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The generally accepted notions of "life" and "death" seem to fade with a close examination of hieroglyphics carved in stone thousands of years ago. The hieroglyphics exclaim, "a group of (Summa) individuals came to this planet thousands of years ago in the wrappings of mummies." The writings go on to say, "these individuals were suspended in time and with the facility of knowledge these mummies were given new bodies." They established what has been referred to as the pre-Egyptian era, and the process of "giving new bodies" is similar to what we know today as cloning. Hieroglyphs translated back in the 1890s state a person was preserved for the purpose of immortality, so he or she could be brought back to life or resurrected at a later date. If a person's cells can be preserved through mummification, the cells can be cloned to re-create a genetic model of the original. Through transfers of the memory and the parts that make up the identity, a person can, theoretically, live forever. Science is on the brink of doing this today, yet we find references to it in ancient writings. One old story that tells the tale goes something like this:
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