The great secret of Tibet hidden from ordinary people. What was Himmler trying to find?

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The great secret of Tibet is hidden from ordinary people. What was Himmler trying to find?



About a year before the outbreak of World War II, a group of Germans secretly

 landed on the eastern border of India. They were on a mission to discover the

 source of the Aryan race. Adolf Hitler believed that the Aryan people of northern

 Europe entered India from the north about 1,500 years ago and the

 Aryans had committed the crime of mixing with the local non-Aryan people and

 had lost the traits that made them superior to other races on Earth. Hitler

 repeatedly expressed his deep hatred for the Indian people and the system for

 freedom and revealed this position in his speeches, writings, and discussions.

 However,


 according to Himmler, one of Hitler's top aides and head of the SS, the Indian

 subcontinent was and still is worthy of closer examination. Hence Hitler's interest

 in Tibet. Those who believed in the idea of ​​the existence of a superior white

 The Scandinavian race believed in the vision of the imaginary lost city of Atlantis

 where people once lived. It is believed that it was located somewhere between

 England and Portugal in the Atlantic Ocean. It is claimed that this legendary island

 sank after being struck by The theory that all the surviving robots moved to

 safer places, including the Himalayas, especially Tibet, which was described as the

 roof of the world. In 1935, Himmler created a unit within the SS called the Ancestral

 Heritage Library, whose mission was to find out where people went after fleeing

 Atlantis after the lightning and the flood, and if traces of the great race remained

 and could be excavated. In 1938, Hitler sent a team of five Germans to


From five Germany forever as part of a search operation. Two members of the team

 played a prominent role, one of whom was Erth Schwab, a talented 28-year-old

 zoologist who had visited the Indo-China-Tibetan border twice earlier. Schwab

 joined the SS shortly after the Nazi victory in the elections in 1933. Shortly before

 Himmler became the sponsor of the Tibet mission, Schwab was very passionate

 about hunting and loved collecting souvenirs in his home in Berlin during one of

 the hunting trips and while trying to shoot a duck from a boat he and his wife were

 in. He slipped as he aimed the gun and the bullet went off, hitting his wife in the

 head and killing her.


The second man was Bruno Bega, a young anthropologist who had joined the SS in

 1935. Bega took measurements of skulls and facial details of Tibetans, made face

 masks and, in particular, collected material on genealogy and origins. The

 importance and development of the Northern Hemisphere.


In this area, the ship carrying the five Germans docked in Sri Lanka in early May

 1938. From there, they took another ship to the schools now included in the village

 and then a third ship to Karakata. The British authorities in India were wary of the

 German passengers thought they were spies. They were initially reluctant to

 allow them to pass through India. The Times of India, which was run by Britain at

 the time, even ran the accusatory headline that


The Gestapo agent in India said that the British political officer in the northeastern

 The Indian state of Sikkim, which was then an independent mountain kingdom, was

 not keen to grant permission for the men to reach Tibet through the population,

 but in The end, the determination and resolve of the Nazi team won out, and by

 the end of the year the five Germans had entered Tibet. The swastika was raised on

 their mules and luggage. The swastika is common everywhere in Tibet. Schiffer and

 the team had seen many of these crosses during their time in India. It had been a

 symbol of good luck for ages and to this day it is seen outside homes, 


inside temples, on street corners, and on carriages and trucks. Tibet had undergone

 many changes during the German team’s stay there. The thirteenth Lama had died

 in 1933, and the new Dollar Lama had only been three years old. Therefore, the

 intermediary was running the affairs of the Buddhist kingdom of Tibet. The

 Germans were treated exceptionally well by the guardians as well as by ordinary

 Tibetans, to the point that Becker, who had made the face masks, worked as a

 doctor treating the people of the region for a time. What the Tibetan Buddhists did

 not know was that in the evil imagination of the Nazis, Buddhism, like Hinduism,


 was the religion that had weakened the racial purity of the Aryans who had taken

 refuge in Tibet and ultimately caused them to lose their spirit and strength when

 The opportunity came for the team to recover and for the team members to spend

 more time doing the real research they had come for under the guise of scientific

 research in fields such as zoology and anthropology. The expedition was abruptly

 halted in August 1939 when the Second World War loomed.


By then, Beger had taken measurements of 376 Tibetan skulls and features, made

 casts of the heads, faces, hands, and genitals of 17 people, and collected the

 fingerprints and hands of 350 others. He had also collected 2,000 ethnographic

 artifacts. Another member of the expedition had photographed 18,000 meters of

 black-and-white film and taken 40,000 photographs. When the expedition was

 halted, Himmler arranged for the team to leave via Karakatha at the last minute,

 and he himself was present to welcome them when their plane landed in Munich.


Schafer took most of his seven treasures to a castle in Salzburg and moved there

 during the war, but once the Allied forces arrived In 1945 the citadel was raided and

 most of the Tibetan photographs and other resources were destroyed. The so-

called scientific results of the expedition's work were the same fate as the materials

 in Schiff's possession, either lost or destroyed. Because of the Nazi government's

 shameful past, no one tried to trace the fate of these materials and research in the

 aftermath of the war.


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