Bruno Cardeñosa's
name will ring a bell with readers who recall the review of his excellent
Los Archivos Secretos del Ejercito del Aire a few issues ago. A
prolific author and talented radio personality, Cardeñosa gives us an
interview with a pioneer in the field whose insights will be of interest
to U.S. readers. |
Carlos Murciano: "Something
Floats Over Our World"
by Bruno Cardeñosa
In 1968, Carlos Murciano was
assigned the UFO beat. Just like that, thanks to the good offices of the
legendary Torcuato Luca de Tena, director of Spain's ABC newspaper. He
went all over the world in search of evidence proving the existence of
unidentified flying objects. Today, with the benefit of age and the time elapsed
since his original assignment, the journalist reflects upon that singular quest
and the ills afflicting 21st century ufology.
"This one of the key
points," says Murciano. "The UFO phenomenon was deprived of its humanity. There
was once upon a time a series of young people, researchers who projected the
problem into statistics. They could have cared less about the character who had
seen the strange object--only the percentages, the cold hard data, and the
numbers, and they started publishing books with these statistics, which
interested no one, since the enigma's human aspect had been eliminated."
Carlos Murciano, a native of
Arcos de la Frontera near Cádiz, represents a historic moment in Spanish
ufology. This poet and novelist, a award winner, and with ninety books under his
belt, saw his life change before him in early September 1968. He was 37 years
old at the time, with six children and an upper management position at a
Madrid-based multinational. His literary prowess was becoming well-known and he
was collecting his first prizes when Spanish society began to face an enigma
which had hitherto concerned only a few people: unidentified flying
objects.
That same year, according to
the statistics he so disapproves of, UFOs were seen more than 400 times over the
Iberian Peninsula, and society was beginning to wonder just what were those
artifacts. Even he pondered over the subject in an article published in ABC on
September 12, 1968. Seven days earlier, one of those strange objects had flown
over Madrid, and he was unable to resist the temptation to write a piece that
would modify the course of his entire life:
"Something floats over the
World, over this old world of ours, weary of rolling through infinite space.
Something (but what?) arrives (but from where?) to roam its skies (but how?)
stopping sometimes (but why?) and later escaping (to where?). Something (or
someone?) that we ignore and can only intuit is observing, stalking and
monitoring the creatures of the Earth who, curious and confused, try to answer
that great question which is made up of so many other lesser ones. It is hard,
truly, to give credit to what we cannot verify without a doubt, but it is no
easier to deny what thousands of people of all walks of life and in the most
unequal parts of our planet are seeing every day; that which many men of
science, who are cautious when it comes to drawing conclusions, are seriously
studying and considering."
Hours after writing these
lines, Torcuato Luca de Tena, ABC's legendary editor, phoned him with a
one-of-a-kind offer: to go around the world in search of UFOs. Carlos Murciano
hesitated. I'm not a journalist, he told him. If I wanted a journalist, Luca de
Tena replied, I could snap my fingers and have hundreds of them. But this
mission called for a man of polished prose who was able to endow the mystery
with a human dimension. And who could be better than a poet?
And so it was that Carlos
Murciano temporarily set aside his business suit and donned his newspaperman
garb, touring Spain and the world at large for almost a year, talking to and
interviewing dozens of wise men who analyzed the enigma as well as witnesses of all different
social and economic backgrounds who had seen the strange objects. The UFO
correspondent does not recall having been home two days in a row after setting
out on his journey.
He traveled extensively in
Spain and overseas: Chile, Argentina, the United States, the United Kingdom and
Italy. His assignment was to write a daily chronicle for the newspaper, and the
work grew to such proportions that the would write in hotels and aboard
airplanes, but fortunately his reports created a great deal of interest: the man
on the street wanted to know what it was all about and his articles sated the
desire. In 1969, under the title "Something Floats Over the World", the Prensa
Española publishing house released choice selections of his writings, which
despite having sold out completely, was never reprinted. It remains today a holy
grail item for anyone wishing to have a perspective of the UFO enigma in its
moment of greatest splendor. His book remains one of the true classics in the
small, great history of this enigma.
After those years there came
an initial drought, followed by a new and prolonged wave of sightings between
1974 and 1980, and subsequently a void in which we are still floating, from a
certain point of view. Public interest in the subject that Carlos Murciano
experienced so closely was lost. There was a period in which there appeared to
be a change in fortune, but finally, everything would revert to the irritating,
cloying darkness.
When I sat facing Carlos
Murciano in his Madrid residence, surrounded by the 20,000 books which form part
of his extensive library, what interested me the most about this man--a
journalist, who lived through those historic years like no other--was to learn
what was the perspective he had gleaned over the years, and the judgement
offered by a well-furnished intellect: his opinion on the subject in the light
of the apparent lack of interest evinced by Spanish society, and the scarce
regard felt toward those who research and study the subject. In the late 1960's,
Murciano witnessed the birth of the
split between UFO researchers, and that is the crux of the question, in his
opinion.
