One of the main goals of Raelism is to build a $20 million embassy for the Elohim, preferably in Israel. Perhaps due to Raelism’s symbol – a swastika enveloped in a Star of David – the movement is banned in the birthplace of Judaism.
UFO cult touches down in Cambodia
The world’s largest UFO cult has reached Cambodia.
“People are not [ready] yet, but we will keep trying to spread the
message,” said Am Vichet, the head of the Cambodian chapter of the
Raelian Movement, which believes a group of scientists created life
25,000 years ago in a laboratory.
His next step was to read a book penned by the group’s leader,
Frenchman Claude Vorilhon, now known by his acolytes only as Rael and
who founded the cult in 1974. He claims to be a reincarnation of Buddha.
Vorilhon, then a journalist for an automobile magazine and racing car
test driver, says that, on December 13, 1973, he took a detour on his
way to work and wandered around an inactive volcano near Auvergne in
France. There, he met an extraterrestrial called Yahweh Elohim, who
explained “the message”.
The message was simple: life on Earth is the scientifically
engineered creation of an advanced alien civilisation, and Vorilhon’s
mission on this planet is to prepare humankind for their eventual
return.
One of the main goals of Raelism is to build a $20 million embassy
for the Elohim, preferably in Israel. Perhaps due to Raelism’s symbol – a
swastika enveloped in a Star of David – the movement is banned in the
birthplace of Judaism.
So Raelians are looking eastward and, last January, applied to the
Council of Ministers in a letter addressed to Prime Minister Hun Sen.
The project, which the letter states will generate “several billion
euros of revenue, as well as additional spinoff ventures”, will make
Cambodians “the first [people] to benefit from the Elohim’s highly
advanced technologies”.
But more than a year after the application was submitted, Rael has yet to receive a response from Phnom Penh.
Ek Tha, a spokesman for the Council of Ministers, said that although
he was not aware of the application, he would welcome an
extraterrestrial movement in Cambodia.
“I myself have researched UFOs and extraterrestrial life for the last two years,” he said.
“To me, this would be great if we can start an alien movement or
institution in Cambodia. We are not alone, my friend. When I tell my
friends at work, nobody believes me.”
But any attempt to build the embassy may come up against practical
obstacles, according to Dan Thibault, a French-Canadian who travels
across Asia spreading Rael’s teachings and was in Phnom Penh last week
to hold a public lecture.
“The problem is political . . . the problem is the
extra-territoriality, the airspace. We need a protected airspace, like a
no-fly zone over the embassy,” Thibault said. “The country that will
organise the embassy will be the spiritual and cultural centre of the
union to come. It’s a really big thing.”
Vichet explained how he began to accept the Raelians’ ideas after he
read Vorilhon’s first book, The Book Which Tells the Truth, which Vichet
recently translated into Khmer.
“I started thinking what our natural state was, and one day you can
see these things in the sky, and then I thought, oh, it’s true. And then
that night I saw the lights again and after that I start to become a
Raelian,” Vichet said.
“After that, my life changed. I learn and I read the books and I
changed a lot of what I used to think, like negative thinking, and I
changed myself.”
The movement claims to be expanding in Asia, boosted by growing
followings in China and Japan. Three Cambodians turned up to the meeting
last week, at which Thibault delved further into Raelian philosophy.
“Life has been created 25,000 years ago. The Elohim came here, they
were a group of scientists who had mastered DNA, and they created all
forms of life on this planet,” he said. “They sent all the gods –
Buddha, Jesus, Mohammed, Moses – all the prophets sent throughout
history. We live in the scientific era and at this time we can create
life significantly in laboratories, which means we are equal to gods.”
To appeal to Asia’s Buddhist masses, Raelians have tailored their teachings to the students of the Buddha.
Rael now claims to be the Maitreya, the reincarnation of the Buddha.
He said the date of his meeting with Yahweh Elohim corresponds with the
Buddhist calendar year 3000, when the sutras state the Buddha shall
reappear. The new Buddha, the sutras continue, “will come from the west”
in “the land of the cock”, which is a national symbol of France.
But controversies over attempts at human cloning in Europe have led
to Vorilhon’s exile from France, where there is a warrant out for his
arrest.
“We want to live forever. [Human cloning] is the first step towards
eternal life,” Thibault said. “It sounds, perhaps, crazy, but some
scientists are working right now on downloading your personality. We’ll
be able to download our personality from our brain to a computer.
“The next step is you upload your personality into a new body. We’re going to do that, it’s just a matter of time.”
Despite the movement’s expressed alignment with Buddhist values,
since its first seminar in 2006, it has only managed to attract 10
adherents in Cambodia.
“We just have a very small number in Cambodia,” said Vichet, adding
that he hopes more people will hear the message now that he has
translated one of Vorilhon’s books into Khmer. “Most of the Cambodian
people, they don’t want to read, especially big books. They don’t want
to read a whole story.”
Raelism, which now claims to have close to 85,000 members in more
than 100 countries, has courted controversy in an attempt to gain
notoriety and support, including campaigns for public nudity, LGBT
rights and setting up a clinic in Burkina Faso to reconstruct women’s
genitals after they have suffered female genital mutilation.
They also hope to attract celebrity support, much like Scientology.
“We met Michael Jackson; Rael met Russell Brand in the past year. But
the fear, they don’t want to identify themselves publicly,” Thibault
said, shortly after playing an animated video showing the four-foot-tall
Elohim, who look remarkably similar to Jackson, meeting Vorilhon.
Mike Kropveld, executive director of the Montreal-based InfoCult,
which has documented Raelism for about 30 years, said that the group is
attempting a two-pronged approach to move into Asia.
“They have been trying for years to move into other countries. They
have been raising money endlessly [to do this],” he said. “At the same
time, they’ve been trying to get Israel to form an embassy. I don’t know
why they want an embassy in Cambodia.
“They also often move into the shock area, or something that’s
titillating, like the topless campaign. A more accurate [membership]
figure would be 5,000, of people who would consider themselves members.”
Kropveld said that Raelism appeals to disillusioned followers of many religions.
“It has had an appeal here, some of the messages the group subscribes
to, it’s like a church in terms of the treatment of women, going to
heaven, going to where the creators are,” he said. “It’s not really so
far off from what [new members] believed before. They kind of have a
global religious perspective.”
While Raelian leaders say Buddhism is compatible with their beliefs,
Vichet stopped practising around the time he became a Raelin “guide”
through a baptism ceremony in 2007. Through the ceremony, Vichet
believes his “cellular plan” was transmitted to a computer in
preparation for judgment when the Elohim return in 2035.
“We do a baptism to get the plan transmitted and become a Raelian.
The baptism actually is physical . . . everybody has vibrations, you
transmit these vibrations.”
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