Strange stories about traces of reincarnation (2)

A woman in Myanmar said she was a Japanese soldier whose villagers burned alive and hung on trees in the war. Her wrists were all like a tie with a rope.

>>>The strange story about the traces of reincarnation (1)

The American woman speaks Swedish

Professor Ian Stevenson, a professor of psychiatry in Sweden, discovered many cases of Xenoglossy, the phenomenon of 'speaking languages ​​that the speaker does not know in a normal state'. This is a concept developed by Charles Richet, a Nobel Prize-winning doctor in 1913, between 1905 and 1907. He studied many fields, including psychology.

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A woman in America can speak Swedish even though she has not had much contact with it.(Artwork: wordpress.com)

Stevenson once studied a 37-year-old woman whom he called TE. She was born and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Her parents are immigrants, who can speak English, Polish, Russian and Hebrew. At school, TE studied French. On the only contact with Swedish, she only heard a few phrases from a Swedish-American television show. However, in a hypnotherapy treatment to find her past life, TE confirmed that she was a Swedish man named Jensen Jacoby, The Examiner said.

During the hypnosis process, TE used Swedish to answer 60 questions in Swedish. 60 of them do not match the words the questioner used. With questions in English, she used English to answer.

Professor Stevenson told TE to do two Swedish lie tests - including a word-matching test and a competency test. He also talked to her husband, family members and acquaintances to see if she was not exposed to Nordic languages. They confirmed that TE had never been in contact with them and her school did not teach Swedish.

The results of the two tests showed that TE knew about 100 Swedish words but could hardly express it in full sentences. Professor Stevenson's advisor praised her voice and pronunciation quite well. Some other experts pointed out that she used some Norwegian words.

Memories of monasteries

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Boy Robin Hull often speaks strange language and admits that he used to study it at a monastery, though in fact he is not old enough to go to school.(Artwork: wordpress.com)

Psychiatrist Adrian Finkelstein is an expert in hypnotherapy to find his past life. He worked at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, USA, and is a professor at the University of California - Los Angeles. He currently runs a private clinic in Malibu, California, USA.

In the book Before and The Treatment, Finkelstein recounts the story of Robin Hull, a boy, who often speaks in a language that his mother does not understand. The mother contacted an Asian language professor. He identified the language Robin spoke in dialects in northern Tibet.

Robin said that years ago, he had learned this language at a monastery. However, in fact, the boy is not yet at school age, never even set foot in any class.

The professor continued to investigate. Based on Robin's information, he guessed the place he mentioned was a monastery located on the Kunlun Mountains. After that, the professor decided to go to Tibet, Cellulite reported.

Myanmar girls have a habit of Japanese soldiers

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Ma Win Tar remembers that she was a Japanese soldier that Myanmar villagers burned alive during the war.(Artwork: wordpress.com)

Another object that Professor Ian Stevenson investigated was Ma Win Tar, a Myanmar woman. Ma Win Tar was born in 1962. At the age of 3, she began living with Japanese military-like habits. She remembered the people in a village in Myanmar who once captured and burned a Japanese soldier's body. According to Ma, she was the ill-fated soldier in her previous life.

Although the girl did not remember the details related to her previous life, Stevenson pointed out some reasonable points in her story. In 1945, Myanmar villagers captured and burned alive Japanese soldiers who could not retreat.

Ma Win Tar's habits differ from those of ordinary girls in Myanmar. She likes to cut her hair short, wear baby clothes even though her parents forbid, eat sweet food and pork but can't eat spicy - a characteristic of Myanmar cuisine. In addition, Ma Win Tar's personality is also 'quite cruel' with the habit of patting friends in the face. According to Stevenson, Japanese soldiers often face Myanmar people and behave in an upright manner during the capture of villages. The strange girl opposes the family's Buddhist tradition, even considering herself as a 'foreigner'. Ma Win Tar announced that she had met members of a committee in charge of the search for dead soldiers in the wars and felt they were like her compatriots, The Guardian reported.

The strangest thing is that Ma Win Tar's hands have serious birth defects. The middle finger and ring finger are only 'loosely attached' to the rest of the hand. A few days after she was born, doctors cut them. She only had a few fingers but all of them were twitching. Ma's left wrist has a congenital birthmark with 3 distinct sunken spots. Her mother said, the same trace also appeared on her daughter's right hand but it was fuzzy. Professor Stevenson surmised that the rope the villagers used to tie up the soldier and hung it on the tree after they burned alive he left a mark on Ma Win Tar's hand.