The secret of the supernaturalist Messing, the “world’s first magical man” who made Einstein marvel

Wolf Messing possessed telepathic abilities, telekinesis, and telekinesis.

Wolf Messing (1899-1974) is one of the top ten most famous people in the world in the twentieth century and is a legend in Europe. He possessed telepathic powers, telekinesis, and telekinesis. His existence also transcended the Perception and limitations of empirical science, leaving the world’s scientific community with great reflection and reflection, including the scientific giant Albert Einstein and Austrian psychologist Sigmund Freud, who both marveled and were shocked by him. His predictions were so accurate that Hitler was desperate to capture him and considered him his number one enemy.

Biography

Born in 1899 to a Jewish Family in Gurakal, near Warsaw, Messing was sent to a religious school at the age of six and was amazed by his remarkable ability to recite prayers. He later attended a Jewish high school, and after two years skipped school and boarded a passenger train, hiding under a chair and falling asleep. When the conductor asked him for a ticket, he picked up a piece of paper from the floor and handed it over, surprisingly allowing him to muddle through and make it all the way to Berlin.

Once he collapsed in the street and was taken to the morgue, where he was saved by a neurological professor named Abel, who was the first to discover that Messing’s brain had extraordinary abilities. Abel began a mind-reading test on the teenager. Messing could enter a state of tonic syncope, a state of consciousness but no physical reflection, and found that he could predict the future in this state.

At the age of 16, Messing arrived in Vienna, the capital of Austria. Later, Messing developed what he cautiously called “psychological experiments” in which he would do actions or things based on what the audience was thinking, tell the past experiences of people he had never met, and discover objects hidden on the audience’s body, among other things.

In 1917, Messing began to travel around the world, astonishing people everywhere with his peculiar performances. Some con artists saw him as an enemy, and his powers always caught them in Time, and Messing also helped solve crimes and help people find lost valuables.

Experiments that made a splash around the world

In 1916, physicist Albert Einstein, and psychologist Sigmund Freud, to the world’s first magical figure known as Messing carried out a sensational experiment.

On this day, at Einstein’s invitation, Messing came to Einstein’s residence.

Previously, Freud had long ago mixed a small copper tweezers and a large iron tweezers in the drawer. They both did not say a word, and Freud sent the first instruction to Messing with his mind: “Please take a small copper regulator from the first drawer above the small cabinet in the bath room on the right!” Messing did not hesitate to go to the bath room, and took the small copper tweezers out.

Freud sent a second instruction to Messing with his mind: “With the tweezers in your hand, pluck three whiskers from Einstein’s eight-string beard as fast as you can!” Mersin did as he was told, and the whiskers were plucked without a hitch. This caused Freud and Einstein to marvel at this.

Before Messing left, he said to Einstein: You will receive a very important prize in 1921. At the time, Einstein heard this and humorously stuck his tongue out, not caring. In 1921, Einstein was awarded the Nobel Prize for the photoelectric effect and for his achievements in theoretical physics.

The recovery of the jewel

One day in 1929, Count Czartoryski of Poland lost a collection of jewels worth 800,000 złoty from his Home. The police and secret detectives searched for a month but found nothing. So the count promised to pay 250,000 zloty if Messing could recover the jewels for him.

As soon as Messing arrived at the Count’s castle, he became suspicious of a young boy. After connecting with that young boy’s subconscious, Messing soon found the jewels in the belly of a teddy bear, among various toys of colored glass blocks, glass balls and glass pieces.

When Messing succeeded, he refused to accept the Count’s payment and only asked the Count to exert influence on the Polish government to remove the law restricting the rights of Jews. Two weeks later, the Polish government rescinded the law.

Escape to the Soviet Union

In 1937, when Messing began performing in a theater in Warsaw, he predicted that if Germany attacked the Soviet Union, Hitler would die. The superstitious Hitler was enraged by this and offered a reward of 200,000 German marks for Messing’s head. Whether Hitler wanted to kill Messing or to use his special powers, no one can say for sure. But Messing had to evade the Germans for a long time.

After 1939, the streets of Nazi-occupied Warsaw were still filled with flyers offering a reward for Messing’s capture. On one occasion he was caught in a busy street and severely beaten. In the police station, he concentrated all the power of his mind, let the guards into his cell, then came out by himself, and after locking the guards in the cell, escaped from Warsaw through the sewers, then hid in a large car filled with hay and rode the night to Soviet territory, but his father, brother and other relatives were brutally murdered in Warsaw.

