Posted on 01/03/2005 7:19:44 PM PST by blam
During Tsunami Remote Viewing primitive tribes in Andaman Nicobar Islands of India
Staff Reporter
January 02, 2005
Indian Military personnel is finally reaching the remote islands of Andaman and Car Nicobar. There is massive devastation especially in Nicobar Islands. The inhabitants in these islands consists of tribal and non-tribal mainstream population. Thousands of people are dead and the coastal areas just evaporated.
The total population before Tsunami of these tribes was approximately 28,000, which accounts for about 9% of the total population of these Islands. The other 91% population consists of mainstream settlers and the military personnel.
The rescue teams are observing some strange things as they are reaching these remote tribal areas for rescue and relief. While there is massive unbelievable devastation, the primitive tribes are relatively unaffected though most of them lived close by the ocean.
According to sources, these tribes moved to higher grounds. So did most animals during Tsunami in South and South-east Asia. The rescue teams are also finding interesting information from these untouched tribal people they could view and hear the Tsunami coming and they moved to higher grounds way before the Tsunami came and earthquake shattered the islands.
Indian Military with all high tech equipments and especially the Air Force lost a full base with hundreds of personnel in this catastrophe.
As a matter of fact another correlation is also interesting the more primitive tribes moved out to the higher grounds days before the catastrophe.
Nicobarese who are settled in the Car Nicobar Island, Nancowry group of islands and in Harminder Bay of Little Andaman constitutes more than 98% of the tribal population. The population of other tribes is very small and is declining over the past several decades. Andaman and Nicobar Administration under the Government of India have rehabilitated Great Andamanese in Strait Island and Onges in Dugong Creek and South Bay of Little Andaman Island. Shompens having a population of 157 live deep in the jungles of Great Nicobar Island. Jarawas, who live in the jungles of South and Middle Andaman were hostile till recently. In last couple of years, they have shown a willingness to come out of their isolated world and mingle with the mainstream population. The Sentinelese live in the North Sentinel Island and are still unapproachable. All the tribes are in a state of transition from their primitive life-styles to a more modern way of life. The Nicobarese were the first to adjust to this. They have almost lost their tribal nature and are as modern as any of the settler community.
The Onges and Andamanese are changing slowly. They keep many aspects of their tribal culture, at the same time have adopted many things from the mainstream population. The Jarawas have just coming out of their seclusion. The Sentinelese has not yet shown any willingness to shed their hostile attitude towards outsiders.
Stating that the devastation in Car Nicobar islands was total, General Officer-in-Command Southern Command Lt Gen B S Takhar on Saturday said, it would take at least take six months for things to become normal in the island. Though the tribals of Andaman islands were not much affected, there has been total devastation in car Nicobar islands mostly inhabited by the modern Nicobarese, Takhar, who undertook an aerial and ground survey of tsunami affected areas along the eastern coast, told the reporters.
Based on the reports we are receiving, Nicobarese who are most modern have lost the most in Car Nicobar and Nancowry group of islands. Very few of them sensed the incoming Tsunami. But the Shompens and Sentinelese who took some direct hit, lost little because of their remote viewing capabilities. They moved to higher grounds before.
According to some of the tribal leaders, earth communicates to them. And this time they could see it coming in their remote viewing periscopes.
Interestingly, in South and South east Asia which includes Andaman and Nicobar islands, it is now confirmed that animal bodies are not found because most of them moved to higher grounds days before the Tsunami came.
It seems if this correlation is anything close to correct, we may be gaining in so called modern technologies but we are losing in higher grounds of technical expertise, which may encompass spiritual science and paranormal technologies.
Ok, I'll accept that one...
P.S. any idea what the winning lottery numbers are going to be? I will be more than happy to split the winnings with you so you won't have to get up in front of the cameras. :-D
LOL...I have no idea. What abilities I have,don't include that kind of thing.
"OK, what is a remote viewing periscope~"
I think it's a highly sophisticated scientific equipment used to view into the future and invented by, guess what, Sentinelese scientists.
"I know this sounds crazy, but I wonder."
Stop wondering; it is crazy.
Damn... well when your superhero powers get better, let me know.
And I have never heard of anyone with ESP or other kinds of ability, win a LOTTERY.
