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White Witch in a Black Robe: A True Story About Criminal Mind Control

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White Witch in a Black Robe is a memoir about how secret high-level mind control is performed throughout victims' lives and the ways heads of governments and religious organizations participate in this, as well as the healing process and how one's mind becomes whole again.The memoir begins with the author's childhood in a multi-generational satanic cult family, her ordinary life in the normal world, and her simultaneous secret tortuous world. She describes her travels as an Illuminati queen and prophet, encountering well-known leaders (whose names have been changed for this memoir). The final section portrays the process of weaving the pieces of her mind back together with the help of a therapist, and adjusting to life with a whole mind.This is an important book for survivors of mind control and ritual abuse, their therapists and counsellors, and the general public, revealing one of the world's best-kept and grimmest secrets. As Wendy Hoffman puts it in her introduction, 'the book is not for the delicate or for those who are convinced the world is fine just the way it is'.

178 pages, Kindle Edition

Published December 15, 2015

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Wendy Hoffman

10 books10 followers

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
1 review
July 23, 2016
This book will shock many. It is one thing to suspect that institutional corruption runs deep. It’s quite another to encounter the horrific details of the generational mind control of children that underlies this corruption. Frankly, it would have been hard for me to accept the scope and degree of evil described in this book if I hadn’t encountered two close friends who experienced much the same thing.

Here, author Wendy Hoffman courageously offers up a relentlessly honest account of her life, a life targeted from infancy for the twisted use of psychopaths and mind-controlled leaders of the government, military, and institutionalized religion. This book exposes and indicts “the powers that be.” Oddly, it is not a disempowering book. It is a book for those who are awake or wish to wake up to a sense of responsibility. The institutions of society will not save us; we the people will save ourselves, much as Ms. Hoffman reclaims her life, memory by memory. She illuminates the way, reconnecting with the unquenchable flame that burns within each of us. As she discovers, that inner flame is available in the direst circumstances. Grace descends on her in the darkest moments: the unconditional love of a doomed boy, the patient skill of a gifted therapist; it is a grace that defeats the best laid plans of the evil which surrounds her.

Ultimately, this powerful memoir reignites hope. In these seemingly desperate times we have all been programmed by the Matrix; we have all been mesmerized into looking outside of ourselves for relief. But if, as with Ms. Hoffman, we discover the power of gently, relentlessly reconnecting with our inner flame and facing our inner demons, we transform not only ourselves, but this dark world.
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395 reviews20 followers
July 6, 2020
Wendy Hoffman wrote Enslaved Queen which is an autobiography of her upbringing within a generational satanic family. She was in therapy with Allison Miller throughout writing and after publishing.

Once it was published, while still in therapy uncovering more memories, Wendy realized there were whole sections of her life still not discovered in time to include in Enslaved Queen. Therefore she wrote this second book, White Witch In A Black Robe. It contains many more missing pieces and follows her to complete freedom away from her satanic roots.

Just like Fiona Barnett, Wendy was being primed to take over the region in which she lives as the head queen. She showed signs of failure at a young age (she was too kind and refused to kill on her own), so one of the men in charge wanted her killed, allowing another, more apt woman to take over. That didn't happen, thankfully, as she bravely stepped away from her family and mind control protocols to tell her story.

Unlike Fiona Barnett, Wendy does not name names. She does write, "A list of the real identities and characters...will be revealed when I and/or Allison Miller die."

It seems like the Corona Virus mishap vomited a whole truckload of conspiracy information on the general public including the satanic networks that hold powerful positions over the planet. It gave me hope that more people will look at these memoirs and take these survivors seriously. Wendy Hoffman makes it easy since she's mostly coherent and detailed with her writing.

I do recommend reading Enslaved Queen before this book, since most of the setting and family dynamic is described fully in that text. This book can make sense on its own, but more background information is always helpful.
2 reviews
February 11, 2017
I couldn't put it down!

I am very grateful to Wendy Hoffman for sharing her story. It has helped me tremendously to come to terms with my own story. I hope one day such evil in this world will no longer exist...especially by the hands of those who are supposed to love and protect us--our own parents and our own government officials. I do believe in God and that He will destroy Lucifer and all who serve him willing.
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24 reviews2 followers
August 16, 2016
The writing itself is wanting, but the tale the author has to tell is horrifically spellbinding. Like any first person account, though, there is no way to know how much or which parts of the story are actually true and which are inventions of fallible human memory or, quite frankly, outright fictions. The fact that the author is being treated for DID further complicates her credibility. I think the best approach to the book is to accept it all as possible, even probable, and simultaneously reject it as Truth. Something like this could have happened, may have happened, but we have no way of knowing whether it did happen and whether it happened in this way.
101 reviews11 followers
September 30, 2016
This book offers some valuable insights into some facets of the Monarch mind control system, particularly the "Illuminati"/European royals facets. Unfortunately, names and locations are not named, which limits the usefulness of the book. I'd recommend Cathy O'Brien's "Trance Formation of America" and Brice Taylor's "Thanks for the Memories" before this book, for sure, but I found it to be worth reading, and the author's story credible by virtue of basic consistency with more verifiable MK Ultra/Monarch survivor accounts, but without the author naming names and places there isn't much to go on regarding further investigation.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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