THE HEBREW WORD FOR MOUSE IS AKBAR, THE LATIN WORD FOR MOUSE IS MUS, THE FRENCH
WORD FOR MOUSE IS SOURIS, AND THE SPANISH WORD FOR MOUSE IS RATON.

When the Philistines stole the Ark of the Covenant from the Israelites, JEHOVAH plagued them with tumors and mice:

Then they said, “what shall be the trespass offering which we shall return to him?” They answered, “five golden tumors (Heb. techorim), and five golden mice (Heb. akbarim), according to the number of the lords of the Philistines: for one plague was on you all, and on your lords” (I Samuel 6:4).

EL is one of the 2 Hebrew words for God found in the Holy Bible. His other name is JEHOVAH. EL Shaddai: EL is Almighty. Israel: Prince of EL. Samuel: His name is EL, Immanuel: EL is with us, Elizabeth: House of EL.

Incredible as it may seem, there were 2 Walt Disneys: One was born in Spain in 1891; and the other was born in Chicago, Illinois, in 1901.


The Spanish Walt Disney
(1891–1966).

 

The first Disney's real name was José Guirao and he was born in Mojácar, Spain, in 1891.

Baby José was adopted by Elias and Flora Disney in California and his name was changed to Walter Elias.

Soon after his adoption, the couple moved to Chicago, Illinois.

 
The U.S. Walt Disney
(1901–1966).

You can tell a lot about a person by knowing his/her real name. That is why JEHOVAH was adamant that His name not be changed. The person known to the world as Walt Disney was born in Spain in 1891. Here is an excerpt from an unauthorized biography of Walt Disney:

"The story is told that at the end of the past century there lived here (Mojácar) a very attractive washerwoman called Isabelle Zamora Ascensio, known to the villagers as La Bicha. She was very popular with the men of the village and became pregnant by one.
"It is believed that the father of Señora Zamora's baby was the already married Dr. José Guirao, who conducted the boy's christening himself, naming him José Guirao as well. Dr. Guirao died shortly after the birth of his son, after which Señora Zamora decided to leave Spain and journey by boat to America."
Barcelonan historian Carlos Almendros spent ten years researching the family origins of Walt Disney, his work underwritten by the Spanish government. According to Almendros, Señora Zamora left Spain because she and Dr. Guirao were devout Catholics and wished to protect both their families. When Señora Zamora, according to Almendros, arrived on the east coast of the United States she began another journey, this one overland, heading west to California, where she was eventually taken in by Franciscan missionaries.
(Eliot, Walt Disney: Hollywood's Dark Prince, pp. 153-154).

That history is so similar to the story of Salvador Fernandes Zarco who stayed at the Franciscan monastery in Spain and changed his name to Christopher Columbus.

José Guirao was adopted by an Anglo-Irish couple named Disney

The Disneys were originally French who joined William the Fake Conqueror's invasion of England in 1066. 1066 was the year when England was finally subdued and brought into subjection to the Latin Papacy:

Walt Disney descended from a long line of crusaders, expert in the art of self-preservation. In 1066, from the French village of Isigny off the Normandy coast, a small band of peasants joined the army of William the Conqueror to claim the throne of England, among them Jean-Christophe d'Isigny, named for the village of his birth. After the wars, D'Isigny remained in England, anglicized his name, and established two northern villages, Norton Disney and Disney, near Coventry.
The Disneys quietly prospered as farmers until the seventeenth century, when they once more took up arms, this time to support the Duke of Monmouth's attempted overthrow of King James II. When that rebellion failed, the Disneys' land was confiscated, and a price was put on their heads. In desperation, they retreated to Ireland to find shelter within the hermetic safety of the devout Roman Catholic society of County Kilkenny. (Eliot, Walt Disney: Hollywood's Dark Prince, p. 3).

One of the County Kilkenny Disneys, Arundel Elias, sailed to the New World in 1834. Arundel originally settled on the Canadian shores of Lake Huron. Arundel had a son named Kepple, and he was the father of Elias Disney.


Flora Disney (1868–1938).
Elias Disney (1859–1941).
 

The peripatetic Elias and Flora arrived in Chicago in the spring of 1890.

The couple adopted baby José in 1891, and changed his name to Walter Elias. José, alias Walt, had a stepbrother named Roy, who was born in 1893.

 

Elias and Flora at the 1934
Chicago World's Fair.

President Wolfson finally declared war on Germany in April 1917. Walt's younger step-brother Roy joined the Navy, and he encouraged Walt to enlist. Roy had 2 older natural brothers, Herbert (1888–1961), and Raymond (1890– 1989). Both brothers ran away from the Disney nuthouse in 1907 and vanished into obscurity.

