Subject: Fatima/"Mary"/UFOs Date: 29 Jan 1995 22:30:08 GMT Fatima was not a Marian apparition if by that phrase is meant a mass sighting of Mary. Like Lourdes, the only persons to have "seen Mary" were the principle players in the drama, not the crowds. Fatima's public aspect, however, while not classically Marian, was classically ufological. The prime event, the "dancing sun", exhibited well-known ufological traits and features. The "sun" as reported was a pale silver disk which spun on its own axis, threw off colors of the spectrum, detached itself from its normal celestial position and made erratic gyrations through the sky. Finally, it plunged toward the earth with swaying motions. At its closest approach, enough heat was generated to dry muddy soil as well as the rain-soaked clothing of witnesses. The anomalous kinetics of Fatima's "sun" are well-attested in the ufo literature. Its spinning and "dancing" movements are applicable to many reported ufo's. Its fall toward the earth was in the typical "falling leaf" pattern associated with ufo flight. The heat phenomena, too, fall well within reported parameters of ufo behavior. There is some evidence that Fatima's "sun" was a disk interposed between the observers and the apparent position of the actual sun: reports relate that cloud banks were visible *behind* the flying disk. Moreover, in the months preceding the "solar" event, witnesses reported balls of light passing through the clouds, as well as the fall of "petals of light" which dissolved before touching the ground. The resemblance to reports of "angel hair" are striking. One fall of such luminescent petals was reported years later at an anniversary Mass celebrating the original event. From a certain perspective, Fatima is the best-attested ufo event of this century. An estimated 75,000 persons witnessed the "dancing sun". Many of these witnesses were openly hostile to the miraculous; many of them saw the gyrating disk as much as 25 miles distant from the principle site at the Cova da Iria. The awesome sight of the sun detaching itself from the sky and plummeting toward the earth had both believers and skeptics cringing in terror. One is compelled to ask just what the motivation for such a "miracle" could have been. On the one hand, there was a stereotypical Marian message which reflected the status quo religiosity of extant mariological beliefs ("be good: fast and pray for siners"). On the other hand, there was the utterly bizarre prophecy issued from the midst of the banal Marian message that there was going to be a "Sign" on October 13th; there was the utterly grotesque fulfillment of the prophecy via the "dancing sun"; and there was the reaction of stark terror on the part of believers and unbelievers alike. In Fatima, we have a commonplace religious message presented in a terrifying ufological context. Believers were shaken and went on believing; skeptics were shaken and went on with their skepticism. No mass conversions were reported; neither was a new Marian cultus launched. Rather, except for the doctrinal incorporation of the "solar" event, Fatima's Marian devotion can be interchanged with that of any other Marian shrine. One can only agree with Michael Grosso's assessment that Fatima presents a "grossly incoherent" picture: while it suggests a genuine ufological event, the event itself reinforced standard Catholic dogma, and we are left in the face of mystery.