by Laura Knight-Jadczyk
from
Cassiopaea Website
Now that we have, for all intents and
purposes, disposed of the "Mystery of Rennes-le-Chateau" as
generally promulgated, what do we have left? Remembering that our
"final word" about the "parchments" was:
After so many discrepancies were
discovered in the various stories, and serious questions began
to be asked, Philippe de Cherisey wrote:
-
There were three parchments, not
four.
-
These parchments were
genealogies, not ’faked’ gospels.
-
The gospels are of recent
manufacture, photocopies of two sheets of paper composed a
little before the publication of Gerard de Sede’s book, and
designed to produce an effect upon that author that has
exceeded the wildest expectations. [Emphasis, mine.]
-
The text Jesu medela vulnerum
inscribed by Sauneire on a plaque situated at the foot of
the altar in his church has been put to good use by the
author of these pseudo-parchments with the intention of
giving them an air of authenticity.
The important thing to remember, at this
point, is that ALL of the conjecture about the Poussin painting,
The
Shepherds of Arcadia, resulted from the "deciphering" of the
mysterious parchments purportedly found by Berenger Sauniere and
reproduced in Gerard de Sede’s book. In other words, the "fake"
parchments as described by de Cherisey above, were the ones that led
to the identification of the painting Shepherds of Arcadia as being
"significant" in some way.
Now, if De Cherisey has said that they did not exist, that the
"real" parchments were only genealogies, what do we do with our
famous painting? Does this mean that all of the "sound and fury"
about Bernenger Sauniere and his trip to Paris, and the use of the
painting as a clue system "signifies nothing?" What does that make
of all the books written by authors who have found such
"miraculously synchronous" landscape markers and other clues that
"mesh" with the painting and the clues in the parchments?
And, if all of the clues of the parchments and the painting are
nonsense, what are we to make of the fact that they HAVE produced
strange connections?
For the sake of the reader who is not familiar with the story of the
parchments and the painting, I AM going to re-tell it in brief
rather soon; but, before I do, I want to go in a slightly different
direction in order to give us some more tools with which to evaluate
what we are going to discuss.
In Mircea Eliade’s most useful book,
The Myth of the Eternal Return,
he discusses the "mythicization" of historical personages. In
Eliade’s presentation, he describes the "archetype" of an event as
being a sort of "mold" that has a much deeper reality than actual
historical events. In this sense, any event or series of events
which does NOT fit the "exemplary model" is meaningless, or rather,
lacks "true reality" in Platonic terms. Another way of putting it
is: there is nothing new under the sun; to everything there is a
season.
Eliade writes:
Just before the last war, the
Romanian folklorist Constantin Brailiou had occasion to record
an admirable ballad in a village in Maramures. Its subject was a
tragedy of love: the young suitor had been bewitched by a
mountain fairy, and a few days before he was to be married, the
fairy, driven by jealousy, had flung him from a cliff. The next
day, shepherds found his body and, caught in a tree, his hat.
They carried the body back to the village and his fiancée came
to meet them; upon seeing her lover dead, she poured out a
funeral lament, full of mythological allusions, a liturgical
text of rustic beauty.
Such was the content of the ballad.
In the course of recording the variants that he was able to
collect, the folklorist tried to learn the period when the
tragedy had occurred; he was told that it was a very old story,
which had happened "long ago." Pursuing his inquiries, however,
he learned that the event had taken place not quite forty years
earlier. He finally even discovered that the heroine was still
alive. He went to see her and heard the story from her own lips.
It was a quite commonplace tragedy: one evening her lover had
slipped and fallen over a cliff; he had not died instantly; his
cries had been heard by mountaineers; he had been carried to the
village, where he had died soon after.
At the funeral, his fiancée, with
the other women of the village, had repeated the customary
ritual lamentations, without the slightest allusion to the
mountain fairy.
Thus, despite the presence of the
principal witness, a few years had sufficed to strip the event
of all historical authenticity, to transform it into a legendary
tale: the jealous fairy, the murder of the young man, the
discovery of the dead body, the lament, rich in mythological
themes, chanted by the fiancée. Almost all the people of the
village had been contemporaries of the authentic historical
fact; but this fact, as such, could not satisfy them: the tragic
death of a young man on the eve of his marriage was something
different from a simple death by accident; it had an occult
meaning that could only be revealed by its identification with
the category of myth.
