Wake up Humanity: And Take Responsibility
By Christa Sira
()
About this ebook
This has brought about a situation where humanity can no longer afford to ignore the present dangers and continue living in the old ways.
We must make changes in the way they live to avoid a potential disaster unfolding through the collapse of the global economies, the environment pollution and the poisoning of food, land, rivers and oceans and all life form in them by taking our duty of care more seriously.
The books contents are based on real events and spiritual principles, along with personal experiences. It describes the general state of affairs of our society and children and highlights the increasing need for humanity to change the way we live and start to take greater care of the planet that sustains our lives and how Gods fury is unleashed through the splitting of the atom.
Simple exercises describe and help the reader how to create a light-field for personal protection around them and how to send it around the world. It urges the reader to use the violet flame and pink rays together with meditations, decrees and affirmations to remove unwanted situations and conditions from their lives.
The book is based on the authors christa-sira@spin.net.au personal experiences, spiritual principles and teachings and events to help the reader to reach a higher state of awareness. .
Wake up Humanity- and take Responsibility is available from, www.xlibris.com, www.amazon.com, www.barnesandnobles.com and all good book stores.
The author has a background in spiritual training courses, facilitating workshops and has designed her own Angel and Universal Card Sets.
Christa Sira
Hans Liszikam was born in the larger provincial town of Bonyhad in Hungary. After the end of WW II, the Russian Army forced him, his parents and sisters to leave their homeland. After a lengthy journey, they arrived in Germany were he was raised and educated. His background is in building, construction and transportation. He also holds a diploma in International Trade. Having been interested in Astrology and other mystical teachings as a child, he became involved with the concept of Spirituality in 1981 and studied these subjects continuously for the next seven years He works as a spiritual teacher in Australia.
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Wake up Humanity - Christa Sira
Wake Up
Humanity
And Take Responsibility
Christa Sira
Edited by: David Gwilym
Copyright © 2012 by Christa Sira.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the copyright owner.
Every attempt has been made not to infringe on the copyright of others. Should such an infringement have occurred, it is purely accidental, and advice of such would be greatly appreciated!\
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Contents
Disclaimer
Foreword
I A Soul’s Journey
II The Dimensions
III The Seven Planes or Bodies
IV Shambhala
V Sira
VI Duty of Care
VII God Lives Within Us
VIII Judgment
IX The Light
X Twin Soul—Twin Flame
XI Seek Oneness, Not Duality
XII Spiritual, Universal and Natural Laws
XIII Chakra Exercise
XIV The Violet Flame & Pink Ray
Rita’s Angel Cards
Universal Guidance Cards
Introduction to Spirituality Audio CD
The God Code in the Seven
A Soul’s Learning
Disclaimer
No responsibility will be taken by the author, publisher or any others involved in the production and distribution of this book for any physical, spiritual or mental harm suffered by any person reading or attempting to practice the activities described in this book. The author strongly recommends that persons wishing to become actively involved in the practicing of the described activities should join a group under the guidance of an experienced teacher. Readers are reminded, in accordance with the fifth principle of spiritualism; they are personally responsible for their lives. The author also wishes it to be known that she is not a medically trained practitioner.
Foreword
Rita wrote all of these things down, so they can reach the multitudes! She is not much of a public speaker, and everybody has their own talents. Whilst writing she notices, she was not the only one writing, there is someone writing with her and she give thanks to this being.
The events described in this book, have actually occurred in the lives of the author and her family, during the time from her birth in 1937 during WW II and up to 1968 in Germany and from 1969 on in Australia and whilst writing this book in the spring, summer and autumn of 2011 in the state of New South Wales.
This story is published with the intent of possibly helping thousands of other persons and families facing similar circumstances in their lives and any other readers, who seek to gain a deeper understanding of the underlying principles involved and perhaps wish to change their outlook and philosophy of life in a world dominated by greed and materialism and where ever increasing and deliberate pressure is placed on the family unit, causing this unit to gradually decay and erode, leading to the sad state of affairs we are now living in.
Where government legislation interferes more and more every day in the privacy of the family unit, taking away the individual parents rights over their children.
In a world where violence dominates society and where authorities are incapable or unwilling to restore law and order, the author believes, only a return to a more humble honest lifestyle by all of humanity, away from greed and materialism which dominates our lives today, where the family unit is once again restored to its rightful position as the bond which holds society together, can reverse the present accelerating trend towards the destruction of our planet, our society and ultimately mankind.
Where many churches seem to be more concerned with dogma and tradition, rather than helping their flocks in their search for answers they are looking for in these days. Answers people have probably been looking for, for many years in their lives, answers of which many can be found in the scriptures.
I
A Soul’s Journey
Rita was born in Muehlhausen/Thueringen, in what today is known as the former East Germany on the 21 of June 1937. In numerology this date adds up to an eleven, which is a master number. She was born at home, in a house numbered 65, which again adds up to an eleven. At the tender age of three months, Rita developed whooping cough, and for a while it was touch and go.
At the same time, both parents contracted lung infections, and whilst looking after her, her mother developed a ribcage lining infection, leaving her with asthma for the rest of her life.
