Monday, March 11, 2019
Valley of the Immortals
SHAMBHALA v tot entirelyyey OF THE IMMORTALS SHAMBHALA valley OF THE IMMORTALS www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA vale OF THE IMMORTALS Table of contents The Jade prevail 3 The inexplicable Entrance to the Valley of the Immortals 5 Mysterious Mountain hatfules 8 A Lost rentn of Advanced Spiritual Culture 11 Eyewitness Reports of Shambhala 12 Trans-Himalayan St sensationhenge 14 More Strange Pheno man barona in Tibet 16 The riddle story of the Magical wand 18 The Shambhala triangle 21 Journey to the Sacred powerdom 22 Subterranean Vaults in the Himalayas 25 The White profit and The Shambhala Triangle 28 The Tibetan Roswell 0 The Crystal Cave of the Nagas 32 Dead transfer be Alive 35 Russian Scientists View an Ethitheral solar System 36 The Laboratories of Shambhala 37 Conclusion 40 by Tony Bushby June 2009 2011 Website http//www. vatileaks. com www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA valley OF THE IMMORTALS The Jade Tower In Tibetan scriptures and in Far tocopherol customs, thither is an quaint and widespread printing in a Secret Kingdom of Wise Men living in seclusion in inaccessible muckleous move of Asia. Orientalists call this secluded calculate Chang Shambhala, or Northern Shambhala ( mellow-pitched-pricedly ms spelled Shamballa).Tibetan monks insist that there is an enigmatic vale of smashing stunner, border by a circle of white-hot jackpots extending from due northern Tibet. -into Mongolia, that is inaccessible to travellers with aside experienced or mystical guidance. It is verbalize in tradition that this hidden globe is unreachable except to initiates or persons dedicated to the weird resurrection of mankind. Its centre is mellowed on the loose(p)ed by the famous Jade Tower that stands in an old-fashi onenessd city which monks yell is heated by warm water rising from chthonianground streams, and the steamer generated rises into the atmosphere to recoil a natural temperature inversion.This valley is non chitchatn from the zephyr beca using up the phenomenon produces a high, light, misty c all over that conceals the underlying priming coatscape. Various exploratory teams journey in the Himalayas claimed to ease up camped by hot thermal springs that nourished abstruse vegetation in ambits come onside of which there was no occasion merely desolation, contestation and ice. Like the Tibetans, Russians and Chinese,. the batch of India to a fault believe in the reality of an ingleside of perfect men and women which they call the Kalapa ( slightly clips Katapa) of Shambhala, who live-in the constant presence of opposite valetly energies.Professor Nicholas K. Roerich, an elevated Russian creator, painter and adventurer (1874-1947) fagged ? ve days from 1923 to 1928 trekking through all seven Tibetan prefectures. He wrote in his book Himalayas Abode of get away (N. K Roerich, Na toss offa Publications, Bombay, l947) that this riddle valley is beyond great lakes and the snow-cover p eaks of the highest mountains in the universe. It fronts that Professor Roerich actually reached Sharnbhala, and for this reason his www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA valley OF THE IMMORTALS ooks and paintings were thoroughly analysed for this article, as were the flora of his son, Dr GeorgeRoerich (1902-1960), an out rest orientalist, philologist, art critic and ethnographer with degrees from Harvard and the Sorbonne. The Roerich family lived in the Kulu Valley of northern India, in close proximity to the border of western Tibet, and from there organised s everal(prenominal)(prenominal) major outings into unexplored vault of heavens of the Tibetan Plateau, the highest land on Earth. These expeditions were manned by dozens of Norwegian, Sherpa, Tibetan, Mongol and Chinese assistants, and at times their missions endured for galore(postnominal) a(prenominal) months.A nonher far-famed researcher, Andrew Tomas, precedent of Shambhala grown of Light (Sphere Books, London, 1977), spent m all a(prenominal) geezerhood in Tibet, where he learned that the realm of Shambhala is situated in a valley sheltered on e genuinely side by mighty snow-white ranges and that its residents retreat into long posterior catacombs. These and other(a) adventurers of Asia acquire create verbally approximately unsuspected valleys con pieceed amidst colossal snowy mountains on the Tibetan Plateau, verbalise to lie hidden well-nighwhere in the vast reaches of the Himalayas.The Bhagavata Purana and the Sanskrit encyclopaedia Vachaspattya excavate Shambhala on the northern side of the Himalayas at the foot of Mount Meru, where legion(predicate) believe that the temporal and the eternal meet. A more de? ned localization of function is shown on a 17th-century map publish in 1830 in Antwerp by Csoma de Koros, an Hungarian philologist who had spent four years in a Buddhist monastery in Tibet. He gave Shambhalas geographical bearings as between 45 and 50 degrees north la titude beyond Lake Manus Hu, approx. ampere- bet on kilometres east of the colonization of Karawhitethorn.Remarkably, another experient monastic document, sighted by Russian explorer Nikolai M. Prjevalgky (1839-1888), de? nes the longitude of Shambhala as at 88 degrees (N. M. www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA vale OF THE IMMORTALS Prjeval twitch, Mongolia, London, 1876, translated by Boris Fereng, p. 63). These two coordinates posit the domain of Shambhala as slightly east of the Altai Mountains, a major mountain system in primaeval Asia, peaking at 4,506 metres (14,783 feet), and precisely where the Poerich expeditions trekked on several occasions.The Secret Entrance to the Valley of the Immortals For millennia, the stacks of Asia crap believed this forbidden territory to be well agreeed, accessible only to the pure of heart. But the questions to be communicate atomic number 18 who argon the good deal that live in this secluded argona and what is their nature? Tibetan lege nd insists that this inscrutable place is inhabited by Silent Sentinelsoformerly ordinary men and women who real a passport to Shambhala because of their religious impartion.Andrew Tomas presents impressive evidence from Tibetan sources in ancient monastic libraries that he was privileged to access, and his ? ndings help us learn more almost this learn colony The Brotherhood of Shambhala is presided over by a small hierarchy of superior beings sometimes alluded to as Mahatmas, which in Sanskrit promoter the great-souled peerlesss. They atomic number 18 improbable beings with preternatural powers who need pick upd their evolution on this major planet that remain with philanthropy in order to facilitate its spiritual progress he life- span of their bodies is almost inde? nite because the Wheel of Rebirth has stopped for them. (Andrew Tomas, Shambhala Oasis of Light, op. cit. , pp. 43-44, passim) In other sacred scriptures, they argon Immortal Beings and from what is known about this coltsfoot of illumined peoples, the plan of reincarnation is an essential part of their philosophy. Tibetan manuscripts add that from time immemorial, a dynasty of wise rulers of aery origin has ruled the Kingdom of Shambhala and h senile the priceless legacy of Kalachakra, the mystic science of Esoteric www. atileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS Buddhism (Giuseppe Tucci, Tibetan Painted Scrolls, Rome, 1949, vol. 1). After seven years in Tibet and chinaware, German author Hartwig Hausdorf wrote in his book Die weisse Pyramide (The White Pyramid) that the Elders of Shambhala are not entirely of this world they smack more of an Alien school principal.. .a species that the Universal Mind has placed on our Earth (Hartwig Hausdorf, Die Weisse Pyramide, re produce in English by sensitive Paradigm Books, Florida, 1998, pp. 92, 102, passim).Since time immemorial, Tibetans and other Asian races have believed that in their midst lived sages who had liberate d themselves from ending