The Chinese Roswell: Ufo Encounters in the Far East from Ancient Times to the Present
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Average customer review:Product Description
Like his predecessor, Heinrich Harrer, who spent seven years in Tibet, Hartwig Hausdorf has ventured, virtually on foot, over many of the sacred places of the Far East. But his aim has been not to discover his own soul, but rather to uncover tell-tale traces of an Alien Mind which may have passed that way millennia ago, and may be passing by again. He has sought out the fabled, forbidden 1,000-foot White Pyramid of Xian. In so doing, he has stumbled upon the key to the ancient Chinese dream of material immortality, a dream perhaps inspired by Alien Mind, and a key hidden in the fabulous, mercury-filled tomb--chamber of the Emperor Shi Huangdi--a tomb-chamber the possible excavation of which the Chinese government has kept secret from the West. He has unearthed new facts about the mysterious stone disks of Bayan Kara Ula, which some believe tell the story of a forced alien landing 12,000 years ago. And he has discerned, in the prodigious mind-over-matter techniques of the Tibetans, the Chinese and the Japanese, the faintest whispers, still audible over the vast gulf of time, of an awesome encounter which may have taken place on the sacred peak of Mount Meru at the very beginning of man's time on earth.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #817649 in Books
- Published on: 1998-08
- Original language: German
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 224 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
For all who wonder and desire to expand their vision ... The Chinese Roswell by Hartwig Hausdorf is indispensable reading. -- Berthold E. Schwarz, M.D., author Psychiatric and Paranormal Aspects of UFOlogy, ALTERNATE PERCEPTIONS, Winter, 1999
Full of interesting topics, and of material little known to the West, this is an excellent, crackling good read. -- Robert C. Girard, ARCTURUS BOOKS Catalogue, November, 1998
Customer Reviews
A must read for anyone even mildly interested in UFOs!
For this lifelong believer that humanity has always been observed by advanced off-world intelligences, a doorway was opened into ancient vistas never before glimpsed. CHINESE ROSWELL is a translation into English of a German text by Hartwig Hausdorf that clearly and concisely describes his investigations into unexplained mysteries of the Far East. Hausdorf's fascinating descriptions include unusually marked stone disks found in the Bayan Kara Ula Mountains, the probable existence of Shangri-La, a 1,000 foot white pyramid in Xian, the origins of the mythology of great winged dragons, and modern day sightings of possible extraterrestial craft. If it is true that Alien Mind(s) have long been present on Earth, this is the most astounding overlooked fact in human history. One of the great benefits of modern trends in literature/journalism is that a treasure trove of vital information is readily available to anyone who wishes to expand his/her knowledge of extraterrestrial impact on human civilization (and it is difficult to imagine anyone who would not). CHINESE ROSWELL is an important addition to that growing collection.
Author's a Liar or a Fool
That anyone would drag out the Bayan Khara Uula yarn is simply sad.(Supposedly Chinese scientists-none of whom ever verifiably existed or could subsequently be identified-found mysterious graves and stone disks which eventually taught them that a spaceship crashed in China and that the stranded aliens were slaughtered by surrounding tribes.Needless to say the "authorities" suppressed the "truth," but luckily for us the word leaked out.) Gordon Creighton demolished this story in the Flying Saucer Review (in the article he refers to it as "the most phony,slipshod and halfbaked stuff that has ever found its way on paper.")The story originally appeared in a German vegetarian magazine,which quoted nonexistent Soviet and Chinese scientists and the trail went cold there.Creighton proved that the physical attributes given to the "descendents" of the aliens are laughably incorrect. The author of this book does not produce a single piece of verifiable evidence concerning the event-which is not surprising.(Neither does he mention Creighton's article.) Readers should refer to "Enounter Cases from Flying Saucer Review"(Signet 1977)for the Creighton's article debunking this campfire story.(And the FSR was pro UFO.)There MUST be better books about Chinese UFOs-Tim Good includes sections on China in several of his books.The fact that this author devotes so much space to an event that demonstrably never occurred proves that he's either a liar or...well,what do you say? The kindest thing would be if he WERE a liar, wouldn't it?. No doubt some readers will find some way to rationalize including nonsense like this in UFO books,but they will be wrong.Stories like this are fine if they're presented as science fiction,but they make the study of UFOs look ridiculous and the people who investigate them look like fools.This is a book that no UFO debunker should be without-they will be able to find plenty of ammunition here proving that uflologists are gullible rubes who enthusiastically swallow anything.People honestly interested in UFOs should boycott books like this a a matter of prinicpal,and never buy any other product this author is associaed with.
A waste of time and money
This book consists primarily of retellings of a variety of esoteric stories legends and myths from the far east. There is very little original material in the book. There is certainly nothing startling or memorable. Far inferior to the works of David Hatcher Childress.



