11
Straightening the Record
In 1984, I received an offer from Danny Shalem, one of Israel's
leading impresarios, for four stage performances. I had to think
it over for some time before deciding to accept. My five years
of semi-retirement from the public scene had invigorated me psychically
as well as physically and spiritually, and I felt ready to face
my home public for the first time in twelve years. It would be
a good opportunity for Hanna to spend some time with her parents,
and I wanted to show Israel to Daniel and his little sister Natalie,
who had been born in 1983.
However, I knew there might be problems. As it says in the Bible,
'No prophet is accepted in his own country' (St Luke 4, verse
23), and there is a mean streak in the Israeli character that
leads to jealousy of anyone who becomes successful abroad. I would
not say that people such as the violinists Itzhak Perlman and
Pinchas Zukerman, the actor Topol or film-maker Menachem Golan
are not accepted back home, but I had already had a taste of the
resentment that tends to be felt towards Israelis who achieve
fame and fortune elsewhere. Then again, I might have been the
most sought-after entertainer in the country for a time in the
early seventies, but how would the new generation react to me?
And what would the older generation think of what was essentially
the same act?
These were some of the doubts in my mind as we hit the runway
of Tel Aviv airport with a reassuring bump. Yet within minutes
I found I need not have worried. Although my press conference
was not until the following day, the entire Israeli press corps
had turned out just to come along and greet me.
'How does it feel to come back as a hero?' one reporter asked
me. I was quite taken aback, and cannot remember my reply.
He set the tone for the press conference, another full-scale media
turn-out, at which Danny Shalem announced that both my shows in
the 3,000-seat Mann Auditorium in Tel Aviv were sold out, as were
the others in Jerusalem and Haifa. The reporters, to my surprise
gave me the full conquering-hero treatment, and there was not
a single hostile question. What, I wondered, had become of all
those 'witch-hunters' who had set out to get me fourteen years
ago?
According to the press, no less than ten magicians stationed themselves
in the front row for the first of my shows in Tel Aviv. No doubt
they were hoping to catch me using the tricks of their trade.
If so, they must have been surprised when I walked onto the stage
to see that there could not be anything up my sleeves, for the
simple reason that I was not wearing any. For the first time in
my career I did what I am sure has never been done in the history
of the Mann Auditorium and appeared in a T-Shirt and tennis shorts!
After the show, which went very well, I received a most unexpected
visitor in my dressing room. He was Ronai Schachnaey, Grand President
of Israel's Society for Promoting the Art of Magic, who had been
knocking me on television a short time previously. Evidently,
he had changed his mind, for his first words to me were, 'Uri,
I take off my hat to you. You are fantastic.' He then gave me
a medallion inscribed with his society's coat of arms. Why did
he give it to me? Did he think I was the greatest illusionist
or a true psychic?
Danny Shalem had booked me for four shows, but demand was so tremendous
that I ended up doing thirty. By the time I left to fly to London
in February 1985 I had collected a total of 113 press clippings
about me from every one of Israel's leading newspapers and magazines,
and 99 per cent of them were positive. I had to take it all back
- Israelis can honour their returning celebrities and artists.
Dry Bones
5 By 1974 Geller's reputation in Israel was well established,
as this Jerusalem Post cartoon shows.
One whose tribute I particularly appreciated was Uri Avneri, owner
and publisher of the popular weekly magazine Haolam Hazeh.
This was the magazine that had printed a long cover story
on me in its issue of 20 February 1974 that, as one of my critics
put it, was 'designed to put Mr Geller out of business for good'.
It was based on false information, including 'interviews' with
my parents which neither of them gave, a lengthy statement attributed
to Hanna of which she never spoke a single word, and the revelation
that Shipi was 'signalling' to me from the audience.
Since this story had been translated in full by one of my witch-hunters,
and is frequently mentioned as if it were a scientifically-produced
exposure of my fraudulence rather than an assortment of second-hand
gossip and purely imaginary testimony, I am glad to be able to
include here some extracts from Mr Avneri's 'Personal Diary' column
for the issue of 21 November 1984. This was based on his own observation
and that of his wife Rachel.
