Metaphysics and matters of national security enjoyed a close
affinity during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I.
Dr. John Dee was more than her astrologer, he was also an accomplished
codebreaker and spy, working for Francis Walsingham, her spymaster. Some four hundred years before James Bond was
first created, Dee worked under the codename of 007 - the zeroes were meant to
represent eyes, and he often headed encoded notes to his monarch with the opening
line 'For Your Eyes Only…'
Somehow it isn't
surprising to see magic and diplomacy so intimately linked in a more
superstitious age.
Finding out a much more recent link defies logic, yet it
appears to have happened.
On the 10th of May 1941, on the eve of Germany going to war
against the Russians, Rudolph Hess, the third most powerful man in Germany
after Hitler and Goering, carried out
his disastrous ‘peace mission’ and landed by plane in Scotland.
He was immediately arrested by the Home Guard, and handed over
to the Army. He had chosen a Scottish landing site near the ancestral home of
the Duke of Hamilton and he demanded to see the aristocrat. This was because he
had been told that the duke was one of the secret members of the imaginary Link
organisation and also a member of the Order of the Golden Dawn.
Hess also said he wanted to be taken to London to see the king. Hess told his amazed interrogators that
occultists had influenced or hypnotised Churchill to take a negative attitude towards Germany . He also said that the
German High Command believed that key British political figures had been ‘mesmerised
by ‘evil forces’. Allegedly these same forces were trying to kill Hess because
he was one of the few people who knew about their ‘secret psychic powers’. (The Daily Telegraph 7th April 2012).
Naturally the British authorities concluded that the
deputy-fuehrer was raving mad. In fact one exasperated Army officer involved in
his interrogation said that Hess should be taken out and shot like a rabid dog.
Commander Ian Fleming, (author of the James Bond books,
which are full of occult symbolism - see above), was keen that Aleister Crowley
should be allowed to interview Hess in captivity. This seems to have been
suggested to Fleming in a letter from Crowley
dated four days after the Nazi was captured.
In it the Great Beast says:’ If it is true that Herr Hess is
much influenced by astrology an magick, my services might be useful to the
[Naval Intelligence] department in case he should not be willing to do as you
wish’ (Pearson 1966).
Although SIS asserted that Crowley never met Hess, it has been claimed
that MI5 did arrange an interview between the two men at one of their
interrogation centres. This was allegedly at Latchmore House on Ham Common in London used by MI5 for
questioning German prisoners-of-war and secret agents they wanted to turn.
(Spence 2008:249).
The Nazi Party’s reaction to Hess’ ‘peace mission’ was to
disown the deputy-fuehrer and his actions. It was claimed he was mentally
deranged and had been falsely and disastrously influenced by astrologers and
occultists. A report in The
Times newspaper on May 14th 1941, however,
claimed that Hess had secretly been offering astrological advice to Hitler. A
few months before his ill-fated trip to Scotland the deputy-fuehrer had
allegedly convinced himself from astrological calculations that, despite recent
German victories, Hitler was doomed.
Therefore Hess saw it as his patriotic duty to try and make
peace with the British government before Germany was defeated. Despite its
unofficial interest, the Third Reich had always had an ambiguous official
approach to occultism and secret societies. A few weeks after the failed
mission an operation called ‘Aktion Hess’ was launched by the Gestapo. This included
banning performances or lectures on the occult, astrology, telepathy,
clairvoyance and Spiritualism and many of their publicly known practitioners
were arrested and ended up in concentration camps (Howe 1967: 192-193).