Olon Angit Kino Solongos Review
At first glance, it sounds like a riddle. But to the shamans ( Böö ) of the steppe, this is a doorway. It describes the moment the physical world touches the divine. In the Mongolian worldview, the sky is not empty space. It is the "Eternal Blue Sky" (Munkh Khukh Tengri) , a layered cosmos of spirits, ancestors, and power.
So, when the shaman chants "Olon Angit Kino Solongos," they are asking a metaphysical question: "Who among you birds will become the bridge?" "Which spirit will bend its back like a rainbow so that I may walk upon it?" What strikes me most about this phrase is the word "Kino" (Who?). It implies that the shaman does not control the spirits. They cannot simply summon a rainbow at will. Olon Angit Kino Solongos
The "Many Birds" represent the swarm of ancestor spirits and ongod (spiritual helpers) traveling toward the human realm. At first glance, it sounds like a riddle
If you’ve stumbled upon this term during a deep dive into Central Asian spirituality, you might have found scattered translations: "Many Birds, Who? The Rainbow." But like most sacred phrases, the literal translation barely scratches the surface. In the Mongolian worldview, the sky is not empty space

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