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Análisis de las relaciones

5. La calidad de la enseñanza en la red de centros

5.5 Análisis de las relaciones

most amazing trip to the Free State province. The purpose of the trip was to deliver a CB to our first farmer client, Ed von Maltitz near Ficksburg, close to the Lesotho border and the Drakensberg mountains.

Ed is a well-known right-wing politician and close to the AWB, or Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging. I do not associate with a lot of his political views, but acknowledge that he’s driven by a genuine love of (his version of) Africa and is a fine, upright and honest human being, to say the least. His honesty and bluntness have earned him the respect of many black people in the country, both from the general and the political ranks. So let’s suspend all judgement, especially as the

cultural and political background is a bit too complex to grasp outside South Africa.

He’s certainly got one point right: destroying the farmer will result in destroying the country. And that is exactly what is happening.

I sincerely believe that he will eventually come out of the right wing corner and take a lot of folks with him, thus contributing immensely to our growing “planetary rescue team” with his honesty, ability and insight.

Certainly an interesting man to meet and a very warm and welcoming host as well.

Enough of this. I needed to refer to his public standing before somebody else does and uses this information out of context.

Vendaland 2002

Ed v. Maltitz in full Camo and his CB

Ed has been severely affected by weather control for 22 years and always been very outspoken about it. He phones in to a lot of radio shows worldwide and speaks about these issues. He’s collected a lot of evidence as well.

I’ve seen the planes buzz over, unmarked of course.

They do little chemtrails. Much more of it seems to be a kind of “HAARP with wings”. But Ed has photos of chemtrails as well.

He also has 5 emphatically evil towers surrounding his farm.

To put it briefly: he’s up against real evil.

According to Ed, yearly preci- pitation was about 150% more before weather control experiments were started.

One of those HAARP needles surrounding Ed’s farm

These South African government experiments were quite widely publicised at the beginning. Allegedly, they were designed to create rain. But strangely, they produced the opposite result right from the start.

They called it “cloud seeding”. I have even heard about this from a simple black man in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe.

We busted some 50 towers on our way down, all of Ed’s HAARP needles, and put a CB on his ground.

A lot of dramatic stuff happened in the atmosphere, stuff I’ve never seen before.

Rain was still reluctant to fall over his property, apart from a few drops, but Ed (who has been looking up to the sky all his life) said it looked very good. On our way back it rained (starting with a hailstorm) all the way along the

The body of evidence

busted route.

Actually, it was a discernible strip of rain with blue sky and cumulus cloud at the fringe.

That was a most exciting result. I felt sure it must have rained on Ed’s farm as well, but it didn’t. He says that his place and the area around is the apex of all South African weather and that’s why they’re concentrating their efforts so much on his farm.

The result was that he was effectively bankrupted over the years, losing his 2000 ha farm in the process.

When rain cloud is building up, a plane always moves in, sometimes at 1 or 2 minutes intervals. After the CB was installed and the strange towers (which have no apparent justifiable function –other than creating a weather barrier) were done, we had thunderstorms building up in a semicircle around with strangest horizontal lightning discharges (also known as sheet lightning). At times it was so dramatic that I was reminded of descriptions of the last days of Stalingrad.

My feeling is that lightning has a lot to do with the orgone dynamics in the atmosphere. We would see dramatic lightning more often in the future, wherever a CB was newly introduced and started to heal the atmosphere. On the other hand, we would observe that lightning that had often been very violent over Johannesburg and Pretoria, would

become much softer after we had brought out sufficient orgonite in this area to neutralise most of the DOR transmitters there.

We also saw strange rays of “blackness” coming up from the ground from a distant position. No way of mistaking sun rays, as they converged to a point on the ground. Also, I think I really saw pure DOR very clearly for the first time. This was the day before at sunset. The next day everything looked very different. The sky was clear and fresh, with good cloud build-up and a first hint of rain in the early afternoon. A lot of swallows were buzzing around some rocks on the property. Looking at the sky, one could also see the orgone as Wilhelm Reich has described it (white streaks and sparks, minute but visible).

