At the beginning of this century in
the Golan Heights of Syria, a 3-year
old boy clearly remembered where
he'd been murdered in his previous
life, just 4 years before.
He correctly identified the spot his
body had been buried, the previous
village where he was from, and even
the identity of his murderer. Is this
proof that reincarnation is real?
At first, no one in his small Druze
village believed him - that is, until he
led village elders to the spot where he
remembers being buried. The villagers
dug up the spot where the boy says his
former corpse was hidden and a skeleton
was exactly where he said it would be.
The small boy said he was murdered
with an axe in his previous life.
Mysteriously, a large axe mark on the
skeleton corresponds to a birth mark on
the boy's head. He also showed the elders
where the murder weapon was hidden,
and upon digging, they found an axe,
right where he said.
Mixed in with the group of Druze village
elders was an Israeli doctor, Eli Lasch.
Dr. Lasch recounted these astounding
events to German therapist, Trutz Hardo
for his book, 'Children Who Have Lived
Before: Reincarnation Today,' in which
this boy's story is re-told, along with other
stories of children who seem to remember
their past lives with verified accuracy.
The boy was of the Druze ethnic group,
and in his culture the existence of
reincarnation is accepted as fact. His story
still surprised his community, due to the
clarity of his recollection of the events of his
previous life and death and the proof he was
able to produce.
Druze beliefs incorporate elements from
Abrahamic religions, Gnosticism,
Neoplatonism, Pythagoreanism, and other
philosophies creating a distinct theology
known to highlight the role of the mind and
truthfulness. The Druze call themselves Ahl
al-Tawhid "the People of Monotheism" or "the
People of Unity" or al-Muwahhidun, "the
Unitarians".
The Druze believe, as some other cultures
do, that birthmarks are related to past-life
deaths.
This boy was born with a long, red birthmark
on his head and as soon as he was old enough
to talk, he told his family he had been killed by
a blow to the head with an axe.
The boy also remembered the full name of his
killer. When he confronted this man, the
alleged killer's face turned white, according to
Dr. Lasch, in his account to author, Trutz Hardo,
but the assailant did not immediately admit to
the murder.
However, faced with all of the evidence provided
by the boy, the murderer was eventually
compelled to admit to the crime and he was
then legally charged.
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