The Vedas are perhaps the oldest written text on our planet today.  They date back to the beginning of Indian civilization and are the earliest literary records of the whole Aryan race.  They are supposed to have been  passed through oral tradition for over 100,000 years.  They came to us  in written form between 4-6,000 years ago. 
The Vedas are divided into four groups, Rigveda, Yajurveda, Samaveda and  Atharvaveda. Each group has an original text (Mantra) and a commentary  portion (Brahmana).  
The Brahmana again has two portions, one interpreting ritual and the other  the philosophy. The portions interpreting the philosophy of the original  texts constitute the Upanishads.  
There are also auxiliary texts called Vedangas. Vedic literature refers to  the whole of this vast group of literature. The whole of Rgveda and most of  Atharvaveda are in the form of poetry, or hymns to the deities and the elements.  
Samaveda is in verses that are to be sung and Yajurveda is largely in short  prose passages. Both Samaveda and Yajurveda are concerned with rituals  rather than philosophy - especially Yajurveda.
The Rig-Veda Samhita is the oldest significant extant Indian text.  It  is a collection of 1,028 Vedic Sanskrit hymns and 10,600 verses in all,  organized into ten books (Sanskrit: mandalas). The hymns are dedicated  to Rigvedic deities. The books were composed by sages and poets from  different priestly groups over a period of at least 500 years, which  Avari dates as 1400 BCE to 900 BCE, if not earlier According to Max  Müller, based on internal evidence (philological and linguistic), the  Rigveda was composed roughly between 17001100 BCE (the early Vedic  period) in the Punjab (Sapta Sindhu) region of the Indian subcontinent.  Michael Witzel believes that the Rig Veda must have been composed more  or less in the period 1450-1350 BCE. There are strong linguistic and  cultural similarities between the Rigveda and the early Iranian Avesta,  deriving from the Proto-Indo-Iranian times, often associated with the  Andronovo culture; the earliest horse-drawn chariots were found at  Andronovo sites in the Sintashta-Petrovka cultural area near the Ural  mountains and date to ca. 2000 BCE. 
The Yajur-Veda ("Veda of sacrificial formulas") consists of archaic  prose mantras and also in part of verses borrowed from the Rig-Veda. Its  purpose was practical, in that each mantra must accompany an action in  sacrifice but, unlike the Sama-Veda, it was compiled to apply to all  sacrificial rites, not merely the Soma offering. There are two major  recensions of this Veda known as the "Black" and "White" Yajur-Veda. The  origin and meaning of these designations are not very clear. The White  Yajur-Veda contains only the verses and sayings necessary for the  sacrifice, while explanations exist in a separate Brahmana work. It  differs widely from the Black Yajurveda, which incorporates such  explanations in the work itself, often immediately following the verses.  Of the Black Yajurveda four major recensions survive, all showing by  and large the same arrangement, but differing in many other respects,  notably in the individual discussion of the rituals but also in matters  of phonology and accent. 
Yajurveda refers to acts of worship such as oblations made into Agni or  Fire. It has two branches, Krishna or Black and Shukla or White. While  both contain mantras or incantations to be chanted at rituals, Black  Yajurveda also has many explanations. The recensions of Black Yajurveda  are Taittirya, Katthaka, Maitrayani and Kapishtthala. Those of White  Yajurveda are Madhyanadina and Kanva. The literary value of Yajurveda is  mostly for its prose, which consists of short terse sentences full of  meaning and cadence.
The Sama-Veda  is the "Veda of chants" or "Knowledge of melodies". The  name of this Veda is from the Sanskrit word saman which means a metrical  hymn or song of praise. It consists of 1549 stanzas, taken entirely  (except 78) from the Rig-Veda. Some of the Rig-Veda verses are repeated  more than once. Including repetitions, there are a total of 1875 verses  numbered in the Sama-Veda recension published by Griffith. Two major  recensions remain today, the Kauthuma/Ranayaniya and the Jaiminiya. P> Its purpose was liturgical and practical, to serve as a songbook for the  "singer" priests who took part in the liturgy. A priest who sings hymns  from the Sama-Veda during a ritual is called an udgat, a word  derived from the Sanskrit root ud-gai ("to sing" or "to chant").  A  similar word in English might be "cantor". The styles of chanting are  important to the liturgical use of the verses. The hymns were to be sung  according to certain fixed melodies; hence the name of the collection. 
Samaveda consists of a selection of poetry mainly from the Rigveda, and  some original matter. It has two parts, Purva-Archika (First Adoratona) and  Uttar-Archika (Later Adoration), containing verses addressed to the three  gods Agni (Fire), Indra (King of Gods) and Soma (Energizing Herb). The verses  are not to be chanted anyhow, but to be sung in specifically indicated  melodies using the seven svaras or notes. Such songs are called Samagana  and in this sense Samaveda is really a book of hymns. 
