Desertgreening – it works!
The southern side of the Atlas Mountains in Algeria’s desert is turning green! What started as a vision of the civil engineer Mr. Madjid Abdellaziz, has over the past years turned into a wide green oasis, where now fruit trees, vegetables and wheat grow in the Sahara Desert. Even truffles, an exclusive gourmet delicacy in affluent countries, sprouted in large number from the otherwise infertile desert sands.
Not only has a patch of desert been converted into a garden, but also the persistent water shortage in Algeria has been resolved by Mr. Abdellaziz’s project and dedicaton. In 2003 the drought in Algeria had taken dramatic proportions and threatened to dry up the last reservoirs in the country, and the government considered importing drinking water by large ships to provide for the basic needs of the population. But now, central Algeria is getting rainfall again.
The astounding success of Mr. Abdellaziz’s methods to bring rain back to the region and to grow plants where nobody ever suspected them to grow is based on simple bioenergetic principles, which have been discovered by some of the most remarkable researchers of recent history: Willhelm Reich, Viktor Schauberger, Nikola Tesla, Walter Russel and George Lackowsky.
What Mr. Abdellazis calls accupuncture of the sky is the ‘treatment’ of an energetic imbalance in the atmosphere with a simple installation that was devised and first applied by Wilhelm Reich, during his famous weather experiments half a century back. Later, James DeMeo, an independent scientist and former university professor from Oregon, among others, has in over 25 years of field research during various highly successful operations in the USA, Israel, Namibia and Eritrea, verified the method, known as “Cloudbusting”.
“The work in Israel did show a strong development of rains, but Israel’s drought was only 3 years duration. In Eritrea, we were looking at 3 decades of dryness and below-normal rains in an already dry region, where the Sahara Desert had been slowly spreading southward over that same time period. Even so, good saturating rains came quickly after our first operations, and most every other operation thereafter. And the rains in Eritrea were widespread and soaking, lasting all day into the evening, of a kind that older residents confirmed they had not seen since childhood.”
Excerpt from J. DeMeo’s research-summary
Why then, you might ask, has the method not been applied yet everywhere – why are there still areas that don’t get rain for years? And, why are there still deserts?….good question! ( …maybe it’s due to a lack of Madjids? )
readings:
desert-greening.com – Mr. Madjids Abdellaziz well documented website about project Djanan in Algeria
Are the deserts getting greener? an article published by BBC on July 16, 2009
