Jeju Air plane crash in Korea

Question 1: What lessons can ascended master students learn from the recent Jeju Air plane crash in Korea? What should we ask the ascended masters for the departed souls of those who perished in the accident? 

Question 2: In Korea, we had a big plane crash. Are there any fallen beings or demons behind this plane crash? Or is this a reflection of Korean people’s subconsciousness? What is the meaning of this kind of accident for the Korean people?


Answer from the Ascended Master Mother Mary through Kim Michaels. The answer was given during the 2025 New Year’s webinar.

As ascended master students, there is not anything you specifically need to learn from this air crash in terms of needing to do anything differently. You need to recognize that in any nation, accidents can happen for various reasons. It can be simply negligence of certain key people. You could say that this is always a reflection of the collective consciousness to some degree, but there is nothing you specifically need to do as ascended master students to learn from this.

What should we ask the ascended masters for the departed souls? Well, you can certainly give the calls to Astrea that the souls will be cut free from any ties to the astral plane so that they can be taken to whatever level they need to go to, depending on their consciousness, where they can receive help to heal and be prepared for their next embodiment.

In terms of fallen beings and demons, you can say that in any accident, there is always a certain influence from dark forces who are seeking to create chaos. But you have to be careful not to over-interpret this, so you think that this is the real cause of it. It is really primarily the collective consciousness. And you need to recognize something here, and this perhaps is what ascended master students could learn from the disaster by looking at the reaction of the Korean people and nation to, not only this disaster, but also the ferry disaster that you had some years ago and other events like this.

In every nation, a majority of the people have a certain mental image of their nation, of what should or should not happen. And in Korea, you have a certain mental image that Korea should be the perfect nation where nothing bad should happen, no mistakes should be made. And therefore, there is a very strong feeling, a very strong reaction to the plane crash, to the ferry disaster, to the stampede you had in Seoul a few years ago, to martial law, to a previous president. And you see this very strong reaction because when these events happen, it shatters this mental image of perfection. And this really is not specific to Korea. You see the same thing very strongly outplayed in most of Asia. China has a mental image. Japan has had a very strong mental image. You see, especially the mental image they had before the Second World War. And of course, you see it in other nations to some degree, but there are actually many nations in the Southeast Asian area who have this very strong desire to appear as the perfect nation.

What you could realize from this is, and what you could make calls on as ascended master students, is that Korea will transcend this. Because, as we have explained many times in different ways at the personal level, if you are not willing to look at issues, you cannot transcend them. This means you suppress them and then the suppression builds a tension that can result in these kinds of accidents. Actually, the best thing that could happen for Korea was that the nation would transcend this desire to save face and maintain a facade and be willing to look at problems, overcome them, work through them, and therefore, Korea could very quickly make progress to an entirely new level. This has already happened in some European nations, where they have been more willing to look at themselves. And you can tie it in with Saint Germain’s stupendous dictation about overcoming this mindset where people are suffering from the hardships, but they are not willing to look at what is causing it. And this is what is holding progress back in many nations.

Because there are so many ascended master’s students in Korea, Korea has a bigger potential than most nations in Southeast Asia for transcending this mindset. And if you could transcend the mindset, you would make progress so much faster than these other nations. And this is, of course, what we want to see for Korea.

 

Copyright © 2025 Kim Michaels