Thursday, May 25, 2023

The most famous clairvoyants of the 20th century

 The history of parapsychology has already recorded hundreds of people endowed with such abilities. The most famous to this day was Michel de Nostre-Dame, born on 14 December 1503 in the French town of Saint-Remy. In his Centurions, he prophesied a whist of bars that completely proved true in the history of our continent.
Marie Lenormand was also very popular. whose guests included Marat. Saint-Just. Robespierre and Napoleon Bonaparte. The Queen of the Netherlands was a guest in her salons, and Tsar Alexander I asked for advice by letter.


Who today is not familiar with the figure of William Hamond. He predicted the death of Leopold II, King of the Belgians, in 1909 and of Tsar Alexander in 1917.
Similar successes were achieved by Morgan Robertson. Edgar Cayce, Gerard Croiset, Stefan Ossowiecki and Jonas Kelie. In their shadows were others, about whom little was written, but who also astonished the world with their paranormal abilities.
One of them was Wolf Messing. He was born on 10 September 1899 in Góra Kalwaria. His telepathic and clairvoyant abilities were the subject of many metapsychic experiments. which were conducted by, among others, Albert Einstein and Sigmund Freud.

As he recalls! Messing. during one of the séances. Freud mentally instructed him: "Go to the bathroom and try to find a pair of tweezers - Then return to the room and with these very tweezers pluck, my friend Einstein, three hairs from his magnificent, luxuriant moustache." The first command w as carried out by Messing without reservation. The second request, on the other hand, caused him serious doubts and reluctance. He shared them with Freud, who, together with Einstein, smiled good-naturedly, for the mental command was carried out without reservation.


Later, after many dangerous adventures, Messing found himself in the Soviet Union. In 1940, he predicted that Russian tanks would roll through the streets of Berlin. These words caused a great sensation among the capital's intellectual elite as well as in the Kremlin itself. They were immediately noticed in Berlin. Since it was only a few months after the signing of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, the statement was met with a sharp protest from the German embassy in Moscow. For we must remember that Hitler was very oversensitive to such predictions. After all, he was familiar with the statements of the excellent clairvoyants Erik Hanussen and Ernest Kraft about his future.
Three years later, when the German invasion was sweeping across more and more of Europe, including huge swathes of the Soviet Union. Messing had to evacuate to Siberia for his own safety. And it was there, in the Novosibirsk opera house, that he predicted that the war would most probably end in the first week of May 1945.


Another of Poland's excellent clairvoyants, Czesław Klimuszko, recalled that in 1947 in Olsztyn he saw the unexpected death of Cardinal Hlond, the cause of which was said to be his lungs. And shortly after his death, another church dignitary would go to his grave. And indeed, four months later the prophecy came true The cardinal died of pneumonia after an operation on his appendix. Bishop Lukomski, returning from Cardinal Hlond's funeral, was killed in a car accident
Recently, one of the most respected and internationally recognised figures specialising in predicting the future has been Jeane Dixon.
She was born on 2 November 1918. At the age of 18, she learned from an adventurous gypsy woman that her hands were covered with prophetic signs, heralding tremendous visionary power. Soon these words were completely confirmed.


In 1946, Jeane prophesied that China would embark on the path of communism and that on 20 February 1947, the partition of India into two states would be announced. She also stated that Ghandi would die in 1948 and that UN Secretary-General Dag Hammerskjold would die in a plane crash.
Most famously, she predicted the death of J.F. Kennedy. It is said that in 1952, while kneeling at the altar of the Blessed Virgin Mary in St Matthew's Cathedral, she suddenly saw the image of a blue-eyed young man with dark brown hair appear before her. An unknown and incomprehensible voice told her that this man, who represented the Democratic Party, would become President of the USA in 1960. His reign, however, would be interrupted by a tragic death. In 1956, Dixon informed the readers of the magazine "Parade" about this prediction.
Seven years later, Americans were preparing for an election campaign. On 22 November 1963, John F. Kennedy and his wife took their seats in the presidential plane, which took a course for Dallas.
On that day, Jeane Dixon awoke with a nightmarish vision. She realised that her dream would come true. The shot fired by a man with a name beginning with the letter O or Q was programmed into her psyche.
In fact, at 1pm, President Kennedy was already dead. Soon, an assassin was arrested in a local Texas cinema who turned out to be 24-year-old Lee Harvey Oswald.
So in this case, too, the clairvoyant predisposition was confirmed. And we will certainly hear about this phenomenon of the human psyche more than once.

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