During a period of more than thirty-five years Dr. Ardy Sixkiller Clarke has collected and documented five thousand plus stories
of encounters with various types of Star People by American Indians. Now Clarke
has written her fourth book – Space Age Indians. This time concentrating on
contacts and abductions involving both seemingly benevolent and malevolent or
dangerous entities. Her study is a unique and specialized research and
documentation accomplishment, unsurpassed in UFO history.
As a woman with American Indian ancestry and a
professor emeritus of Montana State University Dr. Ardy Sixkiller Clarke is
highly respected by the men and women she interviews. Because of their trust and confidence in her,
protecting their names and integrity, the witnesses dare to relate their
personal UFO contact experiences. ”Madison”, an FBI agent on a southwestern
reservation, told Clarke before an interview: ”I know you keep everthing
anonymous. I applaud your approach to your interviews. Many researchers don´t
understand why Indians don´t talk to them. But you honor them with the way you
treat them. They can be free and honest with you and they know you will not
condemn them.”
Clarke is not a ufologist in the ordinary sense, not
a critical investigator trying to determine the ontological status of the
experiences. Instead her approach is what in Anthropology is called the emic or
insider perspective, simply recording the narratives, avoiding judgements about
the encounters. But the author makes her position clear regarding the reality
of what she is recording: ”While the stories told in this book by individuals
like you and me suggest that extraterrestrials visit this planet almost daily,
we have no really hard evidence to prove that is the case… But as a researcher
and social scientist, I believe the stories in this book are genuine,
legitimate, and indisputable.”
The collection of encounters are
divided in three sections: The Blue Men, Reptilians and Insectoids, Other Star
People. While some of the narratives are definitely scary, reminding me of
scenes from H.P. Lovecraft novels, others are beautiful tales of healing and
help from Star People, wherever they come from.
The first sixteen chapters describe encounters with
the Blue Men. The name refer to their blue skin and that they are encased in a
shimmering blue light. According to some Indian legends a race of blue-skinned
people live in underground cities and possess an advanced technology. These
people are described as benevolent, often helping and healing ordinary humans
in difficult or dangerous situations. As in the story of the Chickasaw Indian
Mele, who during his two years in the Vietnam war became trapped in an area
sprayed with Agent Orange. Seeking safety in a cave he encounter three tall
entities, surrounded by a blinding blue light. They guide him to an enlarged
area in the cave where a spacecraft is placed. The Blue Men offer to remove
Mele to safety. They board the spacecraft and he is placed in an area free of
Agent Orange: "It toook me several days to find my squad. Everyone thought I
was dead. I didn´t tell them I was with the Blue Men… They told me Earth was
too beautiful to be destroyed by war and biological weapons and that I should
do more to change it. I discounted their thoughts. I didn´t believe I could make
a difference.”
In section two of Space Age Indians is documented
twelve encounters, or rather abductions by shape-shifting Reptilians and
Insectoids. As in all UFO contact and abduction cases it is difficult to
determine the degree of reality behind these experiences. In Clarke´s book
two stories are of special interest in this respect.
”Julian” is a former Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA)
police detective. It was during his years as a federal officer he encountered a
being on a desert road in Arizona. He told his story to Ardy Sixkiller Clarke
at a dinner in a small town near the Montana/South Dakota border. Julian hade been called out to check on a house reportedly used by a drug cartel. On his way
to the address he suddenly noticed a tall figure on the edge of the highway. The
figure looked like a giant grasshopper. When caught in the shine of the car
spotlight it crouched down and when it stood up again it was human. Julian is
abducted by the now human-loking alien unto a spacecraft where two small grey
beings enter the room. They are ordered to take Julian to another room with
human beings in a trance-like state.
The human-looking alien ask Julian how he can
identify individuals captured in his work. He takes out his fingerprint pad,
take the hand of one of the transfixed female captives and press her thumb into
it and then transfer the print to a small notebook. When the alien is
distracted Julian slip the notebook into his pocket. In the room he notice three
females and three males, appearing to be in their twenties, ”handsome men and
beautiful women.” Julian is then escorted out of the craft and to his car.
Part
of the time he was unconscious during the abduction and he lost three-and-a
half hour of time.
