Syntagma Digital
21st-Century Phi
Supernatural

Do Transplant Patients Absorb Personality of the Dead?

A psychology professor is claiming that many transplant patients “inherit” personality traits from tissue donors. Gary Schwartz of the University of Arizona, says that he has detailed evidence from 70 cases where this is said to have occurred.

His claim is that in more than ten percent of major transplant cases involving the heart, lung, kidney or liver, the patient will show marked signs of this phenomenon. Patients may adopt the donor’s taste in food, develop the same talents, and even take up identical pastimes and interests.

In one case a seven-year-old girl had dreams about being killed after receiving the heart of a girl who had been murdered.

In another, a calm, health-conscious woman began craving fast food and became aggressive, mimicking the tastes of a biker whose heart she had been given.

The many instances of this syndrome seem to reflect the notion that body tissue retains its own memories of events in the life of a person, especially the major organs.

Ancient beliefs hold that eating the organs of a dead warrior will confer the same qualities on the recipient. Once again, folk tales are shown to have a basis in reality, it seems.

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Occult Knowledge in West Africa

We’ve all heard of Voodoo and other supernatural practises originating in the shamanistic traditions of African societies. Gothenburg University in Sweden has completed an anthropological study into the relationship between the supernatural and normal family life in West Africa.

This study deals with two societies: the Sénoufo people of northern Ivory Coast and southern Mali.

“One of the societies, Poro, initiates local adolescents in this knowledge in extended collective rituals; the other, ‘the society of hunters,’ is rather more comparable to a guild in which various ‘masters’ individually convey their knowledge to apprentices and journeymen.

“The trained hunters, who possess a deep knowledge of nature, are specialists on natural medicines and have traditionally functioned as curers of sickness.

“Researchers who observed long ago that these societies were involved in conveying esoteric knowledge, which in principle was inaccessible to the uninitiated, spoke of them as ‘bush schools’ or ‘secret societies.’ The societies have always been influenced by religious and secular impulses from the surrounding community and have thereby continued to play a major role in traditional contexts and in the encounter with contemporary, modern social problems.

“In West Africa today highly educated government ministers and academics as well as local farmers can become members of these societies.

“In Mali the ministry of culture has arranged major international conferences in recent years on hunters’ societies, with thousands of hunters and many researchers participating. Poro continues in many places to play an important role in local politics and in issues involving rural development and agriculture, whereas the hunters in Ivory Coast, since the 1990s, have come to play a considerable, and controversial, role in combating the exponential growth in crime.

“Clad in their traditional costumes and armed with bows and arrows and muzzle-loaders, these hunters have deployed as security guards and bodyguards to protect lives and property, both for individuals and on assignment from entire villages and neighborhoods.

“The dissertation shows that the general public, and gangs in particular, both admire and fear the hunters. This respect and fear is not so much a result of the effectiveness of their weapons but rather the fact that they are ascribed occult and spiritual knowledge that no one else can control.

“Through their pursuit of criminals, instead of prey, these hunters have also come to challenge the monopoly of the state regarding the use of violence and have become more and more involved in conflicts between various factions of the political class in Ivory Coast, and the government has limited their activities to the northern part of the country. As a result, in the wake of the attempted coup in September 2002 and the subsequent civil war, some of the Ivorian hunters came to convert their struggle against gangs to a struggle against the army of the government.

“Today, in various ways and in different roles, hunters and their knowledge are center stage in public affairs of both Ivory Coast and Mali.”

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Mick Jagger Cleansed by a Shaman

Mick Jagger

Ageing Rolling Stone, Mick Jagger, is known to be a bit parsimonious with his sheckles. So if he was going to have his “soul cleansed” by a shaman, we’d expect it to be a cut-price job.

For only 20 Mexican pesos (~$2, £1), the roadside shaman (pictured) offered to cleanse his aura. With Jagger’s small son Lucas looking on, the healer performed a brief ceremony to wipe away the 62-year-old rocker’s sins. Bad energy was expelled in the traditional way using amulets, tree branches and smoke from tobacco leaves.

In Mexican lore, the ceremony is said to deliver wealth, love and health. Whether Mick is lacking any of those is a matter of speculation.

The important question is whether a cleansed Jagger will be able to sustain his role as the “bad boy of rock” when he rejoins his fellow Rolling Stones.

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NY Course on Spirit Possession

A three-week course called, Spirit Possession: Dybbuks, Exorcists, Reincarnation and the Supernatural World of Pre-Modern Judaism will be held in New York on Tuesday February 21, 2006, to Tuesday March 7, 2006 — 6 pm to 7:30 pm.

The release reads: “We will explore the phenomena of spirit possession in the Jewish tradition. We will begin by studying the occult ideas formulated by the Kabbalists in Tzfat in the 16th century. We will read several cases of dybbuks as well as maggids. We will explore how these phenomena of spirit possession highlights aspects of the broader historical context as well as raising questions about the role of women. Additionally we will look at the legacy of dybbuks in literature and film as well as cases of dybbuks in Israel today. Lisa Bennett Tuesday, 6:00 — 7:30 p.m. 3-week course: February 21, 28, March 7 Tuition: $75 for women and men.

Contact Information: http://www.drisha.org/continuinged/talmud

Brought to you by: Drisha Institute for Jewish Education
Drisha Institute
37 West 65th Street
5th floor
New York, NY 10023 .

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