Elizabeth Klarer

Elizabeth Klarer (née Woollatt; 1 July 1910 – February 1994) was a South African woman who claimed to have been contacted by aliens multiple times between 1954 and 1963.[1] Klarer's first visitation would have occurred around seven years old and she was one of the first women to claim a sexual relationship with an extraterrestrial.[2] She promoted an ideal of a better world and beliefs in a cosmic consciousness.[3][4] In her book Beyond the Light Barrier, she strived to convey a message of peace, love, understanding and environmentalism, which she credited to the superior wisdom of an advanced and immaculately utopian Venusian civilization.[5][6] She promoted conspiracy theories of an international cover-up which would essentially keep vital information from the public,[7] and claimed to have been threatened with abduction to press her into revealing details about alien technology.[4][6]

Elizabeth Klarer
Cathkin Peak plateau 29°04′29″S 29°21′04″E, supposed scene of a day-long rendezvous with Akon during which Ayling was conceived.
Born1 July 1910
Diedearly February 1994
NationalitySouth African
Known forClaimed to have been contacted by extraterrestrials between 1954 and 1963
Home townVereeniging, Parktown and Towerby in Johannesburg
Spouse(s)William Stafford Phillips (m. 1932)
Paul Klarer (m. 1946)
Aubrey Fielding (m. 1963)
ChildrenMarilyn Phillips (b. 1933)
David Klarer (b. 1949)
Ayling (b. 1959) (see text)
Parents
  • Samuel Bancroft Woollatt (father)
  • Florence Marshall (mother)
RelativesBarbara (sister, b. 1908), May and Jock (sister and brother-in-law)

Biography

Elizabeth was born in 1910 at Mooi River, Natal,[8] as the youngest daughter of SB and Florence Woollatt. SB was a pioneering veterinary surgeon who subsequently settled at Connington farm near Rosetta in the Natal midlands. Here he became a successful shorthorn farmer, and as dedicated polo player, introduced young people to the sport.[9]

Here, at age seven, Elizabeth and her older sister Barbara also had their first supposed UFO encounter.[10] While feeding their Sealyham puppies outside the farmhouse Elizabeth and her sister claimed that they witnessed a silver disc bathed in a pearly luster which swooped over them. Simultaneously a giant, orange-red and cratered planetoid was observed orbiting and rotating high in the atmosphere.[3][11] The disc would have rushed to meet it, pacing and guiding it northwards, while the planetoid left a smoke trail in its wake.[5]

Only months later she would have had another sighting in the company of Ladam, their Zulu farm manager.[6] Ladam interpreted the sighting in terms of Zulu mythology. Elizabeth sometimes alluded to an even earlier sighting, at age three in 1913/14.[12]

Elizabeth matriculated from St. Anne's Diocesan College in Pietermaritzburg, and moved to Florence, Italy, to study art and music. Thereafter she completed a four-year diploma in meteorology at Girton College, Cambridge,[7] and was taught by her first husband to fly a Tiger Moth light aircraft.[5] In 1932 the three Woollatt sisters and Maureen Taylor formed the Connington polo team and drew a match against the Durban ladies' team, which is seen as the first officially recorded ladies' match in South Africa.[13][14] During a 1937 flight from Durban to Baragwanath in a Leopard Moth aircraft, she and her husband would have seen a saucer which approached, coasted along, and then departed from them.[15] During World War II she held a responsible position in RAF Intelligence.[12]

She believed in telepathic powers, and tried to enhance these abilities since her youth.[11]

Flying Saucer Hill

In 1954, her sister May, then resident on the farm Whyteleafe in the Natal midlands, relayed to her that the native Zulu people were reporting appearances of the lightning bird in the sky. In response Elizabeth and her children travelled from Johannesburg to the farm, and she ascended Flying Saucer Hill the following day, December 27th.[16][17] There she claimed to have seen the star ship descend and hover three metres above ground, while only emitting a soft hum.[11] Its hull was spinning, though its central dome remained stationary.[12] The spaceman who would later identify himself as Akon was clearly visible through one of three portholes. A barrier of heat emanating from the ship would have prevented her from approaching however, and his scout ship departed again.[7]