'Do you believe in telepathy? What do you mean, believe? I live
with it,' he began. His wife, he explained, was able to 'steal'
thoughts from his head before he could express them in words.
'This is why I wanted to meet Uri Geller. What happens when two
telepathists meet?'
He goes on to describe how we did meet, in his own apartment,
noting that I had come to see him and his wife alone. Shipi, my
famous 'accomplice', was not even in the country at the time,
having some business to see to in Europe, and did not arrive until
shortly before the end of my tour. Mr Avneri also mentioned that
I was not wearing a watch. (A local computer expert named Yosef
Allon had been insisting for years that I used a watch to reflect
drawings made behind my back.)
Suddenly, he [Uri] asked for a spoon. He took it and started
stroking it gently. After a few seconds the handle began to bend
upwards. Uri put the spoon on the table and let go of it, and
it went on bending in front of our eyes until it reached an angle
of ninety degrees.
Next, Uri asked me to draw something. He closed his eyes, and
I took care to hold the paper so that he could not see it. I drew
a ship, with three funnels, keeping the paper covered. Finally
he drew something himself, then seemed to give up. 'I don't know
exactly what it is,' he said, 'I'm not sure.'
He showed it to me. It was definitely a ship, except that my
three funnels had turned into three portholes.
Next, Mr Avneri wrote, he asked me to do an experiment with his
wife, so I asked her to think of the name of a capital city. He
decided to join in as well.
I had no pen, so I went into the next room, found a pen, and
wrote the word Tokyo in my notebook. Uri then asked Rachel what
city she had chosen, and she said 'Moscow.'
'No,' said Geller. 'I got it wrong.'
So I thought, for what I had written while Mr Avneri was out of
the room was - Tokyo. He gave quite a start when he saw this,
and he had another surprise to come:
Then I interrogated my wife and she admitted that she had also
'received' Tokyo, but had decided to write Moscow despite her
impression.
So I don't believe in telepathy. But then I also do not believe
in electricity. I don't believe that somebody can sit in London
and I can sit here in Tel Aviv and hear him, with no cable connecting
us. Absurd, isn't it?
One way and another, Haolam Hazeh had tried to do my reputation
a good deal of damage in the past, so I was surprised to receive
a telephone call from its former editor Eli Tavor soon after my
meeting with its publisher. He came to see me in my hotel, and
it seemed that he wanted to make amends for all those attacks
on me he had published in the early seventies. He also had some
remarkable confessions to make about the way the magazine had
been run in his time.
He could not remember who had written the article in the 20 February
1974 issue, though he admitted that it was quite possible that
the writer had made it all up and had never met Hanna. They were
quite capable of writing articles that were pure fiction.
He himself had genuinely believed all the nonsense he published
about me. His scepticism, he added, had been forced upon him by
others. Now, however, this scepticism was directed towards his
own former attitude, which he admitted to have been 'biased'.
He later confirmed all this in a letter dated 20 January 1986.
'I have changed my mind about you,' he said. 'I am convinced today
that you are endowed with abilities that allow you to perform
feats which I cannot explain.'
Early in my tour there was one of those crazy coincidences that
often seem to happen when I travel somewhere. This one began at
Zurich airport, where I had been standing in line waiting to check
in at the El Al counter. I chatted for a few moments with the
man next to me, but saw no more of him after I had checked in.
A week or so later, I found myself with a free morning, so I decided
to take a sentimental jog around some of the places in Tel Aviv
that I remembered from my childhood. One of these was the small
apartment block that contained one of my first homes.
I felt a sudden longing to visit it, so I went up the stairs and
knocked on the door. The man who opened it was as surprised to
see me as I was to see him. It was my fellow traveller from Zurich
airport.
He invited me in, and I took him out to the balcony to show him
where I had written my name in the cement more than twenty years
earlier. It was still there.
