Monday, August 3, 2020

Freemason author behind a new Mazdeo-Christian Noahide ideology


I recently wrote a post on this blog (here) about how a Zoroastrian who was unknown to me had infiltrated www. zoroastrian .org.uk and had invited James Robert Russell, professor of Near East, Iranian and Armenian Studies at Harvard, to be a guest speaker at a Noahide conference. Well I have found who was behind all of this and it is a Freemason author and pseudu-Zoroastrian convert named Michele Moramarco who was born in Reggio Emilia, Italy, in  1953. I call him a pseudo-Zoroastrian convert as even though his article which I previously featured said he had converted to the Zarathustra religion, yet he is trying to developed some sort of universalist Mazdeo-Christian religion which incorporates the Noahide Laws, you can see this agenda in the title of his book "I Magi Eterni: Tra Zarathustra Gesu, Una Vidione Mazdeo-Christina", this is also claimed on his Wikipedia page (here). He also wrote a book on the Noahide Laws, "La celeste dottrina noachita" in 1994. His profile with his connections to Freemasonry and Noahidism is featured on the www. zoroastrian .org.uk website. Don't forget, Freemasons are Noahides (here) and declared the Zoroastrians of India (Parsis) to be Noahides (here).

Wikipeidahttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michele_Moramarco

Michele Moramarco (Reggio Emilia, 6 October 1953) is an Italian author on Masonic ritual and history, a pop musician, and an advocate of Mazdean Christian Universalism.[1]


www. Zoroastrian .org.uk profile 
http://www.zoroastrian.org.uk/vohuman/Author/Moramarco,Michele.htm

Michele Moramarco was born in Reggio Emilia, Italy, in  1953. He studied Philosophy and graduated in 1977 with a  dissertation  on the Indian thinker Shri Aurobindo. Later Michele specialized in Humanistic Psychotherapy, and authored numerous books and articles on various topics including: Freemasonry Studies (a Masonic Encyclopedia),  Non-violence, the Noachide universalistic tradition,  the psychological aspects of death and the history of comical theatre in Italy during the 60s. 

  1. On becoming a Zoroastrian in Italy




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