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Exploring African and
Other Alien Encounters
by Dominique Callimanopulos
Click
here to listen to Isabelle
John Mack and I were at the Ariel School, a small
elementary school outside Harare, the capital of Zimbabwe, listening
to Elsa (not her real name) describe her encounter last September 16
[1994] with an "alien" being. In all, sixty children, ages six through
twelve, reported seeing one large and several smaller spaceships land
- hover, really - over the scrubby bushland adjoining their playground.
The twelve children we interviewed over the course of two days all described
the same event with a steady consistency of detail. In addition to the
spaceships, the children had seen two "strange beings," one sitting on
one of the spaceships and the other running back and forth in the grass,
"bouncing as if he were on the moon, but not quite so much."
The beings were described as black with long heads, "eyes as big as rugby
balls," with thin arms and legs. The event took place during the children's
morning recess while teachers were in a staff meeting. Many of the younger
children were very scared and cried. "At first I thought it was a gardener,"
one fourth-grader told us. "Then I realized it was an alien."
The event lasted about fifteen minutes, the children said, before the
spaceships faded from view. But even in their state of fear, many of the
children reported also being curious and fascinated by the strange beings
they saw, whose eyes in particular commanded an intense attention. Elsa
told us that she thought the beings wanted to tell us something about
our future, about how "the world is going to end, maybe because we don't
look after our planet or the air." She said she felt horrible inside when
she got home that day. "Like all the trees will go down and there will
be no air. People will be dying. Those thoughts came from the man - the
man's eyes."
Isabelle, a composed and articulate ten-year-old, echoed Elsa's feelings.
"He was just staring. He was scary. We were trying not to look at him
'cause he was scary. My eyes and feelings went with him." What came through
her "conscience" as she looked at the being was, "We are doing harm to
the Earth."
The Ariel School sighting is one of the most significant in recent UFO
history. It is the first time such a large group of people have reported
witnessing the simultaneous appearance of spaceships and alien beings.
After receiving a call in September from a BBC reporter telling us that
a flight of strange objects and ships had glided across Zimbabwean skies
for two nights prior to September 16 culminating in the dramatic sighting
at the Ariel School, we decided to investigate firsthand.
International Abduction Project
For two years [1993/1994] the Program for Extraordinary Experience Research
(PEER), has been researching cross-cultural and international reports
of UFO sightings and alien abduction experiences. One of the central research
questions related to the abduction investigation is whether the phenomenon
is occurring abroad in a similar fashion; if so, what aspects of the experience
remain uniform and unchanged from culture to culture, and what part of
the experience, or interpretation of it, is affected by cultural factors.
In addition to project members traveling to Brazil and Africa and speaking
with Native Americans in the United States and Canada, the project has
sponsored research in Japan, Scandinavia, and Chile, and is in communication
with "experiencers" in Europe, Iran, China, Australia, Mexico, and Puerto
Rico. We have compared the abduction experience of shamanic journeying
and possession. We have explored myths related to sky beings, and to other
worlds and dimensions. What has emerged has often surprised us.
People in countries around the world are experiencing alien abductions
that seem, in many cases, very similar to the accounts reported in the
United States; yet the abductions remain distinct in the way people's
cultural background frame their experience. In Brazil, for instance, which
is rife with traditions of spirit and ancestor communication and mediumship,
"ET visitations" are more valued than ancestor spirit visits because of
the ETs' association with high-tech space travel, reflecting the cultural
preoccupation of Brazil's development-minded psyche. This often results
in colorful variations. In one Brazilian home we visited, a mother who
had traditionally ruled the roost through her communications with the
family's ancestor spirits felt her power threatened when her son began
to communicate with [reported] aliens.
Native Americans we have spoken with say the current activities of the
"star-people" point out an imbalance between Earth, humanity, and the
cosmos. One Hopi elder in Arizona prophesied, like so many abductees,
the end of the world as we know it. "There will be a great purge," he
said.
Abduction Experiences Challenge the Nature of Reality
Many aspects of abduction experiences are becoming familiar: dizzying
lights appearing through a windshield or a bedroom window, and small gray
beings with massive, pupil-less eyes that terrify and compel; quelling
paralysis as the experiencer's body is floated through air, walls, and
doors of spaceships; operations which are sometimes healing, often experimental.
Some abductees report participation in the creation of a new species of
crossbred alien/humans, percolating in rows of artificial wombs lining
the walls of the crafts like aquariums. Others describe new worlds of
knowledge teeming with apocalyptic visions and cryptic symbology and silent
telepathic warnings.
Abduction stories have raised a rash of issues as to how literally they
should be interpreted, and how abductees should be helped therapeutically.
The controversy roused by this phenomenon is reminiscent of other scientific
struggles that have surrounded anomalous experiences historically. Evans
Wentz, an anthropologist who studied fairies in the Celtic tradition,
wrestled with defining his inquiries in a scientific context. "These mysteries
have long fascinated scientists who, while wanting to remain true to their
essentially Newtonian tradition, cannot, in the spirit of curiosity, ignore
the mysteries."
William James, the Harvard social psychologist, also pondered these issues.
In his essay, "What Psychical Research Has Accomplished," published in
the 1890's, he wrote, "The ideal of every science is that of a closed
and completed system of truth. … Phenomena unclassifiable within a system
are therefore paradoxical absurdities and must be held untrue."
Undetaking what is essentially cross-cultural consciousness research raises
special difficulties, including the defining of subjectivity and objectivity,
of "real" versus mythic at amplified levels. Our Western difficulty in
integrating the fruits of our dreams and visions - our experiences while
in altered states - into a shared, communal reality severely influences
and limits the way we frame our questions of inquiry and our assumptions
as we conduct this research.
To open ourselves to the significance of abduction experiences for individuals,
we must become tolerant of the overwhelming variety of communications
and visitations the human beings experience with entities and beings that
are, as they have been described, "not of this world." It is only in opening
to this richer context that we can begin to interpret the meaning of abduction
experiences here and abroad.
The "White Bushman," Laurens Van der Post, said, "People always laughed
at the Bushman stories and said they had no meaning. And I suddenly realized
they only had no meaning because we had lost the key and the code. We
had lost the meaning of the stories."
How do we decipher the strange and unfamiliar tales of experiencers? Abduction
stories from around the world contain paradoxes: some abductees are raped
and sometimes tortured with painful procedures; some are healed, educated,
cared for; others experience all of the above. Abduction taunts us with
possibilities - some terrifying, some tatalizing. How do we decipher the
information and stories we hear? How does one live in closer proximity
to that "world beyond the veil"? A glimpse of the alien "other" invites
one to betray earthly assumptions, a suspension of belief that is part
of the pleasure of anthropological fieldwork. It is by finding and occupying
what anthropologists call "limbic" space that one can free oneself to
perceive anew, investing in a reinvented vision of life and reality.
Dr. John Mack and Dominique Callimanopulos'
research on African and other cross-cultural abduction experiences appears
in Dr. Mack's 1999 book, Passport
to the Cosmos. Dominique studied anthropology at Wesleyan University
and has worked as a researcher, writer, translator, and editor in the
areas of human rights, cross-cultural studies, and psychology. This
essay was originally published in CenterPiece magazine, Spring/Summer
1995, p. 10-11.
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