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The Council of
Nine
http://www.forteantimes.com/artic/126/nine.html
One New Age channeling cult,
above all the rest, has had a huge - very disturbing influence on hundreds
of thousands of devotees worldwide. Known as 'The Nine', its disciples
include cutting edge scientists, multi-millionaire industrialists and
leading politicians. This exclusive extract based on The Startgate
Conspiracy by Lynn Picknett and Clive Prince looks at the sinister origins
of The Nine
I am the beginning. I am the
end. I am the emissary. But the original time I was on the Planet Earth
was 34,000 of your years ago. I am the balance. And when I say
"I" - I mean because I am an emissary for The Nine. It is not I
, but it is the group.We are nine principles of the Universe, yet together
we are one.
The declaration above is
typical of the channelled pronouncements of the Council of Nine - or just
'The Nine'. They contain all the usual New Age ingredients of grandiose
statements, shaky grammar and unprovable predictions. But unlike all the
other channelling cults, that of The Nine has serious clout. Perhaps the
reason for this is that they claim to be the Ennead, or the nine major
gods of ancient Egypt (see panel). Or could there be another reason, one
that owes more to The X-Files than the Pyramid Texts? Although The Nine
may appear to be quintessentially a modern phenomenon, our research
uncovered its truly astonishing pedigree. In fact, the story begins nearly
50 years ago, in a private research laboratory in Glen Cove, Maine, called
the Round Table Foundation, run by a medical doctor named Andrija
Puharich (also known as Henry K Puharich).Set up in 1948 to research
the paranormal, among the noted psychics studied at the Foundation were
the famous Irish medium Eileen Garrett and the Dutch clairvoyant Peter
Hurkos (Pieter van de Hirk).Prominent members included the influential
philosopher and inventor Arthur M Young and the socialite Alice Bouverie
(née Astor).
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In December 1952, Puharich
brought into his laboratory an Indian mystic named Dr D G Vinod,
who began to channel The Nine or 'the Nine Principles'. In the
months before Vinod returned to India, a group met regularly to
hear The Nine's channelled wisdom. Never known for their modesty,
The Nine proclaimed themselves to be God, stating "God is
nobody else than we together, the Nine Principles of God."
Three years later,
there appeared to be independent confirmation of their existence.
In Mexico, Puharich and Young met Charles and Lillian
Laughead, former Christian missionaries who were by then
prominent in the burgeoning UFO contactee movement. (For a
description of their involvement in the Dorothy Martin circle, see
Jerome Clark's 'When Prophecy Failed' in FT117.) Back in
the States a few weeks later, Puharich received a letter from the
Laugheads containing messages received by their group's channeller.
This message also claimed to come from the Nine Principles, even -
amazingly - including references to the earlier communications
transmitted through Dr Vinod. Could The Nine possibly be
for real?
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the answer is embedded in the career of Puharich himself.
After disbanding the Round Table Foundation in 1958, he worked for
10 years as an inventor of medical devices and achieved
international recognition as a parapsychologist, most famously
studying the Brazilian psychic surgeon, Arigo (José Pedro
de Freitas). But all that was to pale into insignificance because,
in 1971, Puharich discovered Uri Geller. |
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At their first meetings in
Tel Aviv in 1971, Puharich hypnotised Geller in an attempt
to find out where his abilities came from. As a result, the young Israeli
started to channel 'Spectra' - an entity which claimed to be a conscious
super-computer aboard a spaceship. However, Puharich suggested to him that
there might be a connection with the Nine Principles, and Spectra readily
agreed that there was. The Nine claimed that they had programmed Geller
with his powers as a young child.
Through Geller, The
Nine alerted Puharich to his life's mission, which was to use Geller's
talents to alert the world to an imminent mass landing of spaceships that
would bring representatives of The Nine. However, Geller - by now
an international psychic superstar - bowed out in 1973 and has resolutely
turned his back on The Nine ever since. Puharich had to find other
channels. He joined up with aristocratic former racing driver Sir John
Whitmore and Florida-based psychic and healer Phyllis Schlemmer.
They found a new channeller - a Daytona cook known to history only by the
pseudonym 'Bobby Horne' - who lived to regret his dealings with The Nine.
