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Chronicles From The Future: The amazing story of Paul Amadeus Dienach
Chronicles From The Future The amazing story of Paul Amadeus Dienach Author:Paul Amadeus Dienach In 1921, Paul Amadeus Dienach falls into a one-year-long coma. During this time, his consciousness slides into the future and enters the body of another human being, Andreas Northam, in the year 3906 A.D. The people of the future soon realize his peculiar medical situation and reveal to him the dramatic course of humanity from the 20th until t... more »he 40th century, escorting him on an eye-opening journey across the new Europe. When Dienach awakens from his coma, his consciousness returns to his body and he finds himself back in 1922. Knowing that he doesn?t have much time left due to his fragile health, Dienach writes a diary, recording whatever he could remember from his amazing experience. Without any close friends and relatives to entrust, he doesn?t say a word to anyone out of fear of being branded a lunatic. Before he dies, he hands his diary to his favourite student, George Papachatzis, later prominent Professor of Administrative Law, Rector of Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences and Vice President of the Council of State. When Papachatzis translates the diary, he realizes that what his teacher describes in detail, is an account of time travel and the knowledge he has gained about mankind?s history in the forthcoming centuries ? from the nightmare of ?the Number? (Overpopulation) and World Wars up until the 23rd century, to the world-changing globalisation, the radical new administration system, the colony on Mars and the next human evolutionary stage, Homo Occidentalis Novus. By the end of World War II, the translated diary circulates only as hidden knowledge amongst high ranking masons in the lodges of Athens. Two years before the end of the Greek dictatorship in 1972, Professor Papachatzis, despite an intense dispute, decides to publish a small number of Dienach?s diary in Greek. The Greek Church protests against the content and soon Papachatzis is threatened with social exclusion. Paul Dienach was not an author, poet, or professional writer. Rather, he was an ordinary man who kept a journal, never with the expectation that it would be published. Today, for the first time, this diary has been carefully edited and translated to become readable, but its content and message have not been altered. This unique and controversial book, a universal legacy, is now uncensored and available to everyone. This is the history of our future. We deliver it to you.« less