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Havor

Havor was a major god in the Thauzunian Orthodoxy, associated with labor, sustained effort, and endurance. In pre-Fall belief, Havor did not represent work as virtue or punishment, but as necessity. His domain governed the expenditure of effort required to maintain civilization, from manual labor to repetitive administrative tasks. Work was treated as a constant condition of existence rather than a moral measure.
  Orthodox doctrine framed labor as an obligation distributed across society rather than an individual burden. Havor represented consistency and reliability over intensity. Sudden bursts of effort were less valued than sustained productivity. Laziness was not treated as sin, but as failure to contribute to collective stability. Havor’s influence emphasized persistence rather than motivation.
  Havor was closely associated with workers, logistics systems, and maintenance operations. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized scheduling, shift rotation, and workload balance. Exhaustion was viewed as system failure rather than personal weakness. Havor reinforced the idea that societies collapsed not from lack of effort, but from mismanagement of it.
  No knowledge of Havor survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to his name, symbols, or conceptual framework in modern Vey’Zari culture. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its collapse, all structured understanding of Havor disappeared. He is not remembered, worshiped, or reinterpreted.
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