The mythicization of the accident
had not stopped at the creation of a ballad; people told the
story of the jealous fairy even when they were talking freely,
"prosaically," of the young man’s death. When the folklorist
drew the villagers’ attention to the authentic version, they
replied that the old woman had forgotten; that her great grief
had almost destroyed her mind. It was the myth that told the
truth: the real story was already only a falsification. Besides,
was not the myth truer by the fact that it made the real story
yield a deeper and richer meaning, revealing a tragic destiny?
This mythicization of historical personages appears in exactly
the same way in Yugoslavian heroic poetry. Marko Kraljevic,
protagonist of the Yugoslavian epic, became famous for his
courage during the second half of the fourteenth century. His
historical existence is unquestionable, and we even know the
date of his death (1394). But no sooner is Marko’s historical
personality received into the popular memory than it is
abolished and his biography is reconstructed in accordance with
the norms of myth. His mother is a Vila, a fairy, just as the
Greek heroes were the sons of nymphs or naiads.
His wife is also a Vila; he wins her
through a ruse and takes great care to hide her wings lest she
find them, take flight, and abandon him - as, by the way, in
certain variants of the ballad, proves to be the case after the
birth of their first child. Marko fights a three-headed dragon
and kills it, after the archetypal model of Indra, Thraetona,
Herakles, and others. In accordance with the myth of the enemy
brothers, he too fights with his brother Andrija and kills him.
Anachronisms abound in the cycle of Marko, as in all other
archaic epic cycles.
Marko, who died in 1394, is now the
friend, now the enemy, of John Hunyadi, who distinguished
himself in the wars against the Turks ca. 1450. It is
interesting to note that these two heroes are brought together
in the manuscripts of the epic ballads of the seventeenth
century; that is, two centuries after Hunyadi’s death. In modern
epic poems, anachronisms are far less frequent. The personages
celebrated in them have not yet had time to be transformed into
mythical heroes.
The same mythical prestige glorifies other heroes of Yugoslavian
epic poetry. Vukasin and Novak marry Vila. Vuk (the ’Dragon
Despot’) fights the dragon of Jastrebac and can himself turn
into a dragon. Vuk, who reigned in Syrmia between 1471 and 1485,
comes to the rescue of Lazar and Milica, who died about a
century earlier. In the poems whose action centers upon the
first battle of Kosovo (1389), persons figure who had been dead
for twenty years, or who were not to die until a century later.
Fairies cure wounded heroes,
resuscitate them, foretell the future to them, warn them of
imminent dangers, just as in myth a female being aids and
protects the hero. No heroic ’ordeal’ is omitted: shooting an
arrow through an apple, jumping over several horses, recognizing
a girl among a group of youths dressed alike, and so on.
Certain heroes of the Russian byliny are most probably connected
with historical prototypes. A number of the heroes of the Kiev
cycle are mentioned in the chronicles. But with this their
historicity ends. We cannot even determine whether the Prince
Vladimir who forms the center of the Kiev cycle is Vladimir I,
who died in 1015, or Vladimier II, who reigned from 1113 to
1125. As for the great heroes of the byliny of this cycle,
Svyatogor, Mikula, and Volga, the historic elements preserved in
their persons and adventures amount to almost nothing.
They end by becoming
indistinguishable from the heroes of myths and folk tales. One
of the protagonists of the Kiev cycle, Dobrynya Nikitich, who
sometimes appears in the byliny as Vladimir’s nephew, owes his
principal fame to a purely mythical exploit: he kills a
twelve-headed dragon. Another hero of the byliny, St. Michael of Potuka, kills a dragon that is on the point of devouring a girl
brought to it as an offering.
To a certain extent, we witness the metamorphosis of a
historical figure into a mythical hero. We are not referring
merely to the supernatural elements summoned to reinforce their
legend: for example the hero Volga, of the Kiev cycle, changes
into a bird or a wolf, exactly like a
shaman or a figure of
ancient legend; Egori is born with silver feet, golden arms, and
his head covered with pearls; Ilya of Murom resembles a giant of
folklore - he boasts that he can make heaven and earth touch.
But there is something else: this
mythicization of the historical prototypes who gave the popular
epic songs their heroes takes place in accordance with an
exemplary standard; they are ’formed after the image’ of the
heroes of ancient myth. They all resemble one another in the
fact of their miraculous birth; and, just as in the Mahabharata
and the Homeric poems, at least one of their parents is divine.
