美國TIME周刊有關孟照國外星接觸事件的報導

I Had Sex with an Alien!

資料來源:北京UFO研究會張靖平提供

2003年11月15日

《TIME》 9,29,2003

Forgen China’s astronauts. The country’s most famous intergalactic 

traveler lives in the last house on his lane at the edge of a Siberian 

forest. Meng Zhaoguo’s odyssey began at the Red flag loggling camp in 

the Manchurian province of Heilongjiang, when he saw a metallic glint 

thrown off nearby Mount Phoenix. Thinking a helicopter had crashed, he 

set out to scavenge for scrap. The 36-year-old lumberjack stood gazing 

at the wreck from across a valley when“Foom ! Something hit me square 

in the forehead and knocked me out.”

That collision four years ago,  and what followed,  has made Meng a 

celebrity even today among the growing number of Chinese gaga for 

little green men. In a country that bans“evil cults”and monitors 

faith in anything but the Communist Party, a belief in extraterrestrial 

life is one of the few fringe convictions that’s been allowed to grow 

into an organized movement. The government-approved China UFO Research 

Center boasted 50,00 members and held annual conferences before 

splintering into competing factions three years ago .A 20-years-old 

Chinese bimonthly magazine about UFOs enjoys a circulation of 200,000.

“We have so many visitation reports that if people don’t have 

pictures, we won’t bother investigating,”says Zhang jingping, 

director to the Beijing UFO Research Association.

Chinese fascination with interplanetary life isn’t entirely new. 

Believers point to a 4th century text called the Collected Legacies, 

which describes a “moon boat” that floated above China every 12 

years .Today’s focus is on the science of  UFOs-something tolerable 

to a Chinese Communist Party that advocates“scientific socialism.”

it helps that heavy hitters such as the former president of Beijing 

Aerospace University have long advised UFO-research organizations. 

The hard-science bent means it’s acceptable to publish research on 

closenencounter stories. it’s not O.K., however, to wonder if such 

stories result from people searching for higher meaning in the hurly

-burly of a changing China by turning to God, Buddha or even E.T.

“Chinese may feel a spiritual impulse that leads some to believe 

they’ve been abducted by aliens,”says Richard McNally, a 

psychologist at Harvard  University who has researched  Chinese 

alien-abduction claims.

Few have enjoyed as remarkable a journey as Meng Several nights afte

r his wallop on the head, Meng says he found himself floating above 

his bed .As his wife and daughter slept below, a 3-m-tall, 

six-fingered alien with braided fur on her legs straddled his waist .

After 40 minutes of levitational copulation she departed through the 

wall, leaving Meng with a 5-cm mark on his thigh.A month later, he 

says,he was transported through the wall into a spaceship. Meng aked 

to see the woman with the braided fur. Impossible , they said. But they

gave him hope.“In 60 years, on a distant planet,”they said,“the son 

of a Chinese peasant will be born.”Meng asked if he would ever see 

this child. He would. The aliens did not say where.
 
--M.F/Red Flag Logging Camp

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