Atharvaveda means the Veda of the Wise and the Old. It is associated  with the name of the ancient poet Atharvan (The Wise Old One). It is  also called Atharva-Angirasa, being associated with the name of another  rishi, Angiras. Although later in age, the Atharvaveda reveals a more  primitive culture than the Rigveda. The custom is to enumerate Yajurveda  and Samaveda after the Rigveda, and mention Atharvaveda last.  Atharvaveda contains about 6 thousand verses forming 731 poems and a  small portion in prose. About one seventh of the Atharvaveda text is  common to the Rigveda.  
Atharvaveda contains first class poetry coming from visionary poets,  much of it being glorification of the curative powers of herbs and  waters. Many poems relate to diseases like cough and jaundice, to male  and female demons that cause diseases, to sweet-smelling herbs and magic  amulets, which drive diseases away. There are poems relating to sins  and their atonement, errors in performing rituals and their expiatory  acts, political and philosophical issues, and a wonderful hymn to  Prithvi  or Mother Earth. 
The Upanishads are regarded as part of the Vedas and as such form part  of the Hindu scriptures. They primarily discuss philosophy, meditation,  and the nature of God; they form the core spiritual thought of Vedantic  Hinduism. Considered as mystic or spiritual contemplations of the Vedas,  their putative end and essence, the Upanishads are known as Vedanta  ("the end/culmination of the Vedas"). The Upanishads do not belong to a  particular period of Sanskrit literature. The oldest, such as the  Brhadaranyaka and Chandogya Upanishads, may date to the Brahmana period  (roughly before the 31st century BC; before Gita was constructed), while  the youngest, depending on the canon used, may date to the medieval or  early modern period. 
The word Upanishad comes from the Sanskrit verb sad (to sit) and the two  prepositions upa and ni (under and at). They are sacred tests of  spiritual and philosophical nature. Vedic literature is divided into  karmakanda containing Samhitas (hymns) and Brahmanas (commentaries), and gyanakanda containing  knowledge in the form of the Aranyakas and Upanishads. Thus each  Upanishad is associated with a Veda, Isha-upanishad with Shukla  Yajurveda, Kena-upanishad with Samaveda, and so on.  
The earliest Upanishads may have been composed between B.C. 800 and  400.There have been several later additions, leading to 112 Upanishads  being available today. But the major Upanishads are ten, Isha, Kena,  Kattha, Prashna, Mundaka, Mandukya, Taittiriya, Aitareya,  Shwetashwatara, Chhandogya and Brihadaryanyaka. The teachings of the  Upanishads, and those of the Bhagavat Gita, form the basis of the  Vedanta philosophy.  
The Isha-upanishad emphasizes the identity of the human soul with the  divine soul. The Kena-upanishad discusses the qualities of the divine  essence (Brahman) and the relationship of the gods to the divine  essence. The Katha-upanishad, through the story of Nachiketa, discussed  death and the permanence of the soul (Atman). The fairly long Chhandogya-upanishad develops the idea of transmigration of souls. The  rihadaryanaka -upanishad, the longest of the Upanishads, bears the  message of  the completeness of the divine essence, and the associated  peace. As literary  remnants of the ancient past, the Upanishads  both  lucid and elegant - have great literary value
Despite claims that the Akashic Records have been used by mystics throughout history, there are not any direct references to the Akasha to be found in any of the historical documentation of the aforementioned groups. The term Akasha itself, along with the concept of an aetheric library, originated with the 19th century movement of Theosophy. Skeptics say that the concept of Akashic Records has been attributed indiscriminately and inappropriately to a wide range of historical religious figures and movements.
Traditionally the theory has also been rejected by the scientific community, due to a lack of any independently verifiable evidence. Interestingly, Ervin Laszlo (2004) explores science and the Akashic Records in the spirit of Occam's razor, and champions the theory of the Records as resolving many anomalies within history, science and experience with simplicity.
Specific Accounts of the Akashic Records
In Theosophy and New Age discourse the Akashic Records are records of all knowledge, including all human experience, held in the Universe. The Akashic Records are metaphorically described as a library and are also likened to a universal computer or the 'Mind of God'.
The Akashic Records are referred to by Edgar Cayce, who stated that each person is held to account after life and 'confronted' with their personal Akashic record of what they have or have not done in life in a karmic sense. The idea is comparable to the biblical Book of Life which is consulted to see whether or not the dead are admitted to heaven.
Jane Roberts in the Seth books describes a different version of a similar idea when Seth asserts that the fundamental stuff of the universe is ideas and consciousness, and that an idea once conceived exists forever. Seth argued that all ideas and knowledge are in principle accessible by "direct cognition". Direct cognition shares semantic congruency with intuition and allows for the possibility of direct knowing without time elapsing and without knowledge needing to be transferred e.g. in speech or text. This is similar to what Robert Monroe refers to as rotes in his out-of-body book trilogy.
Some writers believe that, free from and independent of all religions and faiths, there exist many libraries or record repositories such as the Akashic library throughout the universe, albeit on various planes of existence.