and wandered the Earth and the Universe at provide in a physical body. Ancients called them dedicated place place immortals and claimed that they had develop a serial of alchemical elixirs of deathlessness, i n c l u d i n g powdered jade mixed with vermilion that they drank to help prepare their bodies for the state of hsien material immortality in an etherealised body. The now-called Mahatma Letters to A. P.Sinnett were create verbally between 1880 and 1885 by Mallatmas who were express to have actually inhabited Shambhala itself, and indeed they represent a ? rst-hand source about the realm from within the closed in(p) circle of the Sages of the East themselves. (Alfred Percy Sinnett 1840-19211 was the British editor of the English daily newspaper, the Pi iodineer, in Allahabad, India, where he lived from 1879 to 1889, and who was privileged to be, admitted into the Himalayan Brotherhood of High Yogis. ) From this correspondence, Sinnett wro te The Occult instituteing (1881) and Esoteric Buddhism (1883), both of which had a major in? ence in generating globe interest in Theosophy. The replies and explanations abandoned by the Shambhalan Mahatmas to Sinnetts questions were embodied in their letter and produce in 1923 as The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett. (The original letters from the Mahatmas are www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS celebrated in the British subroutine library and give the bounce be viewed by special permission in the Department of Rare Manuscripts. ) The sketch of this mysterious kingdom comes further into focus aft(prenominal) a chew over of the writings of the Mahatmas, who were believed to be a class of people with prophetic abilities.In superstar letter to Sinnett in 1881, the author, the venerable Mahatma Morya, an eastern initiate of Rajput birth, describes the imposing undercover entrance into the Valley of the Immortals At a certain spot not to be mentioned to outsiders, there is a chasm spanned by a frail yoke of woven grasses and with a raging torrent beneath. The bravest member of your Alpine clubs would that dare to venture the passage, for it hangs like a spiders web and seems to be ill-scented and impassable. Yet it is not and he who dares the trail and succeeds s he go forth if it is right that he should be permitted.. .comes into a gorge of surpassing beauty of scenery, to one of our places and to some of our people, of which and whom there is no line or present moment among European geographers. At a tilts throw from the old genus genus Lamasery stands the old Tower within whose bosom have gestated generations of B o d h i s a t t v a s compassionate persons whose essence is perfect knowledge. (Passport to Shambhala, published by the atomic number 74 Siberia geographical lodge, 1923, Letter 18, p. 1, English translation by Professor Vladimir Andrei Vasiliu, 1933 includes a complete army of The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnettj) The dwellers of divers(a) villages in Tibet have claimed that none can pass certain areas without a permit Mahatma Morya added to the intrigue You have already perceive from reliable travellers how addresss refuse to lead them in certain directions. They would preferably let themselves be killed than lead you forward. So, if a reckless traveller nonetheless goes forward, a mountain lands lide begins to rumble before him.If the traveller surmounts this obstacle, then(prenominal) a shower of stones forget carry www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS him away, for the unwelcome one shall not score his destination. (op. cit. , Letter 18, p. 32) People and animals are known to have unnaturally trembled on approaching certain localities in that area, as if bombarded by invisible rays. An unnamed 19th- century Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of Tibet, at one stage travelled the long journey from Lhasa to Mongolia and at one place on the route people and animals in his caravan began to jar for no patent reason.The Dalai Lama explained the phenomena by positing that the party was miscegenation part of the forbidden zone of Shambhala whose psychic vibration was in any case high for the travellers (N. K. Roerich, Heart of Asia, Roerich Museum Press, impertinent York, 1930 to a fault Andrew Tomas, Shambhala, op. cit. , p. 54). The Russian explorer N. M. Prjevalsky and the German linguist and historian A. H. Francke get into in their books the strange behaviour of natives who could not be forced under any condition to enter certain districts in northern Tibet (N. M. Prjevalsky, Mongolia, op cit. , p. 01 A. H. Francke, A Hi figment of Western Tibet, Partridge and Co. , London, 1907). A Russian member of one of Roerichs expeditions person-to-personly told Andrew Tomas that their group had the analogous experience in the depths of Asia, where, for no apparent reason, assistants in the expedition refused to proceed further at one s pot in northern Tibet. The Russian himself admitted that he could not understand why he did not feel like ride any further, pleading that it was weird and inexplicable, a feeling that he did not wish to experience again (Andrew Tomas, Shambhala, op. it. , p. 58). Mysterious Mountain People In Turfan, Sinkiang, western China, Roerich expedition members listened to an intriguing account of a tall, unconsolable- coped adult female wearing an earnest expression on her face who regularly came out of the occultly counterminerns to help the needy, her deeds in even soing great respect among the mob passim the entire Asiatic region. www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS Riders vanishing with torches into subsurface passages were also mentioned (Andrew Tomas, Shambhala, op. cit. , p. 9), as were eyewitness reports of brightly clad, crowned genus Lamas (supposedly from Shambhala) seen seated in palanquins, each carried by four men. Roerich indicates that tall, sli m, white-skinned people had been seen disappearing into rock n roll galleries upon the approach of strangers. Later, when his expedition was track the Karakoram Pass, Roerich relates that he was informed by a native guide that tall, white-clad men and women had been seen on occasions appearing from secret entrances in that area, and sometimes travellers were helped by these mysterious mountain people.In the early 1900s, the Statesman newspaper in India published a story about a British major who had seen a tall, lightly clad man with long hair leaning on a high bow and scanning the valley. noticing the major, the man jumped set ashore a vertical slope and disappeared. The natives calmly say to Roerich, He had seen one of the snowmen who guard the sacred land (N. K. Roerich, Heart of Asia, op. cit. ). In one of his paintings, Roerich portrays a ampere- stand by Maiden amidst rocks and snow, also urinateing a bow. In spite of the glaciers and the apparent cold conditions, she is lightly clad as if protected from the cold by a warm aura.Roerich adds In the foothills of the Himalayas are many sabotages, and it is utter that from these caves subterranean passages proceed for reducestairs Kinchinjunga. some have even seen the stone doorway which has never been pass arounded because the date has not issue forthd. The deep passages proceed to the nice valley. (N. K. Roerich, Himalayas Abode of Light, op. cit. , cited in Andrew Tomas, Shambhala, op. cit. , p. 39) Professor Roerichs reference de? nes the splendid valley of the Immortals. previous(predicate) in his long journey, Roerich came www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS cross pilgrims who told him Behind those mountains live holy men and women who are saving humanity through Wisdom many have tried to see them save failed somehow as in short as they go over the ridge, they lose their way (N. K. Roerich, Heart of Asia, op. cit. also Andrew Tomas, Shambhala, p. 59, passim). Yet N icholas Roerich went into that territory on a pony. He remained absent for a few