Ummo letters

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Ummo letters[1], are over than 200 typed letters (more than 1,300 pages of text featuring a large number of drawings in coloured pencil) received from the mid 1960s, mostly in Spain but also in other countries until 2014. Authors cannot be determined with certainty. These documents were claimed by members of a group present on Earth since March 28, 1950, presenting themselves as emissaries of an extraterrestrial civilization, the "Ummites" (sometimes called "Oummains"), but also claimed by a Spanish telecommunications technician,José Luis Jordán Peña, died on September 9, 2014 in Madrid.

Document format

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The heading is always "UMMOAELEWE", meaning "General Government of Ummo" (as specified in letter D102, for example). The UMMOAELEWE is said to be the supreme hierarchy of the planet UMMO. Many of the documents are unsigned, while others bear only the )+( sign (seal).

Some documents feature handwritten signatures.

These prints or signatures were sometimes completed with a "secret code" ("Farriols code").

Some letters feature slips written on two different describing machines Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).[2][3]

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As soon as 1979, the Spanish journalist Antonio Ribera in " El misterio de Ummo", publicly distributed transcriptions of several of these letters [4]

As these are letters, they belong to their addressees, who may or may not distribute them, possibly with some blacked-out text.

Rafael Farriols has bought them from several recipients, and his family now owns many of the originals, which they are gradually distributing [5]

Other recipients have also circulated the originals of the letters they received, as "GR1 group".

Reference system

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Used by spannish and french

"D" references: from 1966 to 1996, Ignacio Darnaude [6] created and maintained the ummocat [7] of all the events of the Ummo affair and, more broadly, a review of various ufological items.

"NR" references:between 2003 and 2009, letters received in France were classified as "NRn".

"GR1" references:between 2011 and 2014, letters received in Spain were classified as "GR1n".

to be completed

Content of documents

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The various documents cover the following topics: Informations about their star IUMMA (which can be Wolf 424 [8] , their plannet (UMMO) and their planetary system , art of perfume, biology and evolution, chemistry, cosmology (infinity of twin cosmos differentiated by light speed), education, exopolitic, geography, history, language, logic (tetravalent logic), mathematics, metaphysics, philosophy, physics (IBOZOO UU, 10 dimensions), religion, social networking, technology, telepathy, controlled demography, mission on Earth since 1950', exopolitics, description of their interstellar ships, Soul and Collective Soul, OEMIIWOA (Christ), OEMBUAW and BAYOODUU (links between Body, Soul and Collective Soul), Sindon fraud, finalist conception of the evolution of living beings, telepathy, use of titanium memories, plasma engine, disclosure of numerous E.T. races (and location), gravitational waves controlled and used, etc,

For examples (english translated documents):

D33: Indeterminism and free will (letters 1 to 3).
D52: The concept of space - Anticosmos.
D59: Unified field theory - IBOZOO UU (letter 1 to 5).
D69: The Ummo spaceships (letters 1 to 6).
D74 to D81: Who are we? - Where do we come from? - Our relationship with the people of Earth - Dimensional being - Language and logic - The ontological foundations of philosophy - The concept of Woa (God) - Gnoseology - Morality on Ummo,
D105: Soul and time - The collective mind - The IBOZOO UU - The pluricosmos.
D357 + D371: The collective planetary soul - The two limit universes - Twin cosmos - Post-mortem experiences- Synopsis Waam-Waam - The pluricosmos - The two limit universes -The collective planetary soul.
D539 : Abortion problems.
NR13 to NR22 : This collection of letters received in France between 2003 and 2009 covers a wide range of subjects.

The Ummite language

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On the basis of letters, it is difficult to speak of an Ummite language. All we have, apart from a few complete sentences, is a lexicon, a set of vocables, the vast majority of which are given to us in isolation. mentions 403 words ummites in a 1978 compilation [9] and Jean Pollion, in Ummo, de vrais extraterrestres (2002), lists over a thousand words considering that every doubling of a letter in a word is significant.

Two theories have been formulated by analysts of Ummite letters:

  • the first, defended by Jean Pollion, considers that each letter (sound or phoneme) in words transcribed in typewritten form is signifying, and he has called these sounds "soncepts". He considers this to be an "ideophonemic" language[10] :

    "By analogy with ideographic languages, which proceed by assembling ideas corresponding to written and pronounceable signs, I have chosen to attribute to this language the "ideophonemic" character. To date, I have counted 17 phonemes by associative combinations of these phonemes, almost all of which are relational"

    .
  • The second considers that differences in spelling (especially the doubling of letters) are of little significance, and that they are due to differences in the understanding of foreign sounds by the typist(s), or to difficulties in alphabetic transcription. They consider that language is made up of word-objects and not of "soncepts".

