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On Saturday, October 8th, I attended a memorial
service at the 15th Street Friends Meeting House near Sheridan
Square in New York City to celebrate the life of Budd Hopkins,
artist, author, philosopher and UFO researcher.
Though we still feel sadness and the loss at
his passing, this event was a very heartwarming affair More than
200 people (and 1 seeing-eye dog) were present, but thousands of
others who wished to be there, due to distance and time, could not
be present.
We've composed this webpage as a continuing
memorial, first to honor Budd, but also for those who could not be
present to express their own feelings, sentiments and recollections
in the Comment Section* that follows.
An Invitation to Celebrate
the Life of Budd Hopkins
Please join us for a
reception
immediately following the
memorial
in the adjoining room and the
courtyard
Memorial Celebration to Honor
the Life
of
Budd Hopkins
15th Street Friends Meeting
House
New York, NY
Saturday, October 8, 2011
2 pm
I was very touched in a heartfelt way by the
reminiscences and recollections of Budd by friends and family,
especially a disarming introduction made by Leslie Kean, the
recollections of Peter Robbins regarding Budd's establishment of
Intruders Foundation, and the presentation of Budd's artwork through
the years by Grace Hopkins-Lisle, Budd's daughter.
Visiting The Met

(Photo credit: Tim Coleman ©
Courtesy Leslie Kean)
Starting with Leslie Kean, lovely (and loving)
eulogies of Budd were given, sketching his family history, his
career in art, and his personal life. Budd's childhood and family
history were recounted by Betsy Hopkins Mullet, and Andrew
Hopkins-Lisle, Budd's son-in-law, with some sadness, as well as good
humor, expounded on Budd's expertise in art history and told us of
his (Andrew's) physically arduous expeditions with Budd to that
summit of the art world, The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Budd's neighbor, Martin Jackson, gave us views
through the windows of his eyes depicting their lives on the Lower
East Side and reflected on their parental world around New York
City. Mr. Jackson allowed us brief glimpses of their roles/duties as
fathers, and recounted how their lives were intertwined by chance,
choice, fatherhood and the New York City Public School system.

Budd Hopkins with daughter
Grace, grand-daughter Gigi, and son-in-law Andrew
(Photo © Leslie Kean)
The Artist’s Life
Budd's daughter, Grace Hopkins-Lisle, presented
"The Artist's Life" and recalled his journey to Greece, which
affected and influenced his philosophy and art in many ways.

One of Budd
Hopkins' "Guardian" Sculptures
(Photo © Leslie Kean)
Celebrating the Life of Budd
Hopkins
June 15, 1931 – August 21, 2011
Opening Music
Alexandra Eames, piano
Greeting
Leslie Kean
Film Tribute
Randall Nickerson
Words of
Remembrance
David Jacobs
Betsy Hopkins Mullet
Musical
Interlude
Dick Miller, piano
Words of
Remembrance
Andrew Hopkins-Lisle
Film Tribute
Seth Keal and Charles Miller
Closing Music
The Graceful Ghost Rag
by William Bolcom
Alexandra Eames, piano
The Film Tribute
Two
film tributes given by Randall Nickerson, Seth Keal and Charles
Miller brought Budd Hopkins' spirit to the commemoration. As a
result, Budd became a veritable presence and through an
inter-dimensional projection of his own video images and words on a
curved spacetime screen, he was a real participant in the
ceremony. It was uncanny...Budd was there.
(Photo © Leslie Kean)
At one point, during a short back-lit
sequence, I was taken quite aback in my seat as Budd's broad
shoulders, illuminated from behind looked to me like wings and made
Budd look "avian," at first, like an angel, then, I viewed him like
a great old owl....
My favorite moments came when he described his
"raison d'etre," his reason for living:
"I just like adding energy to the World. That's
what I do....and I want to keep on doing that...adding energy to the
World as long as I can."
However, my favorite memory of him (in this
film) will remain the final one, of Budd walking barefoot on the
beach alone on a raw, cold day. He pauses, contemplating the open
sea, then very resolutely takes a step toward the ocean to dip his
foot in the water. Suddenly, touching it, startled and recoiling,
shoulders raised high with a shiver, Budd exclaims:
"Uhff... It's Cold...but Nice!"
Then Budd walked briskly out of frame, out of
sight, into history and on to Eternity...
And I thought to myself:
"What a great description of Life!"

