Apollo 11
- "Something was up there. Something abandoned long ago... with Jack deep underground, it was easy."
- ―Clay Kaczmarek, 2012.[src]
The Apollo 11 was the American spaceflight which landed humans on the Moon for the first time in history. Behind-the-scenes, it was a Templar plot spearheaded by the United States President Lyndon B. Johnson in order to retrieve a Piece of Eden, an Apple of Eden 5, which was located on the Moon.
Background
President John F. Kennedy had plans for a joint venture to the Moon with the Soviets. The Templars knew however that an Apple of Eden could be found on the Moon, which they did not want to fall into Soviet possession. Thus they formulated a plot to assassinate Kennedy and replace him with Johnson, allowing them to reclaim the Apple on their own.[1]
Mission
Buzz Aldrin procured the Apple, making the mission a success. The astronauts then returned to Earth with the Piece of Eden in possession, where it was delivered to Abstergo Industries, though this was never revealed publicly.[2]
Legacy
The true purpose behind Apollo 11 was later included by the Assassin Clay Kaczmarek in the Glyphs, a series of puzzles he had hidden within the Animus as messages for his successor, Desmond Miles. Desmond unravelled this puzzle, along with the other Glyphs, in September of that year.[3]
The Glyph in particular was the tenth in the series. It contained a photograph of Apollo Lunar Module Eagle approaching the Moon was a Masonic pigpen cipher that read "Johnson was one of them. The bee's drone too. Follow the money". Hidden on the Eagle was a quote from John F. Kennedy reading "With these formidable weapons, the adversaries of freedom plan to consolidate their territory, to exploit, to control, and finally to destroy". In the next image, that of Buzz Aldrin on the lunar surface were the logos of the Templars and Abstergo hidden in the negative photo.[2]
Gallery
-
Apollo 11 Approaching the Moon
-
Negative of the Moon Landing photo
References