Who wrote these letters?

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Various hypotheses had been put forward as to the identity of the perpetrators. With irony, the Ummites themselves, in letter D73 [11] list some thirty possibilities.

Thus, there is no consensus: skeptics believe that the letters are more or less elaborate forgeries and that José Luis Jordán Peña was behind the first letters

In 1992 José Luis Jordán Peña claimed, without providing any evidence, to be the author of the documents, as well as being the originator of false photographs ( San Jose de Valderas) on June 1, 1967[12]

Eighteen years later, in a letter addressed to Ignacio Darnaude and posted on 5 November 2010, José Luis Jordán Peña provides further clarification on his talks: Some of the letters and writings are the work of jokers imitating his style. He also points out that collaborators (e.g. Vicente Ortuno, Norman West, John Child, M. Carrascosa, Alberto Borras, T. Pastrami, Sean O'Connelly, Iker J.) sent letters from distant places. He reports that he was initially contacted by two American doctors (he had previously claimed that they were CIA agents working for a foreign agency who offered him, for a salary, to carry out a sociological experiment in the interests of Western culture, which he accepted).

There is no doubt, however, that José Luis Jordán Peña was at least one of the illustrators of these documents, according to Alberto Noguera's perfectly documented study[13] who write in conclusion:

For me, after this documentary analysis, four things are clearly, reliably and definitively demonstrated:

1. There are at least two different types of UMMO letter.

2. The letters were written under dictation or by copying from a draft.

3. The authorship of the letters does not correspond to either typist, as the style is the same in all the letters.

4. The letters were sent from different countries at almost the same time.

Moreover, I would add two facts with a very high degree of probability:

1. There is a fourth person, who is the spellchecker.

2. There is a designer, who may or may not coincide with the spellchecker, who is Jordán Peña.

See also

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References

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Citations

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  1. ^ Ummo (in the initial Spanish transcription), Oummo (in French pronunciation) and Oomo (in English prononciation), is the name of an alleged planet which is said to lie approximately 14. 4 Light-years from the Earth
  2. ^ Jean-Pierre Petit], Le mystère des Ummites : une science venue d'une autre planète?, Albin Michel, 1995, ISBN 2226078452.
  3. ^ Jean-Pierre Petit, Ovnis et armes secrètes américaines : L'extraordinaire témoignage d'un scientifique, Albin Michel, 2003, coll. Aux marches de la science, 270p, ISBN 2253114944 and https://januscosmologicalmodel.com/
  4. ^ Translated in french under the title "Les extra-terrestres sont-ils parmi nous ?: Le véritable langage UMMO" - ISBN-13: 978-2268012902 - Éditeur Editions du Rocher, 1991.
  5. ^ Some forty originals of the letters can be downloaded from the second column (Original PDF scan) on the spanish web site https://ummo-ciencias.org/cartas.html page.
  6. ^ https://www.ivoox.com/voces-del-misterio-n-606-ignacio-darnaude-el-audios-mp3_rf_26821370_1.html
  7. ^ Darnaude catalog download links
    - first part on http://www.ummo-sciences.org/es/UMMOCAT/UmmoCat1.zip
    - second part on http://www.ummo-sciences.org/es/UMMOCAT/UmmoCat2.zip .
  8. ^ The first letter referenced (D21 from early 1966) states

    distance from IUMMA (star of UMMO, can be Wolf 424), to the Sun: the apparent distance, i.e. that which a coherent beam of waves would follow in three-dimensional space was on January 4, 1955 : 14.437 ly

    The real distance (straight distance in decadimensional space) was on the same date, according to our measurement: 3.685 light-years

    The first distance is the one used by terrestrial astronomers for their calculations (disregarding the curvatures of light as it passes through fields of high gravitational intensity), such a distance is "constant" for two bodies fixed in space. The second distance is a function of time, measured in an N-dimensional space, and has a certain periodicity. Its measurement is very important as it relates to our galactic travels.

    One letter (D41-1, probably received on January 14, 1966) estimates the distance between the respective foci of the stellar systems at 3.68502 ly le January 4, 1955. Another letter dated March 18, 1966 (D32) states that the star around which UMMO would orbit is "perhaps" Wolf 424

    We're not sure it's the same star, although the characteristics and position recorded by some terrestrial observatories coincide surprisingly well with our own data

    .

    Skeptics argue that the distance quoted of 3.685 light-years corresponds to that measured by Yerkes' laboratory in 1938 (3.6 to 3.8 al) for Wolf 424, although Yerkes corrected this to 14.4 al as early as 1952.

