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Friday, January 26, 2018

Healing the Effects of the Holocaust

Tomorrow, January 27th, is International Holocaust Remembrance Day, and we would like to not only honor the day, but introduce our plan to heal the effects of the Holocaust.

Our Genocide Museum will be located next to the first Faith of the Pure Ray church in Zurich, Switzerland.

Prior to World War II, the Jews in Europe had managed to establish a remarkable society of wealth and capacity, with famous composers, artists and authors producing masterpieces. The Germans were proud of their own capacity built on hard-work and excellence, but their sense of judgment of the Jews allowed them to justify perpetrating a genocide against the Jews. Imagine what was lost when these remarkable people were killed or forced to flee. 

What has been lost is far more than personal possessions or potential works of art.

Traumatic events leave rifts in the region, which are tears in the energy fabric of the planet. Rifts last long after the original event has been forgotten, and leave a sense of helplessness and hopelessness in the people. No matter how much energy is put into the region, it will just drain away until the rift is healed.

The Genocide Museum will help us all to remember the contributions to society the Jews of the era made, and the Faith of the Pure Ray church will help to heal the rifts associated with the genocide, and to allow the people of the region to once again prosper.