Friday, July 15, 2011

Dorothy Martin ~ ‘Sister Thedra’

I like to play connect the dot and see where it leads me.
Enthusiastic members of her circle were Dr Charles and Lillian Laughead (who appear as Thomas and Daisy Armstrong in When Prophecy Fails [http://pvrguymale.blogspot.com/2011/07/leon-festinger-1919-1989-was-american.html]). The Laugheads had been Protestant missionaries in Egypt before and just after the Second World War. On a postwar visit, Lillian suffered a mental breakdown and, when prayer failed to resolve her problems, the couple came to doubt their faith, beginning a quest through other religious and esoteric systems, finally becoming particularly interested in William Dudley Pelley’s (an American extremist and spiritualist who founded the Silver Legion in 1933, and ran for President in 1936 for the Christian Party) writings. After a meeting with seminal UFO contactee George Adamski (a Polish-born American citizen who became widely known in ufology circles, and to some degree in popular culture, after he claimed to have photographed ships from other planets, met with friendly Nordic alien "Space Brothers"[1], and to have taken flights with them) , they became convinced of the reality and spiritual significance of UFOs. They joined the Dorothy Martin circle and Charles became its organizer and spokesman.

Charles and Lillian Laughead
were supposedly part of the Council of Nine - or just 'The Nine', as in 1955 they met with Andrija Puharich (also known as Henry K Puharich) in Mexico. They were by then already prominent in the burgeoning UFO contactee movement.

Puharich was a medical and parapsychological researcher, medical inventor and author, who is perhaps best known as the person who brought Israeli Uri Geller (self-proclaimed psychic living in England known for his trademark television performances of spoon bending and other supposed psychic effects) and Peter Hurkos (a Dutchman who allegedly manifested extra-sensory perception following a head injury and coma resulting from a fall from a ladder when he was age 30) to the United States for scientific investigation. In December 1952, Puharich had brought into his laboratory an Indian mystic named Dr D G Vinod, who began to channel The Nine or 'the Nine Principles'.

JJ Hurtak
, was appointed Puharich's second-in-command by The Nine. Hurtak had been independently channelling The Nine since 1973. He has become a major player in the millennial drama being played out at Giza, but perhaps more importantly he had established himself as a New Age guru, travelling the world giving workshops on his book of channelled revelations from The Nine, “The Keys of Enoch{That won't be good news for people that do the Axialtonal alignment or theReconnection}. Written and laid out in classic Biblical style, its apocalyptic vision has huge numbers of influential devotees. [http://www.illuminati-news.com/council-of-nine.htm]

There is a sequel to the story of the Guardian group. Dorothy Martin continued to receive messages from the Guardians, who told her to change her name to ‘Sister Thedra’ and to travel to Lake Titicaca in Peru. Once there, she established - along with the Laugheads and seminal mystic and contactee George Hunt Williamson[2] - the Abbey of the Seven Rays.
Which means "she spent five years at the abbey undergoing intensive spiritual training and initiations" is wrong because she started it. Nor was it founded by the Lemurian sage Aramu Muru to preserve the records of Mu, and the golden disc the Kumaras brought from Venus. How much other New Age stuff has been fabricated?

From this base Dorothy Martin began to prophesy the coming of the ‘Time of Awakening’ when Atlantis would rise from the deep and a new Saviour would rescue the righteous. In 1961 she returned to the United States, where she continued to preach her message until her death in 1988.
[http://thenewagefiles.blogsome.com/2009/03/01/dorothy-martin/]

[1] Nordic aliens, also referred to as Aryan aliens, one group of which are said to be Pleiadeans, are said by contactees and UFOlogists to be a group of humanoid extraterrestrials who resemble European racial images, or more specifically Nordic-Scandinavians, characteristically 1.8 to 2.4 meters with white (pink) skin, blue eyes, light blond or white hair, and commonly reported as being male.

[2] George Hunt Williamson (1926 - 1986), aka Michael d'Obrenovic and Brother Philip, was one of the "four guys named George" among the mid-1950s contactees.

It was that in 1952, he and his wife, Betty, then living in Prescott, Arizona, met another couple interested in the saucers, Alfred and Betty Bailey. One evening the four experimented with automatic writing and received a message purportedly from an extraterrestrial, Nah-9 of Solar X Group. In subsequent communications, he and other extraterrestrials warned of a nuclear blast about to occur on Earth. After hearing about the flying-saucer-based religious cult of George Adamski, perhaps through Pelley, Williamson and his wife, and fellow saucer believers Alfred and Betty Bailey, became regular visitors to Adamski's commune at Palomar Gardens and eventually members of Adamski's Theosophy-spinoff cult.

They witnessed Adamski "telepathically" channelling and tape-recording messages from the friendly humanoid Space Brothers who inhabited every solar planet.

Dorothy Martin ~ ‘Sister Thedra

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