Libro Blanco Ramtha -

Ramtha claimed he was a "weaver"—a person from a distant future where history could be visited but not changed. His crime, in his own time, was compassion. He had traveled to the 13th century to give a dying girl named Elisa a medicine that would not be invented for seven hundred years. A single capsule. She lived. But history, sensing a foreign object, began to fray.

No one had spoken that name in centuries. Ramtha was a ghost story whispered to novices: a Moorish scholar who had converted to Christianity, only to be tried by the Inquisition not for heresy, but for something far stranger— chronological dissonance . libro blanco ramtha

Brother Mateo read by firelight, his faith trembling. Ramtha claimed he was a "weaver"—a person from

In the dust-choked archives of a forgotten Valencian monastery, Brother Mateo uncovered a codex bound in undyed sheepskin. Its title, handwritten in a shaky 13th-century hand, read Libro Blanco de Ramtha . A single capsule

The Libro Blanco was his journal. Each page described a reality beginning to split: a crusade that never happened, a language that reversed its syntax, a star vanishing from the night sky. To repair the damage, Ramtha knew he had to do what no weaver had done: write a confession in a medium so inert that time’s agents—beings he called the "Erasers"—could not detect it. Tin. White vellum. Silence.