Are you good with color correcting scanned slides in Photoshop? If so, send me mail. :-D
What...you want me to work for nothing? It sounds as if you have a gigantic pile of messed of pictures. LOL
I couldn't taste food without a mouthful until I went a week without it. Then, I dreamed of food, in color, and tasted it all... Waking up wasn't so pleasant.
I might have developed the smell ability, but other factors interfered, and it is just as well.
What about hearing someone's voice,on recall and matching colors without a swatch? :-)
Hmmmm. but you're quite knowledgeable.
I was on assignment, writing for a magazine about biofeedback, and interviewed some physicians who were using it with patients. One offered to hook me up, saying of course I'd need training before I could get any results. Hah! I aced it from the start, then had a lot of fun with subsequent docs. Anyway, I don't think I was letting go; on the contrary, I was very specifically telling those machines exactly what to do. The mind lead, the body followed,, the machine took note. I'm usually a type-A too, but enjoy experimenting with Powers of Mind.
I definitely cannot do the color matching. My wife assures me that I see colors differently from her.
Food! Yes! I couldn't before I went without food for a week, but by the end of the week, I could recall flavors very well. IMHO, this made me aware of the ability.
We all have different abilities. :-)
That is one of the things which makes life fun.
And interesting.
This photo released by the Anthropological Survey of India shows a three Jarawa tribe boys, one of the five tribes in India's Andaman and Nicobar archipelago. (AP/ HO)
Reading winds, waves may have saved ancient tribes on remote Indian islands
Neelesh Misra Canadian Press Wednesday, January 05, 2005
PORT BLAIR, India (AP) - Two days after a tsunami thrashed the island where his ancestors have lived for tens of thousands of years, a lone tribesman stood naked on the beach and looked up at a hovering coast guard helicopter.
He then took out his bow and shot an arrow toward the rescue chopper.
It was a signal the Sentinelese have sent out to the world for millennia: They want to be left alone. Isolated from the rest of the world, the tribesmen needed to learn nature's sights, sounds and smells to survive.
Government officials and anthropologists believe that ancient knowledge of the movement of wind, sea and birds may have saved the five indigenous tribes on the Indian archipelago of Andaman and Nicobar islands from the tsunami that hit the Asian coastline Dec. 26.
"They can smell the wind. They can gauge the depth of the sea with the sound of their oars. They have a sixth sense which we don't possess," said Ashish Roy, a local environmentalist and lawyer who has called on the courts to protect the tribes by preventing their contact with the outside world.
The tribes live the most ancient, nomadic lifestyle known to man, frozen in their Paleolithic past. Many produce fire by rubbing stones, fish and hunt with bow and arrow and live in leaf and straw community huts. And they don't take kindly to intrusions.
Anil Thapliyal, a commander in the Indian coast guard, said he spotted the lone tribesman on the island of Sentinel, a 60-square-kilometre key, on Dec. 28.
"There was a naked Sentinelese man," Thapliyal told The Associated Press. "He came out and shot an arrow at the helicopter."
According to varying estimates, there are only about 400 to 1,000 members alive today from the Great Andamanese, Onges, Jarawas, Sentinelese and Shompens. Some anthropological DNA studies indicate the generations may have spanned back 70,000 years. They originated in Africa and migrated to India through Indonesia, anthropologists say.
It appears that many tribesman fled the shores well before the waves hit the coast, where they would typically be fishing at this time of year.
After the tsunami, local officials spotted 41 Great Andamanese, out of 43 in a 2001 Indian census, who had fled the submerged portion of their Strait Island. They also reported seeing 73 Onges, out of 98 in the census, who fled to highland forests in Dugong Creek on the Little Andaman island, or Hut Bay, a government anthropologist said.
However, the fate of the three other tribes won't be known until officials complete a survey of the remote islands this week, he said. The government reconnaissance mission will also assess how the ecosystem - most crucially, the water sources - has been damaged.
Taking surveys of these people is dangerous work.
The more than 500 islands across a 8,300-square-kilometre chain in the southern reaches of the Bay of Bengal appear at first glance to be a tropical paradise. But even one of the earliest visitors, Marco Polo, called the atols "the land of the head hunters." Roman geographer Claudius Ptolemaeus called the Andamans the "islands of the cannibals."
You jump to conclusions and assume far too much. None of it though admits an existence of a spirit which speaks volumes.
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