Seth Keal and
Charles Miller of BreakThru Films
(Photo © Leslie Kean)
For me personally, it was as if through virtual
reality, Budd was in attendance there, enjoying our celebration of
his life, still "adding more energy to the World."
We saw Budd walking with Leslie on the beach;
discussing his own artwork and that of others before canvasses and
constructions of his own ingenious design; seriously discussing
UFOs and abductions; at the National Press Club Conference on UFOs,
lecturing, conducting research and finally, dancing with his
granddaughter. All of these video vignettes gave glimpses of
glorious moments of an illustrious (and industrious) life, a life
well-lived, well-loved...as it would seem, quite to his own
astonishment.
Gigi...with
Randall Nickerson
"When you were standing on the brink, was I out
yonder somewhere looking at a star?"
(Photo © Leslie Kean)
Words of Remembrance
Long
time friends and colleagues, Peter Robbins (left) and Dr. David
Jacobs, speaking on the subject of alien abductions, remembered Budd
Hopkins vividly, recalling their regular contacts and phone
conversations with Budd on the topic. Peter recalled how he met
Budd after reading his seminal mid-1970s UFO article on the Hudson
River sightings and landings, published in the Village Voice
and of the establishment of Intruders Foundation.
(Photo © Peter Robbins & Leslie Kean)

Dr. Jacobs (right) brought home
the point that it was Budd who pioneered alien abduction research
and coined the term "Missing Time," and that finally, through that
work, Budd made a breakthrough and assembled enough pieces of the
alien abduction jigsaw puzzle to bring it into focus and give us a
new perspective on the goal of the mysterious "intruders."
(Photo © David Jacobs & Leslie Kean)
Budd Hopkins' insights shed enough light on the
abstruse subject of alien abduction to discern the outline of the
alien paradigm and the alien agenda, a plan, which Budd Hopkins and
David Jacobs noted, involved "reproduction” and possibly genetic
engineering.
Thus, Budd established and exposed the reality
of the extraterrestrial alien abduction phenomenon, bringing it to
the forefront of American awareness.
Closing Music
Pianist
Alexandra Eames Performs
(as "Koda" sits by)
(Photo © Leslie Kean)
Musical interludes at the beginning, middle and
end, performed by Alexandra Eames and Dick Miller on piano, created
a musical triptych around the memories, recollections and images
shared of Budd's life and gave some emotional expression to and
relief from the grief that is still felt by many at his passing.
Many artists, authors, UFO researchers, along
with several veterans of ETAP [Extraterrestrial Alien Presence] were
present to honor Budd. The New York City UFO research community was
well represented, mixing in with nearly 200 people present, among
them Linda Cortile, subject of Witnessed: The True Story of the
Brooklyn Bridge UFO Abductions.
Alan Steinfeld, producer of New Realities, TV
producer Larry Landsman, Hal Egeln, President of The New York Space
Society & Editor of Astro-Gaia News, former Paracast co-host, David
Biedny, psychic researcher Naomi Wolfe, mystic-musician Joshua
Carothers and his wife Jodi were present, along with a score or more
alien contactees, one representing "Virginia Horten" (whose case was
among those first reported in Missing Time and who
unfortunately could not attend).
All joined together at a reception afterward to
share stories and recount experiences of knowing and working with
Budd Hopkins, who cast a brilliant light upon some of the darkest
mysteries of our lives.
–
Robert D Morningstar, Editor of
UFO Digest, October 19, 2011
* * *
October 18th, 2011
"Uff! ... It's Cold...but Nice."
Budd Hopkins - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Budd Hopkins (June 15, 1931 – August 21, 2011
Manhattan) was an American painter, sculptor, and prominent figure
in abduction phenomenon, and related ...
Interest in UFOs -
Alien abduction -
Criticism -
See also
Budd
Hopkins - Intruders Foundation
www.intrudersfoundation.org/budd_hopkins.html
Photos above are copyrighted by Leslie Kean may
not be copied or reproduced without permission. Contact: LKean @
ix.netcom.com
Click here to Read Kay Wilson's Tribute to
Budd Hopkins (Includes
Tributes from around the World)
This article, including photographs, is
published with permission by Robert D. Morningstar and Leslie Kean
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