Alien Dawn: A Classic Investigation into the Contact Experience (18 page)

Read Alien Dawn: A Classic Investigation into the Contact Experience Online

Authors: Colin Wilson

Tags: #alien, #contact phenomenon, #UFO, #extraterrestrial, #high strangeness, #paranormal, #out-of-body experiences, #abduction, #reality, #skeptic, #occult, #UFOs, #spring0410

BOOK: Alien Dawn: A Classic Investigation into the Contact Experience
7.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

A week later, Vallee went to call on Aimé Michel, ‘an amazing gnome of a man, short and deformed, who barely reaches to my stomach.
Yet he radiates a kind of beauty that is unforgettable, a beauty that comes from the mind, and the nobility of his piercing eyes’.
Michel had suggested a notion that he called orthoteny—that UFOs tended to appear on straight lines.
But Michel had collected so many observations—hundreds of reported sightings—that he was unable to handle them all.
Vallee offered what help he could, extending a line that went through Bayonne and Vichy right around the world, so Michel could find out whether other sightings appeared on it.
The result was an excited letter from Michel.
The line went through three major concentrations of UFO sightings, in Brazil, New Guineau and New Zealand.
(A New Zealander named Bruce Cathie, an airline pilot who had experienced four UFO sightings between 1952 and 1965, arrived at a similar theory independently.) Vallee now began using the IBM computer at weekends (it occupied a whole room) to perform more calculations.
He was aided by his wife, Janine.

Vallee found that this interest in UFOs was attracting unfavourable comment, and became afraid that he would lose his job.
An astrophysicist called Pierre Guerin had joined the group, and scientists next door were wondering why an expert on planets was talking to satellite-trackers.
‘It seems amazing to me’, Vallee commented in his journal, ‘that people should find it suspicious and undesirable for scientists of adjacent disciplines to talk to one another.
Isn’t that what science is all about?’

He and Janine made the interesting discovery that there was an apparent relationship between the frequency of sightings and the distance of the planet Mars, which comes closest to Earth every twenty-six months.
This might have led him to wonder whether flying saucers are from Mars; instead, he reflected that it is odd that, if the visitors are from space, they are not seen long before they reach Earth—after all, fairly small objects can be seen in space, even with the naked eye, when they are hundreds of miles away.
Vallee was already beginning to suspect that the flying saucers were not necessarily from other planets, or anywhere else ‘out there’.

On a bookstall by the Seine, Vallee discovered a book by Major Donald Keyhoe, one of the pioneers in the field of ufology, and noted that the attitude of American scientists and military men towards UFOs was disturbing: ‘They behave like a well-organised insect colony whose life is suddenly impacted by an unforeseen event’.
He observed that their idea of researching UFOs was to chase one and shoot it down.
Keyhoe’s book led Vallee to formulate the notion that UFOs are ‘the first great collective intelligence test to which mankind has been subjected’.

Early in 1962, Vallee resigned from the Meudon observatory, sick of the small-minded attitude of French astronomers.
His boss Muller actually reproached him with the words, ‘You think too much’.
He took a job with an electronics firm, which gave him more time and freedom.

Janine asked a friend to look at the computations, and he asked her if they had anything to do with Mars.
It turned out that he had a friend named Michel Gauquelin, a statistician who had decided to discredit astrology by using the statistical method.
In the 1930s, a Swiss mathematician named Krafft had studied the birth data of 2,800 musicians, and concluded that the result proved a relation between a person’s sun sign (the sign of the zodiac he is born under) and temperament.
Gauquelin had fed this data into a computer, and discovered that Krafft was deceiving himself.
Carried away by his success, Gauquelin decided to explode another superstition: that a person’s choice of profession is governed by his rising sign—the planet that is just rising at the moment of his birth.
(Doctors are supposed to be born under Mars, actors under Jupiter, scientists under Saturn, etc.) To Gauquelin’s embarrassment, his first sample—people born under Mars—showed that the Mars effect was real.
The tests were repeated in four different countries, and showed the same result.
Without intending to, Gauquelin had made it fairly certain that astrology is not pure superstition.

