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JUNE – JULY 2002 www.nexusmagazine.com NEXUS • 61One of humanity's greatest challenges lies in the effort it takes to adopt new perspectives while utilising old belief systems in order to steer a course towardsthe best possible future. This challenge is constantly in conflict withestablished belief systems relating to our past, present and future, for these belief systems are the central wheels of the academic hierarchy, involving all aspects ofhumanity including religion. Many of us are only just coming around to the realisation that civilisation was indeed thriving and highly evolved in our ancient past. With each day that passes and each newdiscovery that comes to light, the truth of this is more and more difficult to ignore ordeny. Consider for a moment that our ancestors knew that their civilisation was facing natural disasters and cataclysmic changes. Would they have had the foresight into our future tocreate a mandate and provide future descendants with time capsules containing theirknowledge and experiences? Absolutely! We can say that with certainty, for we are reallyno different today in that respect. There is now a strong and growing body of evidence indicating that the Bock Saga is such a time capsule, containing knowledge allegedly dating back more than 50 millionyears. According to the Saga, it was decreed over 10,000 years ago that the survivingBock family would release the information in 1984, and not before. It was perceived thatby this date, human genetics would once more have the capacity for wholeness, enablingpeople to understand how to live in harmony with nature and each other and thereforeproperly utilise the information. Is the information contained in the Bock Saga true and, more to the point, is it accurate? Time will tell. This article is merely an introduction to the astounding wealth of rareknowledge that is being presented by Ior Bock, who, as the last surviving descendant ofthe Bock family, is entrusted with the keys to its resurrection. In the 1980s, a group called The Positive Foundation came together to begin excavation in an area near Helsinki in Finland, which is believed to be the location of LemminkäinenTemple. According to the Bock Saga, within the Temple's hidden halls there is to befound a repository of human knowledge and existence on our planet dating back millionsof years. THE ROLE OF IOR BOCK IN THE SAGA Ior (pronounced ee-or) Bock was born on 17 January 1942. His father, Knut Victor Bockström, died on 11 May 1942. At that time, only three members of the Bock familyremained: Ior, his mother Rhea and his sister Rachel. After his father died, Ior was adopted by a man named Bror Gustaf Bertil Svedlin and his name was changed to Bror Holger Bertil Svedlin. Svedlin died in 1950 when Ior waseight years old. In March 1968, Ior reclaimed his original family name. From the age of seven, Ior sat with Rhea and Rachel every day to listen to and learn the family tradition of the Bock Saga. He was not allowed to ask questions through these ses-sions, as it is considered that one learns more by listening than by talking. According to Ior, the Saga is based largely on the teaching of sounds, which must be heard and experienced, and therefore it has been passed down orally from generation togeneration in this way. Each descendent was taught from the age of seven to the age of27, for it took 20 years to comprehend and master this knowledge. Thus the Saga wastransmitted to Ior through the years 1949 to 1969. TTHEHEBBOCKOCKSSAGAAGA AANNAANCIENTNCIENT TTIMEIMECCAPSULEAPSULE The oral tradition of the Bock Saga, said to have been passed down over countless thousands of years, suggests that the original inhabitants of Finland were the first people. by Les Whale © 2002 PO Box 5055 Sunshine Coast Mail Centre Nambour Qld 4560 Australia Email: lesw@austarnet.com.au Website: http://www.sshoesmith.fsnet.co.uk/