Page 90 - Brugger Karl The chronicle of Akakor
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The Chronicle of Akakor
the mystic theory of an Aryan master race.
The Third Reich probably allotted more funds to the study of occult sciences than the U.S. did for the
manufacture of the first atomic bomb. The activities of National Socialist secret associations extended from
searching for the origins of the Aryan "race" to large expeditions to the most far-flung corners of the world.
When the German forces had to give up Naples, Himmler had the tombstone of the last Hohenstaufen
emperor removed to Germany. The Thule organization examined the mystic meaning of Gothic towers and
established numerous contacts with Tibetan monks. When the Russians marched into Berlin, they found
hundreds of nameless Tibetans who had fallen at the side of German soldiers.
The operations of German secret associations were no less numerous and well funded in South America. As
early as 1938, a U-boat reconnoitered the lower Amazon. Its crew made a geographic survey and
established contact with the German colony in Manaus. It made the first historical film of Amazonia, which
is still preserved in East Berlin archives. The available photographic material demonstrates that the interests
of the researchers went far beyond the collection of general data.
Another operation, documented in the archives of the Brazilian air force, was the voyage of the S.S. Carlino
in June 1943 from Maceio to Belém. The orders of the valiant German freighter can only be assumed. The
Brazilian air force believed that it carried a shipment of arms for underground German agents and attacked
the ship without success. But this explanation does not appear plausible in retrospect. There was neither a
German colony in the Maceio area nor were there installations of the Brazilian forces.
There are many references to secret operations of the Third Reich in Brazil. Eyewitnesses claim to have
observed the landing of German U-boats on the coast of Rio de Janeiro. A reporter of the Brazilian
magazine Realidade even discovered a German colony in the Mato Grosso, allegedly made up entirely of
former members of the SS.
According to the Chronicle of Akakor, 2,000 German soldiers arrived in the Ugha Mongulala capital
between 1940 and 1945. Marseilles was the point of departure for this secret operation. Among the
members were, among others, A. Jung of Rastatt, H. Haag from Mannheim, A. Schwager from Stuttgart,
and K. Liebermann from Roth. Women and children accompanied the last group. The contact had been
facilitated by a German missionary sister of the Santa Barbara station. A check of the data supplied in the
Chronicle of Akakor supplied evidence that the four mentioned soldiers were assumed dead in 1945. The
mission station Santa Barbara was attacked and destroyed by savage Indian tribes in 1936, according to
information received from the Amazonian diocese. Among the numerous dead were several German nuns.
Considering the technical preparations a landing of 2,000 German soldiers would have required, the facts
are insufficient. But the operations of German secret commandos during the Second World War could be
checked if they had been organized by the Abwehr. Documents about the activities of the foreign division of
the National Socialist party and the secret associations such as Ahnenerbe were either burned, or never even
recorded. Technically, the landing of 2,000 German soldiers would have been feasible. Hitler’s predilection
for occult sciences must have urged him on to establishing contact with a "Chosen People."* The Hitler
biographer Rauschning characterizes the "Führer of the Great German Empire" in this way: "Hitler’s
political actions and plans can only be comprehended if one knows his innermost thoughts and has
experienced his conviction of the magical relation between man and the universe."
* (Editor’s note: Although the Ugha Mongulala would have to be considered non-Aryans, they were
still "White Indians," and the descendants of Gods who had lived on earth.)
The Third Universal Catastrophe
According to the myths and legends of the Latin American peoples, man’s history began with the creation
of the world by the Gods. Their deeds first brought forth the earth and the sky, later plants and animals. The
creation of man was the most difficult task. The Popol Vuh of the Quiche-Maya relates that the Gods first
fashioned man out of dust, then made figures from wood, and finally from a dough of cornmeal. In the view
of the Miztecs of Anahuac, man emerged from a tree. According to the Chronicle of Akakor, the Ancient
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