Vainakh religion


The Vainakh people of the North Caucasus were Islamised comparatively late, during the early modern period, and Amjad Jaimoukha proposes to reconstruct some of the elements of their pre-Islamic religion and mythology, including traces of ancestor worship and funerary cults. The Nakh peoples, like many other peoples of the North Caucasus such as especially Circassians and Ossetians, had been practising tree worship, and believed that trees were the abodes of spirits. Vainakh peoples developed many rituals to serve particular kinds of trees. The pear tree held a special place in the faith of Vainakhs.

Comparative mythology

K. Sikhuralidze proposed that the people of the Caucasus region shared a single, regional culture in ancient times.
Careful study of the Nakh and Kartvelian mythologies reveals many similarities.
Jaimoukha adduces comparison with the Circassians, but also more generally with the Iron Age mythology of western Indo-European cultures, especially emphasizing parallels to Celtic polytheism.
such as the worship of certain trees (including, notably, a pine tree on the winter solstice, supposedly related to the modern Christmas tree, reconstructed calendar festivals such as Halloween and Beltane, veneration of fire, and certain ghost related superstitions.

Pantheon

Jaimoukha on page 252 gives a list of reconstructed "Waynakh deities".