days and, when he productioned, Asiatics prostrated themselves at his feet, exclaiming that he was a god, for no man could have penetrated the frontier of Shambhala without manufacturing business credential (Andrew Tomas, Shambhala, op. it. , p. 58). possibly there was a reason for Roerichs unrestricted entry into the forbidden enclave, for the Mahatmas certain Sinnett those whom we desire to know testament ? nd us at the real frontiers (Passport to Shambhala, op. cit. , Letter 15, p. 131). Roerichs remarks to a lama (religious teacher) in Tibet suggest ? rst-hand knowledge of his ambit Shambhala We ourselves have seen a white frontier post of one of the iii posts of Shambhala (N. K. Roerich, Himalayas, op. cit. ).Apart from searching for the home of the Mahatmas, the purpose of one of Roerichs expeditions crosswise Tibet and Xinjiang to Altai in 1928 is not made entirely clear in his diary, ne vertheless it appears to have been related to to the return of a small section of a sacred cosmic Stone to its rightful home in the Jade Tower in the centre of Shambhala. This fragment was last sent to Europe to aid in the establishment of the League of Nations which, though ending in failure, was so loveable after(prenominal) the First World War (J. Saint-Hilaire, On Eastern Crossroads, parvenu York, 1930, cited by Andrew Tomas, Shambhala, op. cit. , p. 63).This fragment was said to be part of a ofttimes galacticr Cosmic Stone, and it seems that Roerich was a predestined carrier to return it to Shambhala. www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS A Lost Oasis of Advanced Spiritual Culture The folklore of old Russia also points to the reality of a companionship of inspired men and women at a place in the heart of Asia, called Belovodye, in Russian-the Land of the brea social occasion Gods. In the annual Journal of the Russian Geographical Society for 1903, there is an article titled The Journey of Ural Cossacks into the Belovodye Kingdom, written by an explorer named Koroleko.Likewise, in October 1916 the West Siberia Geographical Society published an account by Belosliudov, a Russian historian, titled To the History of Belovodye. Published as they were by scienti? c bodies, both of these articles are of great interest because they reveal a strong tradition that still circulates among old believers in Russia, one that maintains that Belovodye is a secret earthly paradise existing somewhere in the area of far southwesternern Siberia. These two articles lend support to our basic content of a hidden, sacred kingdom somewhere virtually the northernmost regions of Tibet, a kingdom of ancient high comprehension.The traditional tale about the extraordinary, cloistered people of an ancient civilisation in this hidden land was relayed by a mysterious native sage to Russian psychiatrist and author Dr Olga Kharitidi during her stay in remote Sibe ria Their main achievements had been in developing the intragroup dimensions of the mind their entire society possessed a beautiful spiritual intensity that in modern materialist culture is experienced only by a few. They possessed incredible psychological wisdom. They were able to control their private experience of time, and they had learnt to communicate paranormalally over great distances.They had great skills in project the future, and their social structure was the most effective that ever existed. (Dr Olga Kharitidi, Entering the Circle, harper San Francisco, 1996) www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS But one law of the Valley of the Immortals forever stiff in force, that being that the unwanted shall not reach it (Road to Shambhala, a idealistic 18th-century Tibetan book written by the third Panchen Lama or heavy(p) Scholar (1738-1780), translation by Cheng Yuan, 1901). Only those who have hear Kalagiya, the call to Shambhala sent on the wind (ibid. or by tele roadic communication from the Great Masters can ever hope to arrive safely in the Valley of the Wisest People on Earth (L. C. Hamamoto, The brain Doctrine, Lhasa, translation by C. Chan, 1916p. 67). Eyewitness Reports of Shambhala During the ? rst century CE, Apollonius, a highly regarded and charismatic Greek sage, received the call and travelled to Shambhala. He had earlier received directions and knew exactly where to ? nd what was then called the Abode of the Sages (A. P. Sinnett, Esoteric Buddhism, London, 1903 reprint from the 1883 original).Apollonius was innate(p) at Tyana in Captadocia in the third year of this era and died in 98 CE. He was named after the Greek god Apollo, and the populace fondly called him the son of God (Encyclopaedia Britannica, 9th ed. , vol. 10, Apollonius). He taught the doctrine of the Inner Life (ibid. ), went barefoot, wore his hair long, cultivated a beard and clothed himself in white linen paper garments. On his travels he took an As syrian scribe called Damis, who documented Apollonius sayings and deeds in a daily diary. It was from Damis collection of 97 codices that the remarkable stories of Apollonius life experiences were preserved.Around 200 CE, Empress Julia Domna, second wife of the British-born Roman Emperor Septimus Severus (emperor from 193 to 211 CE), exhibited such an interest in the momentous events in Apollonius life that she commissioned the Greek scribe and sophist, Flavius Philostratus (C. 170 www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS c. 245 CE), to write the biography, which he called The Life of Apollonius of Tyana. From these records, we learn that Apollonius stayed in the Trans-Himalayan country for many months (Philostratus, The Life of Apollonus of Tyana, Loeb Classical Library, London, 1912, eight books in two volumes, translated by F.C. Conybeare note that the upcoming Apollonius quotes are drawn from Book 3, which is almost entirely dedicate to his journey to northern Tibe t). Upon Apollonius arrival in a city under the mountain called Paraca (ibid. ), he presented a letter to the then king, Hiarchas (larchas in some translations, meaning Holy Ruler), and was surprised to learn that its contents were already known to the king. Apollonius turned to Damis and said, We have reached men who are unfeignedly wise, for they seem to have the gift of foreknowledge (ibid. ).During his time there, he witnessed incredible things such as wells in the ground projecting vertical beams of brilliant juicy light. He also talked with amazement about what he called pantarbes, or lucent stones, that could be activated to radiate so much light that nighttime could be turned into day at go away. The scienti? c and mental achievements of the inhabitants of this lost city impressed Apollonius so much that he only nodded his fountainhead when King Hiarchas said to him, Ask us whatever you like, for you ? nd yourself among people who know everything (ibid. ).Apollonius en quired as to who they thought themselves to be, and King Hiarchas replied, We consider ourselves to be gods (ibid. ). Not only did Apollonius see the people of Shambhala utilise the power of the Sun, but. he saw them levitating themselves two cubits approx. one metre high from the ground, not for the sake of miraculous display, for they disdain any such ambition but they regard any rites they perform, in consequently quitting earth and walking with the Sun, as acts of homage acceptable to the God. (Philostratus, The Life of Apollonius of Tyana, op. cit. , Book 3) www. vatileaks. comSHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS Parallel phenomena were reported in the twentieth century by renowned orientalist, author and the ? rst western female lama, Madame Alexandra David-NEel (1868-1969), thus supporting the ancient records of Philostratus. She describes Shambhala as a realm not moored in time or space as we are Shambhala is here at present and gone tomorrow (Alexandra David-Neel, Magic and Mystery in Tibet, Dover Publications, newborn York, 1971, ? rst published in 1929) Of the inhabitants of Shambha a Apollonius said