Naturally, the U.S. Navy required a birth certificate for every enlistee:

In 1917, America entered World War I, and Roy, twenty-four, enlisted in the Navy, eager to join the fighting overseas. That July he was sent for training to the Great Lakes Naval Station just outside Chicago's city limits. As soon as he finished his senior year in high school, Walt packed his bag and visited his brother. Ever the romantic, Roy fueled Walt's curiosity with tales of overseas war stories picked up secondhand from returning vets.
The day he returned to Chicago, Walt made up his mind that he too would enlist. When the local recruiter, skeptical of Walt's age, asked to see his birth certificate, Walt wrote to Chicago's Cook County Hall of Records requesting a copy. A week later, by return mail, he received an official-looking document stating that the Hall of Records had no birth certificate for any Walt Disney born on or around December 5, 1901. (Eliot, Walt Disney: Hollywood's Dark Prince, pp. 153-154).

Walt could not enlist in the Navy because of the lack of a birth certificate so he enlisted in the Ambulance Corps instead.


Roy Disney (1893–1971)
as a Navy cadet.
 

Roy Disney was the younger stepbrother of Walt Disney. Roy enlisted in the Navy in 1917, and Walt was determined to follow in his footsteps.

A birth certificate was an absolute necessity to enlist, so Walt was able to procure a birth certificate that said that he was born in 1901.

Incredibly, 1900 began the 120 year countdown to the end of time!

 

Cadet Roy and "teenager"
Walt in 1917.

None of the rules of conventional warfare applied during the Great War. The Boche began using banned poison gas in 1915, and they even used stretchers to hide machine guns!


27-year-old Walt in 191
 

Driving an ambulance was just as hazardous as combat because the Boche fired at anything that moved . . . even horses, mules, and pigeons!.

Miraculously, Roy and Walt survived the war and both stepbrothers became famous.

If Walt had been killed by the Boche the world would never have heard of Mickey Mouse.

 
Ambulance driver Walt Disney in France.

When Roy and Walt arrived back home after the Great War, everything changed in the New Jerusalem. Obviously, Pope Benedict XV, Winston Churchill, "Kaiser Bill," and the Catholics were enraged because they lost a golden opportunity to restore the Papal States.

Walt Disney arrived in Hearstwood in 1923

Even though Hearst was accused of treason for supporting the Kaiser, he still remained king of Hollywood. Hearst had his close friend J. Edgar Hoover investigate everybody who worked in Hearstwood.

If you had any skeletons in your closet Hearst knew about them right away....In the case of the patriotic Walt Disney his background was a sword of Damocles that Hearst held over him!


The wedding photo of
Walt and Lillian.
 

The wedding of Walt and Lillian took place on July 13, 1925, in Lewiston, Idaho.

The U.S. Walt was a balding 34-years-old, while the bride was 26-years-old.

Walt forgot to wear his toupée on his wedding day!


Walt Disney married 26-year-old Lillian Bounds
on July 13, 1925, in Lewiston, Idaho.

By using a toupée, Walt really did find the fountain of youth that his ancestors were looking for in Florida.


Walt Disney and MI666 spy
Charlie Chaplin in 1939.

Walt always wore a hat when he was not wearing his trademark toupée.

William Rasputin Hearst never allowed an image of bald Walt to appear in any of his newspapers.


Walt in front of the Disney Studio in 1930.

Behind every legend there is a real talent so the man who brought the Disney legend to life was named Ubbe Iwerks. Ubbe's ancestors came from Germany, and in 1926 he changed his first name to Ub.


Ub Iwerks (1901–1971).

Ub Iwerks (pronounced eye-works) was born in Kansas City in 1901.

Ub was the creative genius behind Walt Disney Studios and he created the Mickey Mouse cartoon character.

In May of 1924, Ub joined Walt and Roy in California, and from that time onward Walt quit drawing cartoons.

 

 

Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks in 1928.

Walt knew that he was a terrible artist so he left the technical part of running the studio to Ub Iwerks:

From the outset, Ubbe was the highest-paid artist on the staff (including Walt) and became the top animator. From this point on, Walt would no longer animate. A short time later, fellow Laugh-O-gram animators Hugh Harman and Rudy Ising closed down their Arabian Nights Studio to make the trek to join Walt, Roy, and Ubbe.(Leslie Iwerks, The Hand Behind the Mouse, p. 30).

British spies were legion in Hearstwood at that time because William Rasputin Hearst was already planning for WWII.


Vital link



References

Eliot, Marc. Walt Disney: Hollywood's Dark Prince. Carol Publishing Group, New York, 1993.

Gabler, Neal. Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination. Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 2006.

Green, Katherine & Richard. The Man Behind the Magic: The Story of Walt Disney. Viking Press, New York, 1991.

Thomas, Bob. Walt Disney: An American Original. Simon & Schuster, New York, 1976.

Thomas, Bob. Building A Company: Roy O. Disney and the Creation of an Entertainment Empire. Hyperion, New York, 1998.

Iwerks, Leslie, & Kenworthy, John. The Hand Behind the Mouse. Disney Editions, New York, 2001.


Copyright © 2021 by Patrick Scrivener