The purpose of Extraterrestrial Cultural Centers International (ECCI) is to facilitate the integration of earth humanity into the greater extraterrestrial domain of universal stellar civilizations. Our mission is to create an organization and facilities to accomplish this purpose. We intend to fulfill this mission through the creation of a network of extraterrestrial cultural centers and facilities around the globe. The emphasis will be on peaceful, mutually beneficial interrelationships sharing knowledge, understanding and love amongst all.
The Center as envisioned is a step by step process toward the goal of a network of Centers in a number of countries. The first step is to clarify and define the vision, gain funding, then build the organization and our first Center. The Center is organized to have five Divisions and each Division breaks down into several Departments and so on. The Centers business plan on this home page is a conceptual document that will be updated on a regular basis and it explains in much more detail what the Extraterrestrial Cultural Center concept is all about.
We can Imagine a tour of the first Center Complex where the guide brings the guests into the entrance hall, staging area of the building past the two faced statue of the Roman God Janus the keeper of doorways and transitions. One face looks back into the past and the other face looks forward into the future. A short account of the ET named Janus’ words with UK intelligence can be read at the base of the statue or on a plaque next to it.
As we move through the Center’s entrance and staging area from the campus outside, beautiful meditative music in the background surrounds us elevating the awareness and consciousness of both visitors and staff alike. Our guide to the Swiss Extraterrestrial Cultural Center proceeds to point out on the entrance wall, virtual tours of the other Centers being built around the globe. We see one situated in the Brazilian jungle, another in the desert of the American west and yet others in Asia, Russia, and Africa.
The entranceway opens up into the interior Japanese Garden beneath the all-weather glass cupola. To the left is a small irregular pond with two small ducks on the surface and fish swimming underwater. The pond is fed by a waterfall tumbling down from a rock face giving a sense of solitude and tranquility to a few people meditating around its base. We are surrounded by songbirds in the bushes around the rocks, and a pair of tame wild rabbits is nibbling the grass near where we stand.
Our guide proceeds to point out the small frugal administration office opening onto the plaza followed by the staff and guest housing area with its small monastery like rooms for staff and special guests. Along one wall we see rows of tiny enclosed sleeping berths like the ones seen in a Japanese airport. Far in the back is a small kitchen and restrooms for staff and guests.
We follow our guide as she proceeds around the edge of the plaza on a small cobblestone sidewalk where we next peer into the window of the Investigations and Research Department. Here we see several researchers hard at work on their computers networking with others around the globe to compile and continuously upgrade the Encyclopedia Galactica available to the public through the Internet and as a published product.
Next we look into the Department of Galactic Culture and Diplomacy. The folks here are using their computers to network with groups in the field involved in contact. They have just begun using the new ET donated quantum computers and communications to monitor and study the activities of other civilizations about the universe and beyond in other dimensions.
Before the extraterrestrials openly arrived, the staff had been limited to using our own conventional computers and networks to keep track of contact activities around the world. Our guide explains how these Galactic Centers act as nodes in a growing global extraterrestrial infrastructure integrating our half civilized society into the rest of the universal community.
A little further along we pass the conference hall and teaching facility, the media facility, and then enter the museum. Along with the wax models of different ET races sculptured in exquisite detail is a history of ET contact on Earth up to the present day. Many copies of different artifacts from all around the world are on display.
The Center as envisioned is a step by step process toward the goal of a network of Centers in a number of countries. The first step is to clarify and define the vision, gain funding, then build the organization and our first Center. The Center is organized to have five Divisions and each Division breaks down into several Departments and so on. The Centers business plan on this home page is a conceptual document that will be updated on a regular basis and it explains in much more detail what the Extraterrestrial Cultural Center concept is all about.
We can Imagine a tour of the first Center Complex where the guide brings the guests into the entrance hall, staging area of the building past the two faced statue of the Roman God Janus the keeper of doorways and transitions. One face looks back into the past and the other face looks forward into the future. A short account of the ET named Janus’ words with UK intelligence can be read at the base of the statue or on a plaque next to it.
As we move through the Center’s entrance and staging area from the campus outside, beautiful meditative music in the background surrounds us elevating the awareness and consciousness of both visitors and staff alike. Our guide to the Swiss Extraterrestrial Cultural Center proceeds to point out on the entrance wall, virtual tours of the other Centers being built around the globe. We see one situated in the Brazilian jungle, another in the desert of the American west and yet others in Asia, Russia, and Africa.
The entranceway opens up into the interior Japanese Garden beneath the all-weather glass cupola. To the left is a small irregular pond with two small ducks on the surface and fish swimming underwater. The pond is fed by a waterfall tumbling down from a rock face giving a sense of solitude and tranquility to a few people meditating around its base. We are surrounded by songbirds in the bushes around the rocks, and a pair of tame wild rabbits is nibbling the grass near where we stand.
Our guide proceeds to point out the small frugal administration office opening onto the plaza followed by the staff and guest housing area with its small monastery like rooms for staff and special guests. Along one wall we see rows of tiny enclosed sleeping berths like the ones seen in a Japanese airport. Far in the back is a small kitchen and restrooms for staff and guests.
We follow our guide as she proceeds around the edge of the plaza on a small cobblestone sidewalk where we next peer into the window of the Investigations and Research Department. Here we see several researchers hard at work on their computers networking with others around the globe to compile and continuously upgrade the Encyclopedia Galactica available to the public through the Internet and as a published product.
Next we look into the Department of Galactic Culture and Diplomacy. The folks here are using their computers to network with groups in the field involved in contact. They have just begun using the new ET donated quantum computers and communications to monitor and study the activities of other civilizations about the universe and beyond in other dimensions.
Before the extraterrestrials openly arrived, the staff had been limited to using our own conventional computers and networks to keep track of contact activities around the world. Our guide explains how these Galactic Centers act as nodes in a growing global extraterrestrial infrastructure integrating our half civilized society into the rest of the universal community.
A little further along we pass the conference hall and teaching facility, the media facility, and then enter the museum. Along with the wax models of different ET races sculptured in exquisite detail is a history of ET contact on Earth up to the present day. Many copies of different artifacts from all around the world are on display.