In 1992 Dominica began a policy of offering citizenship to people who invested in the nation's economy.
FLAG
Green, with a centered cross of three equal bands - the vertical part is yellow (hoist side), black, and white and the horizontal part is yellow (top), black, and white; superimposed in the center of the cross is a red disk bearing a sisserou parrot encircled by 10 green, five-pointed stars edged in yellow; the 10 stars represent the 10 administrative divisions (parishes).
The parishes represented by the pentagrams are, from the top: St John and St Andrew, (hmmm, at the top eh?) St Peter, St Joseph, St David, St Paul, St George, St Patrick, St Luke and St Mark. The capital, Roseau is in St George parish. The second city is Portsmouth in St John parish.
There are 365 rivers in this small country (289.5 square miles). One for each day of the week.
The official version of history claims that the Caribbean island of Dominica was discovered by Christopher Columbus on Sunday 3rd November 1493. (1) The name of this beautiful and rugged Windward Isle was (they say) chosen because it was discovered on a Sunday. (Latin: Domingo-Sunday). There are other possibilities though, and I will leave it to the reader to make up their own mind as to which is the more likely. Domus in Latin means home. Iniquus means wicked. Do we have 'Home of the Wicked? Possibly. Or maybe Dominus meaning Lord and Iniqus, wicked - Wicked Lord - we know who that is, don't we? The iniquitous credentials of Columbus and his masters are well documented in books such as David Icke's The Biggest Secret. But to this we may add the 'peoples history', the folklore.
Shortly after Columbus's "discovery," Spanish troops and Dominican missionaries made numerous attempts to colonise the island. However after ample bloodshed the Spanish and Vatican marauders were sent packing by the warlike Carib inhabitants, who called their home, Waitikubuli ('Tall is her body' ). The next wave of Europeans were the French who succeeded in colonising part of the island and by 1727 there were 50-60 families settled on Dominica. However in 1761 the British overthrew the French but surprisingly (or perhaps not) allowed the French colonists to stay on their farms. Because the island was covered in a vast and thick rainforest the British, who appear to have been very strongly represented by Scots, shipped in large numbers of African slaves to act as a labour force.
Local folklore amongst the descendants of the slaves in Dominica, and I am told throughout the Caribbean tells that these French, British and Spanish colonists whiled away their isolated lives with frequent and frenzied orgies of sadistic debauchery.
These Suchuyan (Soo-koo-yan), meaning witches cast a cloud of terror over the slave settlements that were huddled tight to the colonial forts. At night people would disappear sometimes never to be seen again. Those that did return told tales of the Suchuyan peeling back their own skin before their orgies and sucking the blood of their victims. Frequently their attackers were seen to'shapeshift' into birds, animals and reptiles; sometimes changing shape many times in one session. When their 'feasting' was over they would don again their skin. Sometimes the slaves were made to watch at other times they would awake back at their hut, having lost all memory of the previous night but with a tell-tale bruise (note: my source did not say puncture wound) upon their wrists.
Today this horror still continues but now the cosmopolitan population serves to confuse and thereby camouflage the Suchuyan. Generations of interbreeding means that now the Suchuyan inhabit the bodies of myriad races including some of the descendants of the original black slaves.
There are both male and female Suchuyan. One clue to the presence of a male is a long 'shhhheeee' noise, like a heavy chain being dragged along the ground.
IMPORTANT NOTE
I stress that my contact is not suggesting every inhabitant, or any particular race are Suchuyan. I emphasise that their bloodline is a restricted one. Not every early settler (probably only a few of them) was Suchuyan. Although their numbers have been strengthened by immigration some would now be living in other parts of the world. All but a few of the inhabitants of these strikingly beautiful islands are friendly, happy and human.
The official version of history claims that the Caribbean island of Dominica was discovered by Christopher Columbus on Sunday 3rd November 1493. (1) The name of this beautiful and rugged Windward Isle was (they say) chosen because it was discovered on a Sunday. (Latin: Domingo-Sunday). There are other possibilities though, and I will leave it to the reader to make up their own mind as to which is the more likely. Domus in Latin means home. Iniquus means wicked. Do we have 'Home of the Wicked? Possibly. Or maybe Dominus meaning Lord and Iniqus, wicked - Wicked Lord - we know who that is, don't we? The iniquitous credentials of Columbus and his masters are well documented in books such as David Icke's The Biggest Secret. But to this we may add the 'peoples history', the folklore.
Shortly after Columbus's "discovery," Spanish troops and Dominican missionaries made numerous attempts to colonise the island. However after ample bloodshed the Spanish and Vatican marauders were sent packing by the warlike Carib inhabitants, who called their home, Waitikubuli ('Tall is her body' ). The next wave of Europeans were the French who succeeded in colonising part of the island and by 1727 there were 50-60 families settled on Dominica. However in 1761 the British overthrew the French but surprisingly (or perhaps not) allowed the French colonists to stay on their farms. Because the island was covered in a vast and thick rainforest the British, who appear to have been very strongly represented by Scots, shipped in large numbers of African slaves to act as a labour force.
Local folklore amongst the descendants of the slaves in Dominica, and I am told throughout the Caribbean tells that these French, British and Spanish colonists whiled away their isolated lives with frequent and frenzied orgies of sadistic debauchery.
These Suchuyan (Soo-koo-yan), meaning witches cast a cloud of terror over the slave settlements that were huddled tight to the colonial forts. At night people would disappear sometimes never to be seen again. Those that did return told tales of the Suchuyan peeling back their own skin before their orgies and sucking the blood of their victims. Frequently their attackers were seen to'shapeshift' into birds, animals and reptiles; sometimes changing shape many times in one session. When their 'feasting' was over they would don again their skin. Sometimes the slaves were made to watch at other times they would awake back at their hut, having lost all memory of the previous night but with a tell-tale bruise (note: my source did not say puncture wound) upon their wrists.
Today this horror still continues but now the cosmopolitan population serves to confuse and thereby camouflage the Suchuyan. Generations of interbreeding means that now the Suchuyan inhabit the bodies of myriad races including some of the descendants of the original black slaves.
There are both male and female Suchuyan. One clue to the presence of a male is a long 'shhhheeee' noise, like a heavy chain being dragged along the ground.
IMPORTANT NOTE
I stress that my contact is not suggesting every inhabitant, or any particular race are Suchuyan. I emphasise that their bloodline is a restricted one. Not every early settler (probably only a few of them) was Suchuyan. Although their numbers have been strengthened by immigration some would now be living in other parts of the world. All but a few of the inhabitants of these strikingly beautiful islands are friendly, happy and human.
Watch this space.
1).3 November 1493
Numerologically this date totals 33 and 22.(See other articles on this site for descriptions of these numbers.)
In ancient Egypt this is the date for the Festival of Isia (possibly Parmelia), the Rebirth of Osiris.
NOTES:
In 1992 Dominica began a policy of offering citizenship to people who invested in the nation's economy.
FLAG
Green, with a centered cross of three equal bands - the vertical part is yellow (hoist side), black, and white and the horizontal part is yellow (top), black, and white; superimposed in the center of the cross is a red disk bearing a sisserou parrot encircled by 10 green, five-pointed stars edged in yellow; the 10 stars represent the 10 administrative divisions (parishes).
The parishes represented by the pentagrams are, from the top: St John and St Andrew, (hmmm, at the top eh?) St Peter, St Joseph, St David, St Paul, St George, St Patrick, St Luke and St Mark. The capital, Roseau is in St George parish. The second city is Portsmouth in St John parish.
There are 365 rivers in this small country (289.5 square miles). One for each day of the week.