The Tarians believe in a hidden world. They call it the world on the other side, or by its earlier name Ineha.
According to their belief, you can go there through passages called gateways. These gateways have no special appearance, they can be innocent-looking cave openings or hollow tree trunks.
Few people managed to cross over to the world on the other side. Fewer still are those who have returned from it. The Tarians call them witnesses, because by their testimony they know how to describe Ineha.
The Tarian tradition is not a religion, it is a belief shared by members of different religions and atheists. Originating in ancient times, it has been passed down by word of mouth for many generations. The earliest recorded testimony is that of Taria, a Phoenician woman who lived in the second millennium BC. (The tradition is named after her).
Her testimony was given to Dido (Elissa), Queen of Carthage. She told her she was a passenger on a ship called Tevata that went to the world on the other side. She described the gateway as a triangular opening with a sun shining behind it.
“A high cliff appeared in front of us in the darkness of the night, in its lower part, at the level of the water, there was an opening in the shape of a triangle, and behind it a sun that lit our way.”
The Terian symbol is a graphic representation of the gateway as described by Taria. It has several versions but all represent the same description.

Many Tarians are actively engaged in searching for passages to the other side in field trips, travels and research work.
The Tarians are bound by secrecy, they do not reveal the location and number of the gateways to anyone but Tarians.

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