Driven to the brink of suicide by their constant demands, he too dropped
out of the scene - his despair being dismissed by Whitmore as
"signs of instability". After this, Phyllis Schlemmer was
appointed the authorised spokesperson for the entity - known simply as
'Tom' - who represented The Nine.
Puharich, Whitmore and
Schlemmer then set up Lab Nine at Puharich's estate in
Ossining, New York. The Nine's disciples included multi-millionaire
businessmen (many hiding behind pseudonyms and including members of
Canada's richest family, the Bronfmans), European nobility,
scientists from the Stanford Research Institute and at least one prominent
political figure who was a personal friend of President Gerald Ford.
We also know that Lyall
Watson (then the darling of the alternative scene because of his
seminal 1973 book Supernature) was involved, as was the influential
counter-culture guru Ira Einhorn - and Gene Roddenberry,
creator of Star Trek.
The key to predicting
eclipses is noticing that they occur in cycles, or at more or less regular
intervals. The Sun goes round the sky once a year; the Moon once a month.
This means that, every month, the Moon 'overtakes' the sun. This happens
at the New Moon, and this is when solar eclipses occur. But, of course, we
don't get an eclipse every New Moon. This is because the Moon has an
elliptical orbit: sometimes it passes above the Sun when it overtakes it,
sometimes below. But the Moon's elliptical orbit has its own cycle: it
returns to the same place it started from every 18 years or so. Thus - if
seen from the same place on Earth - an eclipse will be followed by another
one just over 18 years later.
Roddenberry was part
of that circle in 1974 and 1975, and even produced the screenplay for a
movie about The Nine. How much he was influenced by them is unknown,
although it is said that some of their concepts found their way into the
early Star Trek movies, and The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine (what
a giveaway!) series.
(There is a character named 'Vinod'
in one Deep Space Nine episode.) Another key player in Lab Nine was Dr James
J Hurtak, who was appointed Puharich's second-in-command by The
Nine. In fact, Hurtak had been independently channelling The Nine
since 1973. Puharich and Whitmore commissioned British
writer Stuart Holroyd to write an account of their adventures,
which appeared in 1977 as Prelude to the Landing on Planet Earth (retitled
Briefings for the Landing on Planet Earth in paperback)
In this extraordinary book
the true identity of the Nine - and of Tom - was finally revealed. Far
from being the chummy character that his rather avuncular name suggests,
Tom is actually Atum, the creator-god of the ancient Egyptian religion of
Heliopolis, and Uncle Tom with his eight mates are none other than the
Great Ennead of Heliopolis,
But even with such impressive
contacts, all was not well with Puharich. Lab Nine broke up in 1978
after a series of mysterious events that culminated in an arson attack on
the Ossining estate, and he fled to Mexico, claiming that he was being
persecuted by the CIA. He returned to the USA two years later, and appears
to have played no further part in The Nine story. He died in 1995 after
falling down the stairs in his South Carolina home. However, The Nine
continued. Not only did Schlemmer and Whitmore continue
their mission, but Dr Hurtak has also moved on. He has become a
major player in the unfolding millennial drama currently being played out
at Giza, but perhaps more importantly he has established himself as a New
Age guru par excellence, travelling the world giving workshops on his book
of channelled revelations from The Nine, The Keys of Enoch. Written and
laid out in classic Biblical style, its darkly apocalyptic vision has huge
numbers of influential devotees.This we find very worrying.
Another Nine channel - an
Englishwoman named Jenny O'Connor - was introduced to the avant
garde Esalen Institute in San Francisco by Sir John Whitmore. She
and The Nine became so influential there that they held seminars and -
unbelievably - were actually listed on the Institute's staff, even
successfully ordering the sacking of its chief finance officer and the
reorganisation of its entire management structure..
This should concern us,
because many influential people attended The Nine's Esalen seminars,
including Russians who were part of the Institute's Soviet Exchange
programme. Some of these later rose to prominence in the Gorbachev regime
and were instrumental in the downfall of Communism. (The Esalen Institute
now runs the US branch of the Gorbachev Foundation.)
