I thought this was interesting. The Law of One was written in 1980 and the same year this documentary about Ahkenaten was released by the national film board of Canadia, free to view on their website.
Her story is unique, she fell in to a coma and had a dream about an Egyptian temple and later went on to become a legitimate Egyptolist. She passed away in 1981 shortly after the Ra material came about. The Ra material mentions Ahkenaten as an important figure. She mentions him as an important figure but not in a positive way. It is intriguing that both the Law of One and her opinions about him are different but they both agree that his reign was a turning point in Egypts history.
Dorothy Eady - Wikipedia
[/url]The Lost Pharaoh: The Search for Akhenaten by Nicholas Kendall - NFB
[url=https://www.nfb.ca/film/lost_pharaoh_search_for_akhenaten/]Nicholas Kendall of the National Film Board of Canada visited Egypt in 1979 to make a documentary, The Lost Pharaoh: The Search for Akhenaten. Donald Redford, who had led a team that recently unearthed material relating to the reign of Akhenaten, asked Omm Sety to appear in the film. She, in common with other Egyptologists, did not regard the king as a romantic idealist dedicated to a universal god, but a "one-track minded, authoritarian iconoclast who impaled captives and deported populations."[77]
In October 1980, Julia Cave and a team from the BBC arrived in Abydos to film the documentary Omm Sety and Her Egypt. Featuring interviews with Egyptologists T. G. H. James and Rosalie David, it described Abydos and the excavations that had been undertaken. It had extensive input from Omm Sety, who used crutches due to her deteriorating health.[78] The documentary was broadcast on BBC 2 in May 1981. The Times wrote of the documentary: "An incredulous smile froze on my lips as I watched the Chronicle film Omm Sety and Her Egypt. Could I be absolutely positive it was all a lot of eyewash? Of course I couldn't. And neither will you be able to. In any case, it makes marvellous television."[79] At the time the BBC were recording their documentary, the American producer Miriam Birch asked Omm Sety to appear, along with Egyptologists Kent Weeks and Lanny Bell, in a documentary that National Geographic Channel was filming, Egypt: Quest for Eternity. It concentrated on Rameses II, the son of Seti I. Shooting took place in March 1981, coinciding with Omm Sety's seventy-seventh birthday party at Chicago House, which was filmed. She was in a lot of pain but full of good cheer, and the film crew carried her up to the Temple of Seti for filming. This was to be her last visit to the shrine in which she believed she had served as a priestess 3,000 years before.[80]
Her story is unique, she fell in to a coma and had a dream about an Egyptian temple and later went on to become a legitimate Egyptolist. She passed away in 1981 shortly after the Ra material came about. The Ra material mentions Ahkenaten as an important figure. She mentions him as an important figure but not in a positive way. It is intriguing that both the Law of One and her opinions about him are different but they both agree that his reign was a turning point in Egypts history.
Dorothy Eady - Wikipedia
[/url]The Lost Pharaoh: The Search for Akhenaten by Nicholas Kendall - NFB
[url=https://www.nfb.ca/film/lost_pharaoh_search_for_akhenaten/]Nicholas Kendall of the National Film Board of Canada visited Egypt in 1979 to make a documentary, The Lost Pharaoh: The Search for Akhenaten. Donald Redford, who had led a team that recently unearthed material relating to the reign of Akhenaten, asked Omm Sety to appear in the film. She, in common with other Egyptologists, did not regard the king as a romantic idealist dedicated to a universal god, but a "one-track minded, authoritarian iconoclast who impaled captives and deported populations."[77]
In October 1980, Julia Cave and a team from the BBC arrived in Abydos to film the documentary Omm Sety and Her Egypt. Featuring interviews with Egyptologists T. G. H. James and Rosalie David, it described Abydos and the excavations that had been undertaken. It had extensive input from Omm Sety, who used crutches due to her deteriorating health.[78] The documentary was broadcast on BBC 2 in May 1981. The Times wrote of the documentary: "An incredulous smile froze on my lips as I watched the Chronicle film Omm Sety and Her Egypt. Could I be absolutely positive it was all a lot of eyewash? Of course I couldn't. And neither will you be able to. In any case, it makes marvellous television."[79] At the time the BBC were recording their documentary, the American producer Miriam Birch asked Omm Sety to appear, along with Egyptologists Kent Weeks and Lanny Bell, in a documentary that National Geographic Channel was filming, Egypt: Quest for Eternity. It concentrated on Rameses II, the son of Seti I. Shooting took place in March 1981, coinciding with Omm Sety's seventy-seventh birthday party at Chicago House, which was filmed. She was in a lot of pain but full of good cheer, and the film crew carried her up to the Temple of Seti for filming. This was to be her last visit to the shrine in which she believed she had served as a priestess 3,000 years before.[80]