Jacques and Janine met the Gauquelins, and were amused to realise that they had both been working on a kind of ‘Mars effect’, and that both couples had been obliged to keep their work secret for fear of the scientific establishment.
Vallee began thinking about moving to America, and, when Aimé Michel told him about Hynek, wrote him a letter, and sent him his Mars correlations.

A few days before leaving for America, in September 1962, Vallee paid a visit to a musician named Paul Misraki, who had just published a book called
The Extraterrestrials,
in which he suggested that some religious miracles, like that at Fátima, might have the same cause as modern saucer sightings.
The Fátima sighting had occurred on 13 May 1917, when three Portuguese children saw a white-robed woman who asked them to return every month for six months.
On the second occasion, fifty people were there, and heard an explosion, followed by the sight of a cloud rising from a tree; the third time, there were 4,500 people, who heard a buzzing noise, saw a cloud ascending from the same tree, and again heard an explosion.
The children were shown a vision of hell, and told that a second world war would occur if people did not mend their ways.
(It would begin, said the vision, during the reign of Pope Pius XI, who died in 1939.)

By September, there were thirty thousand people, and they saw a globe of light moving down the valley towards the children, and the air seemed to be full of glistening bubbles as the globe rose and disappeared into the sun.
On the last occasion, in October, there were seventy thousand people.
The pouring rain suddenly stopped, and the clouds parted to reveal a revolving disc of a silvery colour, which radiated, in succession, all the colours of the spectrum.
Then it plunged towards the Earth.
Most of the crowd thought it was the end of the world and fell on their knees; but the disc suddenly reversed, and flew upward into the sun.
When it had gone, the crowd discovered that their clothes and the ground were miraculously dry.

This suggestion of a connection between Fátima and UFOs was to be extraordinarily fruitful for Vallee.

A year after arriving in America, Vallee finally met Hynek in a Chicago hotel, and they talked continuously for twenty-four hours.
Hynek mentioned a vacancy in the computer programming department at Northwestern University, where he worked, and Vallee applied and was accepted.
Soon he was working as one of Hynek’s research assistants on Project Blue Book.
Hynek’s wife, Mimi, thought the whole UFO business was
nonsense, and that it would never be taken seriously.
But Vallee, having read and disliked a number of books on UFOs—for their popular tone—decided to write one of his own.
By this time, his computer calculations had convinced him that Michel’s orthoteny was almost certainly a matter of chance.

By December 1963, Vallee was suggesting to Hynek that ‘an extraterrestrial intervention might have been a factor in man’s early history, specifically in the early development of civilisation and of biblical events .
.
.
The return of such phenomena today could be explained by the need to boost our religious vacillations’.
He thought that some benign group of cosmic beings, trying to guide us towards galactic status, would behave exactly as the saucer operators do.

We should pause here to glance briefly at this notion of UFOs and man’s early history.
It seems, at first sight, absurd, an arbitrary linking of two completely different phenomena—biblical miracles, which most of us take with a pinch of salt anyway, and flying saucers.

What is difficult to grasp is that, for more than five years, Vallee had been studying hundreds—in fact thousands—of UFO sightings, and hearing them described in the witnesses’ own words.
It was totally impossible for him to doubt that flying saucers were real, even though many of them sounded absurd (like the two little robots seen by the Frenchman).

But when did they begin?

Certainly not with Kenneth Arnold; there had been hundreds, even thousands, of sightings long before that day in 1947.

In his dictated book
The Song of the Stars
(1996), the South African shaman Credo Mutwa writes:

There are things that fly through the night, that you call UFOs, which we in Africa call Abahambi Abavutayo, ‘the fiery visitors’ .
.
.
Long before they were heard of in other parts of the world, we, the people of Africa, had contact with these things and the creatures inside them.
I can only speak within certain constraints because we are not allowed to talk in any detail about these sacred things.
Our people fear that should we do that, then the star ships would stop visiting us.