Some 18 months later, she would visit the hilltop again, after further reports of the lightning bird. On this occasion, on 7 April 1956,[11] Akon would have taken her aboard his scout ship,[8][16] a craft some 60 feet (18 m) in diameter. Once inside, she would have met a second pilot, stocky and darker-skinned than Akon, who was supposedly a foremost botanist, besides astrophysicist, by profession. She was allegedly shown a lens which offered views of earth and people through the craft's floor. With only a hum emanating from below and no sense of movement, they would have been transported to the enormous cigar-shaped mother ship which had a garden-like interior. After meeting its inhabitants, she would have been returned to the hilltop,[7] a similar arrangement as that made between Adamski and Orthon in 1952. During the encounter kisses were exchanged and Akon revealed that Elizabeth was in fact a reincarnated Venusian, and long-lost soulmate. He further explained that they would infrequently take earth women as partners, as the offspring would strengthen their race with an infusion of new blood.[6] He also claimed that a number of Venusians were surreptitiously living among people.[11]

According to Akon, humans and their own species (strictly speaking, humans) come from the remote and habitable past of the planet Venus. The original civilization would have migrated in the face of changing planetary conditions (including very unpleasant sulfuric acid showers beyond the impossible temperature). [18]

From 17:45 on the 30th of April 1956, various independent observers noted a steady red glow poised at a rocky section of the hill, which remained there until 2:00 in the morning. No sign of a fire could be found afterwards.[11]

On July 17, 1956,[16] after their family farm was sold, she made a subsequent visit to the area, and claimed to have taken a series of 7 photos of Akon's scout ship using her sister's (or daughter's) simple Brownie box camera.[3] Vivid light flashes would have turned into a dull grey craft enveloped in a shimmering heat haze. For all of an hour the disc would have darted silently over a rise near the farmhouse, making several weaving detours, and it would have shone silvery in bright sunlight before streaking away out of sight.[19] Edgar Sievers, a ufologist from Pretoria, stated that her family saw her leave the homestead alone, and suggested that the frail Elizabeth would have found it difficult to throw a car hubcap and photograph it at the same time.[20] He also stated that no make of hubcap had been illustrated to sufficiently resemble the disc in the photos.[16]

Location of Flying Saucer Hill, Klarer's claimed contact site since 1954, near Rosetta, KwaZulu-Natal: 29°20′41″S 29°51′35″E

Space-motherhood

In April 1958 a series of contacts would have started which would set her story apart from the 1950s standard. These visits by Akon would have culminated in a day-long rendezvous with Elizabeth on the high plateau of Cathkin Peak, where he supposedly presented her with a silver ring which enhanced their telepathic connection. Their love was then consummated and a child was conceived at her advanced age of 48 years.[6][7]

I surrendered in ecstasy to the magic of his love making, our bodies merging in magnetic union as the divine essence of our spirits became one.[6]

After a terrestrial pregnancy she (with her MG car) would have been transported in 1959 to Akon's home planet, Meton, supposedly orbiting Proxima Centauri in the nearby multiple-star system Alpha Centauri. There she would have delivered the male child.[2] Her son, Ayling, stayed behind on Meton to be educated, while Elizabeth reluctantly came home. Meton's planetary vibrations affected her heart, and she was consequently not permitted to return there, instead receiving follow-up visits from Akon and Ayling.[4] The whole trip, delivery and return trip supposedly required less than four months, sufficiently long to enable a nine year stay on Meton however.[6]

There were no cities or skyscrapers as Earth people know them anywhere on Meton. Homes were scattered in park-like grounds... There was an abundance of all things needed by civilization – food, water and all materials for building, an unlimited supply of energy on tap from the atmosphere and the Universe, no shortages of any kind and no monetary system at all.[4]

Klarer took far more time before publishing a book, Beyond the Light Barrier (1980),[3] about her extraterrestrial adventures. On his world lecture tour in the late 1950s, George Adamski made a point of visiting South Africa and looking up Klarer for a chat on their variety of experiences with the friendly, wise "space brothers." By that time, Klarer was not the only Adamski follower to experience claimed space-motherhood.[21][22]

