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French village faces influx of apocalypse believers

emina

Devoted Cultist
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Mar 6, 2010
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From the BBC today:

French village faces influx of apocalypse believers

A French mayor has expressed concern over an influx of New Age believers to his village who are convinced they will escape the end of the world in 2012.

Jean-Pierre Delord, mayor of Bugarach, says rumours are circulating that the village offers shelter from an impending Armageddon.

Bugarach is a small village of about 200 people in south-west France.

The mayor says that in recent years the village has attracted visitors looking for alien activity.

Now it is seeing visitors who predict that the end of civilisation is due to occur in two years' time, he says.

They believe the world will end on 21 December 2012, the end of a 5,125-year-long cycle in the ancient Maya calendar.
'Esoteric visitors'

Mr Delord says he has raised the issue with regional authorities.

"I'm worried because the population of our village is only 200 people and... we risk having a flood from all the corners of the earth," he told RTL radio.

"There are already some websites in the US with some people selling tickets for trips to Bugarach. They are doing some business, and people are already organising visits and prayer and meditation workshops, etc," he added.

"A few hundred coming every year isn't a problem, is it? But we mustn't have thousands coming altogether."

Many of the visitors believe that a group of aliens is hiding in a cavern in Bugarach's 1,231m mountain who will leave when the world ends and take them with them, according to the Sydney Morning Herald.

Sigrid Benard, who runs the Maison de la Nature guesthouse, said she was seeing a rise in those who held the belief.

"At first, my clientele was 72% ramblers. Today, I have 68% 'esoteric visitors'," she told AFP news agency.

The myth of a 2012 doomsday originates in claims that Nibiru, a supposed planet discovered by the Sumerians, is headed toward Earth, according to the US space agency Nasa. That theory then became linked to dates in the Mayan calendar.

However, Nasa states on its website: "Nothing bad will happen to the Earth in 2012. Our planet has been getting along just fine for more than four billion years, and credible scientists worldwide know of no threat associated with 2012."

Honestly! What a whinger! He's got it made whatever happens.

Either (a) the world ends and he's the mayor of the only surviving town or (b) the world doesn't end and he gets to separate some fools from their cash.

Nasa are always such spoil-sports when it comes to the end of the world too!
 
Yes, that is what I was thinking.

Surley the Maya didnt plan this?
 
Honestly! What a whinger! He's got it made whatever happens.

Either (a) the world ends and he's the mayor of the only surviving town or (b) the world doesn't end and he gets to separate some fools from their cash.

But in both cases hes left with a bunch of crusties with a can of cider in one hand and a dog on a piece of string in the other waiting for their benefit cheques.
 
Kondoru said:
Oh, surely they will be more interesting than that!

Indeed they are! Apparently they include Francois Mitterand, nudists, the Nazis, alien watchers, the aliens themselves, Mosad, Steven Spielberg, a cave-dwelling cult, some playboy gurus and Jules Verne.

This just gets better and better! :D

This from The Telegraph:

Bugarach, population 189, is a peaceful farming village in the Aude region, southwestern France and sits at the foot of the Pic de Bugarach, the highest mountain in the Corbières wine-growing area.

But in the past few months, the quiet village has been inundated by groups of esoteric outsiders who believe the peak is an "alien garage".

According to them, extraterrestrials are quietly waiting in a massive cavity beneath the rock for the world to end, at which point they will leave, taking, it is hoped, a lucky few humans with them.

Most believe Armageddon will take place on December 21, 2012, the end date of the ancient Maya calendar, at which point they predict human civilisation will come to an end. Another favourite date mentioned is 12, December, 2012. They see Bugarach as one of perhaps several "sacred mountains" sheltered from the cataclysm.

"This is no laughing matter," Jean-Pierre Delord, the mayor, told The Daily Telegraph.

"If tomorrow 10,000 people turn up, as a village of 200 people we will not be able to cope. I have informed the regional authorities of our concerns and want the army to be at hand if necessary come December 2012."

Mr Delord said people had been coming to the village for the past 10 years or so in search of alien life following a post in an UFO review by a local man, who has since died. "He claimed he had seen aliens and heard the humming of their spacecraft under the mountain," he said.

The internet abounds with tales of the late President François Mitterrand being curiously heliported on to the peak, of mysterious digs conducted by the Nazis and later Mossad, the Israeli secret services.

A visit to Bugarach is said to have inspired Steven Spielberg in his film, Close Encounters of the Third Kind – although the actual mountain he used is Devil's Tower in Wyoming. It is also where Jules Verne found the entrance and the inspiration for A Journey to the Centre of the Earth.

Recently, however, interest in the site had skyrocketed, said the mayor, with online UFO websites, many in the US, advising people to seek shelter in Bugarach as the countdown to Armageddon commences.