One way and another, I made my mark on Israel in some unusual
ways. A woman who had seen me performing one of my regular feats
on television, in which I would order broken watches to tick by
repeating the order 'Work!', had a broken hair-dryer. She took
this to be repaired the following day, and as she was on her way
out of the shop she heard somebody shouting from the back room,
'Work! Work! Work!' I hope it did.
On another occasion, I was going for one of my regular runs along
a street in Tel Aviv when I literally stopped the traffic. A passing
motorist recognized me and screeched to a halt to ask for my autograph.
He forgot his highway code as he did so, and the car behind ran
straight into him, leading to a fair amount of bumper-bending
and general commotion.
The well-known cartoonist Gidon paid his respects to me in the
newspaper Ma'ariv (12 November 1984) with a drawing of
a scroll that looked something like a bent tablet, and was inscribed
with the words 'Now I believe in Geller'.
The mayor of Rishon Letzion in the wine-growing region asked me
to come and look for oil in his area. I was not very optimistic,
and after exploring the land he had in mind I told him I did not
think there was any oil there, as unfortunately seems to be the
case in the rest of Israel.
I was also asked to help in one of those sad incidents of child
abduction by a parent after a dispute over guardianship rights.
I told the worried mother that her son was not in Israel, but
either in Canada or in Florida, and was glad to hear shortly afterwards
that he had been located in the latter.
As in Korea a few months earlier, I suddenly found myself back
in a war zone when I was asked by the Israeli Army to entertain
the troops serving in Lebanon. I was flown in by helicopter for
a single show, which went down well enough for the authorities
to invite me back, and to put my picture on the cover of the military
magazine Bamakhaneh. My visit to the front line brought
back memories of the good times I had enjoyed during my own military
service, but it brought back the bad memories as well - of the
violence, the hatred and the sudden death. After a spate of guerrilla
attacks on Israeli helicopters shortly after my visit, the authorities
decided that a return trip was not advisable.
I was able to make a modest contribution to peace in the Middle
East, when Ezer Weissman introduced me to the Egyptian diplomatic
envoy in Israel. I bent a spoon for him, much to his delight,
and he told me I would be welcome to visit Egypt. He even suggested
I should do a show at one of the pyramids!
Meanwhile, my exhausting tour went on and on, and one of my shows
was in the town of Beersheba. Although it was sold out in advance
and was a great success, it brought back a memory of the less
agreeable kind, of an incident which has been inflated beyond
all reasonable proportions by the witch-hunters. The true facts
are these:
In December 1970, I gave my first show in Beersheba. I cannot
remember anything special about the performance, having now given
thousands of almost identical ones, but a short time after it
a student named Uri Goldstein decided that he had been deceived
by the poster used to advertise the show. It had promised a demonstration
of psychic powers, but in his opinion it was just another display
of stage magic. So he went along to the local civil court and
made a complaint against my promoters, a firm called Solan, and
me.
The court heard and upheld his complaint, and he was awarded the
price of his ticket plus costs, all of which came to the equivalent
of a few American dollars. The summons, if there ever was one,
was sent to Solan and not to me. The first I ever heard of the
case was when I read in a newspaper that a member of the public
had paid the fine and enclosed an ironic little fable in a letter
he sent to the court. A translation of this letter can be found
in John Wilhelm's The Search for Superman, in which he
wrongly states that it was sent by me.
I went to some trouble to look into the facts of this case in
1984 and 1985, and I did so rather more thoroughly than any of
my critics have bothered to do. Eventually, I was able to obtain
documentary evidence from the Hashalom Civil Court that the complaint
was heard in my absence. The case file number, for those
who would like to check for themselves, is 3772/70.
It is therefore rather exaggerated, to say the least, to refer
to me as having been 'convicted in a court of law for pretending
to have paranormal powers', as Bernard Dixon, a former editor
of the New Scientist, did in the issue of 22 October 1975
of a journal called World Medicine.
Just to make quite sure that I had never committed any crimes
that might have slipped my memory, I have now obtained a statement
from the National Department for Investigation of the Israeli
Police. Dated 2 December 1984, it reads: 'At your request, please
find enclosed the conviction sheet of the above' (i.e. - me).
