have sought permission to build a double-story Ziggurat, a type of temple that would have been found in Sumerian times around the 21st century BC.

Zuism was registered as an official religion in Iceland in 2013 and now has over 2,800 members. According to the religion’s founder in Iceland, a temple is needed to give ceremonies such as name-givings, weddings, meetings, and worship. This comes after recent news that Iceland’s foremost Pagan religion, the Ásatrúarfélagið, or Æsir faith, which represents the contemporary continuation of Norse paganism, is set to finish completion of its first temple in 1,000 years later in 2018.

Ziggurat Choga Zanbil | © peuplier/Flickr

Ziggurat Choga Zanbil | © peuplier/Flickr

The Zuist religion claims its belief system precedes the Norse Pagans and is actually the oldest in the world, and based on the Sumerian pantheon of gods such as An, Enlil, Enki, among other deities worshipped in Mesopotamia in the 21st century BC. Despite the growing numbers of these two Pagan movements in Iceland, the vast majority of Icelanders are registered as Christians.

Camille Buckley

Previous
Previous

Italian Immigrant Community in South Philadelphia

Next
Next

Black Britain: A Photographic History