Tag Archives: Sara la kali

Hidden Goddess: How Ancient Romani Spirituality Transformed into Saints, Magic & Sacred Tradition

Romani spirituality has deep roots in ancient Indian traditions, blending goddess worship, sacred rituals, and mystical practices that evolved over centuries. From the reverence of Sara la Kali to the use of divination, ancestor offerings, and purity laws, ancient Romani beliefs reveal a powerful spiritual system that predates Christianity. These pre-Christian Romani practices continue to influence modern Romani culture through folklore, saints, and mysticism, making Romani spiritual traditions a unique fusion of Hindu origins, folk magic, and sacred wisdom.

The Romani people, often called “Gypsies” (a term many now see as outdated or pejorative), trace their origins back to Northern India around a thousand years ago. When they began their migrations into Persia, the Middle East, and eventually Europe, they carried with them elements of ancient Indian spirituality that blended over time with local folk practices. Before most Romani converted to Christianity (and, in some regions, to Islam), their spiritual life was a rich fusion of Indian roots, folk magic, animism, and sacred taboos.

Romani Gypsies

Here’s a breakdown of the traditions and practices that shaped their spirituality before Christianization:

🌿 1. Indian Roots

Vedic & Hindu Influences: Their early ancestors likely practiced forms of Hindu-related folk spirituality. Traces remain in Romani beliefs about fate (baxt – from Sanskrit bhāgya, meaning destiny or luck), purity laws, and reverence for certain deities. Sacred Fire & Water: Fire was considered purifying and protective, as in Vedic ritual. Water sources (rivers, wells) were often approached with reverence.

✨ 2. Animism & Nature Spirits

Belief in spirits inhabiting the natural world (trees, rivers, crossroads, animals). Protective offerings were sometimes left at sacred groves, springs, or crossroads. Birds, especially owls and crows, were seen as messengers of omens.

🔮 3. Divination & Magic

Fortune-telling (dikhaviben / drabardi) was practiced long before it became a survival craft in Europe. Methods included palmistry, casting objects, and later card divination. Dream interpretation was considered a gateway to messages from spirits and ancestors. Charms & amulets were created for protection against the “evil eye” (bibaxt – bad luck).

🌙 4. Ancestor & Spirit Reverence

The Romani had a deep respect for ancestors, believing their spirits lingered close to guide or warn the living. Offerings of food and drink were sometimes left for the dead, especially on anniversaries or liminal nights.

🔥 5. Purity Laws & Taboos (Marime)

A complex system of purity (marime) and pollution shaped daily life, echoing both Vedic ritual law and later local adaptations. Certain acts, foods, and contacts were considered “polluting” and spiritually dangerous. These purity laws kept the community spiritually distinct and protected from harmful outside influences.

🌌 6. Shamanic & Healing Practices

The drabarni (female healer/seer) held a role similar to a shaman or wise woman. She used herbs, chants, and ritual to heal sickness and protect against curses. Herbs like garlic, rue, and wormwood were considered especially powerful. Music, drumming, and chanting often played a spiritual role in shifting states of consciousness.

🕯️ 7. Syncretism

As the Romani moved westward, their spirituality absorbed aspects of Persian Zoroastrianism, Sufi mysticism, Byzantine folk magic, and European pagan survivals. By the time many became Christians (or Muslims in the Balkans, Turkey, and parts of the Middle East), their older spiritual practices didn’t vanish but blended into folk Catholicism, Orthodox Christianity, or Islam. For example, Romani Christians often kept up ancestor offerings, healing charms, and divination alongside church practice.

✨ In short, before Christianity, the Romani spiritual world was a blend of ancient Indian Vedic folk religion, animistic nature worship, ancestor veneration, magical healing, and divination traditions. Even today, many Romani families keep elements of these older practices alive under the surface of their adopted faiths.

🔱 From Indian Deities to Romani Folk Saints/Spirits

1. Śakti / Devī (Divine Mother) → Sara la Kali (“Black Sara”)

In India: worship of the goddess in her many forms (Durga, Kali, Parvati, etc.) was central. In Romani tradition: devotion shifted to Sara la Kali, a dark-skinned saint venerated especially in France (Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer). She is seen as both a Christian saint and a hidden form of the Great Mother, protector of Romani people, linked to fertility, protection, and destiny.

Hindu Goddess Kali

2. Agni (Sacred Fire) → Fire Rituals & Campfire Worship

In India: Agni, god of fire, was the carrier of offerings and purifier in Vedic ritual. In Romani tradition: fire remained sacred at the heart of the camp. Many taboos about not polluting fire stem from this. Lighting candles for ancestors or saints is a Christianized continuation of Agni offerings.

3. Yama (Lord of Death) → Ancestral Spirits & Death Rituals

In India: Yama judged souls and guided them after death. Among the Romani: death became surrounded by strict purity laws (marime) and intense respect for the soul’s journey. Offerings of food, water, or clothing to the dead echo ancient Indian shraddha (ancestor offerings).