As in the epic songs of the Tatars and the Polynesians, these
heroes undertake a journey to heaven or descend into hell.
To repeat, the historical character of the persons celebrated in
epic poetry is not in question. But their historicity does not
long resist the corrosive action of mythicization. [Emphasis,
mine] The historical event in itself, however important, does
not remain in the popular memory, nor does its recollection
kindle the poetic imagination save insofar as the particular
historical event closely approaches a mythical model.
In the bylina devoted to the
catastrophes of the Napoleonic invasion of 1812, the role of
Czar Alexander I as head of the army has been forgotten, as have
the name and the importance of Borodino; all that survives is
the figure of Kutusov in the guise of a popular hero. In 1912,
an entire Serbian brigade saw Marko Kraljevic lead the charge
against the castle of Prilep, which, centuries earlier, had been
that popular hero’s fief: a particularly heroic
exploit provided sufficient occasion for the popular imagination
to seize upon it and assimilate it to the traditional archetype
of Marko’s exploits, the more so because his own castle was at
stake.
"Myth is the last - not the
first - stage in the development of a hero" (Matthias Murki)
But this only confirms the
conclusion reached by many investigators: the recollection of a
historical event or a real personage survives in popular memory
for two or three centuries at the utmost. This is because
popular memory finds difficulty in retaining individual events
and real figures. The structures by means of which it functions
are different: categories instead of events, archetypes instead
of historical personages. The historical personage is
assimilated to his mythical model, while the event is identified
with the category of mythical actions (fight with a monster,
enemy brothers, etc). If certain epic poems preserve what is
called "historical truth," this truth almost never has to do
with definite persons and events, but with institutions,
customs, landscapes.
The memory of the collectivity is an historical. This statement
implies neither a popular origin for folklore nor a collective
creation for epic poetry. Murko, Chadwick, and other
investigators have brought out the role of the creative
personality, of the "artist," in the invention and development
of epic poetry.... the memory of historical
events is modified, after two or three centuries, in such a way
that it can enter into the model of the archaic mentality, which
cannot accept what is individual and preserves only what is
exemplary.
This reduction of events to
categories and of individuals to archetypes, carried out by the
consciousness of the popular strata in Europe almost down to our
day, is performed in conformity with archaic ontology. We might
say that popular memory restores to the historical personage of
modern times its meaning as imitator of the archetype and
reproducer of archetypal gestures - a meaning of which the
members of archaic societies have always been, and continue to
be, conscious...
We have the right to ask ourselves if the importance of
archetypes for the consciousness of archaic man, and the
inability of popular memory to retain anything but archetypes,
do not reveal to us something more than a resistance to history
exhibited by traditional spirituality?
[Eliade, 1954]
Now, there were a couple of things I
emphasized above. One of them was:
...the historical character of the
persons celebrated in epic poetry is not in question. But their
historicity does not long resist the corrosive action of
mythicization.
And the other was:
Murko, Chadwick, and other
investigators have brought out the role of the creative
personality, of the "artist," in the invention and development
of epic poetry.
Taken in the context of the question
asked:
We have the right to ask ourselves
if the importance of archetypes for the consciousness of archaic
man, and the inability of popular memory to retain anything but
archetypes, do not reveal to us something more than a resistance
to history exhibited by traditional spirituality?
...we must seriously consider the
"Control System" proposed by
Dr. Jacques Vallee, and it
implementation in terms of the Rennes-le-Chateau mystery.
I am here going to present some of Dr. Vallee’s closing remarks from
Passport to Magonia, reminding the
reader that, although Dr. Vallee is discussing the UFO phenomenon,
in every place where he refers to it specifically, if we insert "The Rennes-le-Chateau Mystery," it is exactly as applicable, with some
interesting conclusions to be drawn later. A more accurate
assessment of the RLC problem cannot be found anywhere, and it bears
serious consideration.
Dr. Vallee writes:
What does it all mean? Is it
reasonable to draw a parallel between religious apparitions, the
fairy-faith, the reports of dwarflike beings with supernatural
powers, the airship tales in the United States in the last
century, and the present stories of UFO landings?
(And, I would add, the Mystery of Rennes-le-Chateau.)
I would strongly argue that it is -
for one simple reason: the mechanisms that have generated these
various beliefs are identical. Their human
context and their effect on humans are constant. And it is my
conclusion that the observation of this very deep mechanism is
the crucial one. It has little to do with the problem of knowing
whether UFO’s are physical objects or not.