"The problem was the purists
who paid more importance to numbers than to witnesses. This contributed to the
UFO phenomenon's deflation. The man who reads the papers, watches TV, or listens
to the radio, isn't interested in that, and much like a balloon, the subject of
UFOs deflated. Added to this was the reduction in sightings," observed
Murciano.
"And I suppose that the lack
of answers didn't help."
"Because there were no
substantial development. No matter how well-informed you become and how much you
study, the years go by and everything stays the same."
"After all those years of
frantic searching, are you still involved with UFOs?
"Yes. Among the people I
interviewed were researchers like Manuel Osuna and Antonio Ribera, who were
enchanting, and with whom I stayed in touch. But there was that other
group..."
Carlos Murciano, as a noted
poet and winner of the Premio Nacional de Poesía in 1972, clashed head-on with
the excessively cold trend of the scientists. Because, as he was able to attest
after interviewing dozens of witnesses, the UFO enigma attacked a human being's
emotional aspect directly. This was one of the things he learned in his
journeys. "I had a contract signed with Planeta for a new book, but I got tired.
The world of Literature, which was my world, was a world of constant struggle,
filled with squabbles, contempt, and rejection, and it was necessary to always
be at the forefront of the battle. I didn't want to open a second front. There
was no need whatsoever for me to face the sector which thought that it had
discovered it all, and even though Planeta insisted, I refused. I took a step
backward and told myself: you guys can have it. Because UFOs," concludes
Murciano, referring to ufology's so-called critical or scientific sector, known
today as skeptical ufology, "cannot be studied in the abstract."
"Therefore, your reaction
was a product of the face-off which came about between both sectors of
ufology."
"It's just that I couldn't
echo that perspective," Carlos pauses and then states: "No echo and no future.
And time proved me right."
One of the cases which best
portrayed the showdown between ufology's two factions was the one experienced by
IBERIA pilot Jaime Ordovs on February 25, 1969, when flying over the
Mediterranean coast, he witnessed a giant triangular artifact engaged in
impossible maneuvers.
Carlos Murciano recalls, as
though the interview had taken place yesterday, the testimony of the pilot and
its crew. "Whey saw did not appear to correspond to anything known," he points
out. But by then, that other faction of ufology which he mentions was
classifying Venus as a possible cause for the sighting. "Venus, Venus, it always
pops up as a possible explanation," he laments.
As years went by, he was
able to ascertain that these ufologists upheld the explanation, which was also
set forth in the Spanish Air Force's declassified reports, of which he learned
thanks to the follow-up on the subject conducted by J.J. Benítez, the man
who
Much has changed since
the days when Carlos Murciano carried out his research. A fundamental factor is
the that interest in the UFO phenomenon has become factionalized due to errors
of one party or the other. Nor does it give rise to social debate on the street,
as it did then. Has this been a
cause for the number of sightings to decline? In part, yes. Is there a guilty
party? Murciano summarized it in a single sentence: This enigma cannot be
studied in the abstract. But as this veteran man of letters knows, the
Unidentified exist and allow us to see them every so often, while those of us
who research and popularize the subject decades later, are obligated to lay down
the grounds which will aid scientists in emerging from the fatigue generated by
the enigma, and who knows, perhaps spur the quest to find an answer to the
mystery.
"Do you think that the
option of humanizing the enigma, resurrecting it, still exists?"
"It would be necessary
to start from a pool of new sightings. It is necessary to have a new wave that
acts as the trigger. There's no doubt that this phenomenon is cyclical, and it
has always been so. But this latest silence is highly significant and has
already lasted many years."
"But it seems
impossible nowadays that the daily press would renew its permanent treatment of
the subject, as it was done then. There is a great deal of rejection."
"There was always
rejection, but what has indeed changed is the mindset. Before, scientists and
intellectuals were always at loggerheads; now it's not so much. I don't think
that a newspaper like El País or El Mundo would be criticized for
retaking an interest in the subject. If the subject is approached from a modern
perspective and seriously, it would be interesting!"
"What's your
hypothesis about the UFO phenomenon?"
"That UFOs exist as
such and that other worlds are inhabitable," replies Carlos Murciano. "There is
enough evidence for the former, but what are they. The latter I can't prove, but
I'm convinced that there is life on other worlds. Intelligent life? I don't
know. Or let me put it this way--something floats over the world and it comes
from elsewhere, why not? I interviewed," he continues, "diplomats, clergymen,
scientists, military, pilots, technicians, academics, people of all types and
backgrounds."
"And out of all of
them, whose account impressed you the most?"
"So much time's gone
by," Carlos reflects, sighing and recalling an episode which took place in
Sanlucar de Barrameda (Seville) in 1969. "A nine year-old girl had gone out of
her house into the back yard, where there was an olive tree, and saw an object
hovering over it. She went back into her house to tell her grandmother, who also
saw it. The girl never went out of her house and into the back yard again at
night, and she wasn't a liar. I don't know what she saw, but something strange
stood in front of her."