According to Max Heindel's Rosicrucian writings, the Memory of Nature (Akashic Records) may be read in three different inner worlds. In the reflecting ether of the Etheric region there are pictures of all that has happened in the world - at least several hundred years back, or much more in some cases - and they appear almost as the pictures on a screen, with the difference that the scene shifts backward.
The Memory of Nature may be read, in an entirely different manner covering the essence of a whole life or event, in a higher world, in the highest subdivision of the Region of Concrete Thought of the World of Thought, and, last, it may be read in the World of Life Spirit, covering events from the earliest dawn of our present manifestation, but only spiritual adepts, spiritual entities and through grace is access to the Records granted.
In Michel Desmarquet's book Thiaoouba Prophecy, the author claims to have been abducted by supreme alien beings, that in one part of the book guides him through something that is most likely the Akashic records. The term they are using is Psychosphere. The author's understanding is that the Psychosphere is like a "vibratory cocoon, which turns at a speed seven times that of light. This cocoon acts as a blotter, as it were, absorbing (and remembering) absolutely every event occurring on the planet. The contents of this cocoon are inaccessible to us on Earth - we have no way of Œreading the story¹"
Urantia Book
The Urantia Book confirms the validity and reality of these Living Records in several accounts. In Paper 25 is found the statement: "The recording angels of the inhabited planets are the source of all individual records. Throughout the universes other recorders function regarding both formal records and living records. From Urantia to Paradise, both recordings are encountered: in a local universe, more of the written records and less of the living; on Paradise, more of the living and less of the formal; on Uversa, both are equally available.
Again in Paper 28 in The Urantia book we find reference: "The Memory of Mercy is a living trial balance, a current statement of your account with the supernatural forces of the realms. These are the living records of mercy ministration which are read into the testimony of the courts of Uversa when each individual's right to unending life comes up for adjudication, when "thrones are cast up and the Ancients of Days are seated. The broadcasts of Uversa issue and come forth from before them; thousands upon thousands minister to them, and ten thousand times ten thousand stand before them. The judgment is set, and the books are opened." And the books which are opened on such a momentous occasion are the living records of the tertiary seconaphim of the superuniverses. The formal records are on file to corroborate the testimony of the Memories of Mercy if they are required."
Mention in "The Law of One"
In The Law of One, Book I, a book purported to contain conversations with a channeled "social memory complex" known to humans as "Ra," when the questioner asks where Edgar Cayce received his information, the answer received is, "We have explained before that the intelligent infinity is brought into intelligent energy from eighth density or octave. The one sound vibratory complex called Edgar used this gateway to view the present, which is not the continuum you experience but the potential social memory complex of this planetary sphere. The term your peoples have used for this is the "Akashic Record" or the Hall of Records.
 Ancient Aircraft
Ancient Aircraft
2010 ... The search for clues to humanity's creation is often linked to ancient astronauts who came here in the beginning in Flying Vehicles, leaving behind clues to their encounters with humans. Pictographs and megalithic monuments throughout the planet describe human interaction with ancient astronauts, allowing those in our timeline to piece together what happened in the past that shape out destiny today.
Did these ancient astronauts have flying ships, some of which were flown by humans? In the inserts of our consciousness reality program, all things are possible, as we await explanation of our creation and where it is all going. Today many report UFO sightings, many believe aliens exist and in same way interact in our program, if only for biogenetic experiments, mirroring the Nazi Program of WW II, which ended as the alien Grey program began.
Vimanas
Source from: Crystalinks
A vimana is a mythological flying machine, described in the ancient  mythology of India. References to these flying machines are commonplace  in ancient Indian texts, even describing their use in warfare. As well  as being able to fly within Earth's atmosphere, vimanas were also said  to be able to travel into space and travel submerged underwater. 
Descriptions in the Vedas and later Indian literature detail vimanas of various shapes and sizes: 
-  In the Vedas: the Sun and Indra and several other Vedic deities are  transported by flying wheeled chariots pulled by animals, usually horses  (but the Vedic god Pusan's chariot is pulled by goats). 
- The "agnihotra-vimana" with two engines. (Agni means fire in Sanskrit.) 
- The "gaja-vimana" with more engines. (Gaja means elephant in Sanskrit.) 
- Other types named after the kingfisher, ibis, and other animals. 
The word comes from Sanskrit and seems to be vi-mana = 'apart' or  'having been measured". The word also means a part of a Hindu temple.  The meaning of the word likely changed in this sequence: 
- An area of land measured out and set apart to be used for sacred purposes. 
- Temple 
- A god's palace 
- In the Ramayana: the demon-lord Ravana's flying palace called Pushpaka. 
- In later Indian writings: other flying vehicles, and sometimes as a poetic word for ordinary ground vehicles. 
In some modern Indian languages, the word 
vimana means 
ordinary real aircraft. 
