Thor's back: Icelanders are to build a new temple for Norse gods

Icelanders are to build the first major temple to the ancient Norse gods since the Viking age.

Hilmar Örn Hilmarsson and other members of Ásatrúarfélagið walk to a "blót" ceremony. Lenka Kovářová

Nowadays Thor, Odin and Frigg are found either in comic books or history texts. However, an association that promotes faith in the old gods is determined to bring them back.

Ásatrúarfélagið, which represents a modern version of Norse paganism, is building the shrine near the Icelandic capital Reykjavik.

However, its beliefs have a distinctly modern twist. In a reference to Odin and his horse Sleipnir, its high priest Hilmar Örn Hilmarsson said: "I don't believe anyone believes in a one-eyed man who is riding about on a horse with eight feet. We see the stories as poetic metaphors and a manifestation of the forces of nature and human psychology."

The temple will host weddings, funerals and naming ceremonies. Norse rituals tended to include animal – and occasionally human – sacrifice; however, the neo-pagans are of a much more peaceable disposition.

Ásatrúarfélagið's membership has tripled in the last decade to 2,400 from the country's total population of 330,000. Most Icelanders identify themselves as Christian, the vast majority Lutheran, though church attendance is low.

News
MP calls for emergency meeting to end case against suspended Christian nurse
MP calls for emergency meeting to end case against suspended Christian nurse

Shadow equalities minister, Claire Coutinho MP, has called for an end to the case against Christian nurse Jennifer Melle, who is facing disciplinary proceedings for misgendering a convicted paedophile.

Hundreds of churches in Germany being targeted with vandalism and theft
Hundreds of churches in Germany being targeted with vandalism and theft

The cost of the damage to both churches and chapels runs into hundreds of thousands of euros.

Nigerian authorities secure release of 100 kidnapped Catholic school children
Nigerian authorities secure release of 100 kidnapped Catholic school children

The fate of more than 160 other students and staff members abducted in the same attack remains unknown.

EU urged to combat violations of religious freedom in South Asia
EU urged to combat violations of religious freedom in South Asia

Citing a dramatic escalation of targeted attacks against Christians and other minorities in their countries, human rights advocates from South Asia called for stronger EU engagement on freedom of religion or belief at a conference in Brussels on December 4.