Pellegrino Ernetti

Father Marcello Pellegrino Ernetti (October 13, 1925 - April 8, 1994) was an Italian Roman Catholic Benedictine priest and is the most famous exorcist who worked in the Venice area.[1]

Contents

Early life

Ernetti was born in Rocca Santo Stefano, near Rome, on October 13, 1925. At sixteen years old he entered the Benedictine abbey of San Giorgio Maggiore in Venice. He remained there until his death at age sixty-nine. Father Ernetti was a linguist, biblical and musical scholar (a renowned specialist in "archaic" pre-Christian or pre-polyphonic music) as well as a scientist.[2] Father Gabriele Amorth mentions him in his non-fiction book An Exorcist Tells his Story. Ernetti had a degree in quantum physics.[3]

Chronovisor

Ernetti is said to have claimed he constructed a time viewer of sorts in the 1950s, as part of a group that supposedly included Nobel Laureate Enrico Fermi and Wernher von Braun. The machine was called Chronovisor, and could allegedly allow seeing and hearing events from the past. According to an explanation by Ernetti, the luminous energy and sound that objects emanate are recorded in their environment, allowing the chronovisor to reconstruct from said energy the images and sounds of a specific set of events from the past.

Ernetti said he had been working with Father Agostino Gemelli at the Catholic University of Milan trying to filter harmonics out of Gregorian chants when they heard the voice of Gemelli's late father speaking to them on the wire recorder they were using (Gemelli later confirmed this incident). This got Ernetti thinking about what happened to all the sights and sounds humans make. Did they disappear completely or did they continue to exist in some way? Ernetti claimed he then approached some eminent scientists and assembled a team to work on the project leading to the construction of the chronovisor.

Through the viewing screen of the chronovisor Father Ernetti claimed to have witnessed a performance in Rome in 169 BC of the now-lost tragedy Thyestes by the father of Latin poetry, Quintus Ennius. He also claimed to have witnessed Christ dying on the cross.[4]

A book entitled Father Ernetti's Chronovisor: The Creation and Disappearance of the World's First Time Machine, written in German in 1997 by Peter Krassa, explores these claims.[5] The American edition of the book, translated from the German by Miguel Jones and published in 2000, includes an appendix with an alleged "confession" by a relative of Ernetti (who chose to remain anonymous); according to this purported document, on his deathbed Ernetti revealed the real "truth" about the Thyestes and the "portrait" of Christ. The document is purported to be a fraud by Father François Brune of France.[6]

In a 2003 interview, Brune relayed that a few months prior to Ernetti’s death in 1994, Ernetti told him that he had just partaken in a meeting at the Vatican with the last remaining scientists who worked on the Chronovisor. According to Brune, Ernetti told him the Chronovisor had been dismantled by that time. On his death bed, Ernetti reportedly recanted his claims on the Chronovisor; however, Brune theorized that Ernetti was coerced into making a false confession.

Outside of his entanglement with the chronovisor, Ernetti was an extremely respected, but quiet, intellectual whose speciality was archaic music. He spent most of his life researching and teaching this subject and was the author of such respected books as Words, Music, Rhythm and the multi-volume work General Treatise on Gregorian Chant. As a respected clergyman, academic and author, many doubt that his claims were simply fabricated.[7]

Ernetti wrote the book The Likes and Dislikes of the Devil, a collection of his experiences as an exorcist.[8]

On April 8, 1994 Ernetti died on San Giorgio Maggiore in Venice, Italy.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Krassa, Peter (2000). Father Ernetti's Chronovisor: The Creation and Disappearance of the World's First Time Machine. Pasadena, CA: New Paradigm Books. p. 74ff.. ISBN 1892138026. 
  2. ^ Krassa, Peter (2000). Father Ernetti's Chronovisor: The Creation and Disappearance of the World's First Time Machine. Pasadena, CA: New Paradigm Books. pp. 23–25. ISBN 1892138026. 
  3. ^ Breaking the Time Barrier: The Race ... - Google Books. http://books.google.com/books?id=9NedOIaGR8kC&pg=PA105&lpg=PA105&dq=Chronovisor+Ernetti&ct=result#PPA106,M1. Retrieved 2011-09-12. 
  4. ^ Krassa, Peter (2000). Father Ernetti's Chronovisor: The Creation and Disappearance of the World's First Time Machine. Pasadena, CA: New Paradigm Books. ISBN 1892138026.  Chapters 3, 6-7.
  5. ^ http://mcc.dalnet.lib.mi.us/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=V2F4362P88691.1176112&profile=mccclib&uindex=SW&term=Ennius,%20Quintus.%20Thyestes.&aspect=basic_search&menu=search&source=~!mcc#focus
  6. ^ Krassa, Peter (2000). Father Ernetti's Chronovisor: The Creation and Disappearance of the World's First Time Machine. Pasadena, CA: New Paradigm Books. ISBN 1892138026.  Chapter 26.
  7. ^ "The Missing Chronovisor". The UnMuseum. http://www.unmuseum.org/chronovisor.htm. Retrieved 2011-09-12. 
  8. ^ Manila Daily Standard, To The Point, "More than ChaCha, moral regeneration", Emil Jurado, April 13, 2006

Das Geheimnis des Pater Ernetti - Die Zeitmaschine im Vatikan, Author: Père François Brune, Hesper-Verlag 2010, ISBN 978-3-9813262-2-2

Further Reading