Later years

After her sister and brother-in-law died, Elizabeth returned from Natal to Johannesburg. There she worked for a time in a CNA book store,[6] but found city life stifling. From the 1950s onwards her outlandish claims made her a darling of the press, who also loved to ridicule her. She welcomed any press however, as the dissemination of Akon's message was paramount – a life-task of extreme importance.[17] The account of her observations and contact experience in Flying Saucer Review of Nov-Dec 1956 was noticed by Edith Nicolaisen. Nicolaisen's correspondence with Elizabeth consists of 23 letters, written from 1956 to 1976. She published the Klarer story in the small booklet I rymdskepp över Drakensberg in 1959, and a second edition appeared in 1967.[17] From about 1960 to 1966 Elizabeth worked on the manuscript for her book, which now included the Akon love saga, as she couldn't "hide the truth in these matters."[17] In 1968 Elizabeth agreed to be interviewed by ufologist Cynthia Hind, and Hind's write-up of her story appeared in Fate magazine of August that year.[23] Ufologist Kitty Smith established contact with Elizabeth after reading about her in Outspan magazine,[24] and claimed her own sighting of Akon's ship in January 1984.[15]

When another South African, Ann Grevler, claimed alien contact in the late 1950s, Elizabeth was outspoken and issued various challenges to her to defend her statements in an open forum. Likewise she denounced Philipp Human's supposed contact through a trance medium, and this caused a rift between them.[17] In her view the space people would never stoop to such methods. In 1975 she was invited by Hermann Oberth to attend the 11th International Congress of UFO Research Groups in Wiesbaden, Germany. She delivered an address there on 2 November, for which she received a standing ovation. In May 1992 Smith arranged a talk by Klarer at the Unidentified Flying Object Club in Pietermaritzburg. This was so popular that the crowd grew too large to cope with.[15]

Elizabeth faithfully commemorated the April 7th anniversary of her union with Akon by returning to Flying Saucer Hill.[12] On one occasion she befriended SAAF helicopter pilots who sought shelter on the farm during a storm, and they facilitated visits to the hill when a ride on horseback became too difficult for her.[23] Her third husband Aubrey Fielding died in 1981 and his ashes were strewn on the hill.[15] Elizabeth died of breast cancer at age 84,[2] leaving her second book The Gravity File unfinished.[5] The book would have filled in the gaps of the first, besides elucidating the military and political aspects of UFO research, and explaining Akon's "electro-gravity propulsion" technology. Before her death she related to acquaintances that Ayling (like Akon) was now an astrophysicist, who was crisscrossing the universe with his father, his space woman Clea, and their son.[25]

Assessment

Ufologist Thomas Streicher concluded that Klarer's claims are generally poorly substantiated, despite some of them being corroborated by witnesses. Her sister and first husband for instance attested two UFO sightings, but witnesses are lacking to confirm her pregnancy, and it remains unknown whether it was ever documented. He speculates that she was perhaps a fantasy-prone individual who merely imagined most of her experiences.[4] Elizabeth's son David, in particular, has no recollection of an event, absence or pregnancy of his mother that could tie in with her purported space adventures in 1959.[6]

Ufologist Cynthia Hind noted Elizabeth's absolute conviction that she was telling the truth, and never suspected that she was deliberately lying.[23] Hind suspected that an active imagination or illusions borne from a dream-state of euphoria were to be blamed for the improbabilities and inconsistencies inherent to her stories. Both Hind and Smith however alluded to sightings of Akon by members of the public,[23][24] and Hind concluded: "all these factors need examination and it is time we stopped casting aside [such] cases which, although sounding like hoaxes, are not obviously so."[17] Ufologist Edgar Sievers, who also interviewed her family, was completely satisfied that her experiences, at least up to and including the photographs, were of a physical rather than psychic nature.[11]

Ufologist Philipp Human initially heaped effusively praise on Elizabeth, but later changed his stance: "I do not believe one word of her supposed […] contacts and it was a standing joke the way she was helped to photograph an ordinary motor car hubcap. So much for her photographs […] That was before she added additional material to tell of her pregnancy caused by her Venusian lover, […] I pray that this book will never be published." To this Edith Nicolaisen replied: "Don't be afraid, we shall never publish [the story of her Venusian lover, but] I would like to reprint [the] booklet about her contacts. I do believe that she has had some sort of contact."[17]

The Mensa chapter of Johannesburg did not take kindly to her claims and she was heckled during her address.[12] Hard evidence for her claim that she addressed the House of Lords in 1983, and that a paper of hers was read during that year at a UFO congress at the United Nations, has not been found.[6] Supposed hard evidence presented by Elizabeth included her set of 1956 photographs, the ring she received from Akon, a space rock or crystal, and a fern from Meton.[25] Her supportive husband Aubrey remained unperturbed by his wife's love for Akon, reportedly saying, "That's all right with me – as long as he stays in space where he belongs".[12][15]

Bibliography

  • Jenseits der Lichtmauer: Vorgeschichte und Bericht einer Weltraumreise (1977)
  • Beyond the Light Barrier (1980)

Elizabeth Klarer is mentioned in the song Even Elizabeth Klarer off the album Shakey is Good (2008) by South African singer-songwriter Jim Neversink.

