The Migration And Relocation
Of Shambhala in the 20th Century
                    by Robert Charroux  (from Legacy Of The Gods)

 

Does the ‘Master of the World’ in Mongolia influence the world’s political destiny?  I am tempted to think so, and in any case historical facts give the idea a certain credibility, at least in the mind of occultists.

 

But who is the Master of the World?

His name is Jebtsung and he is inhabited by the soul of Amitabha, the god of the west and the merciful spirit of the four mountains that surround the holy city of Ulan Bator (formerly Urga).

 

Jebtsung is not officially recognized by the rulers of the People’s Republic of Mongolia, who are politically hostile to ‘superstition’, but as the Bodgo-Geden he is the spiritual ruler of a hundred thousand lamas and a million subjects.

 

He no longer resides in the sacred Bodgo Ol, the Vatican of his eight predecessors, which the Communist Scientific Committee has ‘nationalized’.  He wanders over the steppes, followed by an impressive court of lamas and shamans.  The idea of an itinerant Master of the World is not very conducive to believing that he and his shamans have supranormal powers, but it would be hard to disprove those powers.

 

Ferdinant Ossendowski, an eminent Polish scholar, escaped from grave dangers by means of a magic ring given to him by the Bodgo-Gegan of Nabaranchi.  Lamas predicted within an hour the death of General Ungern von Sterberg, an adversary of the Bolsheviks.  In 1933 Dr. Maurice Percheron, a French scientist, had unquestionable proof of a mysterious force which was apparently used for the advantage of certain powerful Mongols.

 

 ‘And how are we to explain without magic,’ writes Charles Correga, ‘the fact that Genghis Khan, an untutored herdsman aided by a handful of nomads, was able to subjugate a succession of peoples and empires a thousand times more highly advanced than he was?

 

Kublai Khan, who held sway over Mongolia, China, India, Afghanistan, Persia, and half of Europe, adopted the Buddhist religion when he saw the wonders worked by Turjo Ghamba before representatives of all religions.

 

Hitler tried to use the magic of the Mongols to conquer the world, but he was betrayed by shamans who never gave him the secrets of domination.

 

Those secrets, enclosed in enormous chests guarded by the Shabinari monks in the service of the present Bodgo-Gegen, are written in sacred books: the two hundred and twenty-six volumes of the Panjur and the one hundred and eight volumes of the Ganjur.  Their magic power is materialized in religious objects, principally a prodigious ruby set in a ring which Genghis Khan and his successor Kublai Khan constantly wore on the right index finger.