July/August 2006 Cosmic
A Different View of Humanity’s Origins
by Jean-Claude Gerard Koven
Creation stories abound about the genesis of humanity. Biblical accounts dominate our civilization’s beginnings, while more esoteric stories challenge our society’s belief systems.
I have always viewed the creation stories of the Anunnaki, an ancient race from the planet Nibiru who are believed to have seeded life con Earth eons ago, as a grand metaphor. However, that belief was shattered this past spring when the creation myth became reality—in my body.
I first heard of the Anunnaki 20 years ago when I read The Twelfth Planet by Zecharia Stichin. His book, the product of extensive research into Sumerian tablets and other ancient writings, describes the Anunnaki as the inhabitants of Nibiru, a planet that circles the sun in a 3,600-year elliptical orbit opposite in direction to all the other planets in our solar system. It is not easily seen, the story goes, because its orbital plane deviates considerably from ours and only passes through our rotational plane once every 36 centuries.
The myth of creation related by Stichin says: “Soon after our solar system began to form, a planet thrust from another solar system passed near ours, was attracted inward, collided with a planet called Tiamat, broke her up to create Earth and the asteroid belt, and itself was captured into a great orbit around our sun to become the planet Nibiru. It was so ‘Earthlike’ that the Seed of Life, begun there, was transferred to Earth during the collision.”
Eons passed as life evolved on both Earth and Nibiru. In time the Anunnaki faced the prospect of extinction as they discovered Nibiru was slowly losing its air supply. The only solution was through an elaborate process involving the dispersal of great quantities of gold into their failing atmosphere. When Nibiruian technology evolved sufficiently to allow space travel, the Anunnaki came to Earth, where they discovered vast stores of the gold they desperately needed.
After an extended period of successful mining operations on Earth, the mine workers brought from Nibiru rebelled, and the Anunnaki rulers on Earth decide to replace their own laborers with native Earth life. Their initial attempt was unsuccessful, so they resorted to genetic engineering to splice the native Homo erectus genes with the more complex Nibiruian genes. After several attempts, the Anunnaki succeeded in creating a hybrid species ideally suited to their needs—the one we now call Homo sapiens.
The myth goes on to relate the trials and tribulations that arose as a consequence of interbreeding and uncontrollable population growth. War broke out, and a decision was made to rid the planet of the new species through massive floods. From there, Stichin’s saga parallels many of the Bible stories that he claims are adaptations of earlier Sumerian writings.
I thought it was just a compelling story—especially with Stichin’s extensive supporting documentation, until the impossible happened and I found out that I hold a real part of the Anunnaki myth in my own body.
In spring shortly before delivering a talk in San Diego, I met Ranan Shahar, the founder of the New Dawn Clinic in Los Angeles. He had recently returned from a course in Switzerland on a process called Atlasprofilax that realigns the topmost C1 spinal vertebra, also called the atlas. This curious part of our anatomy, exhibiting little resemblance to all the other vertebrae, fittingly received its name from Atlas, the Titan in Greek mythology who supported the Earth on his shoulders.
According to Atlasprofilax, the C1 of 99.9 percent of humanity is dislocated (luxated in chiropractic terms), causing an energy blockage in the spinal column along with a host of physical and mental disturbances. The luxation is always in the same direction—statistically impossible if this displacement was simply the result of physical trauma.
I received a treatment from Shahar, which involved the massaging (including the use of a pulsating probe) of the soft tissue surrounding the C1 vertebra. Apparently only one 15-minute treatment is necessary, and if properly performed, lasts a lifetime.
Despite being told about the nature of the process, I had completely underestimated its effect. Imagine standing in a dry river bed just below a dam as it is being demolished. The “old me” was ripped away in a torrent of freely flowing energy, and I could all but see myself emerging from my personal chrysalis. Within minutes, the flood modulated into a steady flow, and I received a distinct message telling me that I had broken through a blockage deliberately engineered into the human genome.
While I enjoy a good story every now and again, this one begged for independent corroboration. A few days later I called my friend Wynn Free, author of The Reincarnation of Edgar Cayce?, who teams with Terry Brown in channeling an evolved extraterrestrial intelligence called the Elohim. He responded with a message of confirmation from the Elohim: The luxated C1 was deliberately engineered into the Homo sapiens coding by the Anunnaki in order to render their native pool of mining slaves more docile, programmable and controllable. This mechanism has remained in the human genetic makeup.
Atlasprofilax, currently offered in 10 countries, is not the only process available for realigning the C1 vertebra--some chiropractic methods, including the Blair Upper Cervical Technique, can be used.
Jean-Claude Gerard Koven is a writer and speaker based in Rancho Mirage, Calif. He is a featured weekly columnist for the UPI (United Press International) Religion and Spirituality Forum and the author of Going Deeper: How to Make Sense of Your Life When Your Life Makes No Sense, selected by both Allbooks Reviews and USABookNews.com as the best metaphysical book of the year. Visit www.goingdeeper.org. For details on Atlasprofilax, visit www.atlasprofilax.net.