they Were living upon the earth and unless not on it and forti? ed without forti? ations and possessing zip yet having the riches of all men (Philostratus, The Life of Apollonius of Tyana, op. cit. , Book 3). As for the ideology of the inhabitants King Hiarchas professed a cosmic philosophy accord to which the Universe is a living thing (ibid. ). The Mahatma Letters stresses the fact that they are not atheists or agnostics but pantheists in the widest sense of the word, believing that God and the Universe are ultimately identical. Their concept of cosmic evolution is the basis of why the idea of reincarnation is a major part of the philosophy of the Guardians of Mankind.Trans-Himalayan Stonehenge In 1923, and at an altitude of 4,572 metres (15,000 feet) in his Trans-Himalayan journey, Roerich was stunned to see terce long straight rows of tall, ve rtically standing, graven stones distinguished from the surrounding env adjurement by their fishy shape and design. This great stone multiform ended with a tumescent circle of standing stones with three menhirs in its centre. He exposit the structure as a combination of Stonehenge in England and Carnac in the ancient Celtic world of Brittany, sites that he had visited previously.His caravan was destined to stop overnight tight fitting this stone enigma, but he stayed for three www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS days and discovered four extra rows of vertical stone formations in surrounding areas. Amazed by what he was witnessing, Roerkh asked his Tibetan guides, Pray tell me, who set these stones? He was told Nobody knows but this district from ancient times has been called Doring the place of the sacred standing stones. Our Ancients say that an unbeknownst(predicate) people passed here a long time ago they stopped for several generations but it did no t become their permanent remain (N.K. Roerich, Himalayas, op cit. , passim). Roerich marvelled at the fact that travelling through the heights of the Trans- Himalayas he came across the embodiments of Stonehenge and Carnac (ibid. ). This painting by Roerich, titled The Black Gobi, shows a few of hundreds of ancient inscribed vertical standing stones on the barren heights of the Himalayas full the Gobi Desert. Nicholas Roerich, 1928 private collection (Note Beautiful reproductions of many of Roerichs paintings can be purchased from the Nicholas Roerich Museum, in the raw York visit http//www. oerich. org. ) www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS More Strange Phenomena in Tibet Peculiar happenings have occurred in this vast territory, and some of those events reveal the presence of superior spiritual beings. Madame Alexandra David-Neel, in her book The Superhuman Life of Gesar of Ling (published by Claude Kendall, New York, translation by Violet Sydney, 1934, ? rst published in 1931), relates a personal and curious episode that took place in the small town of Jyekundo, set(p) in a severe district in northeastern Tibet.While there, she met a Tibetan lama who had the reputation of occasionally disappearing into a snowcapped mountain region where no villages existed and where a person could easily starve or quickly freeze to death. Inevitably he would return to civilisation after some time, and in reply to curious questions he would only say that he had been with gods in the mountains (ibid. ). One day, Madame David-Neel half-seriously asked the lama if, on his next trip, he would present a small gift of a bunch of Chinese paper ? owers to the Ruler of the Mountains (ibid. . Some months later, returning from his journey into that mysterious domain, he handed the cut savant a souvenir given to him by that very person. It was a beautiful bluish ? ower that blooms in southern Tibet in July. David-NEel was stunned, saying that in Jyekundo at that time the temperature was 20 degrees below zero, the river was covered with a layer of ice two metres deep and the ground was rimed solid. Where did you get this from? she asked in amazement. The lama answered, Maybe from a warm valley in the north (ibid. ).Roerich also enter a series of extraordinary otherworldly happenings, one being the sudden display of Rigden Jyope (or Djapo), the Ruler of Shambhala. It is said that when he entered a particular lamaist temple, the candles all suddenly lit themselves. Roerich relayed this story in that location was a case of a sudden appearance of an exquisite www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS perfume, as if from temple incense, right in the heart of the Gobi with the stony relinquish extending for hundreds of kilometres in all directions.Not a single temple of hut was in sight and yet all the members of the expedition experienced the scent in their nostrils at the kindred time. This had happened on several occasions a nd there was absolutley nothing to explain it. (Quoted in Andrew Thomas, Shambhala, op. cit. , p. 57) In the dark of numerous nights, Roerich saw lifelike ? ashes of vertical pillars of white light streaking into the sky. What is happening? he asked his lama guides. They answered, These are the rays from the Tower of Shambhala (N. K. Roerich, Himalayas, op. cit. , explaining that the beams were purposely directed upwards from a large, triangular-shaped, glowing stoneothe alleged(prenominal) Chintamani Stoneothat sat atop the Jade Tower. They told him it possessed occult properties capable of vainglorious telepathic inner, guidance and effecting a transformation of consciousness in those in encounter with it. The astonishing thing about this tradition is that the Chintamani Stone is said to have been brought to Earth on a winged horse a lung-ta by messengers of the gods from a solar system in the constellation of Orion (Dr Walter Y.Evans-Wentz, The Tibetan Book of the Great Libe ration, Oxford University Press, 1954), www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS This painting, titled Command of Rigden Djapo, like many of Roerich? s works turn backs concealed messages, Note the darkened fuselage of a glib aircraft angled upwards, complete with a vertical tail section ( left hand of picture). In the top left corner, he subtly depicts pyramidal structures, mayhap references to the 100 or so pyramids now known to exist in northern Asia. Nicholas Roerich 1926-27 private collection, MoscowIt seems that there was more than one of these strange and Precious Stones (ibid. ), for, according to ancient lamaist lore, three of these pyramidal stretchers were brought to Earth and set up in various locations wherever a spiritual mission vital to humanity was established. A suggestion is that one was on the summit of the Great Pyramid at Giza, another on the Jade Tower of Shambhala, and the third may now be under the sea in a place we know as Atlantis. The Myst ery of the Magical Sceptre In Tibet, it is traditionally held that in the year 331 CE a chest came from the sky (Andrew Tomas, Shambhala, op. it. , legend in photographs section), in which were found four sacred objects. Among them was a sorcerous g o l d e n r o d called a dorge, said to have extraordinary c impose on _or_ oppressing capabilities. Fabulous accounts of-this rod have been circulating in Tibet for centuries, and silver, brass and iron replicas are found in most Tibetan lamaseries today. It is www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS believed that it emanated a brilliant radiance during special religious ceremonies, and in the hands of the King of Shambhala it was capable of focusing and manipulating potent cosmic forces.It is said that it also had the power of casting thunderbolts and burning holes in clouds. Many years after the find of the casket, ? ve strangers suddenly appeared before the then King of Shambhala, Thotho-ri Nytan-tsan, and instruct ed him on the proper use of the objects in the casket. Perculiar Craft over the Himalayas Mahatma Morya called Shamhala the city of Science (Passport to Shambhala, op. cit. , Letter 62, p. 101), and that makes it trance to examine the poissibility that this colony (or colonies) of a superior culture possesses an advanced technology. ww. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS That the inhabitants of this enigmatic settlement are scienceconscious can be established from a story relayed by Roerich about a lama who was returning to his lamasery after a long trip from an outlying community. In a stipulate secret subterranean passage, the lama met two men carrying a pedigree(prenominal) sheep, and they told him the animal was for scienti? c breeding in the Valley of the Immortals (N. K. Roerich, Altai-Himalaya A touch off Diary, Arun Press, Brook? eld, CT, 1983, ? st published in 1929). In another account of Central Asia, titled Beasts, Men and Gods, researcher and author Dr Ferdinand Ossendowski records some fascinating facts, and his financial support is as intriguing to read as that of Nicholas Roerich, Alexandra David-Neel and Andrew Tomas. A Mongol lama told Dr Ossendowski not only about an extensive burrow system under the Himalayas but of strange vehicles that rushed through them at extremely high speed (Ferdinand Ossendowski, Beasts, Men and Gods, E. P. Dutton & Co. , New York, 1922).To speak of machines moving rapidly ohmic resistance is to suggest a technological achievement of a high timber in a time that appears to precede our current understanding of complex machinery by centuries. This tradition originated long before the western world developed any sort of technology. There is a similar rumour that subterranean vehicles once operated under the Giza Plateau (10thcentury Arabic traditions). We should consider the possibility that maybe Shambhala and the Great Pyramid are connected by a cut into system. In his travels through Tibet, Roe rich read old lamaist texts that speak of iron serpents which guttle space with ? e and smoke and inhabitants of the distant stars (N. K. Roerich, Heart of Asia, op. cit. ). Also, incredible sightings of fastmoving airships in the zone of Shambhala are numerous. This report from Roerichs diary describes what happened as www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS his expedition was advancing in the vicinity of the Karakoram Mountains On August ? fthosomething remarkable We were in our camp in the Kukunor district not far from the Humboldt Chain. In the aurora about half-past nine some of our caravaneers noticed a remarkably coarse black eagle ? ying over us.Seven of us began to watch this unusual bird. At this same moment another of our caravaneers remarked, There is something far above the bird. And he shouted in his astonishment. We all saw, in a direction from north to south, something big and shiny re? ecting like the sun, like a huge oval moving at great speed. C rossing our camp this thing changed in its direction from south to southwest. And we saw how it disappeared in the intense blue sky. We even had time to take our ? eld glasses and saw instead distinctly an oval form with shiny surface, one side of which was brilliant from the sun. N. K. Roerich, Altai-Himalaya, op. cit. ) Roerichs sighting was some two decades before pilot Kenneth Arnold ? led his famous report of a formation of silver, circular, metallic craft skipping across the sky near Mount Rainier in Washington, USA, which resulted in the coining of the term ? ying saucers. Only an aircraft of unknown type could have performed the abrupt aerial manoeuvres recorded in Roerichs diary. At the sight of the disc in the sky, one of the lamas with the expedition calmly said to Roerich This is the sign of Shambhala ou are guarded by the Immortals of Shambhala did you notice the direction in which this sphere move? you must follow the same direction (N. K. Roerich, Heart of Asia , op. cit. , passim). The Shambhala Triangle In our search for the mysterious Valley of the Immortals, the second part of our story identi? es the location of Roerichs three posts of Shambhala which form a Shambhala Triangle, an area of captivating events that include the late(a) discovery of interstellar tragedy records and sightings of clusters of pyramids in Tibet. ww. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS Journey to the Sacred Kingdom The genera populace living in the sky-brushing land of Asia, aptly called the Roof of the World, has been acutely conscious of the verity of Shambhala for centuries now. The belief in a secret Kingdom of People has lived on throughout the ages, and the existence of Shambhala is further supported by a 1,000-year-old record. It comes to us from a Russian source, found in 1893 in a manuscript at the VyshenskioUspenski hermitage near Shatsk in Tambov Province.Called The Saga of Belovodye (Belovodye is Russian for Shambhala, or Land of the Li ving Gods), the story, appeared in the 4 April 1949 edition of Novaya Zarya (New Dawn), a Russian newspaper in San Francisco. It relays the account of a young Slavic monk named Sergius, who spent several years in a monastery on Mount Athos in northern Greece, beside the Aegean Sea. The ill health of his father caused him to return to Kiev, and some time after his arrival Sergius, then nearing 30 years of age, obtained an earreach with Prince Vladimir the Great (956-1015 CE).His purpose was to relay to him what he had learnt in the monastic program library about a mysterious land in the East where right and lustice prevailed (The Saga of Belovodye Novaya Zarya, ibid. ). Prince Vladimir was so fascinated by the story of the legendary land that in the year 987 he appointed Sergius leader of a large expeditionary party that he equipped and dispatched in search of this Asiatic wonderland. The princes advisers estimated the. 6,000-mile (9,660-km) round journey would take three years, b ut decades passed without a word from the expedition.The people of Kiev believed that all members of the team had perished but in 1043 an old man appeared in Kiev, declaring himself to be the monk Sergius whom Vladimir the Great had sent in search of the Valley of the Immortals some 56 years earlier. The essence of his story was duly recorded and preserved among the mystics of a Russian monastery, and it was that document that was found in 1893. www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS Father Sergius said that at the end of the second year of their dif? ult journey, many people and animals in the group had died, either of extreme weather conditions or from attacks by wolves and bears. In one desolate territory, their party came across a pile of skeletons of men, horses, camels and donkeys and they were so terri? ed that they refused to go any further. Only two of the party agreed to continue with Sergius, and at the end of the third year of travel these two companions w ere left in a village because of their failing health. Father Sergius himself had reached the limit of endurance but was determined to complete his journey or die.Rumours he heard from the people of various regions through which he passed indicated that such a mythical land as Shambhala did exist and that he was heading in the right direction. He employed another guide who assured him that he could take him imminent to the Sacred Kingdom, which the locals called the Forbidden Land.. .the Land of Living Gods and the Land of Wonders (The Saga of Belovodye, ibid. ). third months later, Father Sergius reached the borders of Shambhala. At a particular point, his only remaining guide refused to proceed further, frightened of the invisible guardians of the snowy mountains.Sergius was still unafraid of death and full of faith in the existence of a community of holy people that he had set out to ? nd. Besides, he was too worn out(p) to turn impale. After another few days of lonely trekk ing, he was suddenly accosted by two strangers who made themselves understood to him, even though they spoke an unknown language. Thereupon Sergius was taken to a village where, after recuperating, he was given a job in a monastic-type establishment collating