”I don´t know what has happened , George, but all
the mediums have suddenly disposed of their Indian guides, etc., and have
replaced them with space people traveling in Vimanas.” This is a very
intersting comment made by British ufologist and esotericist Desmond Leslie in
a letter to George Adamski, soon after Flying Saucers Have Landed was published
in 1954. Adamski was critical of the many mediums (channelers) who in the 1950s
proclaimed to be in contact with various space people. Although he was not
generally adverse to the idea of telepathic or psychic communication he did
give this advice to his co-workers: ”You can never check on the sender of a
trance message. Every mock spirit or evil impersonator could come and tell you
that his name was Ashtar or Aetherius and that he lived in a space ship. I
think that these entities are having a heyday leading astray the gullible
mediums and their public… This is not to belittle mediums in any way, but it is
to say that most of them have much to learn before they can be sure of just
what they are receiving, and from whom and where.” (Lou Zinsstag & Timothy Good,
George Adamski - The Untold Story, pp. 55, 57).
The UFO contactee movement of the 1950s was a
colorful spectrum of fascinating individuals. Besides the classic physical UFO contactees
there emerged a wide assortment of mediums, often with a background in various
spiritualist and metaphysical groups. There were no clearcut demarcation lines
between physical and psychic contactees. Some belonged to both camps. GeorgeVan Tassel is a good example, starting as a channeler and later having physical
contacts with space people.
Although the UFO contact movement of the 1950s
certainly was of a mixed quality the core group of physical contactees had a
definite sociological impact on society in a positive way, not often mentioned
by researchers. The movement conveyed a general message of hope, peace,
goodwill and inspired members to contact and friendship with people from all
over the globe, regardless of race, creed or color. George Adamski initiated
the International Get Acquainted Program (IGAP) and Daniel Fry founded
Understanding, Inc.: ”… a non-profit organization dedicated to the propagation
of a better understanding among all the peoples of the earth, and of those who
are not of the earth.”
Daniel Fry in Sweden 1970
By the end of the 1950s the contactee movement
reached its high tide when Gabriel Green, President of AFSCA (Amalgamated
Flying Saucer Clubs of America) arranged the First National Convention on July
11 and 12th, 1959 at Statler-Hilton Hotel, Los Angeles. This two-day convention
amply demonstrated the problems of the contactee movement. Only two of the
classic (and in my view genuine) contactees were present – Orfeo Angelucci and
Daniel Fry. Almost all the other 40 speakers were channelers with more or less
far-out and bizarre claims and messages. The movement was now so contaminated
by psychic racketeers and sincere, but self-deluded mystics that by the end of
the 1960s it faded into obscurity.
Daniel Fry and Gabriel Green at the AFSCA Convention 1959
Journalist Cleve Twitchell wrote a summary of the
program and speakers for Daniel Fry´s Understanding magazine, July-August
1959. Here a few ”highlights”:
”LeRoy Roberts, channel from Oregon, one of whose
mentors came through and stated the the Master Jesus, before coming to Earth,
had visited Mars and had taught its inhabitants to conserve their dwindling
water supply – by building canals.
Wilbur Miller, who received a transmission from the
being Mentar, giving unbelieving Eartlings a well deserved kick in the pants.
William Suther, young teenager, who said he had
recently toured a universe separated from our own in his astral body”
The audience of around 2000 could also listen to:
Monka of Mars and a galactic tour by Hatonn, channeled by Dick Miller
Prince Neosom (Lee Childers), who claimed to have come from the planet Tythan.
Monka of Mars and a galactic tour by Hatonn, channeled by Dick Miller
Prince Neosom (Lee Childers), who claimed to have come from the planet Tythan.
When adressing the controversial issue of the
possible validity of channeling messages it is interesting to compare the ideas
and experiences of Meade Layne who discovered and for many years worked with
the unique deep trance medium Mark Probert. Meade Layne discovered Probert´s
unusual gifts as medium in 1946 and it was through him that the etheric or 4-D
interpretation of ”flying saucers” was first formulated. But Mark Probert never
channeled any ”space people” as so many of the other mediums. Instead the
communicators presented themselves as ordinary individuals who had lived on
earth before.
Meade Layne was well acquinted with all types of
paranormal phenomena and had already in 1936 published an article, Experiments
in Evoking Images, published in The Journal of the American Society for
Psychical Research (vol 30, no 9). After three years of work together with Mark
Probert he published the booklet Mediums and Mediumship in 1949. Regarding the
question of spirit identity he concluded: ”Much importance is attached, in some
quarters, to establishing the alleged identity of spirit communicators. The
question seems of little importance to the present writer, except when
spiritism is considered only in its consolatory and religious aspects. The
basic question is whether any intelligent and excaranate operator is present;
and beyond this, the importance of the communication lies in its content,
whether it is intellectually and morally profitable, and whether it conveys any
information not easily aviable by normal means.” (p. 14).
Mark Probert
Like Meade Layne I personally, during more than a
decade, had the privilege to investigate and become good friends with the
Swedish contactee couple Sture and Turid Johansson. In the Autumn of 1976 Sture
became a deep trance channeler. The first individual to come through was named
Simeno later to be replaced by Ambres, who claimed that his latest incarnation
was as an Egyptian merchant, Rameno Charafez, living around 1,000 years B.C. The
teachings of Ambres became very popular and soon a group formed around the
couple. In the 1980s Sture och Turid moved to the north of Värmland, building a
center attracting many followers who came from all over the world to listen to
the Ambres teachings. Sture became very famous in the 1980s when celebreties
like Shirley MacLaine and Dennis Weaver visited the center in Sweden. Sture and
Turid travelled around the world and I have letters and postcards posted from
California, Hawaii and Mexico. Sture also figures in the miniseries Out On a
Limb from 1987, based on the bestselling book by Shirley Maclaine.
