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There are four main areas of possession. First of all we have demonic, where the person is said to be possessed by a supernatural demon. Another popular form of possession is reincarnation, where a ‘past life’ is said to take over the host.
Spiritualism offers many cases of possession, with mediums contacting, and being taken over by, a spirit of a dead person. The practice has now advanced to Channelling, where a discarnate being takes over the person to impart spiritual philosophy.
We can see that entities can seem to come from many areas of the supernatural, but does the subject suffer from too many ‘tags’? Can we better understand what is going on by ignoring the places entities are said to come from and see if they are ‘internal’ rather than external?

 

Anneliese Michel

 

 

 Images and Sounds from the Exorcism of Anneliese Michel ("Emily Rose")

 

The Exorcism of Emily Rose

Anneliese Michel
Born: September
21, 1952
Birthplace: Klingenberg, Bavaria, Germany
Died: July 1, 1976
(cause of death: dehydration and malnourishment)

"I know that we did the right thing because I saw the sign of Christ in her hands. She was bearing stigmata and that was a sign from God that we should exorcise the demons. She died to save other lost souls, to atone for their sins." - Anna Michel (Anneliese's mother, 2005) In 1968, when she was 17 and still in high school, Anneliese began to suffer from convulsions. Court findings have her experiencing her first epileptic attack in 1969. It was then that a neurologist at the Psychiatric Clinic Wurzburg diagnosed her with Grand Mal epilepsy. Soon, Anneliese started experiencing devilish hallucinations while praying. She also began to hear voices, which told her that she was damned. The court determined that by 1973 Anneliese was suffering from depression and considering suicide. In 1975, convinced that she was possessed, her parents gave up on the doctors from the psychiatric clinic. They chose to rely solely on the exorcisms for healing (washingtonpost.com). Anneliese's symptoms have since been compared with those of schizophrenia, and they may have responded to treatment (telegraph.co.uk). The first unofficial diagnosis was made by an older woman who accompanied Anneliese on a pilgrimage. She noticed that Anneliese avoided walking past a particular image of Jesus, and that she refused to drink water from a holy spring. The woman also claimed that Anneliese smelled hellishly bad (washingtonpost.com). An exorcist from a nearby town examined Anneliese and concluded that she was demonically possessed. After two failed requests, the rite of exorcism was finally granted by the Bishop. According to The Washington Post, as she grew more convinced that she was possessed, Anneliese began to see the faces of demons on the people and things around her. Anneliese was convinced that she had been possessed by several demons, including Lucifer, Judas Iscariot, Nero, Cain, Hitler, and Fleischmann, a disgraced Frankish Priest from the 16th century. She also mentioned a few other damned souls who had manifested themselves through her. Anneliese carried out a number of highly disturbing actions. She licked her own urine off the floor. She ate flies, spiders, and coal. She bit off the head of a dead bird. In one instance, she crawled under a table and barked like a dog for two days. She could often be heard screaming through the walls for hours. Tearing off her clothes and urinating on the floor became a regular occurrence.
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A Movie Based on a True Story
On August 10, 1949, The Washington Post ran an article titled, “Pastor Tells Eerie Tale of ‘Haunted’ Boy.” The same day, The Evening Star (Washington, D.C.) ran an article titled, “Minister Tells Parapsychologists Noisy ‘Ghost’ Plagued Family.” The family was referred to as “Mr. and Mrs. John Doe” and their 13-year-old son “Roland.” The article quoted Richard C. Darnell [president of the Society of Parapsychology] and Dr. J. B. Rhine [director of the Parapsychology Laboratory at Duke University], as saying the so-called haunting was the “most impressive manifestation studied in the poltergeist field.”
Then on August 11, The Times-Herald ran an article titled, “‘Haunted’ Boy’s Parents Tell Of Ghost Messages," giving the story immense credibility in several publications. The Evening Star follow-up article a week later was titled, “Priest Freed Boy of Possession By Devil, Church Sources Say.” The article recapped events and disclosed that the boy was in good condition and free from all troubles.
Because of the articles and reports, many began to inquire for more information about the "Exorcism of Roland Doe." One of which years later was an author by the name of William Peter Blatty. Through his own thorough investigation, Blatty obtained a diary of the exorcism that belonged to one of the two priests involved at the scene; and in 1971 Blatty released his novel "The Exorcist", based on the events of the Roland Doe case, and it became a nation wide best-seller spending 55 weeks on the New York Times Bestseller List. Due to the books success, he wrote a screenplay adaptation to produce a movie of the same name. Blatty's screenplay was fictional, replacing the Roland boy with a girl named Regan, and including many events that were not part of the original story. For further help, he sought the senior priest involved in the Roland Doe case. Author Blatty communicated with the Jesuit exorcist Fr. William Bowdern before he passed away.
Fr. William Bowdern
When Fr. William Bowdern was asked if he would help with the movie, he replied, "I'm sorry. But I want to help you. I think a lot of good could be done for a lot of people if they knew what happened. But I can't... I can tell you one thing... The case I was involved with was the real thing. I had no doubt about it then. I have no doubt about it now. Good luck with your apolistic pursuits." Having already obtained Fr. Bowdern's diary, Blatty asked if it was proper to visit the family and connect them to the film. Fr. Bowdern answered, "No. No. No. We have sworn secrecy and confidentiality to the family of this boy. They STRICTLY do not want any kind of publicity over being connected. Please be careful. Don't ever say anything ever to connect your book, the movie, with this boy.
Don't go on television and do this now or you hurt somebody connected to it. Please. Please don't do it."

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