manuscripts.Later he was moved to an thermionic vacuum tube cavern lit by a peculiar light that aroused his wonder, illuminating everything, dispelling darkness and shadows so that all appeared very even and gentle (The Saga of Belovodye, ibid. ). Later, Sergius was moved to a nearby location where he was accepted as a brother. www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS As the months and years passed, the Slavic monk gained great spiritual knowledge. He was intensely cheerful that at last he had found patient, compassionate, all-seeing wise people who worked for the bene? t of mankind.He learned that, invisibly, they observed everything that was taking place in the outside world and were concerned about growing for ces of evil on Earth. Father Sergius also learned that a number of people from various countries had endeavoured to enter this domain, but without success. The inhabitants observed a strict law whereby only seven persons in a century could visit their abode. Six would return to the outside world with secret knowledge, and one would remain to live in Shambhala without ageing, for time stood still in the clockwork of his genes. Before his return to Kiev, FatherSergius lived his ? al years learn wisdom in a cavern system that was later developed into the Monastery of the Caves. It seems that those half-dozen people, like Sergius, became outside coworkers of Shambhala, making up a small outer(prenominal) circle of wisdombearers. One, an associate co-worker of the Mahatmas, Brahma lyoti of Delhi, had been in constant contact with the super-beings in the Himalayas who manage the world by the power of thought (Anne Marshall, search the Guru in India, Victor Gollancz Ltd, London, 1963). It is also said that over the centuries, small meter of Tibetan sages from the Valley of the Immortals? were responsible for setting up the White Mystery Schools of the East and West (Albert Mackey, MD, A Concise History of Freemasonry, McClure Publishing, Philadelphia, 1917 ed. , Origins entry). Enlightened souls from Shambhala are considered to be apostles from the Valley of the Immortals, for those messengers are directly guided by the Mahatmas and intend for a certain part of the world at a given time in history (Sergy C. Tatyana, Crimson Snow-heaps in the Himalayas, Lvovich Publishing, Moscow, 1925, translation by Larissa M. Vasiler, p. 97). www. vatileaks. comSHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS According to Tibetan lore, signi? cant records of Shambhala and its inhabitants were once in existence. They were published in several volumes of the Yung-Lo ta-tien, the largest encyclopaedia in the world, which preserved a mass of ancient knowledge including a collection of ancient yet i sightings (yeti means magical cock in Tibetan). This magni? cent tome, compiled in the 15th century, was imperturbable of 50 million handwritten Chinese characters bound in 11,095 volumes. at once housed in the Yuan Ming Yuan, the Old Summer Palace in Beijing, it in general perished when he palace was partially destroyed by British and French forces in 1860 during the Second Opium War. Today, only 370 volumes survive, scattered in libraries throughout the world. When we see how much has been lost of the cultural heritage of older civilisations, we shouldnt ? nd it toughened to imagine that there may have been many earlier high civilisations about which little is known, Shambhala being one. Subterranean Vaults in the Himalayas Legends of hidden underground libraries, treasures and exquisite artefacts connected to Shambhala are persistently spoken of in Asia and are described as secret storehouses of ancient knowledge.Earlier civilisations saw ? t to preserve something of the s cience and arts of cultures then vanishing through natural catastrophe or war or for other reasons otherworldly or unfathomable. Tibetan tradition af? rms that time capsules and precious silk-bound volumes are hidden in the innermost recesses of the divine Mt Kangchenjunga, the third highest peak in the Himalayas. Nicholas Roerich learned that a stone door leads to what he called the Five Sacred Treasures of the Great Snow, and his guides discuss him against attempting to entei into the chambers because everything divulged before the destined date results in untold harm (N.K. Roerich www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS Himalayas Abode of Light, Nalanda Publications Bombay, 1947). In the Altai Mountains, Roerich also learned that the Himalayan foothills have concealed entrances leading to subterranean passages and chambers deep below the surface, where mysterious artefacts and exotic treasures have been stored from the beginning of world history. Roerich was also told of a secret underground storehouse on the Karakoram Pass in the Himalayas at an face lifting of 19,500 feet (5,944 metres).His chief guide advised him that great treasures were preserved under the snowy ridge, and he remarked that even the lowly ones among the populace know of vast caverns that hold ancient artefacts. He enquired whether Roerich was aware of books in the outer world that record the location of these subterranean vaults. The wise old courier had spent years in the mountains and he questioned Roerich as to why foreigners, who claim to know so much, could not ? d the obvious entrances to underground palaces on the Karakoram Pass. During his 12 years in northern Tibet in the mid-1800s, Chinese explorer ha Chun-Pingwa spoke with Buddhist monks who claimed that in a secluded part of the Altyn Tagh Ridge there exists a vast network of underground galleries and museums housing a collection of several million breathtaking artefacts, protected by ever-watchful caretaker s.In his memoir, Jia wrote about a subterranean museum that holds miscellaneous objets dart depicting the evolution of mankind on this planet over the course of thousands of years (ha Chun-Pingwa, The Land of No Grass and No Water, The Great Liberation Publishing House, Lhasa, Tibet, 1917 protracts translated for Tony Bushby by Wendy Shin Liu, Jiangwan Town, Shanghai, China, 2009). He described the entrance to this particular series of chambers as being to the left of a deep gorge containing a small cluster of unimpressive houses that mark the site of what may be the worlds greatest museum. www. atileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS Jia was not the only one to have described this collection. It is secure from intrusion, and nothing will disturb its age-old collected works the entrances are concealed, and vaults with manuscripts and artefacts lie deep within the bowels of the earth (Fundamental Promises, a Chinese Buddhist manuscript c. 1820, author unknown translation by Ti-tzang, 1911, pp. 79-81, passim original housed in the Library of Tibetan Works and Archives, Dharamsala, India). A local resident said that at our bazaar, the people of this area come out with. trange, very ancient money, and nobody could evenremember when such money was in usage here (Sergy C. Tatyana, Crimson Snow-heaps in the Himalayas, op. cit. , P. 231). Author Andrew Tomas was of the opinion that all these secret places are connected with the mystery of Shambhala (A. Tomas, Shambhala Oasis of Light, Sphere Books, London, 1977, p. 53). Madame Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1831-1891), the Russian-born traveller and mystic who founded the Theosophical Society in 1875, alluded to the existence of Shambhala giving it currency for western enthusiasts of the occult.She claimed that sages of the East are in a position to release to the world ancient documents that will upset the opinions of historians. She saw a number of secret repositories in northern India, and wrote that initiate d yogis know of a vast network of underground libraries that expands out from cave temples right across northern Tibet. Vatican archives preserve, ancient reports from early- 19thcentury missionaries which record that, in times of crisis, leaders of various