Tibet

RAMANAM
In the Name of The Father, and of The Son and of The Holy Spirit, Amen.

To The Dali Lama and Court (info@tibet.com)
From David R. Graham
12 March 2000

Brothers and Sisters,

Can you tell me the names, in English and/or French transliteration of the Dali Lamas during the period 1088 to 1307 Christian time? I am especially interested in the period 1280 to 1307. My question contemplates a connection between the Knights Templar and Tibetan Buddhism, just as there was between Jesus the Christ and Tibetan Buddhism.

Specifically, I am wondering if the word Baphomet, which has come down to us as used by the Templars at the time of their suppression in 1307, connects to a Dali Lama or a Lama residing in the Mediterranean area. I am considering that the fundamental mission of the Templars was not to make safe the way to Jerusalem but the way through Jerusalem to Lhasa.

Correlatively, can you identify any Tibetan monastic establishments in the Mediterranean area during the first 1000 years of the Christian presence there? I am considering that the people we call Celts and Merovingians are Euro-Tibetans, descendants of travelers/settlers from the period of 3-4K years before Jesus the Christ. Additionally, I am considering that Pythagorean monasticism, which was called Essene in First Century Palestine, and which is otherwise unprecedented in the European record, is a Tibetan flower.

Correlatively, there is evidence of Mary Magdalene being called Dompna in Provencal France, an appellation that sounds Tibetan-inspired.

Most urgently I am wondering if you can tell me the name of the Dali Lamas in the period 1280 to 1307 Christian time or any Lamas in the Mediterranean area whose names might have come down to us as Baphomet.

My eyes hope to see United States Armed Forces liberate Tibet.

Reply by email from The Dali Lama or his court was not received.

ann-margret2d

I have been listening to the Tibetan Book of The Dead and it occurred to me that The Book of Revelation and The Tibetan Book of the Dead were connected in some way, as Christianity comes from Buddhism, and both books are laden with visual images, numerology and instruction.

The conclusion thus far: The Tibetan Book of The Dead is to be read orally to a person on their death bed, or to a person who is shedding attachment to the six realms of “becoming” (taking birth). The Book of Revelation is the Christian equivalent, in the Christian Tradition (Christian images, numerology, instruction) to be read orally at the time of death (physical or otherwise) to accomplish the same end as The Tibetan Book of The Dead does for the Buddist believer. Also, we feel that all religious traditions contain similar treatises. I know this sounds like “no duh”, but The Book of Revelation has never been understood this way before.

Most often, people want to consider it prophetic literature, mathematical treatise, etc., but they ultimately cannot make sense of it. It is to be read orally. Sound and color is what consciousness is only attracted to at the time of death. The words of The Book of Revelation, read aloud take the consciousness out of the lower elements, earth, water, fire, air, space, and merge it with God, so birth and death no longer cause pain, suffering, joy, and all the rest.

Jonah Gottshalk: Trump’s New China Policy Earns Praise From Tibet And Fury From Communists

AMDG

140A

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