The Buddhist book 
Vimanavatthu (Pali for "Vimana Stories") uses  the word "vimana" with a different meaning: "a small piece of text used  as the inspiration for a Buddhist sermon".
 UFO Lore
UFO Lore
Some modern UFO enthusiasts have pointed to the Vimana as evidence for  advanced technological civilizations in the distant past, or as support  for the ancient astronaut theory. Others have linked the flying machines to the legend of the Nine Unknown Men. 
Alexander the Great purportedly gave a description of "dozens of silver disk-like objects"  entering and leaving the Jaxartes River in 337 BC. Alexander, so the  story goes, then became obsessed with the craft and spent many hours in a  primitive diving bell searching for them. (Source: History Channel  "Unidentified Submarine Objects")
Mythological Descriptions
Sanskrit texts are filled with references to gods who fought battles in  the sky using Vimanas equipped with weapons as deadly as any we can  deploy in these more enlightened times. 
In the Ramayana there is a passage in the Ramayana which reads: 
"The Pushpaka chariot that resembles the Sun and belongs to my brother  was brought by the powerful Ravana; that aerial and excellent car going  everywhere at will .... that car resembling a bright cloud in the sky  ... and the King [Rama] got in, and the excellent car at the command of  the Raghira, rose up into the higher atmosphere.'" "Pushpaka" is Sanskrit for "flowery". It is the first flying vimana  mentioned in Hindu mythology (as distinct from gods' flying horse-drawn  chariots). It is also called Pushpaka Vimana. 
The special characteristic of this vehicle is, "What ever may be the  number of people sitting in it, always there will be one more seat  vacant i.e., If N people sit, There will be (N+1) seats". It was  basically a vehicle that could soar the skies for long distances. It  shows that even in ancient times, people were curious about flight and  might have tried to design flying vehicles. 
Pushpaka was originally made by Maya for Kubera, the God of wealth, but  was later stolen, along with Lanka, by his half-brother, the demon king  Ravana. 
The core epic of the Mahabharata mentions no vimanas, but vimanas  often occur in the large amount of matter which was added to the  Mahabharata corpus later. One example is that the Asura Maya had a  Vimana measuring twelve cubits in circumference, with four strong  wheels. 
The Mahabharata is a veritable gold mine of information relating to  conflicts between gods who are said to have settled their differences  apparently using weapons as lethal as those we have now. Apart from  'blazing missiles', the poem records the use of other deadly weapons.  'Indra's Dart' (Indravajra) operated via a circular 'reflector'. When  switched on, it produced a 'shaft of light' which, when focused on any  target, immediately 'consumed it with its power'. 
In one exchange, the hero, Krishna, is pursuing his enemy, Salva, in the  sky, when Salva's Vimana, the Saubha, is made invisible in some way.  Undeterred, Krishna immediately fires off a special weapon: "I quickly  laid on an arrow, which killed by seeking out sound". Many other  terrible weapons are described, quite matter-of-factly, in the  Mahabharata, but the most fearsome of all is the one used against the  Vrishis. The narrative records: 
"Gurkha flying in his swift and powerful Vimana hurled against the three  cities of the Vrishis and Andhakas a single projectile charged with all  the power of the Universe. An incandescent column of smoke and fire, as  brilliant as ten thousands suns, rose in all its splendour. It was the  unknown weapon, the Iron Thunderbolt, a gigantic messenger of death  which reduced to ashes the entire race of the Vrishnis and Andhakas." 
"...(the weapon was) a single projectile
charged with all the power of the Universe.
An incandescent column of smoke and flame
As bright as the thousand suns rose in all its splendor...
An iron thunderbolt,
A gigantic messenger of death,
Which reduced to ashes
The entire race of the Vrishnis
And the Andhakas.
... the corpses were so burned
As to be unrecognizable.
The hair and nails fell out;
Pottery broke without apparent cause,
And the birds turned white.
... After a few hours
All foodstuffs were infected...
... to escape from this fire
The soldiers threw themselves in streams
To wash themselves and their equipment..."
It is important to note, that these kinds of records are not isolated.  They can be cross-correlated with similar reports in other ancient  civilizations. The after-affects of this Iron Thunderbolt have an  ominously recognizable ring. Apparently, those killed by it were said to  be so burnt that their corpses were unidentifiable. The survivors fared  little better, as it caused their hair and nails to fall out. 
Perhaps the most disturbing and challenging, information about these  allegedly mythical Vimanas in the ancient records is that there are some  matter-of-fact records, describing how to build one. In their way, the  instructions are quite precise.   
