Dec 17, 2016

UFO Cult Struggles to Recruit New Followers

Followers of the Raelian Movement gather at the Taiming Plaza Hotel in Phnom Penh on Tuesday. (Cambodia Raelian Movement)
Followers of the Raelian Movement gather at the Taiming
Plaza Hotel in Phnom Penh on Tuesday.
(Cambodia Raelian Movement)
The Cambodia Daily
BY GEORGE WRIGHT
DECEMBER 17, 2016

About 10 years ago, Am Vichet was staring at a clear night sky outside his home in Takhmao City when he witnessed something that would change his life.

“I was sitting together with my brother and sister at home and I looked up at the sky. I see one object,” Mr. Vichet recounted on Thursday.

At first he thought it was an airplane. But after taking a second look, he concluded that the object was from a different realm altogether.

“It was flying around and around. The first thought was, ‘That’s an airplane,’ but later on I saw that it was not moving fast, further and further,” he said.

“This was a real UFO.”

The seeds of intrigue regarding UFOs had been sown in his mind a couple of weeks before, when he had attended a seminar hosted by foreign followers of a movement in Phnom Penh as they attempted to recruit Cambodians to the world’s biggest UFO cult—the Raelian Movement.

After witnessing the UFO circling Kandal province firsthand, Mr. Vichet said, it was the moment that he decided to become Cambodia’s first officially baptized member of the movement.

Raelism was founded in 1974 by a French journalist named Claude Vorilhon.

He claims that on December 13, 1973, at the age of 27, he drove his sports car up the Puy de Lassolas volcano park in central France when a spaceship in the shape of a flattened bell descended from the sky and hovered in front of him. A small, long-haired extraterrestrial named Yahweh then descended down a staircase and asked Mr. Vorilhon to join him on board.

Over the next six days, Yahweh told the Frenchman that he and other extraterrestrials, or Elohim, had created humanity about 25,000 years before. Over time, they had sent numerous prophets, including Jesus and Buddha, to Earth in order to communicate messages of love and peace.

Yahweh said that humanity was at last capable of understanding this, and the time had come for an embassy to be built in order for them to make a safe return.

Mr. Vorilhon, or Rael as he is now known, has yet to convince a country to let him build an embassy and the Elohim are yet to return to Earth. Despite this, his devout followers are still globetrotting in an effort to attract more into his UFO movement, which it claims boasts more than 85,000 members in 104 countries.

Tuesday was the 43rd anniversary of Rael’s “first encounter” with Yahweh and the occasion was marked in Cambodia by a small gathering of nine people, including three foreign Raelians and a handful of tuk-tuk drivers drafted in to make up the numbers, inside a small room at the Taiming Plaza Hotel on Norodom Boulevard.

During the meeting, Canadian Sylvain Mayrand, who joined the movement after picking up one of Rael’s books as a 13-year-old, presented DVDs to the group including one on Rael’s theory of “paradism.”

Paradism is based on observations Rael claims he made on a trip to the Elohim planet in 1975.

It seeks a world without money or work, and states that technology will soon be advanced enough that jobs currently done by humans can be done by robots. In a paradist society, there will be no work, no money, no government, no police, no disease and, eventually, no death. Instead, there would be an emphasis on playing, meditation, the arts and “making friends.”

Details on how paradism is to be implemented are not totally clear.

Speaking after the meeting, however, Mr. Mayrand—who attributed the fact that there are only two active Cambodian Raelians to, in part, newspapers not having “a good reputation for telling the truth”—said he believed Rael’s early teachings illustrate that paradism is attainable.

“I believe [in paradism], but he told that in 1973. That’s the amazing thing: He knew all of this. It’s written in the message that we would get to this point and now we are getting there and we’re very close to this paradise,” he said.

“In 1975, the second encounter, they brought him to the planet where they live eternally in the paradise. They explain in the book how they get to the eternal. Everything is explained. It’s a very scientific explanation,” he added.

Oy Sith, who attended the meeting to find out more about Raelism, said that although he agreed with the religion’s general message of love and unity, he found the theories about extraterrestrials and living a life with no work or money rather far-fetched.

“I don’t believe in UFOs or aliens because no one has even seen these UFO or aliens before,” he said. “Who can prove where the UFOs or aliens [are] living?”

“I don’t agree with the idea that robots will work for people and that money will not be necessary,” he added. “If people are born without working, and there are just robots working for us and we don’t need money, then what were people born for?”

Mr. Vichet said about 1,000 had attended events over the years and many have shown an interest—including a deputy prime minister whom he declined to name. However, the utopian concepts of Rael­ism and paradism are yet to strike a chord with Cambodians, he conceded.

“The concept is a very high-level for the Cambodians. Some may not understand and find it very difficult to accept this one because they are working very hard for their business. Some people are still thinking about working for their living, working for money,” he said.

Cambodia’s first official Raelian cited the importance of the establishment of an embassy somewhere on the planet to call the Elohim back to earth. A 2013 request to Prime Minister Hun Sen’s cabinet to erect one in Phnom Penh went ignored.

“I actually don’t believe that these documents got to the prime minister, because while we started the process they wanted to get big money from us,” he said. “We said we didn’t have any money.”

Despite the absence of an embassy and the lack of success in attracting new followers, Mr. Vichet had faith that the power of the Elohim could still bring paradise to Cambodia.

“Maybe for Cambodia this will take time. I do believe that we will reach it one day, but for me, if there is not any power from the Elohim, I think that it will happen very slowly in a developing country like Cambodia,” he said.

“But if we get support, like the special power from the Elohim, to change the concept of the leaders in this country, people may change their concept and change will come faster.”

(Additional reporting by Buth Kimsay)

wright@cambodiadaily.com



https://www.cambodiadaily.com/news/ufo-cult-struggles-recruit-new-followers-122114/

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