Attempting to understand the
meaning, the purpose of the so-called flying saucers, as many
people are doing today, is just as futile as was the pursuit of
the fairies, if one makes the mistake of confusing appearance
and reality. The phenomenon has stable, invariant features, some
of which we have tried to identify and label clearly. But we
have also had to note carefully the chameleon-like character of
the secondary attributes...
Human actions are based on imagination, belief, and faith, not
on objective observation - as military and political experts
know well. Even science, which claims its methods and theories
are rationally developed, is really shaped by emotion and fancy,
or by fear. And to control human imagination is to shape
mankind’s collective destiny, provided the source of this
control is not identifiable by the public. And indeed it is one
of the objectives of any government’s policies to prepare the
public for unavoidable changes or to stimulate its activity in
some desirable direction.
Thus the Soviets have skillfully employed the services of
science fiction writers to supply the emotional support of their
space effort among the young people. In the Western world,
control over our imaginations is more diffuse, and many sources
compete for it. But it is significant that intelligence agencies
and advertising companies alike should be so highly interested
in folklore. Not only are Batman and the Jolly Green Giant
instances of experiments in this direction; the Vietnam war has
seen similar appeals to public imagination through the use of
local superstition.
I am not saying, of course, that the UFO phenomenon is produced
by a similar trick. But I do say that, beyond the question of
the physical nature of the objects, we should be studying the
deeper problem of their impact on our imagination and culture.
Whatever they are, a lot of books about them have been written,
sold, and read. How the UFO phenomena will affect, in the long
run, our views about science, about religion, about the
exploration of space, it is impossible to measure. But to those
who follow the situation closely, the UFO phenomenon does appear
to have a real effect. And a peculiar feature of this mechanism
is that it affects equally those who ’believe’ and those who
oppose the reality of the phenomenon in a physical sense. ...
For the time being the only positive statement we can make,
without fear of contradiction, is that: it is possible to make
large sections of any population believe in the existence of
supernatural races, in the possibility of flying machines, in
the plurality of inhabited worlds, by exposing them to a few
carefully engineered scenes the details of which are adapted to
the culture and superstitions of a particular time and place.
[Dr. Vallee gives examples of some
completely bizarre UFO cases that reflect in many strange ways the
"synchronous" goings on in the Rennes-le-Chateau story as told by
Henry Lincoln and others, including the library story I have
included in this series.]
He then asks:
...What could be the purpose of such
a worldwide elaborate hoax? Who can afford to contrive such a
complex scheme, for so little apparent result? Is human
imagination alone capable of playing such tricks on itself? Or
should we hypothesize that an advanced race somewhere in the
universe and sometime in the future has been showing us
three-dimensional space operas for the last two thousand years,
in an attempt to guide our civilization? If so, they certainly
do not deserve our congratulations!
[Vallee]
At this point, I would like to insert a
little remark made by the Cassiopaeans in response to a question
about a bizarre synchronicity that seemed a definite confirmation of
an idea, a minor idea, it should be said.
11-19-94
Q: (L) Is the information about the electronic ignition
systems correct?
A: Disinformation comes from seemingly reliable sources.
It is extremely important for you to not gather false knowledge
as it is more damaging than no knowledge at all. Remember
knowledge protects, ignorance endangers. The information you
speak of, T___, was given to you deliberately because you and
J__ and others have been targeted due to your intense interest
in level of density 4 through 7 subject matter. You have already
been documented as a "threat." Remember, disinformation is very
effective when delivered by highly trained sources because
hypnotic and transdimensional techniques are used thereby
causing electronic anomalies to follow suggestion causing
perceived confirmation to occur.
Q: (T) But I’m just a nobody. Why would they go to all
trouble ...
A: Several answers follow: Number One, Nobody is a
"nobody." Number two, it is no trouble at all for aforementioned
forces to give seemingly individualized attention to anybody.
Number three, T___ has been targeted and so has J___ and others
because you are on the right track.
Now, the implications of the above, in
regard to Rennes-le-Chateau, are enormous. IF any part of it is
correct, it means that the "synchronicities" and strange events that
seem to confirm this or that idea can, and very well MAY BE,
designed to lead the researcher in the WRONG direction!
