The story of the Pied Piper of Hamelin is well known. This dark European folktale with unsettling themes of ingratitude and terrible vengeance has been told and retold for generations. The tale goes something like this:
In the year 1284, there was a serious rat problem in Hamelin, which was at that time a prosperous port on the river Weser in Lower Saxony, Germany. Barges full of corn and wheat arrived every day which was ground in the mills and made into bread and cakes in the bakeries. But the rats came and ate all the corn and the wheat, and the bread and the cakes, and there were fleas everywhere. Life in Hamelin became a nightmare. Desperate for a solution, the town mayor announced a prize of one thousand gold guilders to anyone who could free Hamelin of the rats.
The very next day a mysterious man in bright colorful clothing arrived in town. He claimed to be a rat-catcher, and he promised to get rid of all the mice and rats in Hamelin for the promised sum. The “Pied Piper” then took out a small fife from his pocket and began to play a tune. And as the townsfolk watched in awe, thousands of rats came scurrying out of houses and gutters and warehouses and bakeries and began to follow the Pied Piper. Still playing his fife, the Piper led the mass of mesmerized rats out of town and into the Weser River where they jumped one by one into the water and drowned.
When the Pied Piper returned to the town square to collect his prize, the mayor laughed and gave him only fifty guilders. Enraged, the Piper stomped out of town but not before swearing revenge.
A few days later was Saint John and Paul's day, and while the adults were in church, the piper returned dressed in green and began playing a different tune. This time time it wasn’t rats or mice but the town’s children who came running and dancing towards him. The swarm followed him into the mountain where he disappeared along with the children. Only a lame who couldn’t follow quickly enough, a deaf who couldn’t hear and a blind child remained behind. A total of one hundred thirty children were lost that day.
For a long time, the legend of the Pied Piper was mere folktale kept alive by generation after generation of Hamelin residents until the tale started receiving broader audience through the retelling by the Brothers Grimm. But the tale is much more than fiction. There are evidences that suggest that something deeply traumatic did happen in the German town on 26th of June 1284.
Evidences from the past
We know the precise date from an inscription on a stained-glass window on the town’s church, which stood on the town’s square until it was destroyed in 1660. The window bore the image of a piper and the words: “In the year 1284, on the day of John and Paul, it was the 26th of June, came a colourful Piper to Hamelin and led 130 children away.” The date appears again in Hamelin’s town chronicle. Against the year 1384, the entry simply said, “It is 100 years since our children left.”
I would have maybe given it the benefit of the doubt that it was a good faith 1972 campaign to vaccinate kids against deadly diseases—except why does the syringe look evil? And the Pied Piper of the classic story had evil intentions toward the townspeople. The “moral” was the townspeople ought to have given the piper what he wanted and since they didn’t, they deserved what they got. We are the townspeople. We need a sequel where the townspeople rise up and kick the piper to the next galaxy.
Pans grotto or cave is located at the base of Mt Hermon where the watchers came down. It is also where Jesus took Peter to declare the Gates of Hell would not prevail. Currently Mt Hermon hosts the UN heritage site and base unofficially called the Hermon Hotel (you know for "guests") If you're interested, Peter Pan is the modern equivalent but thats Okay, Its your right to be wrong.
The cabal and their priest's of the Mysteries spread their teachings and allegory across many cultures throughout history. Often times retelling their gods as the hero. Probably the most glaring example of this is Lucifer their bringer of Iight(illumination) or knowledge. There are many of their gods the Cabal have fabricated stories of over the course of their 6000 year death cult of existence as Q put it. In the egyptian mysteries the old Babylonian family of the Nimrod, Semiramous and tammuz became Osiris, Isis and Horus. They and their bloodline descendants over the course of History have always done this.
