José Rizal
José Rizal was an exceptionally gifted person. His family was also exceptional. His parents were both well educated. His father, Francisco Mercado Rizal (1818-1898), studied Latin and Philosophy at the College of San Jose in Manila and his mother, Doña Teodora Alonso Realonda (1826-1911), was educated at the College of Santa Rosa. José's brother Paciano, who was ten years older than José, shielded young José from the cruel Spanish Friars. Young José was home schooled. Paciano helped José to study in Europe after José had received his Bachelor of Arts at the Ateneo de Manila and his medical degree at the age of 21 from the University of Santo Tomas.
José Rizal was a Polymath. A Polymath is defined as a person whose expertise spans a significant number of different subject areas; such a person is known to draw on complex bodies of knowledge to solve specific problems. We also know from José Rizal's diary and his two novels that he was psychic. Thirteen years before he faced the firing squad, José Rizal wrote that he dreamt that he almost died. Rizal's biographer Coates, wrote: "The prescience of Rizal, in which dreams contributed only a small part, was extraordinary, verging on the psychic. In his novels there are numerous scenes describing incidents which, long after the books were published, and heaven knows with no volition on his part, actually took place, in strangely similar conditions, in his own life. In some cases, the resemblance between the fictional scene and the subsequent actual event is so close that in memory one is apt to confuse the two. I can think of nothing else quite like this in literature." José Rizal was fluent in twenty-two languages, learning the last three languages when he was in exile in a remote island in the Philippines, Dapitan, where he established a school. The priests threatened excommunication to any family who allowed their son to continue under Dr. Rizal's lessons. When all was said and done, the church reduced his following to 12 disciples wishing to continue their teachings from the master for a period of three years.
José Rizal was a Polymath. A Polymath is defined as a person whose expertise spans a significant number of different subject areas; such a person is known to draw on complex bodies of knowledge to solve specific problems. We also know from José Rizal's diary and his two novels that he was psychic. Thirteen years before he faced the firing squad, José Rizal wrote that he dreamt that he almost died. Rizal's biographer Coates, wrote: "The prescience of Rizal, in which dreams contributed only a small part, was extraordinary, verging on the psychic. In his novels there are numerous scenes describing incidents which, long after the books were published, and heaven knows with no volition on his part, actually took place, in strangely similar conditions, in his own life. In some cases, the resemblance between the fictional scene and the subsequent actual event is so close that in memory one is apt to confuse the two. I can think of nothing else quite like this in literature." José Rizal was fluent in twenty-two languages, learning the last three languages when he was in exile in a remote island in the Philippines, Dapitan, where he established a school. The priests threatened excommunication to any family who allowed their son to continue under Dr. Rizal's lessons. When all was said and done, the church reduced his following to 12 disciples wishing to continue their teachings from the master for a period of three years.
There is eye-witness testimony of the events that morning which confirm biography accounts of changes to regular firing squad protocols on the morning of December 30, 1896. If José Rizal did indeed survive the shooting, he would have been smuggled out of the Philippines and upon recovering from his wounds, Rizal would have eventually joined the Jesuits under the alias name. Legend again has it that Dr. Rizal took the name Reverend Father Jose Antonio Diaz. Whether he did indeed survive the firing squad or not, Mike Brakey, who did about 95% of the research for this program, has concluded that Rizal made provisions to carry out a secret operation against both the Friars in the short-term and the Vatican in the long-term.
Between 1896 and 1942 it is believed a brilliant Pilipino, Reverend Father Jose Antonio Diaz ascended through the Jesuit ranks. He may have risen to second or third in command of the Jesuits and reported directly to the Black Pope—the Superior General of the Jesuits, Wlodimir Ledochowski. After twenty-seven years as the 26th Black Pope, Ledochowski, age 74, suddenly dies December 13, 1942. Now the printed records of the Church indicate, due to the chaos of World War II, no Black Pope was officially elected until September 15, 1946. Jean Baptiste Janssens is presently recorded as the 27th Black Pope.
See link: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superior_General_of_the_Society_of_Jesus
Between 1896 and 1942 it is believed a brilliant Pilipino, Reverend Father Jose Antonio Diaz ascended through the Jesuit ranks. He may have risen to second or third in command of the Jesuits and reported directly to the Black Pope—the Superior General of the Jesuits, Wlodimir Ledochowski. After twenty-seven years as the 26th Black Pope, Ledochowski, age 74, suddenly dies December 13, 1942. Now the printed records of the Church indicate, due to the chaos of World War II, no Black Pope was officially elected until September 15, 1946. Jean Baptiste Janssens is presently recorded as the 27th Black Pope.
See link: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superior_General_of_the_Society_of_Jesus
Hidden Wealth
During this time of chaos and immediately after WWII, it is alleged, Jose Rizal, under an alias name (Reverend Father Jose Antonio Diaz) for 46 years (Rizal would then be 71 years old), was entrusted with the Vatican’s gold. He had also gained access to the bulk of the Japanese and German gold looted from around the world in the first half of the 20th century. Jose Rizal put it in a trust fund, had it melted down in Singapore and stamped and drew up legal documents and got all the leaders at the time, including Eisenhower, Truman, etc. to agree to keep it secret for fifty years, then prepare the entire world for a financial reset in the early part of the 21st century. If all went as Rizal anticipated, the Vatican bankers would be on the edge of bankruptcy from the gold that had been looted from them. If the gold was not released to the world in a timely manner, mankind might enter another Dark Age upon financial collapse of the international bankers.
Recap: We have been talking about José Rizal, the polymath who experienced first-hand the ills of Spanish colonial rule, and then went to the Vatican under the pseudonym Fr. José Antonio Diaz. After rising through the ranks, José Rizal (Trustee for the elite) and his lawyer, Ferdinand Marcos, set up a trust of the world's monetary gold and other treasures for the world's people to inherit after 50 years. This is the hidden treasures... the hidden wealth... inside the Global Debt Facility. - Karen Hudes
Recap: We have been talking about José Rizal, the polymath who experienced first-hand the ills of Spanish colonial rule, and then went to the Vatican under the pseudonym Fr. José Antonio Diaz. After rising through the ranks, José Rizal (Trustee for the elite) and his lawyer, Ferdinand Marcos, set up a trust of the world's monetary gold and other treasures for the world's people to inherit after 50 years. This is the hidden treasures... the hidden wealth... inside the Global Debt Facility. - Karen Hudes