All the blackness was gone. Great numbers of swallows were back in the area, diving happily up and down. Ed had pointed out that one of the symptoms of weather control was the disappearance of most of the birds...

The most amazing thing happened then, witnessed by my wife and myself: A white unmarked plane disappeared into a cloud and didn’t come out. The droning noise stopped. The cloud was isolated, blue sky around. There no way the plane, which was moving fast, could have disappeared naturally. I wouldn’t believe it if I hadn’t seen it..

Vendaland 2002

Ndebele Tour, July 2003

The Ndebele people, an offspring of the Zulu nation, are widely known for the colourful painting of their houses in geometric patterns. Ever since a cultural event, sponsored by the Alliance Francaise, had brought us to the Ndebele village of Mabhoko, we’d been in loose contact with Angelina Ndimande, a painter par excellence.

We decided that Mabhoko would be a great place to put a cloudbuster and, of course, to neutralise all cellphone towers on the way. Mabhoko is about 90 km North of Pretoria. Amazingly, Angelina was not at all surprised when I phoned her about this. She immediately knew who we were and seemed to have no problem accepting what I proposed to her, namely to bring her a device that would hopefully help to bring more rain to her community. We were shocked to see how many towers had proliferated in the approximately 24 months since we last travelled on that route.

The stream of blue points going north-east out of Pretoria shows the suspicious density of towers. The flag is the new CB near the words Elands River. On white-owned farm land you will still find the old- fashioned pattern of a tower every 35 km on the major regional roads. This is not so in the “locations” or previous “native homelands”.

Always in clusters of 3 and with a breathtaking density, the population certainly gets its daily dose. I was particularly shocked by the

implications this has for our activities because it means that our busting is so far behind the real need and we must inspire more people to help us in this effort.

Map of the trip

I realised on this trip that we just cannot handle it alone.

On arrival in Mabhoko we first visited Esther Mahlangu, the world famous Ndebele painter who has exhibited the world over and has her works hanging in museums in Europe, the USA and Japan. We had a chat with her and left her a nice HHG as a gift.

Esther is also a traditional healer and was at that time involved in the initiation ceremonies of the young boys entering manhood.

The body of evidence

Esther Mahlangu, Kevin and Friederike

We met Angelina at the Ndebele Foundation, a beautiful cultural centre which has been built and decorated in the characteristic Ndebele style.

Kevin in front of the Ndebele foundation

At the Foundation there is accommodation for tourists, who can participate in painting classes. Another activity is that all the accomplished painters (traditionally only women) teach classes to the village children. Artefacts, paintings on cardboard and paper, as well as various beadwork items and painted objects are available in a little shop.

After we had been treated to a cup of tea and shown the new

facilities at the Foundation (last time we were there, it was still under construction), we went to the car and got out the CB.

I explained what it was and encouraged Angelina to feel the energy. She immediately adopted it with all her heart and showed her joy and gratitude in a wonderful serene way, that I’ve find so often with the more traditional African people. This is the reason why I prefer to work with these wonderful people. They know intuitively that this stuff works and don’t need lengthy explanations because their energy sensitivity is still largely intact, despite concerted efforts to change this. For those of us white intruders who show respect for and genuine love and interest in their traditional culture and spirituality, they will always open their heart. Angelina told me that her grandfather was a sangoma (traditional healer) which didn’t astonish me the least.

There was much more non-verbal understanding than anything else and it was of the most amazing kind. Nothing we said or did seemed to surprise her in the least.

Credo Vuzamazulu Mutwa 2003

Angelina is a very loving and bright person. I’ve not come across anyone like her anywhere else. The CB is going to stay at her home and is surely in good hands there.

We went home deeply touched and happy:

Angelina, we love you!

Encounter with a remarkable man

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