June 19, 2025
This article explores global conflicts, ancient wars, and spiritual awakenings through a lens that bridges history, myth, and current events. It may be dense for some readers—but stick with it. Estimated reading time: ~5 minutes.
PROLOGUE: The War That Never Ended
Try saying Kurukshetra three times fast—and feel the weight of an age collapse into a single word.
Kurukshetra refers to the legendary battlefield in the Indian epic, the Mahabharata, where a climactic war unfolded between the Pandavas and the Kauravas—two factions of a royal family. But more than a war of succession, it was a cosmic struggle between dharma (truth and righteousness) and adharma (deception and chaos). It was here that Krishna, avatar of Vishnu, delivered the Bhagavad Gita, one of the most profound spiritual discourses known to humanity.
Long before WWI and WWII, long before even the Kali Yuga’s descent into illusion, a great war was spoken of in the Rig Veda and carried through the Mahabharata—a war not merely between men, but between gods. Devas and Asuras clashed across the heavens and Earth, their weapons radiant and terrible, their machines of flight etched into memory as Vimanas. Some believe this war happened 5,000 years ago. Others, like Hancock and Frawley, suggest it may be tens of thousands of years older—an echo of the end of the last great cycle.
Vimana and the Temple Designs
It may be no coincidence that J. Robert Oppenheimer, father of the atomic bomb, quoted the Bhagavad Gita after the Trinity test: “Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.” He had read the Vedic texts. He knew their power. And he may have recognized what he had unleashed—not just a bomb, but a repeat. A cycle revisited.
Archaeological enigmas—such as patches of green glass found in the Libyan Desert or vitrified ruins at Mohenjo-Daro—have long baffled researchers. These are not the remnants of campfires or primitive metallurgy. They bear the signature of extreme heat—akin to that of a nuclear blast. Are these the fingerprints of the Kurukshetra war itself?
Perhaps what we read as myth in the Mahabharata was, in fact, the memory of a cataclysmic war fought with weapons far beyond bows and spears—energy beams, flying craft, and annihilation from the sky. A prehistoric war so destructive, its scars still glitter in the sand.
Reflect: What if our myths are memories? What if the past isn’t gone, but cycling back into view, exposing ancient unhealed karmic wounds?
We
may be witnessing that ancient fued again. Not as arrows and chariots,
but as unseen ships moving between stars… As 5th dimensional cyber wars,
and timelines, split and rewoven. As spiritual forces once cloaked in
myth now move through intuition, vision, and sky. Missiles are once
again being lobbed in the Middle East.
This is not merely history—it’s a cycle that must be broken.
Cycles repeat, not always with swords—but through dynasties, inventions, and veiled alliances.
The many inventions of Leonardo Da Vinci
Consider the Renaissance, where towering minds like Leonardo da Vinci navigated the currents of political intrigue and papal ambition. Da Vinci’s notebooks revealed visions of flying machines, submarines, tanks—technologies centuries ahead of their time. He worked for powerful patrons like the Medicis and Sforzas, threading the needle between scientific genius and political survival.
The Medicis, the Borgias, the papal dynasties—they, too, were locked in battles for power, knowledge, and legacy. Much of that knowledge is purportedly hidden in the underground library of the Vatican. In the United States, a curious pattern emerges: many of its presidents trace their ancestry to European aristocracy. Could today’s political feuds—especially between Democrats and Republicans—be more than ideological? Could they echo ancient feuds among bloodlines with hidden spiritual agendas?
From Global Conflicts to the Spiritual Battlefield
Some suggest that what we are witnessing today, including escalating tensions in the Middle East, Ukraine, and beyond, are echoes or precursors of a larger war to come. While some call it World War III, others interpret it through a spiritual lens: Har-Magedon (you know it as Armageddon), the Biblical site of the final battle between good and evil.
As Ephesians 6:12 reminds us, “For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.”
What if this battle is not just one of armies and politics? What if it’s also energetic—fought through symbols, media, and collective consciousness? And what if we really do have help in the way of a Galactic Federation, not overtly, but influencing events for a more positive outcome?
If you read about the 18 day war of Kurkshetra (via the link above), you may notice tactics that have been used in 2025. Here is a summary of what I noticed:
18 Days That Echo Today
The Mahabharata’s 18-day war wasn’t just a clash of weapons, it was a spiritual chess match, where alliances shifted, egos crumbled, and truth became the sharpest blade.
