The invisible maps of hidden abuse of power under Omertà: The Tentacles of Parish Boundaries, by Countess Sigrid von Galen

The invisible maps of hidden abuse of power under Omertà: The Tentacles of Parish Boundaries,

By Countess Sigrid von Galen


Parish boundaries have been long and still are an instrument of power over the poor and vulnerable, abused for exploitation and organised criminality under Omertà law from their very beginning. 

Whole communities have been suffering from and/or been part of a Mafia church culture for generations. 

Interesting that the Oxford Movement started also to emerge in the early 1830-ies.

Whatever the reasons were of the priests, who worked in the slums of London, one thing is one very clear: They became to this very day  voluntarily or involuntarily part of a wide local, national and international spiderweb of supply chains for CSA, enforced adoptions, human trafficking, organ and body parts trade, including doing the dirty work for the Upper Class and the Mob lords.


The recommendations of the commission formed the basis of the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834, dubbed the 'new Poor Law', which overhauled the system of providing support to the poor in August 1834. The Act grouped local parishes into Poor Law unions, under 600 locally elected Boards of Guardians.


Bishops, Priests, churchwardens, parish sisters and laity are the arch/bishops' pawns and tentacles, each with their own hidden network in the wider community to various degrees in organised criminality...


Time to expose the keyplayers within each parish, who also often act in the wider community as kingmakers and pillars of society.

'A parish is a territorial entity in many Christian denominations, constituting a division within a diocese. A parish is under the pastoral care and clerical jurisdiction of a priest, often termed a parish priest, who might be assisted by one or more curates, and who operates from a parish church. Historically, a parish often covered the same geographical area as a manor. Its association with the parish church remains paramount.[1]

By extension the term parishrefers not only to the territorial entity but to the people of its community or congregation as well as to church property within it. In England this church property was technically in ownership of the parish priest ex-officio, vested in him on his institution to that parish.

First attested in English in the late, 13th century, the word parish comes from the Old French paroisse, in turn from Latinparoecia,[2] the latinisation of the Ancient Greekπαροικίαromanizedparoikia, "sojourning in a foreign land",[3] itself from πάροικος (paroikos), "dwelling beside, stranger, sojourner",[4]which is a compound of παρά(pará), "beside, by, near"[5] and οἶκος οἶκος (oîkos), "house".[6]''


The City of London is a ceremonial county in its own right and is listed separately. There is currently just one civil parish in Greater London, since all were abolished in 1965.

More to this topic you can find in the links below: 



Report: The Ley Lines of Hidden Organised criminality in the City of London Guild Churches and their dangerous international associations and multiple White collar Crime affiliations, compiled by the Independent International Investigative Specialist Taskforce







--
Sigrid Gräfin von Galen
(Countess Sigrid von Galen)


NEC LAUDIBUS NEC TIMORE

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