He goes on to speak about the Mutende-ya-ngenge, ‘the grey or white .
.
.
creature with a largish head whose face is chalk-white, with large green eyes that go around the creature’s head so that it can look at you over its shoulder .
.
.’.
He adds that the Mutende sometimes captures human beings, cuts them open, then closes them up again, and makes them forget what has happened.
‘It is only when a witch doctor puts this person into what we call the
godsleep .
.
.
that this fact comes out’.

Mutwa goes on to describe his own abduction encounter with ‘fellows like little dolls’ in the bush, who were able to paralyse him, then examined him painfully, sticking instruments up his nostrils.
He then describes how a female creature made love to him: ‘but there was nothing human or warm about it .
.
.
only a feeling of coldness and violation’, Afterwards, he was shown a creature like a baby frog, suspended in a purplish liquid—a humanoid foetus?

He found himself back in the bush, and, when he approached a village, all the dogs tried to attack him, and he had to be rescued.
He then learnt he had been missing for three days.

Mutwa adds, ‘There are creatures who are watching over us curiously, and who, I think, are regulating human progress for some reason’.

In 1925, the Russian mystical artist Nicholas Roerich, who designed the set for Stravinsky’s
Rite of Spring,
set out across the Himalayas, and described in his journal how his party had been staring up at an eagle when ‘we all saw, in a direction from north to south, something big and shiny reflecting the sun, like a huge oval moving at great speed.
Crossing 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 field glasses and saw quite distinctly an oval form with shiny surface, one side of which was brilliant from the sun’.

But as early as 2 January 1878, a farmer named John Martin, of Denison, Texas, had been out hunting when he saw a moving object in the northern sky, dark in colour, and of considerable size.
It must also have been moving fast, for, after he had looked down to rest his eyes, he discovered that the object was already overhead, at a great height, and ‘looking like a large saucer’.

Even this is by no means the first.
The
Chronicle
of William of Newburgh, a thirteenth-century monk, tells how, in 1290, in Byland Abbey in Yorkshire, the abbot and monks were at a meal when a ‘flat, round, shining silvery object’ flew over the abbey and ‘caused the utmost terror’.
And
Flying Saucers on the Attack
(1954) by Harold Wilkins (which, in spite of the sensational title, is a serious and comprehensive study of UFOs) lists no fewer than 150 reports of strange lights and objects in the sky, from 200 BC to 1912.
A typical description by the Roman Julius Obsequens in 90 BC speaks of ‘a globe of fire, golden in colour’, in the area of Spoleto, which ‘fell to Earth, was seen to gyrate .
.
.
became greater in size, and was seen to rise from the Earth, was borne east, and obscured the disc of the sun with its magnitude’.

Even Alexander the Great saw a UFO.
In 322 BC, he was besieging the city of Tyre when ‘a large silver shield’, with four smaller shields behind it, circled over Tyre; it shot a beam of light at the city wall and blasted a hole through it.
The other ‘shields’ then fired at the defence towers.
Alexander lost no time in taking advantage of this supernatural intervention and invading the city.

The very first report that sounds like a UFO sighting dates from ancient Egypt around 1500 BC.
A papyrus now in the Vatican describes how, in the reign of Thutmose III and his queen Hatshepsut, a ‘circle of fire’ came from the sky, and its breath had a foul odour.
A few days later, in the evening, the sky was filled with the circles of light, which then ascended and vanished towards the south.

Other books

Sparhawk's Angel by Miranda Jarrett
The Darkest of Secrets by Kate Hewitt
Another Life Altogether by Elaine Beale
Nine Minutes by Beth Flynn
Precious Thing by Colette McBeth
Sweet Insanity by Marilyn
No Light by Costello, Michael
Apocalyptic Shorts by Darksaber, Victor