From: rcj@u.washington.edu (Bob Jacobson)
Newsgroups: alt.alien.visitors
Subject: Re: Strieber on Larry King this Monday night
Message-ID: <21llts$f7v@news.u.washington.edu>
Date: 10 Jul 93 06:00:28 GMT
References: <C9pzJy.6J5@freenet.carleton.ca>
Organization: University of Washington

It already happened last year (March 11, 1992)...

KING: ...
Whitley Strieber  is back.  He's written a string of bestsellers.  This
one,
the latest, is not about people from outer space, but it's going to make
some
people in the Catholic Church angry.   Whitley Strieber  is next.  Don't
go
away.
 
ANNOUNCER: Coming up: He wrote volumes about his apparent abduction by
aliens.
Now, what's happened to  Whitley Strieber? 
 
[Commercial break]
 
 Whitley Strieber  Writes About 'Unholy Fire'
 
KING:  Whitley Strieber  - He scored a sensation in the late 80's with a
string
of unnerving bestsellers about his apparent UFO experiences.  In
Communion and
its sequel, Strieber described years of perceived abductions by mysterious
creatures.  Three books, a movie later, Strieber is moving on.  His latest

novel - Unholy Fire - will likely divide the Catholic community as surely
as the
Communion book split UFO buffs.  Unholy Fire is just out from Dutton -
there you
see its cover - and  Whitley Strieber  joins us here in Washington.
 
I like the moustache,  Whitley. 
   
 WHITLEY STRIEBER,  Author, 'Unholy Fire': [laughs] Thanks,  Larry. 
   
 KING:  Is this a new  Whitley Strieber? 
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Well, it was an attempt to disguise myself.  I think after
this is
over I'm going to shave it off.
 
KING: [laughs] No alien visits in a long time, Whitley?  You know, we
have some
fun with this.  None?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: We had some fun with this, Larry.  I still remember-
 
KING: In fact, one night we had a night where I lost control there.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: [laughs] That's right, the moment you lost control still is
vivid
in my memory.
 
KING: That's right.  And what happened, folks, Whitley was on.  We got
him to
talking about aliens, and I just lost it, and it was like Rickles was
here.  I
was on the floor.  It was hysterical.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: It was wonderful.
 
KING: And you were a great sport.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: [laughs] Well, I survived it.
 
KING: You haven't been visited in a while?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Well, you know, I don't know what that was.  I never knew
what it
was.  I didn't know then and I don't know now.  And I managed to make
everyone
who's connected with it furious at me because I wouldn't-
 
KING: You wouldn't say it was this; you wouldn't say it was-
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Exactly.  I wouldn't say what any of them wanted.
 
KING: Well, you were basically a journalist, right?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Well, no, I was a novelist really-
 
KING: You were a writer.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: -not even that far up the ladder of fact-getting.  I was a
writer.
 
KING: You were a writer.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Novelist, yes.
 

KING: This is something that happened to you.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Right.
 
KING: So now all you're doing now is just going on and writing?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Right.  It stopped after about three years and there were no
physical side effects, no apparent mental side effects - [laughs] - as
far as I
know.
 
KING: When you go to bed at night, though, do you wonder, 'Could tonight
be a
return?'
 
Mr. STRIEBER: I have sleep problems.  I have been waking up at the
approximate
hour it happened - about 3:00 in the morning - ever since.
 
KING: All right.  What's Unholy Fire about?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Well, now this is very close to my heart because I've
finally
gotten up the nerve to write a novel - it has to be a novel - a book
about the
Church.  I am a Catholic.  I've been a Catholic since I was born, and I'm
awful
unhappy with the Church and I think there are some tremendously important
things
about the Church that we are in danger of losing if the Church collapses,
and I
think it might collapse.
 
KING: And it'll collapse why?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Well, basically because there aren't enough people becoming
priests.  And they're not doing that for one simple reason.  Everybody
thinks
that the Vatican Council was what caused all the turmoil in the Church
for the
past 25 years, but that was not it.  In 1968 the Pope promoted an
encyclical,
called On Human Life, that said birth control was wrong, and generally
what it
did was it went into the bedrooms of Catholics all over the world and
said, 'You
do this.  You do that.' And the Church changed.  It became, instead of a
sacramental church, a church of sex instructions.
 
KING: It wasn't that before?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Not really.  It wasn't emphasized like that.  From that
moment,
that is when people began to resign from the priesthood and when the
number of
people going into the priesthood began to decline.  Church attendance all
over
the world began to drop and it's never really stopped.  It's going up a
little
bit now, but not much.
 
KING: What's the story line?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Two priests- One of them is a good priest.  He's the kind of
priest that every Catholic wishes he knew and that some of them- Like I
was
lucky enough to grow up with such a priest.  And then there's a bad
priest.
Now, I think that it'll be quite a while into the thing before anyone
realizes
who's who so I'm going to just let that much out of it, but that's
essentially
what it's about.  And the issue is celibacy and sexuality.  I go right
into all
of that stuff.
 
KING: Andrew Greeley has written lots on this.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Uh-huh.
 
