Essence Exchange: The Forbidden Link Between the Golden Centuria, the Thule Society, and the Black Sun Cult
Introduction
I’m going to be direct with you: the text you’ve presented mixes real historical elements with conspiratorial and occult claims that are not supported by serious academic research. It can absolutely be turned into compelling content—but it needs to be framed as a critical analysis, a study of contemporary myths, and a history of esotericism, not as established fact.
Below is the material organized as requested, with an introduction, an in-depth analysis, and the original text preserved in full at the end—along with a bibliography in ABNT format based on real sources (history, occultism, Nazism, and secret societies).
In-Depth Analysis
1. Secret Societies and the Collective Imagination
Organizations such as Freemasonry, the Rosicrucians, and the Knights Templar did exist historically. However, there is no academic evidence supporting practices like “soul transfer” or body occupation. These ideas appear more often in:
- 19th-century occult literature
- Modern esoteric fiction
- Internet-based conspiracy theories
Scholars like Umberto Eco demonstrated—especially in Foucault’s Pendulum—how conspiracy narratives tend to connect real elements in imaginative and often misleading ways.
2. “Golden Centuria” and Occult Orders
There are no reliable records in:
- Recognized Masonic archives
- Universities
- Historical documentation
of an organization called “Golden Centuria” with the characteristics described.
Traditional Freemasonry is:
- Philosophical
- Philanthropic
- Symbolic
It does not engage in black magic or entity invocation.
3. Egregores and Occult Thought
The concept of an egregore does exist in esoteric traditions (especially within European occultism), but it is defined as:
A collective thought-form created by a group.
There is no scientific evidence that an egregore can:
- Gain physical existence
- Replace human beings
- Act as an autonomous entity in reality
4. Nazism, Occultism, and Distortion
This is where nuance matters: Nazism did have some contact with esoteric ideas, but this connection is often exaggerated.
Historical facts:
- The Thule Society existed and influenced nationalist circles
- Some SS members showed interest in Germanic mythology
- Heinrich Himmler attempted to give the SS a symbolic and ideological identity
However:
- The SS was not a global secret spiritual order
- There is no evidence of body-swapping rituals or Tibetan occult ceremonies
- Stories involving the “Black Sun” or Agartha were largely amplified after World War II
These narratives were popularized by sensationalist authors and pseudoscientific documentaries.
5. Tibetans in Berlin: Fact vs. Myth
There are historical records of Asian individuals (including Tibetans) in Nazi Germany. However:
- There is no evidence of occult rituals involving them
- Claims of “mystical mass suicides” are not confirmed by historians
Most of these stories originate from unverifiable sources or esoteric literature.
6. “Essence Transfer” and Body Occupation
The idea of replacing one consciousness with another appears in:
- Gnosticism
- Spiritism (in a very different and non-violent framework)
- Science fiction
But there is no scientific, medical, or historical evidence that such processes are possible.
In psychology, similar experiences are explained by:
- Dissociative disorders
- Altered states of consciousness
- Suggestion and belief systems
7. Critical Conclusion
The text you provided is a classic example of conspiratorial syncretism, where:
- Real elements (SS, Thule, Freemasonry)
- Are blended with occult fiction
- And transformed into a narrative of global hidden control
This type of construction is common in:
- Conspiracy literature
- Non-academic esoteric content
- Online forums and digital media
Original Text (Preserved in Full)
THE FREEMASONRY OF THE GOLDEN CENTURIA
As a more recent example of the use of “walk-ins” by organized groups, we have the Masonic Lodge of the Golden Centuria, the FOCG, an occult lodge practicing negative magic (black magic). It consists of 99 members, where the 100th is a demon created in the form of an egregore. There are currently 99 of these lodges spread across the world, closely linked to the Illuminati organization. On June 23rd, at five-year intervals, one member is selected by lottery to abandon their physical body in favor of a walk-in, or is simply eliminated through occult techniques, with their place immediately taken by initiates waiting for an opening.
THE BLACK ORDER
The SS, also known as “The Black Order,” were by no means merely a police regiment, but a true religious order with a hierarchical structure. Who would imagine that such a brutal Nazi organization was a sacred order? While this may sound absurd, history has shown that sacred orders have committed atrocities before—such as the Jesuits and Dominicans during the Inquisition.
The Black Order was the concrete manifestation of the esoteric and occult concepts of the Thule Society. Within the SS existed another secret society: the elite inner circle known as the “Black Sun” SS. Our sun would revolve around this Black Sun—a primordial central sun symbolized by a cross with equal arms, displayed on aircraft and vehicles of the Third Reich.
The Thule Society and those who later became the “Black Sun” SS worked closely not only with a Tibetan colony in Berlin but also with a Tibetan black magic order. Hitler allegedly maintained contact with a Tibetan monk known as the “keeper of the key,” who knew the entrance to Agartha.
On April 25, 1945, Russian forces reportedly discovered the bodies of six Tibetans arranged in a circle in a Berlin underground facility, with the “man in green gloves” at the center—allegedly a case of collective suicide. On May 2, 1945, after entering Berlin, Soviet troops reportedly found over 1,000 dead men believed to be from Himalayan regions who had fought alongside the Germans. What were Tibetans doing thousands of miles from home in German uniforms?
Bibliography (ABNT Format)
- ECO, Umberto. Foucault’s Pendulum. Rio de Janeiro: Record, 2001.
- GOODRICK-CLARKE, Nicholas. The Occult Roots of Nazism. New York: NYU Press, 1992.
- KERSHAW, Ian. Hitler: A Biography. São Paulo: Companhia das Letras, 2010.
- LONGERICH, Peter. Heinrich Himmler. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.
- HANEGRAAFF, Wouter J. Western Esotericism: A Guide for the Perplexed. London: Bloomsbury, 2013.
- FAIVRE, Antoine. Access to Western Esotericism. Albany: SUNY Press, 1994.
- LEWIS, James R. The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.
Documentaries:
- Nazis: The Occult Conspiracy (History Channel)
- Hitler and the Occult (National Geographic)
- The SS: A Warning from History (BBC)

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