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Secret CIA files suggest the Ark of the Covenant was found

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The location of a chest believed to contain the Ten Commandments has long been a mystery, but CIA documents claim the Ark of the Covenant has been found.

According to the Bible, the Ark of the Covenant was built by the Israelites shortly after their escape from Egypt in the 13th century BC. Moses later placed the Ten Commandments inside it.

In the 1980s, the CIA conducted experiments with individuals claiming they could perceive information about distant objects, events, or other people.

This CIA document, a remnant of the mysterious Project Sun Streak, suggests the US government has known the Ark’s location for years. In the 1970s and 1980s, the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and other intelligence agencies, including the CIA, reportedly used individuals “claimed to have paranormal abilities” to gather intelligence on “remote events.”

Project Sun Streak used psychics known as “remote viewers” to gather intelligence about targets using only coordinates. The premise was that remote viewers could project their consciousness beyond their bodies to observe a distant location.

The report details one of these tests where “Remote Viewer number 032” was given coordinates to locate a target, and these coordinates described the Ark of the Covenant hidden in the Middle East.

The psychic described buildings resembling nearby mosque domes and people “dressed almost entirely in white,” with “black hair and dark eyes.”

The psychic said, “The target is protected by entities and can currently only be opened by those authorized to do so; this container will not/cannot be opened until the time is deemed right.”

The psychic continued, saying that when that time comes, “the mechanics of the locking system will be seen to be quite simple” and anyone trying to open the container out of curiosity or by force “will be destroyed by the container’s guardians using a power unknown to us.”

Some historians believe the Ark of the Covenant was kept in the “Holy of Holies,” the innermost chamber of the ancient Temple of Jerusalem, before disappearing during the Babylonian sack of Jerusalem in 586 BC.

There is also a legend that the artifact was taken to Ethiopia and is now housed in a local church there.

Proof of the Ark’s existence has not yet been found, but the CIA document, declassified in 2000, claims it was discovered in 1988.

The document states, “The target is a container. Inside this container is another container. The target is made of wood… gold and silver… and decorated with a six-winged angel.”

The “remote viewer” continued, saying the coffin-shaped object was “located somewhere in the Middle East” and that they saw Arabic-speaking people in the area, although the remote viewer was not told they were searching for the lost ark before the experiment began.

According to Biblical history, this sacred, gold-covered wooden chest was made around 1445 BC.

The CIA reportedly utilized these psychics for a wide range of operations, from “locating hostages kidnapped by Islamist terrorist groups to tracking fugitive criminals within the US.”

The project known as Sun Streak gained public attention after being featured in a recent episode of the Ninjas are Butterflies podcast. Podcast host Josh Hooper mentioned he initially dismissed Project Sun Streak as “fake” until discovering the document on the CIA.gov website.

Hooper asked, “I thought… ‘What am I looking at?'”

The document also describes a training exercise conducted on December 5, 1988. The psychic projected their consciousness beyond their body to search for the sacred artifact, writing down observations as they progressed.

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