In 1930, aged 4, Shanti Deva from Delhi, India, told her parents that
she had once lived in a place called Muttra (now known as Mathura), that
she had been a mother of three, who died in childbirth, and that her
previous name was Ludgi. Because the girl continually related the
story, her parents investigated. It turned out there was a village
called Muttra, and that a woman named Ludgi had recently died there.
They took Shanti to the village where she began to speak the local
dialect and recognized her previous-life husband and children. She even
gave twenty four accurate statements matching confirmed facts about
Ludgi’s life. An impressive feat for a four year old.Sunday, 18 August 2013
Past life evidence
In 1930, aged 4, Shanti Deva from Delhi, India, told her parents that
she had once lived in a place called Muttra (now known as Mathura), that
she had been a mother of three, who died in childbirth, and that her
previous name was Ludgi. Because the girl continually related the
story, her parents investigated. It turned out there was a village
called Muttra, and that a woman named Ludgi had recently died there.
They took Shanti to the village where she began to speak the local
dialect and recognized her previous-life husband and children. She even
gave twenty four accurate statements matching confirmed facts about
Ludgi’s life. An impressive feat for a four year old.Freddy Jackson’s Ghost
This creepy photo, taken in 1919, was first published in 1975, by Sir
Victor Goddard, a retired R.A.F. officer. The photo is a group portrait
of Goddard’s squadron, which had served in World War I, aboard the HMS
Daedalus. An extra ghostly face appears in the photo. At the back of the
airman positioned on the top row, fourth from the left, can clearly be
seen the face of another man. It is said to be the face of Freddy
Jackson, an air mechanic who had been accidentally killed by an airplane
propeller two days earlier. His funeral had taken place on the day this
photograph was snapped. Members of the squadron easily recognized the
face as Jackson’s. It has been suggested that Jackson, unaware of his
death, decided to show up for the group photo. In case you don’t notice
the ghost – look behind the head in the inset on the left of the
picture. James Worson
On September 3, 1873, a man named James Worson had accepted a challenge
to race, in record time, from the town of Leamington to the town of
Coventry, a 20-mile trek. He had been boasting of his foot skills and
then was asked to prove them, so, with sporting good spirits, he set
about to do just that. Two friends, Hammerson Burns and Barham Wise,
followed behind in a horse-drawn gig. Burns brought along his camera.
Worson was never out of their sight, and would often turn around while
running to exchange some friendly words with the two riders. Running in
the middle of the road, Worson suddenly appeared to stumble and pitch
forward, having time enough for only one short, piercing scream. Wise
later said, “It was the most ghastly sound ether of us had ever heard.”
But as Worson pitched forward with that terrible cry, instead of falling
to the ground as he appeared to be about to have done, he completely
and totally vanished in mid-fall, before ever striking the ground. The
road itself told the story and Wise took the pictures to prove it.
There, in the soft dirt, were Worson’s footprints.They led down the
middle of the road, looked as if the runner stumbled, and there they
disappeared. A search was called and the locals scoured the area for
James. The bloodhounds used in the search were strangely reluctant to
approach the spot where Worson disappeared. He was never seen or heard
from againDevil’s Footprints
On the night of 8–9 February, 1855, and one or two later nights, after a light snowfall, a series of hoof-like marks appeared in the snow. These footprints, measuring 1.5 to 2.5 inches wide and eight inches apart, continued throughout the countryside for a total of over 100 miles, and, although veering at various points, for the greater part of their course followed straight lines. Houses, rivers, haystacks and other obstacles were traveled straight over, and footprints appeared on the tops of snow-covered roofs and high walls which lay in the footprints’ path, as well as leading up to and exiting various drain pipes of as small as a four inch diameter. There were also attendant rumors about sightings of a “devil-like figure” in the Devon area during the scare. Many townspeople armed themselves and attempted to track down the beast responsible, without success. Recently, on the night of March 12, 2009, more strange marks, corresponding to those left in 1855, were found again in Devon – these new footprints are shown above.