  9. ^ Antonio Ribera Les Extra-terrestres sont-ils parmi nous? Le véritable langage Ummo (original Spanish title: El misterio de Ummo in 1979), translated by J. J. Pastor, Éditions du Rocher, 1984 and 1991, ISBN 2-268-012-905; p. 217
  10. ^ Jean Pollion, Ummo, de vrais extraterrestres!", Éditions Aldane, June 2002, page 281.
  11. ^ "D73".
  12. ^ "Article 11-1 : Les evenements d'Aluche et de san Jose de valderas (1/4)".
  13. ^ "La mecanografía de UMMO".

Bibliography

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In French

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  • Jacques Vallée, Le collège invisible, Éditions Albin Michel, 1975 (trans. from English The Invisible College, 1975).
  • Antonio Ribera and Rafael Farriols, Preuves de l'existence des soucoupes volantes (original Spanish title: Un caso perfecto), Éditions de Vecchi, 1975.
  • Martine Castello, Philippe Chambon and Isabelle Blanc La conspiration des étoiles. Les Ummos : terrestres ou extraterrestres ?, Éditions Robert Laffont, 1991, ISBN 978-2-2210-7016-1.
  • Jean Sider, Ummo : Les raisons d'un doute, in Lumières dans la nuit, February 1991.
  • Jacques Vallée, Révélations, Éditions Robert Laffont, 1992.
  • Dominique Caudron, Les Ummoristes sont parmi nous , in the collective book edited by Thierry Pinvidic, OVNI. Vers une anthropologie d'un mythe contemporain, Éditions Heimdal, 1993.
  • Renaud Marhic, L'affaire Ummo : les extraterrestres qui venaient du froid, Éditions Les Classiques du Mystère, 1993.
  • Renaud Marhic, La mystification d'Ummo : des aveux qui appartiennent à l'histoire, in Phénomèna No. 19, January-février 1994.
  • Jean Pollion, Ummo, de vrais extraterrestres !, Éditions Aldane, 2002.
  • Christel Seval Ummo - Un dieu venu d'ailleurs?

Le Temps Présent (France), 2011, ISBN : 2351850882 ; 978-2351850886

  • Stone GardenteapotUmmo, l'avertissement 2016, Èditions Atlantes (France) ISBN : 2362770214 ; 978-2362770210
  • Stone Gardenteapot Oummo : L'effet Quetzalcoatl , 2018, Èditions Atlantes (France), ISBN : 2362770532 ; 978-2362770531
  • Jean-Claude Bourret, Jean-Pierre Petit ,2018 : Contacts cosmiques; Jusqu'où peut-on penser trop loin ? »

Guy Trédaniel éditeur (France), ISBN : 2813218111 ; 978-2813218117

In Spanish

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  • Fernando Sesma Manzano, Yo, confidente de los hombres del espacio, Editorial Graficas Espejo, 1965.
  • Fernando Sesma Manzano, UMMO, otro planeta habitado, Editorial Graficas Espejo, 1967,
  • Oscar Rey Brea, Algo sobre las fotografias del supuesto ovni de San José de Valderas
  • Antonio Ribera and Rafael Farriols, Un caso perfecto, Barcelona, 1968; republished in 1973 by Plaza & Janés, Barcelona.
  • Father Enrique Lopez Guerrero, Mirando a la lejania del universo, Plaza & Janés, Barcelona, 1978.
  • Antonio Ribera, El Misterio de Ummo, Plaza & Janés, Barcelona, 1979.
  • Juan Dominguez Montes, El pluricosmos, Éditions Libreria Agora S. A., 1983, ISBN 84-85698-14-2.
  • Antonio Ribera la increible verdad Collection Otros horizontes Plaza & Janés Barcelona, 1985 ISBN =84-01-47201-6 .
  • Antonio Ribera UMMO informa a la Tierra.
  • Rafael Farriols, EL hombre, El cosmos y Dios, D'Arbo Productions, S. L. Collection: La punta del Iceberg, 1999, ISBN 84-605-8814-9.
  • Vicenç Solé i Ferré, A la Búsqueda de un mecanismo evolutivo inteligente, 2003, ISBN 84-933294-2-8.
  • J. Benítez El hombre que susurraba a los ummitas, Barcelona: Editorial Planeta, 2007, ISBN 9788408071488.
In English
  • Jerome Clark, Ummo Hoax, in The UFO Encyclopedia Volume 3, 1996.
  • John R. Heapes, Other Worlds, Universe, 2014 (development on the Ummo planet, p. 101-122).
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