The attached sheet contains my name and date of birth, and the
single line: No criminal record found.
I have never replied in the past to any of my individual critics.
I have, however, been doing a good deal of research of my own
into some of the more persistent of them, with the help of news
clipping services, reporters and journalists, teams of private
investigators and lawyers in North, Central and South America,
Japan, Europe and Israel, all of whose thorough and tedious inquiries,
some involving the Freedom of Information Act, have resulted in
a staggering amount of information and have been carried out entirely
within the law.
The same cannot be said of all of my attackers. One of them resorted
to illegal activity in his efforts to incriminate me in 1985,
when he filed a false record of payment ('1099') form to the US
Internal Revenue Service, using a false name but having somehow
or other learned the correct sum I had received for an engagement
overseas. To his disappointment, no doubt, I was not subject to
taxation on this in the US, since I was never resident there.
One way and another, I have amassed an enormous pile of documentation,
from newspapers, magazines, radio and television shows, lectures,
press conferences and private conversations. I keep receiving
more from unexpected sources, and I am grateful to all those well-wishers,
some of them unknown to me, who have been helping me compile such
a valuable archive. When I recently had it moved out of my home,
I weighed it and found it came to more than 100 kilograms.
I am sorry for some of the more extreme witch-hunters and I pity
them, though I also have to thank them for making their priceless
contribution to the Geller myth over the past fifteen years or
so.
While I am in this record-straightening mood, let me now give
you the facts concerning my very brief career as a stage 'magician',
which I described in more detail in My Story.
In 1970, less than a year after my first public performance, I
was booked to appear at the Beit Hachaial (Soldiers' Home) auditorium
in Tel Aviv. The promoter of this particular event felt that my
act was becoming a little repetitive, which was quite true, and
he thought it would be a good idea to add some trickery to the
genuine displays of psychic power. A friend of his whom he particularly
wanted to impress was coming to see the show, so he told me the
number of the man's car licence-plate and asked me to produce
it 'clairvoyantly' during the performance.
I thought this was a stupid idea, and I told him so, but he insisted
and I finally agreed to keep him quiet. He was so pleased with
the result that he persuaded me to include it in my repertoire.
At the age of twenty-four, and a beginner in show business, I
was in no position to argue with a man far more experienced than
I, who was, after all, helping me earn my living. I gave in, though
not for more than four or five performances.
Then I confessed what I had done against my better judgment to
a trusted and respected friend - Dr Amnon Rubinstein, who was
then the dean of the Law School at the Hebrew University and went
on to become a member of the Israeli cabinet. Amnon was horrified,
and made me promise never to cheapen my talents again.
At the same time, he told me I should be co-operating with scientists
and trying to find out more about the workings of the human mind.
I obeyed both his orders. I never ever did the licence-plate trick,
or any other kind of deliberate deception again, and as soon as
the opportunity arose I offered my services to the scientists
I have already mentioned, whose findings you can read in The
Geller Papers.
A curious thing I have noticed again and again over the years
is that when somebody like me is denounced as a cheat, the allegation
is accepted without question, however dubious the original sources
may be. The denunciation is repeated again and again, even by
people who would check their facts carefully if they were holding
forth in public about their own professional specialities. It
is then regarded as established fact.
Here is a very recent example of how this process gets under way.
In January 1986, a friend called me from the USA to let me know
that Russell Targ had apparently just denounced me in public as
a fake, a cheat and even a thief. At least, he had been quoted
as having done so.
This did not sound like the behaviour of the Russell I knew, so
I called him up at once to check exactly what he had said at the
meeting mentioned.
'It's a complete fabrication,' he told me. All he had said was
that he had never personally done a successful experiment in metal-bending
with me, which was quite true and which he had already said several
times in print. The rest was pure invention, and I am sure that
will not stop the debunkers from writing one more lie into their
versions of history.
On the other hand, when I go from one scientific laboratory to
another, submit to all kinds of controlled experiments directed
by professional scientists, most of them physicists, who then
publish their findings in respectable science journals, it is
a very different story. I find it quite amusing that those same
critics who reject what they read in Nature will accept
the second-hand libels they read in the popular press.