The Mahabharata also tells of the awesome destructiveness of the war:  "... (the weapon was) a single projectile charged with all the power of  the Universe. An incandescent column of smoke and flame as bright as the  thousand suns rose in all its splendour... An iron thunderbolt, a  gigantic messenger of death, which reduced to ashes the entire race of  the Vrishnis and the Andhakas.... the corpses were so burned as to be  unrecognizable. The hair and nails fell out; pottery broke without  apparent cause, and the birds turned white.... after a few hours all  foodstuffs were infected.... to escape from this fire, the soldiers  threw themselves in streams to wash themselves and their equipment..."  Some say that the Mahabharata is describing an atomic war. References  like this one are not isolated; but battles, using a fantastic array of  weapons and aerial vehicles are common in all the epic Indian books. One  even describes a Vimana-Vailix battle on the Moon! The above section  very accurately describes what an atomic explosion would look like and  the effects of the radioactivity on the population. Jumping into water  is the only respite. 
In the Sanskrit Samarangana Sutradhara (Literally, "controller of the battlefield"), it is written: 
"Strong and durable must the body of the Vimana be made, like a great  flying bird of light material. Inside one must put the mercury engine  with its iron heating apparatus underneath. By means of the power latent  in the mercury which sets the driving whirlwind in motion, a man  sitting inside may travel a great distance in the sky. The movements of  the Vimana are such that it can vertically ascend, vertically descend,  move slanting forwards and backwards. With the help of the machines  human beings can fly in the air and heavenly beings can come down to  earth." 
In Mesopotamian sources -- The Hakatha (Laws of the Babylonians) states quite unambiguously: 
"The privilege of operating a flying machine is great. The knowledge of  flight is among the most ancient of our inheritances. A gift from 'those  from upon high'. We received it from them as a means of saving many  lives." 
More fantastic still is the information given in the ancient Chaldean  work, The Sifrala, which contains over one hundred pages of technical  details on building a flying machine. It contains words which translate  as graphite rod, copper coils, crystal indicator, vibrating spheres,  stable angles, etc.
Ancient cities whose brick and stonewalls have been vitrified, that is,  fused together, can be found in India, Ireland, Scotland, France, Turkey  and other places. Some say that there is no logical explanation for the  vitrification of stone forts and cities, except from an atomic blast;  but others say that vitrified forts arose by an enemy setting fire to a  fortification composed of a mixture of big timbers and stones.
References
The Yantra Sarvaswa of Maharshi Bharadwaja, Vimaana Chandrika of  Maharshi Narayan, Vyoma Yaana Tantra of Sounaka, and Vyoma Yaanarka of  Dandi Natha are some of them. They contained topics like Maargadhi  Karana (Navigation and control of speed during flight), Lohaadhi Karana  (alloys used for various components of the aircraft) and Saktyaadhi  Karana (production and usage of various fuels used in aircraft).  
Para Sabda Grahakata is a subject of monitoring the flight tracks of  aircraft, navigatory communication system, and monitoring the  conversation of the pilots in the aircraft. Maharshi Gouthama mentioned  32 models of aircraft used in Treta Yuga; only one model among them,  called Pushpaka Vimaanam, became popular in the Ramayana. The Vaimaanika  Sastra describes Tripura Vimaanam that uses a solar powered engine to  travel at three levels - on the land, under the surface of water, and in  the air. Sakuna Vimaanam is a cross between an aircraft and a rocket - a  space shuttle. 
A symposium on "Science and Technology in ancient India" was organised  in December 1990 at B.M. Birla Science Center at Hyderabad, A.P., India.  Many topics of ancient Indian aeronautics were discussed. The Vaimanika  Prakaranam in Vimana Vignana deals with instruments like Guha Garbha  Darsha Yantra which can locate objects hidden underground from an  aircraft. A semiconductor ferrite named Chumbaka radiates microwave  signals and detects hidden objects. 
The B.M. Birla Scienc Center has been doing active research in finding  scientific content in Vedas and Puranas. The Center has deciphered a  number of new materials from Amsu Bodhini. These materials comprise of  glasses with special effects and metallic alloys with rare combinations -  many of them have extraordinary properties unknown to modern  technology. Unlike the modern methods which use 'inert' materials, these  materials required 'live' ingredients like herbs, tree barks, and tree  gums in addition to mineral ores. The sastras had integrated the  knowledge of many conventional disciplines like chemistry, materials  science, metallurgy and Ayurveda. These materials were widely used in  the manufacture of aircraft in ancient India. Some of them can be used  in low cost solar energy generation systems needed for India. 
Dr. Roberto Pinotti, an Italian scientist, presented a paper on  'Aeronautics in ancient India' in the World Space Conference conducted  at Bangalore. He told the conference delegates that those aircraft were  similar to modern jet-propelled aeroplanes. He agreed that they  represent the most complex and sophisticated designs.  
Some of them used radars and imaging technology instrumentation. 
- Vimana Aircraft of Ancient India and Atlantis (Lost Science Series), David Hatcher Childress, Ivan T. Sanderson, January 1992.  
