Topic started on 12-2-2008 @ 12:00 PM by medulari
I'm looking for information about an article I'm trying to write (which I hope will lead to a full-length book) about "The Megameidan Directive".
Does anyone here know anything about this? My research has led me to a couple of web forums (only to find people asking the same questions I'm
asking) but for the life of me, I've been unable to figure out what keywords to use. My source tells me that this clandestine movement uses certain
code phrases and words -- "megameidan", "savior's saviors" being two of them and he/she also told me that, by design, no one member knows very
much about the scope and breadth of the movement -- by design. But supposedly there does seem to be a website or something where people who've been
contacted can go to read more about the movement's ideology and so forth. All my internet savvy has failed me in finding it. Maybe one of you know
the URL?
According to what I've managed to figure out so far, this whole thing started when a "chain letter" was disseminated on a random mass email in
which people were given "a message" which contained the details of how to topple the Vatican and the Papal authority. Apparently, this movement
doesn't even have a central leadership or any official membership roster, relying on "members" to continue the dissemination of the directive. The
Megameidanists seem to be operating right under everyone's noses, including the clergy whose churches they target for "hits". "Members" don't
even know one another.
The main theory driving this movement is pretty straightforward and seems even potentially effective: To satisfy the Directive, one need only attend
a Christian Mass where the Eucharist is performed, pose as a devotee, line-up for Communion, receive a wafer, leave with the wafer uneaten and then
respectfully bury it somewhere. Members supposedly also share "disclosure material" with one another I guess because they do intentionally leave
evidence to alert the clergy of their actions. Another suggested method of "alerting the Butchers of Christ" to a successful "hit" or "raid",
is to send emails to the parish priests. The "member" I contacted spoke of writing about "hits" in the church guestbooks! The point of all this
seems to be two-fold: (1) to undermine organized Christian authority's "ransoming of Jesus' transmutated flesh", which Megameidanists claim "has
enslaved through culpability 1 billion+ eaters of Christ" (a conspiracy in itself), and, (2) a heartfelt attempt to "save Jesus" from "eternal
abuse and torture" by misguided Christians who see ritualized cannibalism as a means to gain access to their deity. The elegance of the idea (and
the problem for any research) includes the absence of any overseeing of "missions" by any organized leadership, because each member acts on his own,
in secrecy, without a need for kudos and only has to effect one single "rescue" to be able to consider himself "saved from the domination of
Christianity" and himself a "savior's savior".
I've been given a copy of some of the underground work, "The Hairetikos" which includes a prophetic heretical vision (it's pretty creepy actually)
and have finally located the passage where the directive is made, but can find very little about the actual movement it inspired, other than a few
emails from a "confirmed Megameidanist" in which I was given what I have so far. If any of you are or know a Megameidanist, or have an extant
version of "The Hairetikos", I'd be very interested in interviewing you -- of course with complete anonymity guaranteed -- with the long range hope
of finding enough material for a book. Anyone....?
