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What if our Earth is not solid but hollow inside. What if it's not dark inside, but lighted "oh-so-bright" for there's a small sun at the centre of Earth… And what if the inside of Earth is not so barren, but full of lush green forests, sparkling rivers, pristine mountains and calm, blue oceans… though all so inaccessible. It still probably would not make a difference in our lives, unless we are not told that the "inside" is populated too..
The Hollow interior of our Earth is inhabited by a highly intelligent and evolved human race, prospering there for millions of years. Not very long ago there was a time when we were all one. But through our own follies we cut ourselves off from the eternal source - from the oneness of humanity inside our Earth. And ever since they have patiently waited for the day of our unification.
Explorers who have ventured to northern climes, like Dr. Fridtjof Nansen, tell of an Arctic Paradise when one has passed the ice-floes, where they find open waters, warmer weather and an abundance of wildlife. Some claim to have sailed into an opening which the sea flows freely through and discovered an inner-world, an underworld, a world of plently, where peace reigns.
'The basic idea underlying all Mesopotamian, Egyptian and Greek myths of the creation of man is that man was created in the Underworld, i.e. in the interior of the Earth, pending a later release onto the surface of the Earth. In the Greek myths, man was thus created from clay and fire in the womb of the goddess Gaea, who personified Mother Earth. Similarly, in the older Mesopotamian myths, man was created in the womb of Mami or Ninharsag, (‘Lady of the Mountain’) who likewise personified the Earth'. The most ancient religious texts speak of a separate world situated underneath the Earth's crust which was supposed to be the dwelling-place of departed spirits. When Gilgamesh, the legendary hero of the ancient Sumerian and Babylonian epics, went to visit his ancestor Utnapishtim, he descended into the bowels of the Earth; and it was there that Orpheus went to seek the soul of Euridice. |
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