Why NAZI needed the Holy Grail

February 11th, 2007

Yet another confirmation emerged recently that NAZI were all the time after the Holy Grail.
According to the Independent, in a book titled The Desecrated Abbey by Montserrat Rico Góngora published by Planeta in Spanish it is reported that Heinrich Himmler, the head of the Nazi SS, made a secret wartime mission to an abbey in Spain in search of what he believed was the Aryan Holy Grail.
There is nothing new about the NAZI mysticism propagated largely by SS officers incriminated in participation in bloody pagan rituals. But the interpretation provided by the author of the the book is slightly out of the usual. In this book it is claimed that the Reichsführer-SS thought if he could lay claim to the Holy Grail it would help Germany win the war and give him supernatural powers. Quite reasonable assumption to make if you either understand nothing about the Holy Grail mystery or wish to deliberately confuse your reader. The book claims that, far from being the King of the Jews, Himmler shared the outlandish belief with other leading Nazis that Jesus Christ was actually descended from Aryan stock. Góngora writes that Himmler, Hitler’s right-hand man, believed Jacob was of Aryan blood and his descendants, including Jesus Christ, were Aryan too. Another problem here. If this was true than how to explain an endless hatered the NAZI regime propagated towards not only the Catholic Church but the whole Christianity, or Herr Himmler was allowed to hold his personal views on the subject?
Interestingly, the book attempts to provide some clues as to where the Holy Grail may be found:

The Reichsführer is known to have stayed at the Ritz hotel in Barcelona and made his hour-long journey to Montserrat surrounded by “blond-haired SS men”, reports at the time said.
Himmler came to Montserrat inspired by Richard Wagner’s opera Parsifal, which mentions the Holy Grail could be in kept in “the marvellous castle of Montsalvat in the Pyrenees”.
It was widely believed in Nazi circles that this castle was Montserrat, a belief strengthened by the fact the first performance of the opera was held at the Liceu Opera House in Barcelona in 1913. Others have said it was Montségur in France.
Wagner is thought to have been inspired by the writings of the 13th troubadour Wolfram von Eschenbach and scores of other writers who claimed to know where the sacred chalice used by Christ at the Last Supper lay.
According to Góngora, Himmler was also inspired by a folk song from Catalonia, the north-eastern region in which Montserrat lies, which has a cryptic reference to a “mystical font of life” situated in the area.

Close enough, but not quite! Luckily they missed. The assumption that NAZI wanted to find the Holy Grail just to use its powers is as silly as it is illogical. To believe this is to believe that powers of the Holy Grail can be used to achieve evil means. It is much too obvious that Himmler, being himself an expert in racial mysticism could not believe such a nonsence. Why would the NAZI SS be so much interested in UXUO? The obvious answer is - they were going to destroy it as it was perhaps the only power that was at the time strong enough to oppose their evil plans.
UXUO is hard to find and if found it should be understood in spiritual terms, not as a tool or weapon.

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Beware! Another hoax is spreading fast.
Natalia and Irina Strozzi GuicciardiniSome Giuseppe Pallanti, a high school economics teacher from Florence who presumably spends his spare time writing books about the Mona Lisa and is most respectfully described as an “armature historian” had recently uncovered a death certificate that shows that a woman named Lisa Gherardini, died on July 15, 1542, in Florence and is buried in a convent in the center of the town. He also states she was a mother of five, plus a sixth who was adopted and lived near Basilica of San Lorenzo, which is near the Convent of St. Ursula, where supposedly she is buried. A story goes on and he also claims that one of her daughters became a nun and lived in that same convent. Pallanti said, that a husband of Lisa Gherardini in his will said that after his death, she would go and live with her daughter, and this fact eventually led him to search through documents there and discover her death certificate.
So far so good but how it relates to the world’s most famously enigmatic woman, Mona Lisa you ask.
Well, it seems Lisa Gherardini married a rich silk merchant named Francesco del Giocondo. In Italy the most famous painting of Leonardo is also known as “La Gioconda” but why? read more »

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Oscar WildeVatican City, 4 Jan. Rome daily La Repubblica reported on Thursday:
Oscar Wilde, the great 19th century English playwright, poet, author of Irish descent also perceived by many as a gay icon, is being ‘rehabilitated’ by the Vatican in a book written by a close aide of Pope Benedict XVI.
In ‘Pro-vocations - Aphorisms for an anticonformist Christianity‘, Father Leonardo Sapienza, a Rogationist priest and the head of protocol at the Prefecture of the Pontifical House, lists about a thousand of the author’s most famous aphorisms - such as ‘I can resist everything except temptation’ - along with those of a less famous and equally provocative writer, Nicolas Gomez Davila, a Colombian Christian who died in 1994.
Wilde was born in Dublin, Ireland, on 16 October 1854 and died adged 46 on 30 November 1900 in Paris. He converted to Catholicism on his deathbed after a life of excess and provocations in Victorian England, where he also served a forced labour sentence on homosexuality charges.
Official Vatican doctrine condemns homosexuality hence this looks more and more controversial. Does it mean Vatican is softening its position on the issue?
Father Sapienza explained his fascination with Wilde by saying that he had been a “writer who lived perilously and somewhat scandalously but who has left us some razor-sharp maxims with a moral”.
It is not the scandal that surrounded Oscar Wilde for all of his life or his alleged and actual homosexual adventures but his deep esoteric knolege is what scares the Vatican so much. Listen to these quotes to feel it:

“I’ve been looking for love all my life and all I’ve ever found were lovers!”

And, then, the more famous one about sin:

“The easiest way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it.”

It may be that struggled with his personal demons, but a man who wrote stories like “The Happy Prince” and “The Selfish Giant” must have known the Lord.

“How else, but through a broken heart could Our Lord have entered in?”

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What is 6174 for four digit numbers, 495 for three digit numbers and none for two or five digit numbers?
Who is D. R. Kaprekar?
How it is related to UXUO mystery?
Find out some answers here - for others look deeper into your soul.

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UK branch of UXUO Society held an urgent meeting this Friday in London. Proceedings will be distributed among members.

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Searching the web I recklessly typed UXUO as a search word in Google. Within the large number of results (precisely 500 when I searched) to my infinite surprise I was able to recognise a large portion of the . There are some forces out there already dissipating UXUO message albeit in a cryptic form.
You can repeat the search yourself and try to decipher the messages, but be careful to pick the right key for your decoding.

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UXUO and Da Vinci Code

June 26th, 2006

It’s been a secret for much too long and now it is the time to reveal the true key to the Da Vinci code.

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