All indications, it seems, that Pope John XXIII fully prophesied, the assassinations of John F. Kennedy,his alleged lover Marilyn Monroe and his brother Robert Kennedy, with the luxury of detail, as well as having pointed out in the same way, the direct responsible.
As if he could see the future
The Pope is believed to have referred to Jackeline Onasis, widow of President Kennedy and ex-wife of the arch-billionaire, Aristotle Onasis. The first to die was the beautiful Marilyn Monroe, on August 5, 1962.
She was found dead in her room, in circumstances that have not yet been clearly explained. Authorities said it was a suicide, but some believe it was part of this trio of mass murders.
And the most direct relationship between these three crimes, is that, they say, Marilyn had relations and affairs with the President, while also holding them with her brother, Robert Kennedy.
Next on the chart was John F, on November 22, 1963, in Dallas, Texas. And the third to be bereaved was Robert, on June 5, 1968, in Los Angeles, California. The famous writer Pier Carpi, wrote a book entitled ‘The Prophecies of John XXII’, where you can literally appreciate the following:
«… A family of dictators will take power in the land of Luther’s sons. He’ll spill blood.
That’s when Noah will start building the last Ark. But he will not see the waters, thanks to the word of the one who is not known, that makes the mighty tremble when he descends from the mountain.
The president will fall and the brother will fall. Between the two, the corpse of the innocent star.
Some people know. Ask the first black widow and the man who will take her to the altar on the island.
Their secrets are in guns, in crime. And they’re secrets of the one who wasn’t in Nuremberg.”
According to Pier Carpi, John XXII was able to see, several years in advance, the macabre deaths of Marilyn Monroe, John F Kennedy and Robert Kennedy, proving that these were political crimes and that among the direct responsible, he was apparently Jacqui Onassis, whom the multitudes most considered in the instant of their widowedness.