Messing’s message

Messing said: “None of my abilities can be used as a transcendent means of obtaining material gain. Of course the person who possesses these abilities – an honest person – will not use his special abilities to make a fortune, to cheat or to commit crimes. If he did, he would not be successful. Because the end of doing so will eventually …… be the retribution of punishment …… must be! So do not envy everyone!”

Russian TV’s Quest

In 2011, the Russian TV channel “РЕН” aired a 47-minute episode about the discovery of the supernaturalist Messing. The program was based on existing historical mirror archives and a series of interviews with people who recreated and explored Messing’s “psychological experiments” during the Soviet era.

On January 4, 1950, Messing used hypnosis to effortlessly pass through Stalin’s layers of guards and into his office without any passes. The meeting lasted about an hour, and before Messing left, told Stalin to please not allow the Air Force field hockey team to fly tomorrow or the members would not survive.

But Stalin, in order to verify the truth of Messing’s prediction, only dissuaded his son Vasily and coach Poporov from taking the train to Sverdlovsk, while the rest of the team still traveled by air. The next day, the LU-2 crashed, leaving 11 field hockey players, the doctor and six passengers unharmed.

After Stalin’s death, Khrushchev became the leader of the Soviet Union. In order to consolidate his power and to make a new change in the face of the Soviet Communist Party, Khrushchev was eager to move Stalin from his grave in Moscow’s Red Square. Forced by the situation at that time, Khrushchev’s idea could not be realized.

So, a request was sent to Messing saying, could you use your ability to say to the people that Lenin’s soul came to you and said that he wished to move Stalin from his grave. Messing said, I will not do such a thing, nor will I talk to any dead soul. This became, at the time, high black humor.

It was not that Messing did not understand the political persecution and the Holodomor created by Stalin, but he had been brought up with a strict religious upbringing, and he kept himself to become a decent and honest man, and he did not interfere. He only concentrated on his “psychological experiments” to give more people living in confinement under the Soviet system the opportunity to experience for themselves the existence of forces beyond human reality. This is what he devoted his Life to doing.

The impact of Messing’s “psychological experiments” on Soviet society

Social life in the former Soviet Union was full of confusion and uncertainty for the masses. When ruled by a totalitarian regime, the society lost its support from all angles. The distrustful attitude of people towards each other urgently awaited help and solutions. In particular, the devaluation of knowledge, moral decay, and at the same time the opposite of the human spirit, flooded the society under the Soviet system in large numbers.

People’s hearts longed for faith, for the appearance of miracles to bring light. Thus, the people of the former Soviet Union were very fond of the existence of supernatural powers. In the beginning, Mersin held a hundred “psychological experiments” almost every month, and all the places where they were held were full and overcrowded.

Einstein and Freud, the giants of science and psychology

Einstein, who was agile and profound in his thinking and had studied the Dazangjing and the I Ching, knew that science had limitations and mentioned the I Ching three times in his diary and wrote: “If there is a future discipline that can replace science, then the only discipline is Buddhism.” Although Buddhism was only a part of the boundless Dharma, Einstein already saw in the sutras the beginnings of a superscience of Buddhism. Einstein and Freud were truly truth-seeking in their approach to science, not casually denying and rejecting the miraculous superscientific phenomena, but interested in thinking about the arguments.

After his experiments with Freud for Messing, Einstein expanded his wisdom, and in his later years, he thought deeply about “God” and exclaimed about the wisdom of Buddha.

“Einstein said (in Living Philosophy 13, 1931): “The knowledge of the existence of things we do not understand, and our sense of those things which our consciousness can accept as the most profoundly reasoned and beautiful, constitute our devotion to religion. In this sense, but only in this sense, I am convinced of religion.”

In reply to Rabbi Herbert Goldstein of the International Synagogue (New York, USA), he said, “I believe in the God of Spinoza, a God who manifests himself through the harmonious ordering of things in existence, rather than a God who is concerned with human Destiny and behavior. ” When attacked by Martin Buber on his religious beliefs, he declared, “What we physicists strive for is simply to follow him in drawing his lines.” As a summary of Einstein’s religious beliefs, he once said, “There is an infinite Higher Intelligence revealing Himself through details that our frail and powerless minds can feel, and humble praise for this constitutes my religious beliefs.”

Einstein believed in a cosmic religious feeling, but opposed a personalized God. He once said, “The religion of the future will be a cosmic religion, and Buddhism includes the characteristics expected of a future cosmic religion. It goes beyond a personalized God, avoids dogma and theology, encompasses both the natural and the spiritual, and is a religious feeling based on the experience of all things natural and spiritual as a meaningful whole. Buddhism fits this description exactly. If there is any religion that can cope with the demands of modern science, it must be Buddhism.”

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