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About Kaharagia

Learn about the history, values, and structure of the Principality of Kaharagia.

Our Values

These values are not slogans. They are habits of life. They guide how we treat each other, how we exercise authority, and how we face the world beyond us. Anyone who accepts them in good faith may belong to the Kaharagian nation.

Sovereignty and Continuity

At the centre of national life stands the Sovereign. The Sovereign is a guardian, not a ruler for personal ends, and acts for the welfare and unity of the people. Loyalty to the Sovereign is part of our common bond. The Sovereign reigns for life and may name a successor. This practice allows for lifelong preparation, stable transfer of authority, and the steady growth of wisdom in office.

Human Dignity

Every person carries equal worth. Human rights are to be respected in law and in daily conduct. Many Kaharagians are people of faith; we affirm that all are created with inherent dignity, including members of the LGBT community. No one is excluded on grounds of origin, belief, or identity.

Hospitality and Welcome

Kaharagians are known for a warm, open manner. We receive newcomers with courtesy and make space for them in our everyday life. Hospitality strengthens trust, builds community, and honours the image of God in every person.

Peace and Restraint

We choose peace. Kaharagians do not provoke violence and do not glorify it. Force is acceptable only in defence. Patience, self-command, and measured speech are marks of strength, not weakness.

Charity and Service

Those who have, help. We give time, skill, and resources to relieve need and to lift up the vulnerable. Charity is not a display; it is a duty freely embraced and a sign of solidarity with the wider human family.

Chivalry and Honour

Conduct matters. We prize truthfulness, fairness, courage with humility, and keeping one's word. Chivalry is not theatre. It is the daily practice of honour in speech and action, especially when no one is watching.

Ceremony and Memory

Ceremony keeps faith with our story. Public acts, shared rites, and dignified forms remind us who we are and what we owe one another. Proper ceremony is not an empty display. It teaches respect, steadies institutions, and binds the generations.