At work Julian was able to get a positive ID of the abducted woman by
using the Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System (IAFIS). Asked
by Clarke is he could identify the individual:
”Yes, she was a seventeen-year-old female from Las Vegas. She had been arrested
four times for prostitution. She disappeared three years ago. Her roommate
reported her missing. She said the last time she saw her, she was getting into
a car with a strange looking man who was driving a Cadillac.” There was also a
photo and Julian could identify her as the same girl he had seen on board the
spacecraft. According to Julian there are three species that represent a threat
to humanity: the reptilians, the buggers, and the Grasshoppers or Mantis-men.
The buggers are insectoids. The Greys are a sort of manual workers doing the
bidding of these entities: ”The buggers are the ones in control, and they are
scary dudes.”
Clarke has documented another case that is
interesting from a reality or evidence perspective. An American Indian doctor
”Wiley” is abducted during a hunting trip. The aliens look like lizard men,
working together with smaller entities. On board the craft he notice three
other men but two appear oblivious to what is going on. The third man is fully
awake like Wiley. His name is Frederick and he is a doctor from New York City.
The agree, if possible, to contact each other if they are freed. They are
released by the aliens and after a few days Wiley search for Frederick on the
internet and find him in New York City. In the email contact they can both
confirm what has happened but Frederick remember more details of the abduction.
Cases like these are very disturbing and raise many
questions. Who are the abductors? Real aliens or is this some kind of secret
mind manipulation intelligence work (MILABS)? I have personally corresponded
with one American abductee, Laura, who together with her husband (retired
military, special ops, military intelligence) had a very frightening experience
with shape-shifting aliens looking like large insects. In Sweden or Scandinavia
these types of encounters are almost unknown. I have only tried to make an
unsuccesful follow-up on the controversial Lacerta file. An interesting book
dealing with these types of entities is Solomon Islands Mysteries by Marius Boirayon. I have often wondered, what if some of these frightening creatures
mentioned by a.o. Ardy Sixkiller Clarke really exist and are secretly operating
on our planet, how does the Disclosure activists deal with this issue? A
Disclosure of such evil and dangerous activities would probably cause widespread fear and
paranoia that would make the Orson Welles War of the Worlds panic of 1938 look like a peaceful Sunday picnic.
There is very little information in the Esoteric
Tradition that could be of interest anent these types of aliens. But I did come
across a very curious reference, a prediction of a possibly future threat made
by Rudolf Steiner in a lecture given at Dornach, Switzerland on May 13, 1921: ”And from the earth there will spring forth a terrible brood of beings, a
brood of automata of an order of existence lying between the mineral and the
plant kingdoms, and possessed of an overwhelming power of intellect… This swarm
will seize upon the earth, will spread over the earth like a network of
ghastly, spider-like creatures, of an order lower than that of plant-existence,
but possessed of overpowering wisdom. These spidery creatures will be all
interlocked with one another… The earth will be surrounded — as it is now with
air and as it sometimes is with swarms of locusts — with a brood of terrible
spider-like creatures, half-mineral, half-plant, interweaving with masterly
intelligence, it is true, but with intensely evil intent.”
There is not much help here in information from the
core esoteric works of Blavatsky, Bailey or Laurency who very seldom mention
evil extraterrestrials. But there is one interesting comment made by the
Tibetan to Alice Bailey, warning of a form of ”cosmic evil” reaching mankind:
”… an evil which is not indigenous to our planet, an evil with which it was
never intended that men should deal.” (Alice Bailey, The Rays and the
Initiations, p. 753).
As a sort of comforting compensation to Reptilians and
Insectoids the last seventeen chapters of Space Age Indians deal with
benevolent aliens, often giving practical help in distressing situations or
medical help. A good example is Eve´s Story: The Star People Are Healers. Eve´s
mother, a retired tribe council member suffered from a dibilitating form of
arthritis. She encounter a human-looking alien wearing a dark brown one-piece
uniform. When he walk he doesn´t seem to touch the ground. He claim to be
a doctor from another planet. ”His hands had magic in them", according to
Eve. After a healing session Eve felt no more pain and can now do things like
in her youth. Before the healing she was so bad she couldn´t open a door knob
or a jar.
The four books so far
published by Ardy Sixkiller Clarke are exceedingly fascinating, thought
provoking and for the mainstream ufologist a bit frustrating as no follow-up on
the cases is possible by other investigators. But that gives no reason to
dismiss these stories, many which would probably never be known and documented without the
persistent efforts of the author. Personally I look forward to the next volume
of Star People stories.