EVIDENCE OF THE NAZI BELL

After the close of World War II, many Nazis were tried at war crime tribunals for crimes against humanity and violations of human rights. One defendant was Jakob Sporrenberg, a former Nazi SS Obergruppenfuhrer, one of the highest commissioned Nazi SS ranks.

A Polish war crimes court tried Sporrenberg for the murder of 60 German engineers, scientists, and technicians. In his court affidavit, Sporrenberg gave details of the Nazi Bell project, calling it “Die Glocke.” Describing the secrecy surrounding the Bell, Sporrenberg admitted that the scientists and engineers were murdered to prevent them from disclosing any details of the technology with those outside the program to the outside world.

According to Sporrenberg’s affidavit, the Bell was a highly advanced technology that produced a hissing, or buzzing sound when operational. He noted that because of the sound, his fellow Germans referred to the Bell as “Der Bienenstock,” the German word for “beehive.”

But evidence of the existence of the Nazi Bell does not end with Sporrenberg. Many conspiracy theorists point to the paintings of the late 19th-century artist, Charles A. A. Dellschau, as additional evidence of the Bell’s earlier existence.

Dellschau’s images of the anti-gravity Bell might be an indication that German engineers had knowledge of the Bell long before it was actually deployed during World War II. Some even claim that Dellschau’s Bell paintings are evidence that he was in contact with hyper-intelligent extraterrestrials with a pro-Nazi agenda.

Dellschau painted highly detailed images of the craft prior to the Nazis’ Bell project. The artist was a member of the cryptic “German Sonora Aero Club Collective,” a group that constructed exploratory aircraft designs. Dellschau’s craft was identical to what would soon be dubbed “Die Glocke,” a.k.a the German Bell.

If Dellschau had completed only one painting, it easily could be shrugged off as a coincidence. However, he painted hundreds of craft that look strikingly similar to the Bell.

WRITTEN EVIDENCE OF THE NAZI BELL’S EXISTENCE

Those who believe in the Nazi Bell technology often point to the writings of several authors, including:

IGOR WITKOWSKI

Witkowski is a contemporary Polish author, editor and military journalist. In 2003 he published his book “Prawda o Wunderwaffe,” which translates to “The Truth About the Wonder Weapon.” The book includes a detailed description of the Bell craft. Witkowski’s book was eventually reprinted in Germany under the title, “Die Wahrheit über die Wunderwaffe.”

In his text, Witkowski refers to the futuristic German UFO technology as the “Nazi Bell.” He reports that he first discovered evidence of the Bell in 1997 while poring over classified transcripts from Sporrenberg’s Polish War Crimes Court testimony. Witkowski says he also received the documents from an unnamed individual who had worked within Poland’s intelligence community. He adds that unfortunately, he was not permitted to make copies of the records, and could only transcribe their content.

Witkowski also claims that five of the seven early Bell project engineers perished during testing. He writes that the Bell’s test rig ruins can be found in a concrete structure at a Wenceslas mine located about two miles from the Complex Sokolec subterranean Project Riese works in Poland. According to Witkowski, the Bell was eventually moved to a South American country governed by a group of Nazi sympathizers.

NICK COOK

Nick Cook was a military journalist and author. Expanding on Witkowski’s writings about the Nazi Bell, Cook providing his own opinions and research in his book, “The Hunt for Zero Point.” Cook believes the Bell was eventually transported to the United States as per an agreement between SS General Hans Kammler and American officials.

HENRY STEVENS

In his 2007 book, “Hitler’s Suppressed and Still-Secret Weapons, Science and Technology,” Henry Stevens writes that the violet-hued fuel used to power the Bell was red mercury, as conventional mercury does not contain fluid compounds. Stevens also tells a story of a German scientist, Otto Cerny, who told a teenaged Greg Rowe about special Third Reich technology that utilized a concave mirror atop a device believed to be the Nazi Bell. Rowe claims Cerny told him this device was even capable of generating images from the past.

A slew of other writers, including Jim Marrs and Joseph P. Farrell, have made mention of the Bell in their publications, often associating this “wunderwaffen” or “miracle weapon” with Nazi occultism, free energy, and anti-gravity research.

WHAT HAPPENED TO THE BELL AFTER WORLD WAR II?

Many conspiracy theorists agree that the Nazis shifted the Bell’s locale to the Arctic Circle and/or South America following the execution of their top scientists.

It has been said that Nazi leaders continued their secret space program by developing UFO technologies and communicating with extraterrestrial beings through channelings in the years following World War II.

Some theorists believe that a handful of Nazi leaders traveled to the Aldebaran solar system with the Bell technology. and that extraterrestrials telepathically transferred other UFO schematics to mediums. Others believe the Nazis still have secret UFO-development bases in the Arctic that have yet to be discovered by the outside world.