As a small child, Rita was a whirlwind who loved the picture of her grandfather, (her fathers father) hanging in the kitchen and she believes today that she saw an angel next to the picture.
Her favourite time of the year was, and still is today Christmas, and her family Christmas today is very similar to that of her parents many years ago, only wishing that the tree was real, smelling like a pine and not made of plastic. With the wood fire going, and being warm and cozy, she used to watch delightfully her mother baking cookies and Christmas cakes.
In Germany the sixth of December is St. Nicholas when children would receive a home baked cake man and at times some chocolate gingerbread hearts. Today she found, these products can be purchased in Australia at the Aldi Stores. During winter, Rita liked to sleep in—in the morning, watching the snow tumbling down as she felt safe and secure back then.
In 1939, WW II broke out, and being a child, she had no idea how devastating the following years would become, and with her father being in the war, her mother became the main figure in her life.
One day two girls from across the road called on Rita to come to play, as she arrived there, they led her up some steps, only to push her back down again. This incident changed Rita’s life for ever and made her what she is today, with her mother becoming her confidant, and although she played with other children, she would never again allow any of them to become close to her!
Once whilst visiting an aunty in Kala with her mother and older sister, she said to her mother, mum aunty Else is ugly! Her mother said: Don’t you say something like this to her!
When her aunty returned from the kitchen, Rita looked at her and said: Aunty you have a beard!
It was not a pleasant situation, but children don’t look at it this way, for it is their truths, and aunty Else (who was a beautiful soul), did not hold it against Rita or her mother!
A few days later, Rita went with her uncle in to the city. There they met his son and girlfriend, and as children often do, she changed her mind and went with them, telling her uncle (who did not understand her) so. When he returned home, he told her mother, that she had run off. When her cousin’s girlfriend and Rita returned home, she was told by her mother, if she did this again, she would be sent to the gypsies. After starting school at the age of seven, the family moved to the other end of town to be closer to the school, with their new address being 29 Augusta Street, again this added up to an eleven, a master number!
In April 1945, the war came to an end and one afternoon they heard that the American troops were close by, so Rita and her two older sisters were made to stay inside, for they were old enough to be sexually assaulted by the Yankee soldiers.
When the US soldiers arrived at their place, they threw her family out of their home to occupy it themselves, leaving Rita and her family no other choice but to move into the back house on the property, an old flour mill where they stayed with a cousin and some aunties.
One day whilst preparing some sandwiches, a couple of Yankee soldiers turned up at the door. They were invited to come in and share the freshly made sandwiches with them, but refused out of fear of being poisoned. However, after a member of the family ate a sandwich, they joined in too. During the following conversation one of the soldiers said: We want to go to Berlin and stay there!
But they were told that the Russian Army was already there. Upon being asked by the soldiers how they knew, they were told, we listen to the radio.
Many months later, Rita’s father returned back home from a Russian POW camp, (he had been with the military police during the war in Russia), and told his family many stories about the war, and one of these is still in her mind today.
Her father once drove a high ranking officer from one town to another. As they drove through a forest, they noticed an old farmer collecting firewood. The officer told his driver to stop, got out of the car and went to the farmer, whom he told to turn around and then shot him in the back of the head. Rita’s father could say nothing to the officer, for he would have been shot also. As they arrived at their destination, the officer got out of the car and a hand grenade that came out of the nowhere exploded and hit him in the stomach. Rita’s father looked at him and said: Deserves you right for killing the Farmer!
At that time she did not know about the law of cause and effect and that (if one did something wrong), at times it can take some time for the effect to eventuate, but in this case, the effect or retribution was almost instantaneous!
After Rita’s father had returned from the POW camp, a man came on a regular basis to their home in East Germany and told him to leave for West Germany, as the Russians were incarcerating every one who had an association with the former German Military. Knowing that the threat was real, her father left the family and fled overnight to West Germany.
Life returned to normal and Rita went back to school, and although the Russians were there, she hardly saw them and the children were safe.
At times she went to the city and on the way back, whilst passing a Catholic Church, she always went inside and sat on a bench, without knowing why. Today Rita recognises that it was an inner feeling that made her go there. As time went by, missing her father (who every so often sent yeast from the west), which her mum and grandmother took to the surrounding villages in exchange for food, got worse. This went on for a while, and Rita and her mum managed every so often to sneak across the border, to the West to visit her father.
One Christmas whilst visiting her father in West Germany, they decided to stay with him; however, her mother had to go back to the east to dissolve their home. Crossing the border between east and west was always a tricky and dangerous thing to do, for Rita’s mother had to walk quite some distance along the railway tracks at night to bypass a couple of stations, so she could not be seen and captured by the Russian border guards. The West German border guards did not hassle them, for they knew what it was like living under the communist system.
Starting school in the West was a drama for Rita, for the teacher had no understanding for the feelings of a little scared girl in totally new surroundings, putting her down immediately, which to this day, still affects her emotionally. One could say, (it is only a state of mind, but emotionally it still lingers)! Life in Malsfeld went on, and again because of the experience with the other girls in the east, Rita had no true friends. One day, whilst returning home from school crying, her mum asked her,