4. Nāgas / Serpents → Protective Spirits & Amulets

In India: serpent deities were guardians of water and fertility. In Romani belief: snakes remained powerful omens; snake-shaped jewelry or amulets were protective. The idea of the crossroads spirit also carries echoes of serpent/deity guardianship.

5. Karma & Bhāgya (Fate, Destiny) → Baxt (Luck)

In Sanskrit: bhāgya = fate, fortune. In Romani: baxt = luck (good or bad). Luck became central to Romani worldview, shaping divination and fortune-telling practices.

6. Śiva (God of Transformation) → Spirit of Change & Music

In India: Śiva is linked to destruction/creation, asceticism, and ecstatic dance. In Romani culture: elements of music as a sacred power (violins, drumming, ecstatic dance) echo Śiva’s role as Nataraja (Lord of Dance). The wandering, ascetic lifestyle itself mirrors Śiva’s renunciate archetype.

🌿 Survival Within Christianity

Saint Worship: Romani often fused their deities with Christian saints (Sara la Kali, St. Anne, St. George, St. Nicholas). Ritual Purity: Christian prayers were layered on top of older purity codes (marime). Divination: Palmistry, cards, and omens were tolerated as “folk craft” but actually stemmed from the ancient role of the drabarni (seer/healer). Pilgrimage: Christian shrines (e.g., to the Black Madonna) became substitutes for goddess temples.

✨ So in essence, Romani spirituality didn’t vanish with conversion — it camouflaged itself inside Christianity, turning deities into saints, shrines, and rituals, while keeping the deeper worldview of fate, purity, ancestor reverence, and magical protection intact.

❤️‍🔥 Sara La Kali

Sara La Kali

Sara la Kali, also known as Saint Sarah or Sara the Black, is a beloved figure among the Romani (Gypsy) people, especially in the south of France where she is venerated each year during a pilgrimage to Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer. Her connection to both Christian and Hindu traditions reveals a fascinating blend of cultural and spiritual history, rooted in the origins of the Romani people in India.

1. Romani Origins in India

Historical Migration: Linguistic, genetic, and cultural evidence shows that the Romani people originally came from the Indian subcontinent, specifically from regions like Rajasthan and Punjab, around the 10th to 12th centuries CE. They migrated westward over centuries through Persia, the Middle East, and eventually into Europe. Linguistic Evidence: The Romani language contains strong Sanskrit roots, as well as elements from Persian, Armenian, and Greek—reflecting their migration path. Cultural Continuities: Certain traditions, musical styles, and even spiritual beliefs among Romani groups echo Indian customs.

2. Who is Sara la Kali?

Saint Sarah is venerated as the dark-skinned servant (or possibly daughter) of one of the “Three Marys” who, according to local legend, arrived by boat in southern France after fleeing persecution in the Holy Land. The name “Kali” in her title means “the Black” in French, but it may also carry deeper symbolic or spiritual significance—particularly when viewed in the context of her supposed Indian roots.

Sara La Kali & the 3 Mary’s

3. Connection to the Hindu Goddess Kali

Kali in Hinduism: Kali is a powerful, dark-skinned goddess associated with time, destruction, protection, and liberation. She is fiercely protective of her devotees and represents the transformative power of the divine feminine. Spiritual Resonance: As the Romani people migrated west from India, it’s plausible that they carried memories and symbols of their native deities. When encountering Christianity in Europe, their traditions may have syncretized with local saints and legends. Name & Iconography: The name “Sara la Kali” directly mirrors the name of the goddess Kali, and she is described as dark-skinned, powerful, and compassionate—qualities often attributed to Kali Ma. Devotion by Gypsies: Romani pilgrims often express deep emotion, reverence, and personal identification with Sara la Kali, in ways that resemble Bhakti (devotional) traditions from India.

4. Syncretism and Cultural Memory

The Romani people, as a diasporic culture, adapted their spiritual heritage into the dominant religious frameworks of the lands they inhabited—like Catholicism in France—while preserving elements of their ancestral traditions. The figure of Sara la Kali may be a Christianized continuation of Kali, preserving the memory of the divine feminine power that traveled with the Romani from India to Europe.

In essence, Sara la Kali can be understood as a bridge between the Romani people’s Indian roots and their adopted European religious identities. Her dark skin, powerful presence, and spiritual importance echo the Hindu goddess Kali, suggesting a deep ancestral memory preserved through migration, transformation, and faith.

Sara La Kali

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Tamar from The Chosen series is secret code for the Real Hidden Mary Magdalene

In this fascinating video, we discuss the intriguing character of Tamar in the hit television show The Chosen. We explore how she might be a secret code for the real and often overlooked figure of Mary Magdalene from the Bible. We will look at the symbolism and connections between these characters that makes this hidden link evident. With a closer look, we will dive deep into the mystery of the true identity of this powerful biblical woman and explore how she may have been hidden in plain sight all along.

It should also be noted that..

The myths surrounding Sara La Kali, an enigmatic figure from southern France who is sometimes referred to as Sarah the Egyptian, are filled with intrigue, wonder and debate. This figure, who is believed by some to be the secret daughter of Jesus and Mary Magdalene, and to have come with her Mary Magdalene to France, was said to be known and called the name Tamar as well, which has been shrouded in mystery and controversy for centuries.