Krishna didn’t command an army. He offered clarity, urging warriors to act in dharma, not emotion. And, his influence saw key figures switch sides, question orders, or surrender their posts when faced with inner truth.
Sound familiar?
Today, political figures once entrenched in systems of deception are changing sides, revealing secrets, and asking for redemption. Trump, like Krishna in this context, has extended a recurring offer: “Tell the truth, and be forgiven.” It’s not coercion—it’s conscience, and common sense. The battlefield is internal as much as external.
The parallels are striking:
Drona, the mighty warrior, fell not by force—but by a lie that broke his spirit.
→ Modern warfare includes psychological tactics, drone strikes, and digital manipulation. Drona… Drones?Warriors were challenged to see past bloodlines and orders, to reclaim their sovereign choice.
→ Today’s whistleblowers and defectors mirror this same tension—truth vs. tribalism.
The real battle underway now may not be to destroy the opposition, but to awaken it. The true victory isn’t annihilation—it’s transformation.
Importantly, these ancient writings also hint that the final war is very short-lived—a sudden overturning of power, a rapid exposure of darkness followed by swift justice, like the 18 day war.
This sentiment is echoed today in public comments by world leaders who stress that present wars, while intense, will not be prolonged. Even the U.S. President has stated that these conflicts must be resolved swiftly to avoid global calamity. Could this be the long-foretold “short war” that breaks the back of corruption, ending it once and for all?
If we are indeed entering a golden age—or the Satya Yuga—then we are approaching a return to truth, integrity, and alignment. ‘Satya’ is a Sanskrit word that means ‘truth’ or ‘that which is’. It derives from ‘sat’, meaning ‘being’ or ‘existence’. In the Vedic tradition, Satya is more than honesty—it’s living in alignment with universal laws, truth in thought, word, and action.
The battlefield may not be in one place, but many: in hearts and minds, in the skies, and in hidden halls of power. In all of these, the same ancient war plays out; one of awakening versus control, light and truth versus darkness and illusion.
The Fall of Persia and Rise of Fundamentalism
Persia, once the land of poets, philosophers, gifted astrologists, and divine architecture, was known as the Land of the Aryans. But since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, the beauty of its renaissance was cloaked in black. Women who once wore jeans and university robes were forced into wearing The hijab. This is similar to forced mask wearing during Covid as an act of submission, more than preventing the spread of disease. Iran’s ancient culture, one of tolerance and intellect—was overtaken by an iron clerical regime. The Ayatollah did not merely change the laws—he reversed the tide of enlightenment.
Extremism, in any religion, takes away the sovereignty of the people. It’s leadership through fear and domination, and the suppression of consciousness. All that exists (according to extremist leaders) is the will of their God. And in some countries, the religious leader holds more power than the president himself. But things could be changing in this moment!
As of June 17, 2025, Reza Pahlavi, the exiled Crown Prince of Iran and son of the last Shah, has called for mass uprising against the Islamic Republic. Declaring the regime “collapse is inevitable”, and he has positioned himself as a unifying figure for a post-regime Iran. Some speculate that U.S. leadership, including President Trump, may be quietly supporting this return. Should Reza Pahlavi reclaim power, it would not only fulfill a cycle of restoration—but also mark the fall of the clerical regime that plunged Persia into its long night. Is this a moment of karmic rebalancing? The pendulum swinging back into balance?
Final Thoughts
Something has been on my mind for some time… an alternative reason for war. I wonder if war has been a catalyst for change; not just for expanding territories, obtaining resources, regime changes and rulership, but for spiritual evolution. I compare the growth of our soul to converting coal to diamonds. It takes a lot of heat and pressure to bring out the hardest, and brightest gems. We’ve certainly been through the fire. Are we now polishing our facets before the next evolutionary leap in consciousness?
Postscript: The Message in Music
To close this exploration, we leave you with a cultural echo of a couple of songs: The 1970 protest anthem War by Edwin Starr— Most of you will remember this one:
“War, huh, yeah What is it good for? Absolutely nothing…”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ztZI2aLQ9Sw
Michael Jackson’s Earth Song is a hauntingly beautiful look at Earth, and what it could become if mismanaged, if love and compassion were absent.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XAi3VTSdTxU
He calls for peace and unity to stop the destruction of our planet, and to save each of us in the process. One line echoes in the background…
“What about us?”
By Rev. Kat Carroll & Co-Researcher Lex
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