Tuesday,
December 16, 2014
Researcher Claims That A UFO Disguised As An Angel Save Soldiersin WWI
A new book claims that an ‘Angel’
which is said to have appeared above one of the first battles in World War I,
saving the lives of fleeing British soldiers, might have been an extraterrestrial
visitor – a flying saucer on a mission to ‘alter the future’.
The Angel of Mons was described
as either St George, St Miichael, angels, or crowds of angelic warriors as it
fended off advancing Germans at the Battle of Mons in 1914 – and was reported
at the time by the Evening Standard.
The story was swiftly turned into
myth by the soldiers themselves – and became a staple of parish magazines, and
cited as evidence that God was on the British side.
But a new book, ‘UFOs of the First World War’,
says that many UFO enthusiasts now believe that the ‘angel’ was an alien
visitor – shaping itself into a form that would have been recognisable to the
exhausted British soldiers fleeing overwhelming German might on the
battlefield.
The battle had been one of the
first in which the British faced the Germans – and despite retreating, only
1,600 lives were lost.
Kevin Goodman, a UFO
expert and author of books of mysterious encounters in the UK, says, ‘The UFO
enigma was unknown during the First World War conflict, the troops would relate
to an event such as this in the only way they could, by thinking that they had
a sign from God.’
‘The phenomenon has taken many
guises throughout history. In times of stress, fear and possible imminent death
one finds solace in something that we can relate to.’
Nigel Watson, author of ‘UFOs of
the First World War says, ‘Even today the legend is swathed in controversy.
Theories about it range from it being a myth based on Machen’s story, the
product of hallucinations due to stress and exhaustion, real angelic
visitations, ghosts, swamp gas, airships or alien UFOs projecting or shaping
themselves to the expectations of the witnesses.’
Others claim that the story is
simple fiction. The popular author, Arthur Machen claimed that this legend was
created by his fictional ‘The Bowmen’ story published in The Evening News, 29
September 1914.
In it, British soldiers call on
St George for aid, and are helped by ghostly bowmen from the Battle of
Agincourt. One fact that lends weight to this theory is that few reports of the
incident exist beforee Machen’s story.
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