Even more curious, to me, is the fact that some people will not
even accept the evidence of their own eyes. Or they may accept
it at first, but then allow others to change their minds for them.
Professor John Taylor, for example, asked me to do several experiments
in his own laboratory, such as bending a piece of metal that was
fixed to a letter-scale. I did this, and various other things,
but later he concluded that I must be a fraud simply because I
would not agree to do them all again after some magician or other
had told him how to tighten up his controls. Even if I had done
this, another magician would have come along and said the first
one's controls were no good, and so it would have gone on.
The writer Arthur C. Clarke saw his own key bend in front of his
eyes during one of the visits I made to Professor John Hasted's
laboratory in London in 1974. 'My God!' he said at the time, 'it's
all coming true. This is what I wrote about in Childhood's
End. I can't believe it!'
Ten years later, however, his mind had been changed for him by
somebody who was not even present, and in Arthur C. Clarke's
World of Strange Powers (1984) he quoted my account of the
episode and accused me of faulty memory. 'He did take the
door-key out of my hand,' he wrote, 'and he placed it on a firm
metal surface while stroking it. Interesting, to say the least
. . .'
'Interesting indeed. He forgets to mention that his own thumb
was on top of his key as it bent, according to Professor Arthur
Ellison, head of the electrical engineering department at City
University, who witnessed the incident at point-blank range, and
gave an accurate description of it in a lecture in London in 1985,
which he repeated in print in The Times Higher Education supplement
for 22 August 1986.
Mr Clarke has some strange views on scientific research. He describes
The Geller Papers as an 'astounding farrago', many of whose
contributors 'must now wish that the entire edition had dematerialized'.
Why? Because they published positive results?
According to Professor Ellison, writing in the article mentioned
above, the reason why people tend to change their minds after
witnessing something unusual is quite simple. 'Such occurrences
are "impossible",' they say, 'therefore they cannot
happen. It is not necessary to look further into these matters:
it would merely be a waste of time. All the claims, confirmed
by so many distinguished scientists and others, must be false.
They must all have been deceived by a conjuror . . . And nobody
likes to be thought naive: better to keep quiet.'
Several people mentioned in this book have later suffered attacks
of what Brian Inglis calls retrocognitive dissonance - that is,
they say one thing to me when I meet them and something quite
different to some reporter or other several years later. Among
those who suffered recently from this complaint, when the Mail
on Sunday contacted them in 1986, were President Carter, Henry
Kissinger, Clive Menell, Jorge Luiz Serrano and a spokesman for
the Korean defence ministry. I can only say that I have discovered
that I have a new talent: for inducing loss of memory in others.
Fortunately, however, retrocognitive dissonance works both ways,
and sometimes it can help straighten the record rather than distort
it. I referred earlier to the New Scientist article (6
April 1978) in which the 'final disintegration' of the Geller
myth was announced. The man who allegedly provided the evidence
for this was a former manager of mine named Yasha Katz, with whom
I parted company in 1974 after a disagreement over his share of
my takings - a problem with which many entertainers are familiar.
Yasha was quoted as having made a number of allegations, some
of which were printed in a journal called the Skeptical Inquirer
(Spring/Summer 1978). One of my most persistent detractors
credited him with 'the single greatest indictment of Uri Geller
I have ever heard'. Among Yasha's allegations were that Shipi
and I had 'taken refuge' in Mexico, which had no extradition treaty
with Israel, and were 'wanted for questioning' in Israel in connection
with Shipi's military service.
If I was indeed wanted for questioning in Israel, now was the
time for the authorities to catch up with me. My arrival in November
1984 was plastered all over the newspapers, and my daily appearances
in every major town in the country were well advertised. I gave
enough press conferences for everybody in the whole of Israel
to question me as much as they liked. Shipi, who arrived later
in my tour, was also freely available for questioning by all and
sundry.
