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The location of "The Knowing Library"
Published by: jack 2009-01-07

  • What I am going to ask is not going to be easy to answer. I have tried myself, but with the information I was able to recollect from the documentary I saw on TV a long time ago is too fragmented to allow me to find an answer. Experts likely to answer this question should have a substantial knowledge of the Arabic world as I suspect that what I am looking for is located in an Arabic country. I would like to know the location of what I call "The Knowing Library". It is a library that contains pergament rolls for every person that will visit it. It describes the persons past, present and future life as well as a general description of the personality of that individual. The language that they are written in is not spoken by many people anymore, the commentator that went to this site for purpose of his documentary had to hire a translator that was able to translate what the people that operate the library were reading out aloud. Again, I suspect the location of the library to be in an Arabic country or at least in one where a version of Arabic used to be spoken. The age of the library is not exactly known to me neither, I only remember that it is very old from an oxidental point of view meaning that it dates back to B.C. . Once more, they said that there would be a pergament roll waiting for every person showing up at the library and I want to have a proof for that and travel there myself. I am sure this was not a hoax. This question is not intented to mislead any Google expert but is a question that I am really seeking an answer for, please do take it seriously even though the content might sound somewhat superstitious to some. Thank you very much for your attention, I am looking forward for your comments. As I am on a travel through Africa at the moment there might be a time lag in the answers that I can provide to feedback that you might want me to provide. Please understand though that I do not know more than what I wrote here in this description so the question should relate to other things.


  • Dear goodmen1-ga, The TV documentary you have seen was indeed no hoax. Such an absolutely unique ancient library does really exist, though I do not dare giving an opinion whether the records on every individual's life and destiny are mere humbug or something one should take for serious. However, your memory of the TV documentary concerning the geographical location of that library and the language of the ancient scriptures was not quite right. This might be the reason why your extensive research has not revealed satisfying results so far: The location is, in fact, not Arabia but Southern India. And the very old language of these recordings is not a form of Arabic, but Ancient Tamil (which looks, at least to everyone who is not a highly specialized linguist, very much like Arabic indeed). Otherwise, the Indian institution matches your description exactly. To avoid confusion, I will start with the basic answer on your question. The library you described is located in Vaithisvarankoil, a village approximately 26 kilometers from the town of Chidambaram in the southern Indian federal state Tamil Nadu. Here is the complete address: Vashistar Nadi Astrological Center Nadi Navalar No. 67, West Car Street Vaithisvarankoil 609 117 India (Tamil Nadu) The library, part of a temple of the dieties Shiva and Parvati, is not a secret place; everyone who desires it may ask there for obtaining information from the scipture allegedly containing information on his past, present and future life. The records - called Naids - are not written down on parchment or something similar, but on palm leaves. Hence it is often referred to as the "Palm Leaves Library". For a fee, the priest in charge of the library will find the visitor's individual recording from the archives, and a graduate translator for Ancient Tamil (a very old languange nearly extinct) will translate it orally to Hindi or English. To consult the records, personal attendance is essential. The origin of this library is rather mythical. The old legend says that the Indian wise man Bhrigu had the theurgic ability to foresee the destinies of tousands of people not even born yet, but who were predetermined to come to the Palm Leaves Library one far day to find out about their lives. He wrote down his knowledge on a huge number of palmleaves in about 5000 BC, supposedly. Since then, the records have been copied on fresh palm leaves again and again over the centuries by initiated priests. The Palm Leaves Library of Vaithisvarankoil is only the most famous one. In fact, there are several such collections in India and Sri Lanka, all of which claim to derive their records from Bhrigu original scriptures. A list of some additional libraries can be found on Tigo Zeyen's website "Palmblatt-Orakel": http://www.palmblatt-orakel.de/palmblatt-les.html The library of Vaithisvarankoil has been introduced to a wider Western public in a TV documentary by German travel author and theologian Holger Kersten who went there in the early 90s, though it is absolutely possible that other TV documentaries have been made there before. The austrian author Peter Krassa, inspired and curious by Kersten's report, also visited that Palm Leaves Library in 1993. He had his future predicted and later wrote several books and articles about it, one of which I happened to know by chance. Should you be able to read German, you might be interested in one of Peter Krassa's books on this topic, "Die Palmblattbibliothek und andere geheimnisvolle Schaupl tze der Welt. Augenzeugen berichten" (= The Palm Leaves Library and other mysterious places of the world. Reports by eye-witnesses). It is available, for instance, from Amazon.de: http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3776618051/qid=1029867062/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_3_1/028-2964308-5974129 I am absolutely sure that these Palm Leaves Libraries are what you searching for, since they are definitely unique. No such collections of scriptures predicting individual destinies are known to exist anywhere in the Arabian world. Sources: Peter Krassa: Geheime Forschungen & Verdeckte Experimente (= Secret Science & Covered Experiments). Published by Tosa Verlag, Vienna (Austria), 2001. ISBN 3-85492-211-6 Palmblatt-Orakel (=Palm Leaf Oracle), by Tigo Zeyen, 2001 (in German) http://www.palmblatt-orakel.de/ Palmblattbiliotheken/Palmlibrarys, by Wolfssohn (in Google Cache) ://www.google.de/search?q=cache:SBcZcKcDtvkC:members.aol.com/wolfssohn/palm.htm+Vaithisvarankoil&hl=de&ie=UTF-8 Das Verm chtnis der Sieben Weisen - Die Bibliotheken des Schicksals (= The Legacy of the Seven Wise Men - The Libraries of Destiny), by Thomas Ritter, 2001 (in German, Acrobat Reader file) http://www.thomas-ritter-reisen.de/pdf/palmblattbibliotheken1.PDF Travel Report: India, Tamil Nadu, by Jan Bruyndonckx, 2000 http://homepage.mac.com/jbruyndonckx/tamilNadu.html Search terms used: Vaithisvarankoil: ://www.google.de/search?q=Vaithisvarankoil&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&hl=de&btnG=Google-Suche&meta= palmleaf india predictions: ://www.google.de/search?hl=de&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&newwindow=1&q=palmleaf+india+predictions&meta= I hope this is what you were looking for. Regards, Scriptor
  • The location of "The Knowing Library"::
    I would like to know the location of what I call "The Knowing Library". It is a library that contains pergament rolls for every person that will visit it.
    http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=56469
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