SAEDNEWS: Warmius says: When the translation of the book reached me, I read a portion of it and immediately burned it, because it reveals truths that no one is ready for yet. We need a very long time to understand them!
According to the History and Culture Service of Saed News, quoting Akuna Press:
The Necronomicon—also called Resurrection of the Dead or the Madness-Inducing Book—is a mysterious text with multiple ominous titles. Another name for it is Al-Dhaif. The original author was a primitive man from Syria named Abdul al-Hazrat, who wrote it in 699 CE.
After completing the book, al-Hazrat’s dismembered body was found. The cause and circumstances of his death remain unknown. The original book (a separate version was later written by H. P. Lovecraft and released in the horror genre) consists of seven volumes and contains prophecies about the future of humanity. It is claimed that some of Nostradamus’ predictions were derived from this text.
A record from 1487 by the monk Olaus Wormius survives. In his writing, he refers to the book as extremely dangerous. Wormius notes that the mysterious book deeply affects its readers. In another text, he writes that when a translation of the book reached him, he read a portion and immediately burned it because it revealed truths that no one was ready to comprehend—truths requiring immense time to understand.
The translation Wormius claimed to have destroyed in fire resurfaced in 1586 in Prague, in the possession of a man widely recognized as a sorcerer. Dr. John Dee and his assistant Edward Kelley, according to rumors, attempted to use the book to resurrect the dead.
Later, the book was donated to the Bodleian Library at Oxford by a collector named Elias Ashmole. Two other copies are held in the British Museum and the Vatican Library. The Bodleian copy disappeared in 1934. It is said that Hitler, fascinated by metaphysics, somehow acquired this copy, and it has not been seen since.
The British Museum copy was removed from public cataloging in 1940 and stored in a secure facility. It was later placed alongside the royal family’s crown jewels in a protected gallery.
What makes this book so dangerous is not only its madness-inducing content, such as the physical harms it describes, but the raw and merciless truths it contains. These truths are said to collapse the reader’s beliefs and perception of life entirely. Those who read it are either driven to the brink of insanity or left to wander through life in absolute darkness and purposelessness.