The Nine are very much still
with us. One of their recent channels, who is also in contact with Tom, is
the American writer David M Myers. He is co-author with Britain's David
S Percy of that extraordinary tome Two-Thirds, a history of the galaxy
and the human race according to Myer's otherwordly contacts (who
clearly have no sense of the absurd). Percy - best known as a
champion of the 'Face on Mars' and the 'hoaxing' of the Apollo moon
landings - was at one time part of the Schlemmer circle. Among the
other major proponents of the 'monuments' of Mars and their alleged
connection with ancient Egypt is none other than Dr James Hurtak -
The Nine's great prophet - who has promoted this idea since as long ago as
1973. Richard C Hoagland - familiar to FT readers as another
unrepentant 'Mars Face' enthusiast - is also clearly under The Nine's
spell. David Myers and David Percy were, respectively,
American and European Director of Operations for Hoagland's Mars
Mission. In fact, his interpretation of the 'monuments' of Mars comes
directly from The Nine. Flake though he may appear (increasingly in these
hallowed pages), but his influence over huge swathes of the hungrier
mystery seekers is undeniable. This is the man who addresses rapt
audiences at the United Nations.
But it is in the New Age
channelling circuit that The Nine have truly come into their own. In any
other circles their true agenda would no doubt have been rumbled long ago,
but this is the New Age. Anything The Nine say must be sweetness and
light, right? But an objective reading of their divine pronouncements
reveal the first stirrings of something very nasty in Paradise.
Their words appeared in 1992
as the book The Only Planet of Choice, credited to 'transceiver' Schlemmer
and edited by Mary Bennett (a one-time member of the Schlemmer
circle who also edited Myers and Percy's Two-Thirds). This has had an
unprecedented influence over the New Age. According to Palden Jenkins
(editor of an earlier edition of Only Planet) more and more New Age
channelling groups are 'realising' that the real source of their wisdom is
The Nine. In fact, we have discerned what amounts to a campaign by The
Nine - or their adherents - to 'take over' the New Age. It would be a
mistake to underestimate the economic or even political potential of this
vast subculture - rich pickings indeed.
But The Nine's influence does
not extend merely to New Age channelling circles. Andrija Puharich,
James Hurtak and Richard Hoagland have all lectured at the
United Nations in New York. And individuals connected with The Nine are
also known to have influence with Vice-President Al Gore. Of
course, if The Nine really are the ancient gods of Egypt, then surely
there could be fewer more significant events than their return. One may be
justified in thinking that the more leading politicians who fall under
their influence the better; but are they really the ancient Ennead of
Egypt? Can it be that they have actually returned to sort us all out,
scattering love and enlightenment from their high moral ground?
Tom, in The Only Planet of
Choice, chooses his words carefully as he explains that all the races of
the Earth were seeded from space-gods - except one, the "indigenous
race", the blacks. He is very careful to urge us not to make an issue
out of this. After all, it's not the black race's fault that they have no
divine spark like the rest of us.
Perhaps the most disturbing
aspect of the history of The Nine is its relationship to the career of Andrija
Puharich. Recent research has revealed Puharich to have a
distinctly sinister side. As an Army doctor in the 1950s, he was deeply
involved with the CIA's notorious MKULTRA mind control project (see
panel). He - together with the infamous Dr Sidney Gottlieb -
experimented with a variety of techniques to change or induce actual
thought processes. even to creating the impression of voices in the head.
These techniques included the use of drugs, hypnosis and beaming radio
signals directly into the subject's brain. And, significantly, he was
engaged in this work at exactly the same time that The Nine made their
first appearance at the Round Table Foundation. The Foundation itself is
now known to have been largely funded by the Pentagon as a front for its
medical and parapsychological research. Puharich was still working
for the CIA in the early 1970s, when he brought Uri Geller out of
Israel. Puharich's use of hypnosis is particularly interesting in The Nine
circle. In the case of Uri Geller and Bobby Horne, he first
hypnotised them and then suggested that they were in touch with The Nine -
and lo, they were! Ira Einhorn - a close associate of Puharich's
during the 1970s - confirmed to us that he believed that Puharich
was "humanly directing" The Nine communications.
The evidence we have gathered
strongly suggests that Tom and his fellow gods originated, not in the
stars, but behind closed doors as part of a CIA mind control experiment.
And what happened to that experiment? Now with hundreds of thousands of
devotees, some in very high places, can The Nine be deemed a success? Of
course, that depends very much on what the CIA had in mind. With their
subtle racist propaganda, perhaps the flaky New Age Nine should worry the
hell out of us.
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