Murry Hope

[8] Hope studied voice, taking lessons with a teacher from the Paris Conservatoire and in London had a small part in West End production for two years.

[8] In 1957 she co-founded the Atlanteans Society with Tony Neate, a healing and spiritual group at Malvern Hills, England, that aimed to treat issues such as exorcism and mental disorders.

[5] By that time Hope wrote a seasonal column for Prediction magazine, a periodical oriented towards mystical subjects, where she used to sign the pseudonym Athene Williams.

[1] In 1977 Hope had her alleged psychic abilities tested by a doctor from Cambridge University under the supervision of the broadcaster BBC and obtained good results.

There she calls attention to the knowledge possessed by North African tribes, namely the Dogons,[18] and conducts the reader on a trip across an alleged alien legacy descended from the "tri-star system of Sirius".

Later on she examines the nature of leonine entities from Sirius called Paschats which, conjectures Hope, through the lion goddess Bastet were worshiped in Egypt.

Hope argued that Gaia , a living and conscious being, must be protected in her work The Gaia Dialogues . [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
Egyptian goddess Bastet , a possible representation of leonine beings from Sirius star system, surmises Murry Hope. [ 15 ]