"Many come and pray on the mountainside. I've even seen one man doing some ritual totally nude up there," said Mr Delord.

Sigrid Benard, who runs the Maison de la Nature guesthouse, said UFO tourists were taking over. "At first, my clientele was 72 per cent ramblers. Today, I have 68 per cent 'esoteric visitors'," he said.

Several "Ufologists" have bought up properties in the small hamlet of Le Linas, in the mountain's shadow for "extortionate" prices, and locals have complained they are being priced out of the market. Strange sect-like courses are held for up to €800 a week. "For this price, you are introduced to a guru, made to go on a procession, offered a christening and other rubbish, all payable in cash," said Mr Delord.

Valerie Austin, a retired Briton from Newcastle who settled in Bugarach 22 years ago who said the alien watchers were spoiling the village atmosphere.

"You can't go for a peaceful walk anymore. It's a beautiful area, but now you find people chanting lying around meditating. Everybody has the right to their own beliefs, but the place no longer feels like ours." She said alien watchers planted strange objects on the mountainside.

Recently she found a black virgin statuette cemented to the rock face.

Although she described the alien claims as "total rubbish", she said there was nevertheless something special about the place.

"It has a magnetic force in the scientific sense of the word. There is a special feeling here, but if I really believed the world were about to end, I'd have a whale of a time over the next two years" rather than look for salvation, she said.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstop ... itors.html
 
these people are very lucky....Not only are they getting a very mixed variety of nuts, property prices are going up.
 
Kondoru said:
these people are very lucky....Not only are they getting a very mixed variety of nuts, property prices are going up.

Well, if it's to be taken literally, it doesn't seem like the houses will survive the apocalypse though. Looks like everyone'll have to cram into the cave!
 
More and more people are apparently heading there.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...or-rescue-aboard-alien-spaceship-7584492.html
"A genial sexagenarian, Mr Delord says: "We've seen a huge rise in visitors. Already this year more than 20,000 people have climbed right to the top, and last year we had 10,000 hikers, which was a significant rise on the previous 12 months. They think Pic de Bugarach is 'un garage à ovnis' [an alien garage]. The villagers are exasperated: the exaggerated importance of something which they see as completely removed from reality is bewildering. After 21 December, this will surely return to normal.""
 
A few years back I did a 'In the footsteps of the Cathars' walking holiday and the Pech de Bugarach was on route. This was long before all this stuff started, but it is a very impressive looking mountain with a real atmosphere and I commented at the time that our little party looked like the Hobbits on the way to Mount Doom.

PechdeBugurach.jpg
 
Shouldn't that be 'Croûte sans leurs chiens'.

We went from Montsegur (last stand of the Cathars), via the Gorge de Galamus which has a very strange church on the site of a hermitage in a cleft in the rocks, and through Renne les Chateau, all of which had mystical or weird connections, but passed by Pech de Bugarach, which looked as though it should have stories attached to it, but didn't at the time, or at least none that had reached Fortean Times.

There was a very atmospheric little inn in the village, it looked a lot like those ones you see in old movies, where the villagers warn you about strange happenings....
 
Umm, its often isolated hills and peaks that are associated with lights, isnt it?
 
French officials ban access to sacred mountain which believers claim will be refuge from 'Mayan apocalypse on December 21'
  • * Rumours say the mountain will burst open on December 21 to reveal an alien spaceship which will save those nearby from the apocalypse
    * French police will control access to the mountain and village to stop expected hordes of New Age fanatics, sightseers and journalists
    * December 21 is the estimated end of the Mayan long calendar, which some believes marks the end of the world as we know it
Fears the end of the Mayan calendar predicts the end of the world this coming December have run rife on the internet in recent years.

Less well known is the rumour that one particular mountain in south-west France will burst open on that day revealing an alien spaceship which will carry nearby humans to safety.

Well, if you were counting on that possibility to save you from the apocalypse, prepare to be disappointed. French officials have banned access to the Pic de Bugarach to avoid a rush of New Age fanatics, sightseers and, above all, journalists.

A hundred police and firefighters will also control approaches to the tiny village of the same name at the foot of the mountain, and if too many people turn up, they will block access there too.

Believers say the world will end on December 21, 2012, the end date of the ancient Mayan calendar, and they see Bugarach as one of a few sacred mountains sheltered from the cataclysm.

Eric Freysselinard, France's top official in the area, told AFP: 'We are expecting a few visionaries, a few people who believe in this end of the world, but in extremely limited numbers.

'We are expecting greater numbers of people who are just curious, but in numbers we cannot determine. Above all, we are expecting lots of journalists.'

Full story at http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... ccess.html
 
A hundred police and firefighters will also control approaches to the tiny village of the same name at the foot of the mountain, and if too many people turn up, they will block access there too.

Oh dear, thats hardly enough.
 
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