21.07.2015 Views

vatican-assassins-by-eric-jon-phelps

vatican-assassins-by-eric-jon-phelps

vatican-assassins-by-eric-jon-phelps

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Chapter 40 569Dolores, also Jesuit . . . In 1942, Fidel was sent to Havana where hecarried on with his secondary education at the Jesuit College of Belen(Bethlehem).” {12}“Fidel was significantly influenced <strong>by</strong> [Jesuit] Fathers Amondo[Armando] Llorente and Alberto de Castro . . . De Castro admiredFranco . . . Fidel was very active in a Jesuit organization similar to theBoy Scouts, the ‘Explorers.’ . . .‘Fidel was trained <strong>by</strong> the Jesuits to become their representative,’ saysCarlos Rafael Rodriguez. ‘The revolution does less propaganda[promoting] for Fidel than the propaganda <strong>by</strong> the Jesuits.’. . . Fidel spenteleven years in Catholic Boarding schools, seven of them in Jesuitinstitutions . . . ‘Fidel is a Jesuit first, a revolutionary second, and aMarxist third.’ . . . He promoted the [Jesuit-controlled] Soviet system as amodel . . . In a way he was turning Cuba into a giant Jesuit school inwhich he was the principal . . . It is still the Jesuit school in which he isthe principal . . . Fidel has not forgotten that the military invariably holdsthe ultimate power. It is perhaps significant that Fidel’s first title iscommander in chief.” {13} [Emphasis added]“[Wherever] a totalitarian movement erupts, whether Communist or Nazi[fascist], a Jesuit can be found in the role of ‘adviser’ or leader; in Cuba[it was] Castro’s Father Armando [Amondo] Llorente . . . ” {14}The Jesuits, in order to bring their illegitimate son of a Nazi and “grease ball”student dictator to power (as he was called <strong>by</strong> his classmates), used their Am<strong>eric</strong>anpress, money, entertainment industry, CIA and Soviet Russia. We read:“ ‘After the Matthews articles which followed an exclusive interview <strong>by</strong>the Times [Henry R. Luce SMOM] editorial writer in Castro’s mountainhideout and which likened him to Abraham Lincoln, he was able to getfollowers and funds in Cuba and in the United States. From that time onarms, money and soldiers of fortune abounded. Much of the Am<strong>eric</strong>anpress began to picture Castro as a political Robin Hood.Also because Batista was the dictator who unlawfully seized power,Am<strong>eric</strong>an people assumed Castro must, on the other hand, representliberty and democracy. The crusader role which the press and radiobestowed on the bearded rebel blinded the people to the left-wing politicalphilosophy with which even at that time he was already on record . . . ’The Jesuits – 1959 - 1962

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!