Dear Karen

I refer to your posting on the Knight's Templar discussion forum,
connected to Morgana's Observatory
 You posted the following message:
 
  >>Hello,
  >>We are doing an art project for the Tate Gallery Bankside (London)
at www.somewhere.org.uk/broadcast/. In a nutshell,
  its a contemporary interpretataion of the Canterbury Tales, with 29
pilgrims going on a 24hr journey and broadcasting (via
  cell phones mainly) a 'tale' back live to Borough Market on Sat Sept
.11th.
  >>My reasons for being here are that one of our pilgrims, Roy
Snelling, is going to Rennes -le- Chateau to examine the
  mysteries around the religious stories of the region, and to question
his faith as a result. We are interested in obtaining any
  feedback from people here on what he should aim to see, who he should
speak to, 'pilgrimage' experiences to this destination
  that others may have had. Also possible is that an email dialogue
could be integrated into his tale - ie. the artists as 'hosts'
  could discuss any points raised with Roy live on the site.
  >>Look forward to any feedback.
  >>Karen & Nina
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I referred your posting to a contact of mine who used to
post frequently on this forum and has studied Rennes Le Chateau.  He lives in the
U.S.

Here is his suggestion:----

"Hello Vince, Perhaps you could forward these comments to Morgana's Templar forum as
I can't seem to access it these days. As a journalist I would say that your best bet
would be on-site at Rennes-le-Chateau, you'll likely find plenty of tourists and
researchers who will be very happy to provide you with any number of their pet
theories. Also, there is a bookstore on-site at Rennes-le-Chateau which might be
useful. Of course, the many books on Rennes-le-Chateau should provide many contact
ideas. Aside from that, I would suggest contacting the nearest Masonic Lodge or
Rosicrucian Praonos once you get into the vicinity.

And perhaps once in Paris you might want to visit St. Nicholas du Chardonnet church,
where Monsignor Ducaud-Bourget gave Tridentine Masses and was a source of controversy
for his traditionalist stance (much like Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre was). I don't
know whether Ducaud-Bourget still is alive. Ducaud-Bourget was supposed to have been
a Prieure de Sion member.

Hope this helps.

Rosencruez."
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