Out On A Limb, Swedish edition
In 1976-1977 I participated in several trance
sessions at the home of Sture och Turid and hade many long conversations with
Ambres. I taped these sessions and they became important as they taught me a
lot of how trance communication works and the problem of interpretation. During
the seven or eight seances in 1976-1977 when I participated there was no really
new or unknown facts regarding UFOs or paranormal phenomena presented by
Simeno. It was essentially a summary of the views discussed in the meditation
group we belonged to, although expressed in a somewhat novel form. I do not
state this fact to belittle the Sture Johansson channelings. The teachings of
Simeno and Ambres are in many respects inspiring and beautiful, a combination
of Theosophy, spiritualism and Advaita mysticism. There is no fanaticism,
life-negating ascetiscism or political extremism in the messages.
Sture Johansson channeling Ambres, with wife Turid
As it is actually more or less impossible to
determine the real identity of the ”spirits” in channeled communications I
agree with Meade Layne that the only option left is assessing the philosophical
and intellectual quality of the messages. Mainstream academic, materialist,
reductionist psychology usually regard the channeling phenomenon as the effect
of a subconsciously created personality. This may be the answer in some cases.
The esoteric explanation is somewhat different. Here are quotes from three
esoteric sources of interest as alternative paradigms:
” And, you have heard of and read about a good many
Seers, in the past and present centuries, such as Swedenborg, Boehme, and
others. Not one among the number but thoroughly honest, sincere, and as
intelligent, as well educated; aye, even learned… Tell me, my friend, do you
know of two that agree? And why, since truth is one, and that putting entirely
the question of discrepancies in details aside — we do not find them agreeing
even upon the most vital problems..." (The Mahatma Letters to A.P .Sinnett, Letter 48).
”Unless regularly initiated and trained — concerning
the spiritual insight of things and the supposed revelations made unto man in
all ages from Socrates down to Swedenborg and "Fern" — no
self-tutored seer or clairaudient ever saw or heard quite correctly." (The
Mahatma Letters to A.P. Sinnett, Letter 40).
In Telepathy and the Etheric Vehicle by Alice Bailey (pp. 76-77) the
Tibetan adept D.K. givet these interesting figures regarding channeled
messages:
”1. Messages emanating from the relatively nice, well-trained subconscious
nature of the recipient. These well up from the subconscious but are regarded
by the recipient as coming from an outside source…These messages are normally
innocuous, sometimes beautiful, because they are a mixture of what the recipients
have read and gathered from the mystical writing or have heard from Christian
sources and the Bible. It is really the content of their right thinking along
spiritual lines and can do no one any harm, but is of no true importance
whatsoever. It accounts, however, for eighty-five percent (85%) of the
so-called telepathic or inspired writings so prevalent at this time.
2. Impressions from the soul, which are translated
into concepts and written down by the personality; the recipient is deeply
impressed by the relatively high vibration which accompanies them… This
accounts for eight percent (8%) of the writings and communications put before
the general public by aspirants today.
3. Teachings given by a senior or more advanced
disciple on the inner planes to a disciple under training or who has just been
admitted into an Ashram. These teachings bear the impress and conclusions of
the senior disciple and are frequently of value; they may—and often do—contain information
of which the recipient is totally unaware. The criterion here is that nothing
(literally nothing) will concern the recipient, either spiritually or mentally
or in any other way connected with his personality, nor will they contain the
platitudes of the religious background of the recipient. They will account for
five percent (5%) of the teaching given, but this is in relation to the entire
world and the percentage does not refer to some one occult group, one religious
faith or one nation. The recognition of this is of vital importance.
4. Communications from a Master to His disciple.
This accounts for two percent (2%) of the entire telepathic receptivity,
demonstrated by humanity as a whole throughout the entire world. Western students
would here do well to remember that the subjective Eastern student is far more
prone to telepathic receptivity than is his Western brother…”
Alice Bailey
Finally a comment from the Swedish esotericist HenryT. Laurency:
”What most characterizes spiritualists is that they permit themselves to be
guided by beings in the emotional world, highly developed “spirits in the
spiritual world”. The only comment necessary here is that even the most highly
developed beings in the emotional world lack a true knowledge of reality and
life. That knowledge cannot be acquired in the worlds of man… Spiritualists
think that the medium is protected by so-called controls, who see to it that no
unworthy beings use the physical envelopes of the medium. However, these
“controls” have never reached beyond the emotional stage, the stage of the
mystic, and they lack the requisite esoteric knowledge. They have no other
knowledge of reality than the one they acquired once when in physical
incarnation, and the one they receive through “pupils” who have studied
esoterics. Usually, these “controls” are old Indian yogis who are detained in
the emotional world through the philosophical systems they have accepted.”
(Henry T. Laurency, Knowledge of Life Three, chapter on Spiritualism).
None of these esoteric authors mention the possibility
of communicating with extraterrestrial visitors. In this area we find another
problem not addressed: psychic communication with the help of technological
instruments as mentioned by George Van Tassel and Daniel Fry. But whatever the
form of communiction, the problem of identification is just as relevant when it
comes to physical contacts. How do we know the visitors are what they claim to
be? My favourite heretic
among ufologists, John Keel put it this way: ”Suppose a strange metallic disk
covered with flashing colored lights settled in your backyard and a tall man in
a one-piece silver space suit got out. Suppose he looked unlike any man you had
ever seen before, and when you asked him where he was from, he replied, "I
am from Venus. " Would you argue with him?” (Operation Trojan Horse, p.
214).