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Exploiting Nostradamus

Nostradamus' predictions surface every time a major event occurs. AJIT DUARA explains why these quatrains are open to misrepresentation.

IMMEDIATELY after the tragedy on September 11, there was a hoax doing the rounds on the Internet. It quoted a prophecy of Nostradamus to illuminate the devastation in New York City. It was pretty explicit and went like this:

"In the city of York there will be a great collapse, 
Two twin brothers torn apart by chaos 
While the fortress falls the great leader will succumb 
The third big war will begin when the big city is burning."

The quote on the Internet is signed "Nostradamus" and dated 1654. Michel de Nostradame, to give him his real name, never wrote such a quatrain and he died in 1566, 100 years before the date attributed to this piece of creative invention.

For centuries, the quatrains of Nostradamus have been subject to manipulations and interpretations to suit the times and troubles of various interest groups. So who was this man? What did he stand for?

His biography is very moving. He was born in 1503 at St. Remy in Provence, France. A highly educated and intelligent man, he was well versed in literature, history, medicine and astrology (astrology was then a legitimate subject of learning). His greatest achievement, however, was not in astrology but in medicine. He was able to prevent many cases of bubonic plague - which was then raging across Europe - by advocating cleanliness and prescribing vitamin C. As the plague visited a town, Nostradame would arrive, at great risk to his own health, and organise a cleanliness drive in homes and on streets. He gained fame and honour by this simple but intelligent method.

Sadly, God had a different script for him. His wife and children contracted the plague and, by a tragic irony, Nostradame - the saviour of many towns across France - was unable to save his family. They died in 1537.Traumatised and in deep depression, Nostradame became a wanderer and began questioning the purpose of his existence. For six years, he suffered in self-imposed obscurity and then reappeared with a new course for himself. He said he could see visions of the future and wrote them down in "The Centuries", 10 volumes with a 100 quatrains each, in which he made his predictions. The first edition, containing centuries one to four, came out in 1555. But because such prophecies might have been seen as the work of the devil, he hid some of their more explicit meanings in riddles, puns and anagrams.

It is because Nostradame deliberately obscured his work, as a form of self-censorship, that they are, today, so open to misinterpretation and exploitation. Nevertheless, some verses are uncanny and there is clearly a psychic power that he had gained after his personal suffering and his contribution to humanity.

But the method of Nostradame is quite different, for example, from that of Vedic predictive astrology. He simply saw things in his mind's- eye and described them, well-read man that he was, in the literary format of his time - the quatrain. The hoax on the Internet is a clever amalgam of a number of existing verses. It is easy to combine two verses and apply them to the tragedy in New York. Take Century 1, quatrain 87:

"Earth-shaking fire from the center of the Earth. 
Will cause the towers around the New City to shake: 
Two great rocks for a long time will make war, 
And then Arethusa will colour a new river red."

Now assuming that the "New City" is New York, what are "Arethusa" and the "river red"? Or take another verse, Century 5, quatrain 65:

"Suddenly arrived, the terror will be great, 
The principal players in the affair are hidden away: 
And the lady in the hot coals will no longer be in sight, 
Thus little by little will the great ones will be angered."

What is the mumbo-jumbo about the "lady in the hot coals"? The persuasive believer would say, if you combine the first two lines of each quatrain into a single quatrain look at what you will get:

"Earth-shaking fire from the centre of the Earth
Will cause the towers around the New City to shake:
Suddenly arrived, the terror will be great
The principal players in the affair are hidden away."

Now this newly invented quatrain is free from mumbo-jumbo and fits the tragic events of the past week. You might ask, by what logic do you combine these particular verses to form a single unit? Nostradame must have had a working knowledge of numerology. The number for century 1, quatrain 87 is 7 (1+87=88=16=7) and 7 is also the number for century 5, quatrain 65 (5+65=70=7). So they are part of one unit and you can combine them. This is the kind of manipulation that is possible.

Interestingly, Nostradame was smarter than his translators, interpreters and self-appointed experts. He predicted that these manufacturers would all fail, saying so in a verse, towards the end of all his predictions - Century 9, quatrain 81. Read it and it will make your hair stand on end!

"The sly King will understand his ambushes,
From three fronts the enemies assail,
A strange number, tears from the hooded men,
The brilliance of the translator will come to fail."

To use a Latin phrase with which Michel de Nostradame, in his time, would have been familiar - quod erat demonstrandum, or as we used to write after our geometry homework in school, Q.E.D. (Quite Easily Done).

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