- Vedic Physics: Scientific Origin of Hinduism, Raja Ram Mohan Roy  
- The Secret Teachings of the Vedas, Stephen Knapp 
- Ancient Indian Aircraft Technology in The Anti-Gravity Handbook (Lost Science), David Hatcher Childress  
The Anti-Gravity Handbook - by David Childress
Many researchers into the UFO enigma tend to overlook a very important  fact. While it assumed that most flying saucers are of alien, or perhaps  Governmental Military origin, another possible origin of UFOs is  ancient India and Atlantis. What we know about ancient Indian flying  vehicles comes from ancient Indian sources; written texts that have come  down to us through the centuries. 
There is no doubt that most of these texts are authentic; many are the  well known ancient Indian Epics themselves, and there are literally  hundreds of them. Most of them have not even been translated into  English yet from the old Sanskrit. 
Indian Emperor Ashoka started a "Secret Society of the Nine Unknown  Men"-- great Indian scientists who were supposed to catalogue the many  sciences. Ashoka kept their work secret because he was afraid that the  advanced science catalogued by these men, pulled from ancient Indian  sources, would be used for the evil purpose of war, which Ashoka was  strongly against, having been converted to Buddhism after defeating a  rival army in a bloody battle. The "Nine Unknown Men" wrote a total of  nine books, presumably one each. Book number was "The Secrets of  Gravitation!" 
This book, known to historians, but not actually seen by them dealt  chiefly with "gravity control." It is presumably still around somewhere,  kept in a secret library in India, Tibet or elsewhere (perhaps even in  North America somewhere). One can certainly understand Ashoka's  reasoning for wanting to keep such knowledge a secret, assuming it  exists. 
Ashoka was also aware of devastating wars using such advanced vehicles  and other "futuristic weapons" that had destroyed the ancient Indian  "Rama Empire" several thousand years before. Only a few years ago, the  Chinese discovered some Sanskrit documents in Lhasa, Tibet and sent them  to the University of Chandrigarh to be translated. Dr. Ruth Reyna of  the university said recently that the documents contain directions for  building interstellar spaceships! 
Their method of propulsion, she said, was "anti-gravitational" and was  based upon a system analogous to that of "laghima," the unknown power of  the ego existing in man's physiological makeup, "a centrifugal force  strong enough to counteract all gravitational pull." According to Hindu  Yogis, it is this "laghima" which enables a person to levitate. 
Dr. Reyna said that on board these machines, which were called "Astras"  by the text, the ancient Indians could have sent a detachment of men  onto any planet, according to the document, which is thought to be  thousands of years old. The manuscripts were also said to reveal the  secret of "antima"; "the cap of invisibility" and "garima"; "how to  become as heavy as a mountain of lead." 
Naturally, Indian scientists did not take the texts very seriously, but  then became more positive about the value of them when the Chinese  announced that they were including certain parts of the data for study  in their space program! This was one of the first instances of a  government admitting to be researching anti-gravity. 
The manuscripts did not say definitely that interplanetary travel was  ever made but did mention, of all things, a planned trip to the Moon,  though it is not clear whether this trip was actually carried out.  However, one of the great Indian epics, the Ramayana, does have a highly  detailed story in it of a trip to the moon in a Vimana (or "Astra"),  and in fact details a battle on the moon with an "Asvin" (or Atlantean")  airship. This is but a small bit of recent evidence of anti-gravity and  aerospace technology used by Indians. 
To really understand the technology, we must go much further back in  time. The so-called "Rama Empire" of Northern India and Pakistan  developed at least fifteen thousand years ago on the Indian  sub-continent and was a nation of many large, sophisticated cities, many  of which are still to be found in the deserts of Pakistan, northern,  and western India. Rama existed, apparently, parallel to the Atlantean  civilization in the mid-Atlantic Ocean, and was ruled by "enlightened  Priest-Kings" who governed the cities. 
The seven greatest capital cities of Rama were known in classical Hindu  texts as "The Seven Rishi Cities." According to ancient Indian texts,  the people had flying machines which were called "Vimanas." The ancient  Indian epic describes a Vimana as a double-deck, circular aircraft with  portholes and a dome, much as we would imagine a flying saucer. It flew  with the "speed of the wind" and gave forth a "melodious sound." There  were at least four different types of Vimanas; some saucer shaped,  others like long cylinders ("cigar shaped airships"). The ancient Indian  texts on Vimanas are so numerous, it would take volumes to relate what  they had to say. 
The ancient Indians, who manufactured these ships themselves, wrote  entire flight manuals on the control of the various types of Vimanas,  many of which are still in existence, and some have even been translated  into English. The Samara Sutradhara is a scientific treatise dealing  with every possible angle of air travel in a Vimana. There are 230  stanzas dealing with the construction, take-off, cruising for thousand  of miles, normal and forced landings, and even possible collisions with  birds. In 1875, the Vaimanika Sastra, a fourth century B.C. text written  by Bharadvajy the Wise, using even older texts as his source, was  rediscovered in a temple in India. It dealt with the operation of  Vimanas and included information on the steering, precautions for long  flights, protection of the airships from storms and lightning and how to  switch the drive to "solar energy" from a free energy source which  sounds like "anti-gravity." 