References

  1. Christopher, Paul (1998). Alien Intervention. Lafayette, LA: Huntington House. pp. 156–7]. ISBN 9781563841484.
  2. Dmitriyev, Yevgeny (2004). "Aliens take samples of semen and ovule from human abductees for their genetic experiments". Pravda.ru. Archived from the original on 2009-02-03. Retrieved 2009-01-02.
  3. Klarer, Elizabeth (2008) [1980]. Beyond The Light Barrier: The Autobiography of Elizabeth Klarer. Claremont, Cape Town, ZA: New Vision. ISBN 9780620319058.
  4. Streicher, Thomas James (Ph.D.) (2012). Extra-planetary experiences: alien-human contact and the expansion of consciousness. Bear & Co. pp. 56–59. ISBN 9781591438946.
  5. Beukes, Lauren (19 February 2010). "The Woman Who Loved An Alien". bookslive. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
  6. Beukes, Lauren (2015). Maverick: extraordinary women from South Africa's past. South Africa: Penguin Random House. pp. 241-. ISBN 9781415206720.
  7. "Beyond the Light Barrier: Elizabeth Klarer (Documentary)". YouTube. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  8. Faria, J. Escobar (1960). Discos Voadores, Contatos com Sêres de Outros Planêtas. Volume 15 of O Homem e o Universo (in Portuguese). São Paulo: Edições Melhoramentos. p. 28. OCLC 22285507.
  9. "Obituaries: Samuel Bancroft Woollatt 1876 - 1952". Journal of the South African Veterinary Association. 23 (1): 55–56. January 1952. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  10. "'n Ander wêreld". Beeld. 22 February 2009. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
  11. Ragaz, J. Heinrich (March–April 1957). "Mein Flug in einem Raumschiff" (PDF). Weltraumbote (16/17): 3–8. Retrieved 27 November 2019.CS1 maint: date format (link)
  12. Allan, Janni (March 1983). "UFO's, Elizabeth Klarer and FYI Katy Perry you are 30 years late". Just Jani Column. janiallan.com. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  13. "History of Polo in South Africa: 1920s & 1930s". South African Polo Association. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  14. Laffaye, Horace A. (2015). The Polo Encyclopedia (2nd ed.). McFarland. p. 405. ISBN 9781476619569.
  15. Coan, Stephen (2 July 2012). "Written in the Stars: On World UFO day, Stephen Coan takes a look at KwaZulu-Natal's very own Elizabeth Klarer". PressReader. The Witness. Retrieved 1 November 2019.
  16. Sievers, Edgar (December 1956). "Encounter in South Africa" (PDF). Uranus. 3 (3): 56–59. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  17. Blomqvist, Håkan (16 March 2019). "The Edith Nicolaisen - Elizabeth Klarer correspondence". Håkan Blomqvist's blog. Retrieved 20 November 2019.
  18. "Elizabeth Klarer UFO Abductee Experience". Area 51 Aliens. New Zealand. 15 July 2020. Retrieved 15 July 2020.
  19. Hind, Cynthia (March 1992). "Woman takes photo of flying saucer" (PDF). UFO Afrinews. 5: 28.
  20. "Landing in South Africa". Flying Saucer Review: 1–4. December 1956.
  21. Randles, Jenny (2006). "Star Children". Archived from the original on May 5, 2006.
  22. McKenzie, Hal. "Britain ahead of U.S. in UFO disclosure". cosmictribune.com.
  23. Hind, Cynthia (July 1999). "UFO Afrinews" (PDF). UFO Afrinews (20): 6–10. Retrieved 20 November 2019.
  24. Gottschall, Sheryl (15 May 2019). "Exclusive interview with Kitty Smith". UFORQ Australia. YouTube. Retrieved 1 November 2019.
  25. "Elizabeth Klarer". Beeld. 6 June 2006. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
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