Sara La Kali aka Sarah the Egyptian

Little is known about Sara La Kali, but the main point of contention is the source of her enigmatic name. Some claim her alias of Sara La Kali, which can be translated as “the Black Tamar,” is derived from the name of the biblical figure Tamar. According to ancient Hebrew culture, women of royal descent often kept their royal lineage secret. This could explain why Sara La Kali’s name was kept hidden within the confines of a pseudonym.

Tamar from The Chosen series

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Arrival of Mary Magdalene and entourage to Southern France

Tamar – Mary Magdalene’s secret daughter

Generally, when you hear about Mary Magdalene’s daughter, people tend to call her, consistently, “Sara”. But, the truth is that her name is actually Tamar.

Back in the 1st century, (and before that) it was traditional for girls, when they reach 12-15 years of age, for them to be married-off. (this generally went around the time of their first period… first period, get your husband!) Mary Magdalene’s family was rich. They decided to send their daughter off, from their home in Magdalena (Obviously, Mary “self-choose” her “surname”.) to marry a rich man in Bethany. Now, Magdalena is a northern Israeli (yes, I said “is”. It still stands!) town, a huge one for fishing, because it is on the Jordon river — but Bethany, is right next to Jerusalem, which is (obviously for us geography geeks) very south Israel. Mary was sent off with one donkey, tons of money, and her spikenard perfume. Along the way, Mary was raped by a southern-African band of bandits, they stole her donkey, and all her money. And, this resulted in a pregnancy. She was at least more than half way, she made it just to Jericho, a town slightly more northern than Bethany, but by the time she made it she was too sick (and by that, I meant too pregnant) to make it to Bethany. Oh what am I doing, this post is about TAMAR. OK- just to rap things up, she then went into prostitution, then met Jesus, wa-laa!

Well, about a month before the crucifixion, Mary got pregnant with Jesus’ child. After the crucifixion, Mary, Tamar (who was now… I think 15-16 years old) Salome (a female apostle of Jesus), Mary of Bethany and Lazarus escaped Israel in a rowboat — with Peter Simon now the first Pope, and more than enough people wanting to slit her throat, she had to leave. Under disguise, Tamar changed her name to “Sara”, and pretended to be Mary’s slave, (Gosh that’s horrible) noting her “father” was of southern-African origins. During this time, Mary gave birth to a boy who she named Joseph. Tamar was bypassed in favor of Joseph, him being a boy, but there were those that believe Tamar was the real heiress and as such a secret society sprung up around her and her beliefs.

It is called The Tamar Secret Society. And it is the most secretive society on Earth. It started in Glastonbury, a small town in England, but it’s base can also be traced to France as well as England. It had strong connections with the Celtic church where many of its members came, later it developed strong connections with the Cathars in France. Tamar even has it’s own language, with has almost 5,000 spells connected to it. The Tamar holds virginity very important, to both men and women. The Tamar where well connected to the Knights Templar and the Prieuré de Sion. It is thought by some that when the Templar where being persecuted by the catholic church that the Templar passed on to Tamar the secrets of the Arc, which they had discovered some years earlier.

Reposted From : Magdalene: Beyond the Da Vinci Code

Tamar – Secret Daughter of Mary Magdalene

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Saint Sarah, Santa Sara La Kali, Sarah the Egyptian

Saint Sarah aka Santa Sara La Kali aka Sarah the Egyptian aka Sarasvati Lakshmi Kali, daughter of Jesus & Mary Magdalene, known by Catholics as Egyptian servant to the Three Mary’s as they fled from Roman persecution in Jerusalem to France to a place now known as Saintes Maries de la Mer in Camarque, France.

To the Romani Gypsies, she is Santa Sara la Kali, the Patron Saint of the Gypsies. To Gnostics, Essenes & Nazoreans she was actually the daughter of Jesus & Mary Magdalene, disguised as a servant to hide her true identity. It is said that, every year since their arrival the people have been celebrating the day of their arrival to France at the coast with a large pilgrimage festival. The day of the pilgrimage honouring Sarah is May 24; her statue is carried down to the sea on this day to re-enact her arrival in France.

Some authors have drawn parallels between the ceremonies of the pilgrimage and the worship of the Hindu goddess Kali (a form of Durga), subsequently identifying the two. Ronald Lee states:

“If we compare the ceremonies with those performed in France at the shrine of Sainte Sara (called Sara e Kali in Romani), we become aware that the worship of Kali/Durga/Sara has been transferred to a Christian figure… in France, to a non-existent “sainte” called Sara, who is actually part of the Kali/Durga/Sara worship among certain groups in India.”

The name “Sara” itself is seen in the appellation of Durga as Kali in the famed text Durgasaptashati.

In The Rozabal Line, author Ashwin Sanghi puts forward that Sara-la-Kali refers to the three Hindu goddesses – Saraswati, Lakshmi, and Kali – the goddesses of Knowledge, Wealth and Power – symbolizing the trinity of female power.