The Vaimanika Sastra (or Vymaanika-Shaastra) has eight chapters with  diagrams, describing three types of aircraft, including apparatuses that  could neither catch on fire nor break. It also mentions 31 essential  parts of these vehicles and 16 materials from which they are  constructed, which absorb light and heat; for which reason they were  considered suitable for the construction of Vimanas. 
This document has been translated into English and is available by  writing the publisher: Vymaanidashaastra Aeronautics by Maharishi  Bharadwaaja, translated into English and edited, printed and published  by Mr. G. R.Josyer, Mysore, India, 1979 (sorry, no street address). Mr.  Josyer is the director of the International Academy of Sanskrit  Investigation, located in Mysore. There seems to be no doubt that  Vimanas were powered by some sort of "anti-gravity." Vimanas took off  vertically, and were capable of hovering in the sky, like a modern  helicopter or dirigible. Bharadvajy the Wise refers to no less than 70  authorities and 10 experts of air travel in antiquity. 
These sources are now lost. Vimanas were kept in a Vimana Griha, a kind  of hanger, and were sometimes said to be propelled by a yellowish-white  liquid, and sometimes by some sort of mercury compound, though writers  seem confused in this matter. It is most likely that the later writers  on Vimanas, wrote as observers and from earlier texts, and were  understandably confused on the principle of their propulsion. The  "yellowish-white liquid" sounds suspiciously like gasoline, and perhaps  Vimanas had a number of different propulsion sources, including  combustion engines and even "pulse-jet" engines. 
It is interesting to note, that the Nazis developed the first practical  pulse- jet engines for their V-8 rocket "buzz bombs." Hitler and the  Nazi staff were exceptionally interested in ancient India and Tibet and  sent expeditions to both these places yearly, starting in the 30's, in  order to gather esoteric evidence that they did so, and perhaps it was  from these people that the Nazis gained some of their scientific  information! 
According to the Dronaparva, part of the Mahabarata, and the Ramayana,  one Vimana described was shaped like a sphere and born along at great  speed on a mighty wind generated by mercury. It moved like a UFO, going  up, down, backwards and forwards as the pilot desired. In another Indian  source, the Samar, Vimanas were "iron machines, well-knit and smooth,  with a charge of mercury that shot out of the back in the form of a  roaring flame." Another work called the Samaranganasutradhara describes  how the vehicles were constructed. It is possible that mercury did have  something to do with the propulsion, or more possibly, with the guidance  system. 
Curiously, Soviet scientists have discovered what they call "age-old  instruments used in navigating cosmic vehicles" in caves in Turkestan  and the Gobi Desert. The "devices" are hemispherical objects of glass or  porcelain, ending in a cone with a drop of mercury inside. It is  evident that ancient Indians flew around in these vehicles, all over  Asia, to Atlantis presumably; and even, apparently, to South America.  Writing found at Mohenjodaro in Pakistan (presumed to be one of the  "Seven Rishi Cities of the Rama Empire") and still undeciphered, has  also been found in one other place in the world.
Ester Island
Writing on Easter Island, called Rongo-Rongo writing, is also  undeciphered, and is uncannily similar to the Mohenjodaro script. Was  Easter Island an air base for the Rama Empire's Vimana route? (At the  Mohenjo-Daro Vimana-drome, as the passenger walks down the concourse, he  hears the sweet, melodic sound of the announcer over the loudspeaker,  "Rama Airways flight number seven for Bali, Easter Island, Nazca, and  Atlantis is now ready for boarding. Passengers please proceed to gate  number..") in Tibet, no small distance, and speaks of the "fiery  chariot" thus: "Bhima flew along in his car, resplendent as the sun and  loud as thunder... The flying chariot shone like a flame in the night  sky of summer ... it swept by like a comet... It was as if two suns were  shining. Then the chariot rose up and all the heaven brightened." 
In the Mahavira of Bhavabhuti, a Jain text of the eighth century culled  from older texts and traditions, we read: "An aerial chariot, the  Pushpaka, conveys many people to the capital of Ayodhya. The sky is full  of stupendous flying-machines, dark as night, but picked out by lights  with a yellowish glare." The Vedas, ancient Hindu poems, thought to be  the oldest of all the Indian texts, describe Vimanas of various shapes  and sizes: the "ahnihotra- vimana" with two engines, the  "elephant-vimana" with more engines, and other types named after the  kingfisher, ibis and other animals. 
Unfortunately, Vimanas, like most scientific discoveries, were  ultimately used for war. Atlanteans used their flying machines,  "Vailixi," a similar type of aircraft, to literally try and subjugate  the world, it would seem, if Indian texts are to be believed. The  Atlanteans, known as "Asvins" in the Indian writings, were apparently  even more advanced technologically than the Indians, and certainly of a  more war-like temperament. Although no ancient texts on Atlantean  Vailixi are known to exist, some information has come down through  esoteric, "occult" sources which describe their flying machines. 
