Embryo Transfer In Ancient India - Alternative View

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Embryo Transfer In Ancient India - Alternative View
Embryo Transfer In Ancient India - Alternative View

Video: Embryo Transfer In Ancient India - Alternative View

Video: Embryo Transfer In Ancient India - Alternative View
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2500 years ago, the gods in ancient India performed embryo transplantation. This is stated in the legends of Jainism

In India, "the land of thousands of gods," in ancient temples and books, there are many traces that testify to the activities of aliens. Another such trail was discovered by veterinarian Dr. Wolfgang Lampeter from Wasserburg. In the legends of Jainism, he found descriptions of embryo transfer.

Legend has it that the gods decided that one of them should descend to Earth in order to found a new religion. For this mission, the god Mahavira was chosen, who took the form of an embryo. With the participation of another god, named Harinaigamesin, a divine embryo was planted on an earthly woman. Harinaigamesin, who in the divine world has the title of "commander of the celestial infantry", went astride the "peacock" down to Earth. There in the city of Kundagrama he found a pregnant woman from the Brahmin caste, Devanada, and proceeded to the operation:

"He put her into a deep sleep, but her eyes were open, he did it without hurting her, she was in a dream." With the words "May the noble lady allow me," he removed the embryo from the womb of Devanada and placed the embryo of the god Mahavira in its place.

Back in heaven, Harinaigamesin provided a report. According to legend, only now the heavenly rulers noticed that they had forgotten something important: God could only be born from the queen, since he needed a royal education. However, the Devanada, who had the embryo implanted, belonged "only" to the highest priestly caste. Therefore, Harinaigamesin on his "peacock" again went to Earth and found Queen Trishala there, who had the same gestational age as Devanada. The divine messenger changed places of embryos and disappeared unnoticed into the heavenly realms. Obviously, the transplant took place without complications, for in the year 599 BC, Trishala gave birth to a healthy child, who later created the religion of Jainism under the name of Mahavira.

An amateur indologist Dr. Lampeter was fascinated by the legend, but he had questions. Were conditions similar to anesthesia known then? Why was it so important that the exchange of embryos between women took place at the same stage of pregnancy? “What was especially interesting for me was the fact that, although there are many legends about heroes and gods, whose birth is shrouded in mystery, until now there has not been a single legend in which the birth of a hero or god is associated with an embryo transfer,” writes Wolfgang Lampeter. The specialist in artificial insemination does not want to know anything about the fact that, possibly, aliens were involved in the process.

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But a resident of Münster, professor-indologist Adelheid Mette considers the whole legend to be pure fantasy. In her opinion, the story of embryo transfer was invented for social and political reasons, since Jainism had an anti-Brahmanistic orientation. However, this explanation is not enough, since the ancient Indian texts provide such details about embryos that have become known only to modern science. “In the first month, the embryo becomes a lump,” says, for example, in the book “Visnu Dharmottara”. “In the third month, bones and skin are formed, in the fifth month - the hairline of the body, in the sixth month - thinking is laid, in the seventh month the embryo feels discontent, in the eighth and ninth months it grows strongly.”

In another book, the Vedic Grabha Upanishad, it is said: “24 hours after fertilization, a lump (kalila) appears, after seven nights it becomes a bubble (budhuda) …” For comparison: the Dutch doctor Rainier de Graaf found human ovarian follicles only in 1672 In another Sanskrit text, "Tandulaweyaliyya" ("Teachings on the existence of man before and after birth") it is written: "In the yoni (ovaries), women spontaneously arise and die from 400,000 to 900,000." These are the precursors of the oocytes, the so-called primordial follicles. In modern science, their number is estimated from 400 thousand to two million.

Dr. Lampeter believes that he discovered a way how ancient Hindus could observe such processes in the human body 2500 years ago: with the help of magnifiers made of cut rock crystal. An indologist from Marburg, Professor Wilhelm Pay, in his work on lenses in Ancient India, writes that, apparently, pieces of rock crystal were found in the streams of the Pamir mountains, polished with water to the shape of lenses. Convex pieces of rock crystal were also found in the palace of the Assyrian king Ashurnasirpal II (884-859 BC). Dr. Lampeter's experiment showed that small embryos can indeed be seen with a simple botanical magnifying glass with 16x magnification.

However, all this does not explain how the knowledge about primordial follicles, visible only under a microscope, was obtained, not to mention their number (from 400,000 to 900,000), which certainly cannot be counted with the help of lenses. In addition, the observation of a growing embryo does not at all mean the ability to quickly exchange embryos, which is possible only with the help of the most modern medical methods. In addition, the legend of embryo transfer from about 600 BC. e. contains two piquant facts:

a) the idea of "immaculate conception";

b) human education is carried out by "divine" mentors who spread among people their ideas brought from extraterrestrial limits.