Earthbound spirit
In September, 1931, the Irving family — James, Margaret and daughter
Voirrey (13) — claimed to hear persistent scratching and rustling noises
behind their farmhouse’s wooden wall panels. At first they thought it
was a rat, but then the unseen creature began making different sounds,
sometimes spitting like a ferret, or growling like a dog, or gurgling
like a baby. The creature soon revealed an ability to speak, and
introduced itself as Gef, a mongoose. It claimed to have been born in
New Delhi, India, in 1852. According to Voirrey, who was the only person
to see him properly, Gef was the size of a small rat, with yellowish
fur and a large bushy tail (the Indian mongoose is in reality much
larger than a rat and does not have a bushy tail).Gef variously claimed to be “an extra extra clever mongoose”, an “earthbound spirit” and “a ghost in the form of a weasel”. He once said, “I am a freak. I have hands and I have feet, and if you saw me you’d faint, you’d be petrified, mummified, turned into stone or a pillar of salt!” Voirrey Irving, who took Gef under her wing, died in 2005. In an interview published late in life, she maintained that Gef was not her creation
Ghost Ship
In February, 1948, distress calls were picked up by numerous ships
near Indonesia, from the Dutch freighter SS Ourang Medan. The chilling
message was, “All officers including captain are dead lying in chartroom
and bridge. Possibly whole crew dead.” This message was followed by
indecipherable Morse code then one final grisly message… “I die.” When
the first rescue vessel arrived on the scene a few hours later, they
tried to hail the Ourang Medan but there was no response. A boarding
party was sent to the ship and what they found was a frightening sight
that has made the Ourang Medan one of the strangest and scariest ghost
ship stories of all time.All the crew and officers of the Ourang Medan were dead, their eyes open, faces looking towards the sun, arms outstretched and a look of terror on their faces. Even the ship’s dog was dead, found snarling at some unseen enemy. When nearing the bodies in the boiler room, the rescue crew felt a chill, though the temperature was near 110°F. The decision was made to tow the ship back to port, but before they could get underway, smoke began rolling up from the hull. The rescue crew left the ship and barely had time to cut the tow lines before the Ourang Medan exploded and sank.
To this day, the exact fate of the Ourang Medan and her crew remains a mystery.
Mysterious UFOs,
Chupas are mysterious objects, or UFOs, allegedly seen by night in the
eastern forests of (mainly) Brazil. They are described as smaller,
metallic-like objects that fly about the treetops, making a humming
sound like a refrigerator or a transformer. Since most people in the
area are poor, they often go out during the night to hunt food, such as
deer. To do this, they climb up in trees to await their prey. It is
often during this period of waiting that hunters claim to spot the
chupas. When seen, chupas are claimed to emit a bright white light.
Instead of being “just unidentified objects” or lights, they are alleged
to be lethal. In some cases, people claim to have been hunted by them.
It is claimed that this often results in all kinds of pain for days
(sometimes years) after their experience. It has also been claimed that
some people have even died from the alleged lethal beams emitted by the
chupas, and that some hunters have tried to shoot at the chupas, with no
effect.Dog suicide Bridge
The Overtoun Bridge is an arch bridge located near Milton, Dumbarton,
Scotland, which was built in 1859. It has become famous for the number
of unexplained instances in which dogs have, apparently, committed
suicide by leaping off it. The incidents were first recorded around the
1950′s or 1960′s, when it was noticed that dogs – usually the long-nosed
variety, like Collies – would suddenly and unexpectedly leap off the
bridge and fall fifty feet, to their deaths. In some cases, however,
the dogs would survive, recuperate, and then leap off the bridge again.
What makes this tragic mystery even more mysterious is that many of the
dogs that jump from Overton Bridge jump from the same side and from
almost the same spot: between the final two parapets on the right-hand
side of the bridge.Some believe that the bridge is haunted. In 1994, a man threw his baby son off the bridge, claiming that it was the anti-Christ. Later, the man attempted suicide there as well. Was Overtoun Bridge responsible for this tragic event? Some believe that Overtoun Bridge is a “thin place”, where the barrier between the world of the living and the world of the dead meet, and sometimes cross over
Mysterious Woman
In the mid-eighteenth century, hunters in the Ochamchir region of Georgia (a Province of Russia on the edge of the Black sea) captured a ‘wild woman’ who had ape-like features, a massive bosom, thick arms, legs, and fingers, and was covered with hair. This ‘wild woman’, named Zana by her captors, was so violent at first that she had to spend many years in a cage with food being tossed to her. Eventually, she was domesticated and would perform simple tasks, like grinding corn. She had an incredible endurance against cold, and couldn’t stand to be in a heated room. She enjoyed gorging herself on grapes from the vine, and also had a weakness for wines, often drinking so heavily she would sleep for hours. As Colin Wilson points out in The Encyclopedia of Unsolved Mysteries, this is likely how she became the mother of many children to different fathers. These children usually died when she tried to wash them in the freezing river. The villagers started to take her children away from her and raise them as their own; unlike their mother, the children developed the ability to communicate as well as any other villager. Zana died in the village about 1890; the youngest of her children died in 1954. Her story was researched by Professor Porchnev who interviewed many old people (one as old as a hundred and five) who remembered Zana, as well as two of her grandchildren. The grandchildren had dark skin, and the grandson, named Shalikula, had jaws so powerful that he could lift a chair with a man sitting in it. It is believed that Zana may have somehow been a surviving member a previous evolutionary state of man.
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