The True Story Behind ‘The Pied Piper of Hamelin’
The story of the Pied Piper of Hamelin is well known. This dark European folktale with unsettling themes of ingratitude and terrible vengeance has been told and retold for generations. The tale goes something like this:
In the year 1284, there was a serious rat problem in Hamelin, which was at that time a prosperous port on the river Weser in Lower Saxony, Germany. Barges full of corn and wheat arrived every day which was ground in the mills and made into bread and cakes in the bakeries. But the rats came and ate all the corn and the wheat, and the bread and the cakes, and there were fleas everywhere. Life in Hamelin became a nightmare. Desperate for a solution, the town mayor announced a prize of one thousand gold guilders to anyone who could free Hamelin of the rats.
The very next day a mysterious man in bright colorful clothing arrived in town. He claimed to be a rat-catcher, and he promised to get rid of all the mice and rats in Hamelin for the promised sum. The “Pied Piper” then took out a small fife from his pocket and began to play a tune. And as the townsfolk watched in awe, thousands of rats came scurrying out of houses and gutters and warehouses and bakeries and began to follow the Pied Piper. Still playing his fife, the Piper led the mass of mesmerized rats out of town and into the Weser River where they jumped one by one into the water and drowned.
When the Pied Piper returned to the town square to collect his prize, the mayor laughed and gave him only fifty guilders. Enraged, the Piper stomped out of town but not before swearing revenge.
A few days later was Saint John and Paul's day, and while the adults were in church, the piper returned dressed in green and began playing a different tune. This time time it wasn’t rats or mice but the town’s children who came running and dancing towards him. The swarm followed him into the mountain where he disappeared along with the children. Only a lame who couldn’t follow quickly enough, a deaf who couldn’t hear and a blind child remained behind. A total of one hundred thirty children were lost that day.
For a long time, the legend of the Pied Piper was mere folktale kept alive by generation after generation of Hamelin residents until the tale started receiving broader audience through the retelling by the Brothers Grimm. But the tale is much more than fiction. There are evidences that suggest that something deeply traumatic did happen in the German town on 26th of June 1284.
Evidences from the past We know the precise date from an inscription on a stained-glass window on the town’s church, which stood on the town’s square until it was destroyed in 1660. The window bore the image of a piper and the words: “In the year 1284, on the day of John and Paul, it was the 26th of June, came a colourful Piper to Hamelin and led 130 children away.” The date appears again in Hamelin’s town chronicle. Against the year 1384, the entry simply said, “It is 100 years since our children left.”
https://www.amusingplanet.com/2018/12/the-true-story-behind-pied-piper-of.html
So interesting!
I would have maybe given it the benefit of the doubt that it was a good faith 1972 campaign to vaccinate kids against deadly diseases—except why does the syringe look evil? And the Pied Piper of the classic story had evil intentions toward the townspeople. The “moral” was the townspeople ought to have given the piper what he wanted and since they didn’t, they deserved what they got. We are the townspeople. We need a sequel where the townspeople rise up and kick the piper to the next galaxy.
I would have given them every benefit of doubt. I was young once.....
An allusion to their god Pan. https://www.greekmythology.com/Other_Gods/Pan/pan.html
It's the Pied Piper.
The pied piper IS an allegory of Pan.
I doubt it.
Pans grotto or cave is located at the base of Mt Hermon where the watchers came down. It is also where Jesus took Peter to declare the Gates of Hell would not prevail. Currently Mt Hermon hosts the UN heritage site and base unofficially called the Hermon Hotel (you know for "guests") If you're interested, Peter Pan is the modern equivalent but thats Okay, Its your right to be wrong.
What does that have to do Hamelin Germany in 1284? How condescending but out of left field can you get?
The cabal and their priest's of the Mysteries spread their teachings and allegory across many cultures throughout history. Often times retelling their gods as the hero. Probably the most glaring example of this is Lucifer their bringer of Iight(illumination) or knowledge. There are many of their gods the Cabal have fabricated stories of over the course of their 6000 year death cult of existence as Q put it. In the egyptian mysteries the old Babylonian family of the Nimrod, Semiramous and tammuz became Osiris, Isis and Horus. They and their bloodline descendants over the course of History have always done this.
Today, Lara Logan brought up the book RETURN OF THE GODS… interesting.
Deceit is their middle name.
That's a strange way to try to support what you said.
They don't have to tell you anything.
They couldn't care less.
Today that’s a Left Parade.