KING: Have you read him?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Yes, but he's very polite because he's a priest, himself,
and he's
got a constituency inside the Church.  He can only go so far.  I'm free.
[laughs] I don't have anybody to stop me.  I said what I thought.
 
KING: Why do you stay in the Church if you don't like its tenets?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Because the sacraments to me are real, and that's what the
Church
is about.  The rest of it - the business about, 'You should think this;
you
should think that' - I just don't even listen to it.  I don't think many
people
do.
 
KING: You don't?  You don't feel, then, if you go and take communion - no
pun
intended - that you're insincere?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: I think that- I believe in birth control.  I do not believe
that
abortion should be outlawed.  In fact, almost down the line I'm the
opposite of
what the Catholic hierarchy says I should believe.
 
KING: Priests should marry?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: I think priests should marry.  I think women should be
priests.
 
KING: You're a liberal Catholic.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: An open-minded Catholic.
 
KING: Open-minded Catholic.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: [laughs] Yes.
 
KING: Well, many are saying, 'Why not leave the Church?'
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Because the sacraments are still there and they've remained
unchanged for thousands of years, and I want that.  I'm going for that.
 
KING: Do you think it's possible to change that most rigid of churches?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Yes.
 
KING: Do you see another Pope John XXIII around?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Not right now.
 
KING: It's going to take someone like that, isn't it?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: But it's going to have to happen because they can't- This
generation, the Church is going to survive, for the next 20 or so years. 
But
after that, it's going to begin to really profoundly decline because
there are
just not going to be enough priests.
 
KING: You accept, though, virgin birth-
 
Mr. STRIEBER: I don't know.  I think I probably do.
 
KING: You accept the Devil?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Yes.  After what happened to me - the Communion experiences
- I
decided that that might be a good idea, to accept the idea of the Devil,
just in
case that's what I saw.  [laughs] I'm not certain, but I do simply
because if
you look closely at the life of the world you see the workings of evil in
the
world.  There seems to be a sort of machinery behind it that is far
beyond just
the accident of human life and I think there might be a consciousness of
some
kind there.
 
KING: Do you accept original sin?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: I don't know.
 
KING: Well, you're a practicing Catholic - then why?  If you don't know
about
virgin birth, you don't know about original sin, you like the sacraments-
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Well-
 
KING: You can get the sacraments in the Episcopal Church, can't you?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Not the same sacraments, no.  You can't because in the
Catholic
Church the belief in communion is very, very deep and very strong - in the
Catholic Church - the belief that communion is actually a real interaction
between you and the deity.  And in the Episcopal Church it's more of a
symbolic
thing.
 
KING: Now Judaism allows all thoughts.  In fact, it has divisions.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Yes.
 
KING: It has the Reform, the Orthodox, the Conservative - and, as Alan
King
says, it has a fourth called 'Come As You Are.'
 
Mr. STRIEBER: [laughs] Right.
 
KING: The Catholic Church has- It had divisions when Luther left it.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Right.  Well, right now what the Catholic Church has is
three
groups.  It has the hierarchy with a very old-fashioned view of things
that
dates almost from the seventeenth century.  It has the laity who are,
many of
them - at least from the studies I have read - are very similar to me in
their
beliefs.  And then it has the working priest, who is trying to do a
balancing
act between these two groups, to keep his parish alive and also to keep
his
bishop happy - often very difficult.
 
KING: Do you believe in possession?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: I think that some extremely bizarre things can happen to
people
along those lines, and I don't think we understand what they are.
KING: And that was based on personal experience, right?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Yes, sure was.
 
KING: Because you were possessed, in a sense.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: I would say I was assaulted by something from the unknown,
rather
than possessed by it.  I hope that I was never possessed by it, although
there
are those who might disagree with me.  [laughs]
 
KING:  Whitley Strieber  is our guest - nothing but bestsellers.  The
newest,
from Dutton, is Unholy Fire.  We'll come back and start to take your phone
calls.  This is  Larry King  Live in Washington.  Don't go away.
 
[Commercial break]
 
KING: Let's go to your calls for  Whitley Strieber.   His newest book is
Unholy
Fire.  He's the author of Communion and Transformation.
 
We go to Gary, Indiana.  Hello.
 
8th CALLER: [Gary, Indiana] Hi.  It's a great show tonight and I'm
privileged to
talk to you.
 
I'd like to know whether you thought the movie Communion was an accurate
representation of both the book and your experiences, and if you've had a
chance
to read a book by how-
 
KING: OK, I didn't get that-
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Yes, the movie Communion.  I heard that part of it.  The
movie
Communion is a movie of my experiences with the apparent aliens - whatever
happened to me.  I think, first of all, the movie is emotionally very
authentic.
It looks like how it felt to have that experience.
 
KING: Who played you?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Chris Walken [sp?].
 
KING: Great actor.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Oh, a wonderful actor, and the director, Philippe Moreau
[sp?],
got a wonderful job out of him.
 
They did not have enough money to do the things I saw right.  It just
isn't true
to life.
 
