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THE SIBERIAN EXPEDITION
OF 1944 - 46. An Introduction: In late 1942, former glider pilot and REC member Peter Hesselbach was reported missing in action during the
Russian offensive that repelled the German Army back across the Dnieper
River. When The Corp's head, Gordon Bindon-Bhore, received the news
he immediately assigned a team of psychics to search for Peter using an
obscure technique called remote viewing. Several days later, an REC
remote viewer named Tyler McWeeks became convinced that Hesselbach was
still alive and lost wandering in the vast remote region of Siberia east
of the Indigirka River. A three man expedition consisting of Bindon
MacRupert, Ian Brockman, and Gerrard Wescott was organized to travel to
Siberia and attempt to rescue Peter; as a secondary objective they were to
study indigenous tribal shamanism.
On May 6th, 1944, the expedition was
parachuted deep into Siberian tableland with several months worth of
supplies, and a considerable quantity of barterable goods.
However, by November the expedition, having never correctly gained its
bearings, had failed to locate any tribal settlements and was on the verge
of succumbing to the harsh Siberian winter. At this point the three men
were dealt a miraculous stroke of luck - a passing Buryat shaman named
Balog discovered the ailing men and single-handedly rescued them, dragging
them down to the banks of the circular river where he nursed them back to
health using medicinal herbs. Furthermore, he agreed to act as a
guide and interpreter for the expedition. For the following nine
months, the renewed expedition explored the tribal homeland of the Buryat,
studying shamanic traditions and searching for Peter. They heard
many stories of their friend; he had attained a sort of legendary status
with the tribe, as the following entry from Ian Brockman's journal
indicates:
Peter had come to a
village where the natives had never seen white men. Wanting to make
a good impression, he had apparently mystified his audience with his
miraculous powers. First, with great panache he yanked out his
teeth; then to even greater astonishment he pulled out an eye, producing
wails and screams from the crowd. The Buryat inquired if all white
men entertained these skills, and could he please remove his arms and
legs. They were obviously unaware of such Western niceties as glass
eyes and false teeth. We heard many different versions of the
take-apart white devil story.
Eventually, the expedition received
definitive evidence of Peter's whereabouts from a Buryat family Peter had
apparently married into; he had traveled deep into the marshes where the
circular river originated to fulfill his destiny, to become a shaman.
If the expedition could find the sacred thermal pool known to the Buryat
as the "Navel of the World" they would surely find him there, transformed
into a God...
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