The mass shooting in Prague


Question: Two weeks ago, 14 people were killed in a mass shooting in Prague University and another 25 were injured. This event has profoundly shaken Czech academia and society as a whole. It was widely believed that such events could not occur in Central Europe, which is considered relatively safe and peaceful. What is the lesson for the Czech Republic behind this incident? What are the major challenges for Czechia in the years to come so that it could grow in consciousness?

Answer from the Ascended Master Mother Mary through Kim Michaels. This answer was given during the 2024 New Year webinar.

Well, there are always individual factors behind such an incident. There is a person who has to do this. This person has to be in a weak state of mind so that his or her mind can be taken over by dark forces, often in the emotional realm.

You have to be careful not to over-interpret this as having a greater significance than it does. In other words, it is not necessarily that because this happened in Czechia, there is some kind of problem in the country or in the collective consciousness, that the country then needs to look at and change.

What I would rather focus on is to say that after the invasion of Ukraine, there has naturally been an increased tension and insecurity in all of the countries who were either part of the Soviet Union or the Warsaw Pact. What has happened is that there is an increased tension in the entire region and this makes it more likely that incidents like this could occur. And it is not necessarily that this could have occurred only in Czechia. And it is not necessarily that there is any particular issue or problem in Czechia that made it occur there. Because it could have occurred in any of the other countries if there had been a person whose mind was weak enough to be taken over.

You understand that what we have said about fallen beings is that they are not a united group, which is the primary reason they have not been able to take over the earth. There are of course different groupings of fallen beings, but there is clearly a group of fallen beings in the emotional, mental and identity realms that are behind Putin, behind Xi Jinping, behind the leadership in Iran and certain other nations. These have as part of their agenda to destabilize democratic nations. And as I said, because of the past, because of the records in the collective consciousness, this has had a severe effect in these nations in Eastern Europe. And it is the agenda of these fallen beings to destabilize these countries in any way they can. And this is just one way to create something shocking that makes people in the country think there must be something wrong with our country, there must be something wrong with us.

And I am not here trying to give people an excuse for not looking at themselves, but I am just saying that it would be more constructive to look at the past and to connect it to what is happening with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and how their records from the past have been stirred up by this. And this needs to be processed, and there needs to even ideally be an open discussion about: Have we moved on from the past? Where are we at today? Are we really committed to being part of Europe, being part of NATO, being part of the democratic world? And it is not just in Czechia, it is the entire region, all of the countries who were part of the Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact. This is the more constructive way to approach this incident. And of course, other countries could learn from it as well and take up this willingness to look back at the Soviet past, what has been stirred up by Russia’s invasion and Putin’s threat to expand the Soviet Union and how will we deal with this as a country.

It is also of course important to look at these countries and their support for Ukraine in the war. And this is of course especially important for Hungary where there has been some, we might say, divided signals coming from Viktor Orbán concerning Ukraine and the support for Ukraine and his ties to Russia and so forth. And this is also something that all countries in the region need to look at.

And what does that mean? Where do we stand as the country of Hungary for example? Have we forgotten about the past, the Soviet past? Have we forgotten about the tanks rolling through our capital? Where do we stand today in our relationship to Russia now that we see that Putin has revealed his intentions, which we could conveniently ignore until the invasion of Ukraine? Which direction do we want our country to go in? Do we want to keep having one foot in the EU and one foot out, or do we want to commit to the EU and NATO, or do we want to go back towards being closer to Russia and thereby inevitably being dominated by Russia? Because, should it not be clear by now that any country’s relationship to Russia must be black and white, either you submit or you must try to remove yourself from Putin’s influence. I mean, can there be a gray zone in between there as some seem to think? This is what needs to be discussed.

 

Copyright © 2024 Kim Michaels