But, returning to C’s comments:
Are we dealing instead with a
parallel universe, where there are human races living, and where
we may go at our expense, never to return to the present? Are
these races only semi-human, so that in order to maintain
contact with us, they need crossbreeding with men and women of
our planet?
Is this the origin of the many tales
and legends where genetics plays a great role: the symbolism of
the Virgin in occultism and religion, the fairy tales involving
human midwives and changelings, the sexual overtones of the
flying saucer reports, the biblical stories of intermarriage
between the Lord’s angels, and terrestrial women, whose
offspring were giants?
From that mysterious universe, have
objects that can materialize and ’dematerialize’ at will been
projected? Are the UFO’s ’windows’ rather than ’objects’? There
is nothing to support these assumptions, and yet, in view of the
historical continuity of the phenomenon, alternatives are hard
to find, unless we deny the reality of all the facts, as our
peace of mind would indeed prefer.
The problem cannot be solved today.
If we absolutely must have something to believe, then we should
join one of the numerous groups of people who have all the
"answers." Read Menzel’s books or
the Condon Report, that fine
piece of scientific recklessness. Or subscribe to the magazines
that "prove" that "flying saucers are real and from outer
space." I have not written this book for such people, but for
those few who have gone through all this and have graduated to a
higher, clearer level of perception of the total meaning of that
tenuous dream that underlies the many nightmares of human
history, for those who have recognized, within themselves and in
others, the delicate levers of imagination and will not be
afraid to experiment with them.
It may seem useless to conjecture about a phenomenon that,
according to all authorities, remains unidentified. But... it
has left a clear series of marks in the beliefs and attitudes of
our contemporaries, in pattern not only identifiable but also by
no means unprecedented. Hence it is not necessarily pointless to
try to devise critical tests, both sociological and physical in
nature, to determine whether or not purposeful design is
involved in the phenomena the witnesses describe. If the answer
is yes, the problem of deducing the identity of the intelligence
that generates it is not necessarily a solvable one...
Whenever a set of unusual circumstances is presented, it is in
the nature of the human mind to analyze it until a rational
pattern is encountered at some level. But it is quite
conceivable that nature should present us with circumstances so
deeply organized that our observational and logical errors would
entirely mask the pattern to be identified. To the scientist,
there is nothing new here. The history of science consists in
dual progress: the refinement of observational techniques and
the improvement of analytical methods.
On the other hand, the proposition
that the universe might contain intelligent creatures exhibiting
such an organization that no model of it could be constructed on
the basis of currently classified concepts is also theoretically
plausible. The behavior of such beings would then necessarily
appear random or absurd, or would go undetected, especially if
they possessed physical means of retiring at will beyond the
human perceptual range. It is interesting, but only incidental,
to observe that such physical actions would appear on scientific
records as mere random accidents, easily ascribable to
instrumental error or to a variety of natural causes.
Considering the UFO phenomenon as a special instance of that
more fundamental question, we are presented with the dual
possibility of very long-term insolvability and of continued
manifestation, and this is true whether the phenomenon is
natural or artificial in nature.
This being the case, the development of a new myth feeding upon
this duality is entirely predictable. In the absence of a
rational solution to the mystery, and the public interest in the
matter being intense, it is quite likely that in the coming
years every new brand of charlatanism will use it as a base,
although it is not possible to predict its exact form. We may
very well be living the early years of a new mythological
movement, and it may eventually give our technological age its
Olympus, its fairyland, or its Walhalla, whether we regard such
a development as an asset or as a blow to our culture.
Because many observations of UFO
phenomena appear self-consistent and at the same time
irreconcilable with scientific knowledge, a logical vacuum has
been created that human imagination tries to fill with its own
fantasies. Such situations have been frequently observed in the
past, and they have given us both the highest and the basest
forms of religious, poetic, and political activity. [...]
We must finally address ourselves to the question:
"If we reject
the naive theory that the UFO phenomenon is caused by friendly
visitors from Mars, what alternatives can we suggest?"
It is
amusing to try to answer this question. Imaginative science
fiction buffs could perhaps look into the following lines of
speculation:
1. There exists a natural
phenomenon whose manifestations border on both the physical
and the mental. There is a medium in which human dreams can
be implemented, and this is the mechanism by which UFO
events are generated, needing no superior intelligence to
trigger them. This would explain the fugitivity of UFO
manifestations, the alleged contact with friendly occupants,
and the fact that the objects appear to keep pace with human
technology and to use current symbols. The theory explains
the behavior of the "visitors": aggressive in Latin America,
"Cartesian" in France, "alien monsters" in the United
States, etc. It also, naturally, explains the totality of
religious miracles as well as ghosts and other so-called
supernatural phenomena.
