By Tara MacIsaac, Epoch Times |
May 17, 2014
Last Updated: September 4, 2014 2:21 pm
The universe is full of mysteries that
challenge our current knowledge. In "Beyond Science" Epoch Times
collects stories about these strange phenomena to stimulate the imagination and
open up previously undreamed of possibilities. Are they true? You decide.
A 3-year-old boy in the Golan Heights region
near the border of Syria and Israel said he was murdered with an axe in his
previous life. He showed village elders where the murderer buried his body, and
sure enough they found a man’s skeleton there. He also showed the elders where
the murder weapon was found, and upon digging, they did indeed found an axe
there.
In his book, “Children Who Have Lived
Before: Reincarnation Today,”German therapist Trutz Hardo tells this boy’s story,
along with other stories of children who seem to remember their past lives with
verified accuracy. The boy’s story was witnessed by Dr. Eli Lasch, who is best
known for developing the medical system in Gaza as part of an Israeli
government operation in the 1960s. Dr. Lasch, who died in 2009, had recounted
these astounding events to Hardo.
The boy was of the Druze ethnic group, and in his culture the
existence of reincarnation is accepted as fact. His story nonetheless had the
power to surprise his community.
He was born with a long, red birthmark on his head. The Druze
believe, as some other cultures do, that birthmarks are related to past-life
deaths. When the boy was old enough to talk, he told his family he had been
killed by a blow to the head with an axe.
It is customary for elders to take a child at the age of 3 to the
home of his previous life if he remembers it. The boy knew the village he was
from, so they went there. When they arrived in the village, the boy remembered
the name he had in his past life.
A village local said the man the boy claimed to be the
reincarnation of had gone missing four years earlier. His friends and family
thought he may have strayed into hostile territory nearby as sometimes happens.
The boy also remembered the full name of his killer. When
he confronted this man, the alleged killer’s face turned white, Lasch told
Hardo, but he did not admit to murder. The boy then said he could take the
elders to where the body was buried. In that very spot, they found a man’s skeleton
with a wound to the head that corresponded to the boy’s birthmark. They also
found the axe, the murder weapon.
Faced with this evidence, the murderer admitted to the crime. Dr.
Lasch, the only non-Druze, was present through this whole process.
To read more of Hardo’s stories, read his
book, “Children Who Have Lived Before.”
No comments:
Post a Comment