KING: You mean, the special effects?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: The special effects, yes, but the emotional- If you want the
emotional content of that experience, that movie is really accurate.
 
KING: I think it's Manasquan, New Jersey.  Hello.
 
9th CALLER: [Manasquan, New Jersey] Hello.  Mr. Strieber, I had a
question.

First, I wanted to thank you very much for coming forward with both of
your
books.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Oh, thanks.
 
9th CALLER: They've given me a lot of courage to confront my own
situations
which were very similar to yours.  In fact, I had experiences in a town
just
outside Pine Bush, New York-
 
Mr. STRIEBER: What's your question?
 
KING: Ah-ha!  Whitley, you've got me down.
 
Go ahead.  What's your question?
 
9th CALLER: Yes, I wanted to find out has he had any more situations
happen to
him since?
 
KING: No.  You have not, right?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: OK, well, about a year ago it stopped very abruptly and I
may- I
don't think I'll ever write about it again, but I will say, just to this
caller
and to everyone, that I've had since I wrote Communion over 55,000
letters from
people around the world who've had similar things they think they had
happen to
them.  And we still get about 200 a week, and this is years after the
book has
been-
 
KING: And you still don't know what it was, right?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Nobody knows.
 
KING: You guess outer space.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: I guessed a lot of things.  I think the experience over the
years
became so sublime, my basic problem is I don't even know how to talk
about it
any more.
 
KING: Did you ever drive around, like by yourself, and say, 'Maybe I'm
whacked'?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: At first, yes, but then it became- It turned into something
that
was the most intellectually challenging and beautiful thing I ever knew
and I
don't think it was something out of craziness.  If it came out of my
mind, it
came out of a part of my mind that is universal to us all - let me put it
that
way - and is really something wonderful.
 
KING: Sunnyvale, California, with  Whitley Strieber.   Hello.
 
10th CALLER: [Sunnyvale, California] Hi, Larry.  Hi, Whitley.  I want to
ask you
what is your thoughts on the patterns that are being found in corn fields
and of
cows being operated on-
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Circles, OK - crop circles.  All right, we're not going to
talk
about the Church, it looks like, tonight but-
 
KING: It's hard to get away from,  Whitley. 

Mr.  STRIEBER:  [laughs] It's hard to get away from this, but OK.  First
of all,
crop circles - very interesting what's going on in England with these
circles.
There's been a lot of talk that it was a hoax by a couple of guys walking
around
with boards on their feet, but in a little magazine, a weekly magazine
called
Science News, recently there was a fascinating article saying that
previously
unknown geometric patterns have been discovered in these circles,
indicating new
theorems of geometry that are beyond anything that we have yet
discovered.  And
there was a wonderfully lively sort of debate in the letters column this
week
about that among a group of scientists so-
 
KING: What do you think?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Well, again, I think it's related to what was happening to
me and
what's happening to a lot of people.  I think something's changing around
here
and we just can't even begin to put it into words.  I used to have a
newsletter
which I ran for a couple of years to help satisfy people's curiosity and
I said
in the last newsletter, 'It's us.' It's something to do with us.  It has
to be -
the depth of it and the subtlety of it and the profoundly human and yet
sort of
transcendent quality of it.
 
KING: Would the Catholic Church be least open to that?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: No, I don't think so at all.  One of the things that got me
through this was-
 
KING: Your Catholicism?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: -my Catholicism and relationship to the Church.  There was
a point
when this thing was really hitting me very heavily where almost the only
things
I had to hang onto were my family and my faith.
 
KING: The book - Unholy Fire, from Dutton.  By the way,  Whitley Strieber
 is
going to be on our radio show tonight.  You might want to tune in there. 
We'll
take more phone calls and he'll be with us for an hour.  We'll come back
with
some more moments right after this.
 
[Commercial break]
 
KING: With  Whitley Strieber  - New Castle, Pennsylvania, hello.
 
11th CALLER: [New Castle, Pennsylvania] Hi, Larry.
 
Whitley, I was wondering, what kind of response, if any, have you had
from the
Catholic Church or your other parishioners in your church?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Oh, it's complicated.  I have some churches- I go to more
than one
church and some of them are rather uncomfortable with me, having me
around.
They don't know- Not because they think I'm a heretic; because they don't
quite
know what to make of me.  I have had some very interesting responses from
the
Church, itself, but it was asked of me that I not speak about them
publicly, but
simply to say that the Church is very interested in this phenomenon.
 
KING: Would you say on the record- You can't be off the record-
 
Mr. STRIEBER: No.
 
KING: -we're on television live- that more priests agree with you than
would
say?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: The Pope?  [laughs]
 
KING: Do you think more priests agree with you than would publicly agree?
 
Mr. STRIEBER: You mean about birth control and such?
 
KING: About all your feelings, generally.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: I don't know the answer.  I do think that most of the
clergy are
with the laity on things like birth control, though, yes.
 
KING: Thanks, Whitley.  See you at the radio show.
 
Mr. STRIEBER: Yes, see you there.
 
KING:  Whitley Strieber  - the book is Unholy Fire, from Dutton.