2. The same result would be obtained if we could
hypothesize mental entities, which would be simultaneously
perceptible to groups of independent witnesses.
Unfortunately it would stop short of explaining the traces
left by such phenomena.
3. We could also imagine that for centuries some
superior intelligence has been projecting into our
environment (chosen for reasons best known to that
intelligence) various artificial objects whose creation is a
pure form of art. Perhaps it enjoys our puzzlement, or
perhaps it is trying to teach us some new concept. Perhaps
it is acting in a purely gratuitous effort, and its
creations are as impossible to understand as is the Picasso
sculpture in Chicago to the birds that perch on it. Like
Picasso and his art, the Great UFO Master shapes our
culture, but most of us remain unaware of it.
Unfortunately, none of these
attractive theories has a scientific leg to stand upon! I must
apologize for presenting them here, but I only wanted to show
how quickly one could be carried into pure fantasy as soon as
the hard lesson of the facts was ignored. Clearly, a hundred or
a thousand such theories could be enumerated at very little
expense, and every one of them could serve as the basis for a
very nice new myth, religion, or pseudo-scientific fad.
If we decide to avoid extreme speculation, but to make certain
basic observations from the existing data, five principal facts
stand out rather clearly:
Fact 1. There has been
among the public, in all countries, since the middle of
1946, an extremely active generation of colorful rumors.
They center on a considerable number of observations of
unknown machines close to the ground in rural areas, the
physical traces left by these machines, and their various
effects on humans and animals.
Fact 2. When the underlying archetypes are extracted
from these rumors, the saucer myth is seen to coincide to a
remarkable degree with the fairy-faith of Celtic countries,
the observations of the scholars of past ages, and the
widespread belief among all peoples concerning entities
whose physical and psychological descriptions place them in
the same category as the present-day UFOnauts.
Fact 3. The entities human witnesses report to have
seen, heard, and touched fall into various biological types.
Among them are beings of giant stature, men
indistinguishable from us, winged creatures, and various
types of monsters. Most of the so-called pilots, however,
are dwarfs and form two main groups:
(1) dark, hairy
beings--identical to the gnomes of medieval theory--with
small, bright eyes and deep, rugged, "old" voices; and
(2) beings - who answer the description of the
sylphs of the Middle Ages or the elves of the
fairy-faith - with human complexions, over-sized heads,
and silvery voices.
All the beings have been
described with and without breathing apparatus. Beings of
various categories have been reported together.
Fact 4. The entities’ reported behavior is as
consistently absurd as the appearance of their craft is
ludicrous. In numerous instances of verbal communication
with them, their assertions have been systematically
misleading. This is true for all cases on record, from
encounters with the Gentry in the British Isles to
conversations with airship engineers during the 1897 Midwest
flap and discussions with the alleged Martians in Europe,
North and South America, and elsewhere. This absurd behavior
has had the effect of keeping professional scientists away
from the area where that activity was taking place. It has
also served to give the saucer myth its religious and
mystical overtones.
Fact 5. The mechanism of the apparitions, in
legendary, historical, and modern times, is standard and
follows the model of religious miracles. Several cases,
which bear the official stamp of the Catholic Church
(Fatima, Guadalupe, etc.), are in fact--if one applies the
definitions strictly--nothing more than UFO phenomena where
the entity has delivered a message having to do with
religious beliefs rather than with fertilizers or
engineering.
Given the above five facts I believe
the following three propositions to be true:
Proposition 1. The
behavior of nonhuman visitors to our planet, or the behavior
of a superior race coexisting with us on this planet, would
not necessarily appear purposeful to a human observer.
Scientists who brush aside UFO reports because "obviously
intelligent visitors would not behave like that" simply have
not given serious thought to the problem of nonhuman
intelligence. Observation and deduction agree, in fact, that
the organized action of a superior race must appear absurd
to the inferior one. That this does not preclude contact and
even cohabitation is an obvious fact of daily life on our
planet, where humans, animals, and insects have interwoven
activities in spite of their different levels of nervous
system organization.