countries sent deputations into the Himalayas to seek advice from the Genii in the Mountains (Catholic Encyclopedia, Pecci Edition, vol. i, p. 299). However, these documents do not reveal where the representatives went. An undated manuscript written by Monseigneur Delaplace around 120 years ago supports the belief of sages of Central www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS Asia that people with special knowledge live in inaccessible and exclusive parts of the Himalayas (Annales de la Propagation de la Foi, translation by Pierre L. Josselin, 1929 extract cited in A. Tomas, Shambhala,op. cit. , p. 28). The Tibetan epic of Ghessar Khan foresaw the opening of certain hidden halls of records at a time when steel ships ? in the sky, and Madame Blavatsky opined that some hidden manuscripts would be subtly and intentionally released in a spiritually richer future (The Theosophist, July 1912). Great is the Tibetan belief in an illumined subterranean people, who on occasion have been seen with torches in the dark. Roerich told of a man of great appearance who arrived in Tibet from Siberia with his caravaneers and proudly stated, I shall prove to you that the tale about the subterranean people is not a fantasy. I shall lead you to the entrances of their subterranean kingdoms (N. K. Roerich, flak in Chalice, Nicholas Roerich Museum, New York, 1929).Whether or not he did is not recorded in Rberichs books. Through all of Asia, through all the deserts, and from the oceans to the Urals, wondrous traditions of holy people living in mysterious underground cities exist. And plot of ground many pages of the story of mans life on this planet have been torn out by the hand of Time, these ancient traditions do at test to the reality of secret treasures and depositories of rare writings stored in isolation that record knowledge from time immemorial. The White Pyramid and The Shambhala Triangle In an attachment to a rare 18th-century Tibetan book Road to Shambhala (written by he third Panchen Lama 1738-17801, translation by Cheng Yuan, 1901), intriguing references are made to a winged humanoid race which once lived in Tibet and subsequently destroyed itself. This same document also records the existence of numerous pyramidal structures in various locations across the Roof of the World, www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS unknown to the western world. Some of these edi? ces are described as fabulous, and multicoloured versions were set amongst dozens of other pyramids (ibid. ). The reality of pyramidal clusters in the Himalayas was con? rmed in more recent times, the ? st available report being that of American trader Fred Meyer Schroder, who in 1912 haply stumbled upon a gia nt pyramid surrounded by smaller structures. Amazed, he asked his Buddhist monk-guide what they represented and was told that 5,000-year-old lamaist documents not only contain information about the purpose of these pyramids but reveal that they were immensely old when the records were written. If this dating were ever con? rmed, the Himalayan pyramids would be older than the accepted dating of the Giza pyramids. Some 33 years later, another remarkable pyramid was sighted that seems to have embarrassed the scholarly world.In the northern spring of 1945, US Air beat back pilot James Gaussman was ? ying an aircraft from China to India across Tibet when he was forced to tighten altitude because of an engine malfunction. He reportedly said I ? ew around a mountain and then we came to a valley. Directly below us was a gigantic white pyramid. It looked like it was from a puff tale. The pyramid was draped in shimmering white. It could have been metal, or a form of stone. It was white on all sides. What was most curious about it was its capstone a large piece of precious gem-like material. I was deeply moved by the colossal size of the thing. Hartwig Hausdorf, Die Weisse Pyramide The White Pyramid, republished in English as The Chinese Roswell, New Paradigm Books, Florida, 1998, p. 112) Gaussman believed that this pyramid exceeded 1,000 feet (-305 metres) in height, more than double that of the Great Pyramid of Giza. Gaussmans photographs were never published, but a black and white picture of an earthen www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS pyramid near Xian, the capital of Chinas Shaanxi Province, was presented to the media in 1990 as the gigantic white pyramid that Gaussman supposedly photographed 45 years earlier. However, Gaussmans ? ght path was some 500 miles (805 kilometres) northwest of the published pyramid photo, and one suspects that this particular image was released by Chinese government to keep the existence of the White Pyramid secret from western knowledge. In 1947, two years after Gaussmans sighting, another US aviator, Maurice Sheahan, ? ying southwest over Shaanxi Province, also espied a gigantic white pyramid. Several US newspapers, including the New York Times (28 March 1947), published accounts of his sighting. In Himalayas Abode of Light, Roerich spoke of three frontier posts of Shambhala that suggest a triangularshaped area de? ing the precincts of this mysterious kingdom. The location of these termination markers is unknown, but when a triangle is created at the same angles as the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt (51 degrees 51 minutes), starting at around 50 degrees north latitude and using longitude 88 degrees as the western (base) boundary, it intersects with Gaussmans 1945 ? ight path near where he sighted the gigantic white pyramid. Using the southwest continuation of his ? ight path, the southern frontier post is determined at its crossing with longitude 88 degrees.Within this isolated triangle, some surprising events are known to have happened and probably the most fascinating is the so-called Tibetan Roswell. The Tibetan Roswell In the ? rst week of January 1938, a scienti? c expedition led by Chinese archaeologist Chi Pu Tel penetrated deep into mountainous regions of BaianKara-Ula, somewhere near where the Yangtze and Mekong rivers begin their long, meandering course southward. There they discovered a cave system with grave aligned in parallel rows, undisturbed for millennia. These graves were without headstones or epitaphs, but on the cave walls were www. atileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS drawings of ? gures with elongated heads as well as depictions of planets. Archaeologists excavated the graves and found skeletons with abnormally large skulls and piddling bodies less than four feet (1. 22 metres) in length. On the cavern ? oor, half-buried in dust, they found the ? rst of 716 strange stone discs, each with a hole in its centre and resembling a long- playing gramophone record. Each disc was sculptured with grooves spiralling out to the perimeter which were found to be composed of closely written characters that spelled out a message.Later, in 1962, four scientists led by Nipponese professor Tsum Urn Nui of Beijings Academy of Prehistory announced that they had ? nally decoded the discs. They revealed that the discs told of the crash landing of an stranger spacecraft some 12,000 years ago. It seems that the crew survived, but the craft was too badly damaged to be able to ? y again. After encountering numerous dif? culties in making the spectacular results public knowledge, Professor Tsum Urn Nui resigned his position and returned to Japan. However, the scienti? community of the Soviet Union did not reject his report, and the results of further testing using an oscillograph supported Professor Tsum Urn Nuis dramatic ? ndings. www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS The Crystal Cave of the Nagas A passage in the op ening pages of the Mahabharata states that this epic was written in a beautiful valley at the foot of Mount Meru. That valley is said to be Sharnbhala. It would be fair to conclude that the worlds longest epic was earlier written in the scriptoriums of the Immortals