Similar, if not identical to Vimanas, Vailixi were generally "cigar  shaped" and had the capability of maneuvering underwater as well as in  the atmosphere or even outer space. Other vehicles, like Vimanas, were  saucer shaped, and could apparently also be submerged. 
According to Eklal Kueshana, author of "The Ultimate Frontier," in an  article he wrote in 1966, Vailixi were first developed in Atlantis  20,000 years ago, and the most common ones are "saucer shaped of  generally trapezoidal cross-section with three hemispherical engine pods  on the underside." "They use a mechanical antigravity device driven by  engines developing approximately 80,000 horse power." The Ramayana,  Mahabarata and other texts speak of the hideous war that took place,  some ten or twelve thousand years ago between Atlantis and Rama using  weapons of destruction that could not be imagined by readers until the  second half of this century. 
The ancient Mahabharata, one of the sources on Vimanas, goes on to tell  the awesome destructiveness of the war: "...(the weapon was) a single  projectile charged with all the power of the Universe. An incandescent  column of smoke and flame as bright as the thousand suns rose in all its  splendor... An iron thunderbolt, a gigantic messenger of death, which  reduced to ashes the entire race of the Vrishnis and the Andhakas....  the corpses were so burned as to be unrecognizable. The hair and nails  fell out; pottery broke without apparent cause, and the birds turned  white.... after a few hours all foodstuffs were infected.... to escape  from this fire, the soldiers threw themselves in streams to wash  themselves and their equipment..." It would seem that the Mahabharata is  describing an atomic war! References like this one are not isolated;  but battles, using a fantastic array of weapons and aerial vehicles are  common in all the epic Indian books. One even describes a Vimana-Vailix  battle on the Moon! The above section very accurately describes what an  atomic explosion would look like and the effects of the radioactivity on  the population. Jumping into water is the only respite. 
When the Rishi City of Mohenjodaro was excavated by archaeologists in  the last century, they found skeletons just lying in the streets, some  of them holding hands, as if some great doom had suddenly overtaken  them. These skeletons are among the most radioactive ever found, on a  par with those found at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Ancient cities whose  brick and stonewalls have literally been vitrified, that is-fused  together, can be found in India, Ireland, Scotland, France, Turkey and  other places. There is no logical explanation for the vitrification of  stone forts and cities, except from an atomic blast.  
Furthermore, at Mohenjo-Daro, a well planned city laid on a grid, with a  plumbing system superior to those used in Pakistan and India today, the  streets were littered with "black lumps of glass." These globs of glass  were discovered to be clay pots that had melted under intense heat!  With the cataclysmic sinking of Atlantis and the wiping out of Rama with  atomic weapons, the world collapsed into a "stone age" of sorts, and  modern history picks up a few thousand years later Yet, it would seem  that not all the Vimanas and Vailixi of Rama and Atlantis were gone.  Built to last for thousands of years, many of them would still be in  use, as evidenced by Ashoka's "Nine Unknown Men" and the Lhasa  manuscript. 
That secret societies or "Brotherhoods" of exceptional, "enlightened"  human beings would have preserved these inventions and the knowledge of  science, history, etc., does not seem surprising. Many well known  historical personages including Jesus, Buddha, Lao Tzu, Confucius, Krishna,  Zoroaster, Mahavira, Quetzalcoatl, Akhenaton, Moses, and more recent inventors and of course many other people who will  probably remain anonymous, were probably members of such a secret  organization. 
It is interesting to note that when Alexander the Great invaded India  more than two thousand years ago, his historians chronicled that at one  point they were attacked by "flying, fiery shields" that dove at his  army and frightened the cavalry. These "flying saucers" did not use any  atomic bombs or beam weapons on Alexander's army however, perhaps out of  benevolence, and Alexander went on to conquer India. It has been  suggested by many writers that these "Brotherhoods" keep some of their  Vimanas and Vailixi in secret caverns in Tibet or some other place is  Central Asia, and the Lop Nor Desert in western 
China is known to be the centre of a great UFO mystery. Perhaps it is  here that many of the airships are still kept, in underground bases much  as the Americans, British and Soviets have built around the world in  the past few decades. Still, not all UFO activity can be accounted for  by old Vimanas making trips to the Moon for some reason. 
Undoubtedly, some are from the Military Governments of the world, and  possibly even from other planets. Of course, many UFO sightings are  "swamp, gas, clouds, hoaxes, and hallucinations, while there is  considerable evidence that many UFO sightings, especially "kidnappings"  and the like, are the result of what is generally called "telepathic  hypnosis." 
One common thread that often runs between "Alien kidnappings," "sex with  aliens," and other "close encounters of a third kind" is a buzzing in  the ears just before the encounter. According to many well informed  people, this is a sure sign of telepathic hypnosis
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