Proposition 2. If we recognize that the structure and
nature of time is as much of a puzzle to modern physicists
as it was to [our ancestors], then it follows that any
theory of the universe that does not take our ignorance in
this respect into account is bound to remain an academic
exercise. In particular, such a theory could never be
invoked seriously in a discussion of the constraints placed
on possible visitors to our planet.
Proposition 3. The entire mystery we are discussing
contains all the elements of a myth that could be utilized
to serve political or sociological purposes, a fact
illustrated by the curious link between the contents of the
reports themselves and the progress of human technology,
from aerial ships to dirigibles to ghost rockets to flying
saucers - a link that has never received a satisfactory
interpretation in a sociological framework. ...
To conclude, let us remark that the
density (timewise) of UFO manifestations is not decreasing. Let
us also note that knowledge of the structure of time would imply
superior knowledge of destiny (I am using the word "destiny" to
designate not the fate of individuals but the mechanism through
which physical events unfold and the canvas upon which they are
implemented). Perhaps I should remind the reader of two points
we have touched upon earlier:
(1) the relativity of
time in Magonia, a theory passed on to us in numerous tales
we have reviewed; and
(2) that astonishing little remark made by a sylph to
Facius Cardan, which antedates quantum theory by four
centuries: "He added that God created [the universe] from
moment to moment, so that should He desist for an instant
the world would perish."
As Jerome Cardan says, "Be this fact
or fable, so it stands." I cannot offer the key to this mystery.
I can only repeat: the search may be futile; the solution may
lie forever beyond our grasp; the apparent logic of our most
elementary deductions may evaporate. Perhaps what we search for
is no more than a dream that, be-coming part of our lives, never
existed in reality. We cannot be sure that we study something
real, because we do not know what reality is; we can only be
sure that our study will help us under-stand more, far more,
about ourselves.
[Vallee, 1969, 1993]
So, with this new perspective on the
problems, we are now standing with our feet squarely planted in
quicksand and ready to have another look at Rennes-le-Chateau and
the Shepherds of Arcadia!
First, we want to remember what Dr. Eliade has asked:
We have the right to ask ourselves
if the importance of archetypes for the consciousness of archaic
man, and the inability of popular memory to retain anything but
archetypes, do not reveal to us something more than a resistance
to history exhibited by traditional spirituality?
And the answer
Dr. Vallee has given:
...it is possible to make large
sections of any population believe in the existence of
supernatural races, in the possibility of flying machines, in
the plurality of inhabited worlds, by exposing them to a few
carefully engineered scenes the details of which are adapted to
the culture and superstitions of a particular time and place.
Remembering that:
...the historical character of the
persons celebrated in epic poetry is not in question. But their
historicity does not long resist the corrosive action of
mythicization.
And the means by which it is
accomplished:
Murko, Chadwick, and other
investigators have brought out the role of the creative
personality, of the "artist," in the invention and development
of epic poetry.
In the Mystery of Rennes-le-Chateau, we
have mythicization on a grand scale. Many of the "little myths" were
already in place, just waiting for someone to come along and weave
them all together into a grand myth, an archetype, a "Holy Grail" of
a story with something for everyone. And, Henry Lincoln and pals, as
well as those who have followed with their own theories and "proofs"
have obliged. What Gerard de Sede did on a national scale, Lincoln
et al did on a global scale, and Rennes-le-Chateau is now
practically a household word - a modern myth of epic proportions.
We have located some of the "artists" of the myth, the creators of
the saga: De Cherisey and Plantard, aided and abetted by
Lincoln,
Leigh and Baigent, but we still do not know what motivated them,
what forces acted on them, and where the inspiration for the truly
engaging drama originated. And, what’s more, we do not, and perhaps
even THEY do not, know yet the MEANING - the objective. What is the
myth designed to DO?
Remember what Jacques Vallee said:
And to control human imagination is
to shape mankind’s collective destiny, provided the source of
this control is not identifiable by the public.
And:
Whenever a set of unusual
circumstances is presented, it is in the nature of the human
mind to analyze it until a rational pattern is encountered at
some level. But it is quite conceivable that nature should
present us with circumstances so deeply organized that our
observational and logical errors would entirely mask the pattern
to be identified.
Because many observations of UFO
phenomena appear self-consistent and at the same time irreconcilable
with scientific knowledge, a logical vacuum has been created that
human imagination tries to fill with its own fantasies. Such
situations have been frequently observed in the past, and they have
given us both the highest and the basest forms of religious,
poetic,
and political activity.
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