and then became the foundation of major Eastern understandings.Tradition maintains that Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha) and Lao Tzu (c. 600 BCE), founder of Taoism, both visited the Valley of the Immortals. The Bon priests of Tibet admit that they received their faith from this same stream of philosophy (Baikal magazine USSR, no. 3, 1969). The Bon faith the oldest spiritual tradition in Tibet, developed from a manuscript the priests called The First Scripture. . . the True teaching the tradition is of Eternal Wisdom that came from the Immortals of Shambhala (L. C. Hamamoto, The Soul Doctrine, Lhasa, translation by C. Chan, 1916, pp. 97-99, passim). www. vatileaks. comSHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS Another ancient Tib etan book also had its origin in the Himalayas. Called the Bardo Thodol in Tibetan, it is known in the western world as The Tibetan Book of the Dead, and it is traditionally read aloud to dying persons to help them attain liberation of the soul after death. Tradition maintains that this extraordinary writing originated with a race called the Nagas, and lamaist records indicate that eight members of this race were associated with meetings with the King of Shambhala. In Tibetan understanding, they are noted for their profound wisdom, and the existence of the Nagas is ? mly established in the ancient lore of northern India. It is said that the Nagas have human faces of great beauty, serpentine body features and the ability to ? y when they emerge from Patala, the Netherworid. Prince Arjuna, Lord Krishnas disciple, is alleged to have visited and conversed with the Nagas. According to tradition, it is said that they live in the Palace of the Serpents in fabulous subterranean abodes illu minated by crystals and precious stones. Roerich called one of his paintings The Lake of the Nagas (1932), and another shows a Naga sitting on an island in a northern Tibetan lake east of the Altai Mountains.This locates the Nagas in The Shambhala Triangle. Some ancient authors claim that the Nagas (male) and Naginis (female) originally intermarried with humans, mostly with great kings, queens and sages or humans of great spirituality (Iamblichus, On the Mysteries, curiously those of the Egyptians, Chaldeans and the Assyrians, fourth century also referenced in Passport to Shambhala, West Siberia Geographical Society, 1923, English translation by Professor Vladimir Andrei Vasiliu, 1933, p. 174).It is also said that selected people have had the privilege of entering the vast caves of the Nagas, connected by tunnels like an anthill, stretching hundreds of kilometres inside the mountain ranges across northern India and deep into northern Tibet. www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF T HE IMMORTALS Roerichs paintings total in the hundreds, and some are of locations in Russia, Mongolia, Egypt and elsewhere. There is something mysterious about the way he handles perspectives and atmospheres that appears to indicate other dimensions and alien orders of being, or at least gateways or portals leading to such.Those savage inscribed stones in lonely upland areas Lao Tzu on the back of a water buffalo heading west into an avenue of arc trees a massive book some two metres thick, lying open with a person standing on a timber bar looking down upon its pages a human skull of immense size his perspicacious depiction of pyramids in the background of several of his paintingsoall of these suggest that Roerich was revealing sully information in painted ciphers.Maybe he was honouring the Oath of Shambhala, that being an parallelism forbidding visitors to reveal openly what they saw or learned while in the Valley of the Immortals (Passport to Shambhala, op. cit. , p. 189). Ro erich called this painting about Sacred (Treasure of the Mountain). In it, he shows huge crystals dwar? ng humans clustered together in the hurrying left of the picture. Nicholas Roerich, 1933 (Nicholas Roerich Museum, New York visit http//www. roerich. org. ) www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS Dead Alien Found AliveAn American drugs and arms dealer, John Spencer, a resident of China in the years following World War 1 unwittingly found himself in a lamaist monastery at Tuerin in southwestern Mongolia. He had collapsed of exhaustion on a mountain track while ? eeing governing in China, and was found by monks who took him to their monastery to recover.. At that same time, the monks were hosting another tour American, William Thompson, a scholar who was studying Far Eastern religious beliefs in their library. A few days later, the recuperating John Spencer was exploring external areas of the monastery when he came upon a set of weather-beaten teps leading down to a small metal door. He opened it and entered into a spacious, brightly coloured, I2-sided room. The walls were decorated with drawings of heavenly constellations, celestial bodies and zodiac signs. In wonderment, Spencer ran his hand over the surface of a wall, and unexpectedly a nearby panel noiselessly opened inwards, revealing a dark tunnel beyond. He noticed a pale green light at a distance, and advanced into the gloom. After several minutes, Spencer reached the end of the tunnel and entered a large cavern, brilliant with an eerie green light.Along the length of one wall were 30 cof? ns, neatly laid out side by side in a long row. Thinking that they may contain jewellery or treasure, Spencer started opening the cof? ns, and in the ? rst three he found corpses of monks wearing garb similar to that of his monastic helpers. As Hartwig Hausdorf reported In the fourth lay a woman in mens vestments in the ? fth a man who he guessed was from India, and who wore a red silk peak i n the third to-last, there lay, perfectly preserved and clothed in white linen, the body of a male in the next-to-last cof? there rested the body of a female whose ethnic origins he couldnt instead determine (Die Weisse Pyramide, republished as The www. vatileaks. com SHAMBHALA VALLEY OF THE IMMORTALS Chinese Roswell, op cit. , p. 61 passim). Remarkably, the corpses showed no sigm of decomposition, and Spencer level-headed that the cof? ns had been there a long time. insert picture Roerich called this painting Most Sacred (Treasure of the Mountain). In it, he shows huge crystals dwar? ng humans clustered together in the upper left of the picture. 0 Nicholas Roerich, 1933 (Nicholas Roerich Museum, New York, http// www. oerich. org) flunk to ? nd any treasure, Spencer ? nally reached the last cof? n and lifted the lid. To his amazement, he looked down upon a small creature dressed in shimmering silver clothing. Its large head was a silvery colour, with huge closed eyelids, no brim and a short stub of a nose. When he bent down to touch the corpse, its huge opal-shaped eyes suddenly opened and glared at him, emitting a piercing green light that blinded the would-be tomb robber. Spencer slammed the lid shut and ran petri? ed from the cavern, tearing his clothing on protruding rock walls in his panic to depart.He reentered the monastery proper, and was told by a high- ranking lama that the creature he saw was an ef? gy of a great master who had come from the stars (ibid. ). The lama tried to convince him that he had only imagined that the creature was alive, but Spencer never doubted the reality of his weird encounter. Startled, he related his experience to William Thompson, who subsequently published details in an American periodical, Adventure, some time after his return to the USA. A few days later, Spencer left the monastery and disappeared without trace. He was never heard of again.Russian Scientists View an Ethereal Solar System In subterranean Tibet, a be arded guide told Roerich in 1928, many great treasures of Wisdom are buried when released, one very old cache of scienti? c artifacts will stun the world (N. K. Roerich, Flame in Chalice. ,op. cit. ). www. vatileak
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