Varmius says: When the translation of the book arrived in my hands, I read some of it and immediately burned it in the fire. Because it reveals truths that no one is ready for yet. We need a very long time to comprehend it!
According to a report by the news site Saed News and quoted by Akona Press:
The book Necronomicon (Resurrection of the Dead) or The Mad-Making Book are titles given to this book. Its other name is Al-Dha’if. The original author of this book was a primitive man from the Levant named Abdul al-Hazrat, and it was written in 699.
After the book was finished by al-Hazrat, his dismembered body was found. The cause and manner of his death remain unknown. The original book (another version of this book was written by H.P. Lovecraft and published in the horror genre) consists of 7 volumes and contains prophecies about the future of humanity. According to claims, some of Nostradamus' prophecies are derived from this book.
A document from 1487 remains, written by the monk Olaus Wormius. According to this, he refers to a very dangerous book. This mysterious book greatly impacts its reader. In another of his writings, Wormius says: "When the translation of the book came to me, I read some of it and immediately burned it in the fire. Because it reveals truths that no one is ready for yet. We need a very long time to comprehend it!"
However, the translation that Wormius claimed to have burned in the fire was found again in 1586 in Prague, but in the hands of someone who was widely known as a magician, Dr. John Dee and his assistant Edward Kelley. According to rumors, the two of them, after finding the book, tried to resurrect the dead!
The book was then gifted to the Bodleian Library in Oxford by a collector named Elias Ashmole. Two other copies of this book are in the British Museum and the Vatican Libraries. The Necronomicon copy in the Bodleian Library disappeared in 1934. It is said that Hitler, due to his strong interest in metaphysics, somehow obtained this book, and after that, no trace of that version remains.
The copy in the British Museum was removed from the catalog in 1940 and transferred to storage. It was later placed along with the royal family's jewels in the protected gallery castle. What makes this book dangerous is not just its maddening aspect, i.e., its physical damage section, but the facts written in it are so brutally and unapologetically clear that they cause the collapse of all beliefs and perceptions related to life. It only brings darkness and a great void to the person who reads it. That is, if the person does not go mad from reading this book, they are forced to live in aimlessness and total darkness.