Soon after my arrival, I was surprised to read in the newspaper
Ma'ariv (9 November 1984) that Yasha was now stating: 'Never
did I say that he is not real', referring to me. I was even more
surprised to hear that he had wanted to help promote my tour and
have his name on the posters along with that of Danny Shalem.
I got in touch with Yasha and explained that although I forgave
him for having done me a good deal of harm in the past, I wanted
him to set the record straight. Here is part of the affidavit
he signed on 10 December 1984 in the presence of lawyer Moshe
Ben-Haim:
I have known Uri Geller since 1971. I confirm that all the
information I gave [in 1977] about him and his relatives, and
Mr Shtrang, was lacking any real basis and was false. I confirm
that everything I said was a consequence of the fact that there
had been a disagreement between myself and Mr Geller, whom [sic]
I thought owed me certain payments.
I specify that people who wanted to damage Uri Geller approached
me at that time [1977] and pressed me to make statements aimed
at harming him. I agreed under pressure, and gave information
that was completely untrue.
It is not true that Uri Geller fled to 'exile' in Mexico because
of an inquiry into him by Israeli authorities. As far as I know,
there was no such inquiry or any reason for one.
It is not true that I said Uri Geller was a fake, or was cheating
while performing either on or off stage. It is also of course
untrue that I helped him cheat in any way.
I specify that people who wanted to harm Uri Geller used me
for the purpose of damaging Uri Geller in an unjustifiable way.
Another person whose reported statements surprised me in the past
was my former girl-friend Iris Davidesco, with whom I had a somewhat
public but nevertheless satisfying reconciliation.
'You were the love of my life, Uri,' she told me when we met.
'I was hurt because you left me, and I went along with what the
others were saying because I wanted to hurt you back, and it was
the only way I could.'
In February 1985, I left Israel totally exhausted both physically
and mentally after so many performances and interviews. It had
been my most gruelling tour since Brazil in 1976, and I vowed
I would never do another like it. All the same, it was very good
to have been welcomed home so warmly, and to have made my peace
with so many detractors of the past.
Life is full of synchronicities, and I seem to receive much of
my share of them at airports or in aeroplanes. As I waited in
the lounge of Tel Aviv airport for my London flight, I noticed
a man of about my age looking at me and smiling. I assumed he
had recognized me from one of my shows, and nodded politely to
him. Then it was time to embark, and soon after we had taken off
and the 'fasten seat belts' sign had been switched off. I felt
a tap on my shoulder. It was the man from the lounge, now sitting
right behind me.
'Uri, look at my face,' he said. 'Do you remember?'
'well,' I replied, 'yes, I saw you in the airport.'
'Look again,' he went on. 'Don't you remember me?'
His face looked vaguely familiar, but I could not put a name to
it.
'If it wasn't for me,' he said, 'you wouldn't be on this aeroplane.'
'What do you mean?'
'Don't you remember the day you nearly drowned when you were ten
years old?'
'Avi!' I exclaimed. Of course I remembered now. During my brief
stay at the kibbutz at Hatzor, near Ashdod, in 1955 and 1956,
I had gone swimming in the sea one day with some of the other
boys. I was a terrible swimmer then, and had no idea how strong
the undercurrent was or what to do if I got myself caught in it,
which is just what had happened. What I had done was clutch in
terror at the only person within reach, which was Avi. I had nearly
drowned the pair of us in my panic, but mercifully he was stronger
than I and a good swimmer, and he managed to drag me to the beach.
He was right but for him I would not have been on that aeroplane,
or anywhere else.
['Actually I think it says something enormously important about
modern cutlery']
6 A Marc cartoon from The Times, 1973.
7 A Heath cartoon from the Sunday Times, 1986.
We had a good chat about old times and promised to keep in touch
when we said goodbye to each other at Heathrow Airport. Avi was
flying on to Canada, where he now lives, and since I had already
begun to plan this book I asked him to write to me with his account
of an unusual episode from the same period as my near-drowning,
which he also remembered clearly. For the benefit of those who
still believe the witch-hunters' claim that I learned all my tricks
from Shipi Shtrang (who was only a few months old when the incident
in question took place), here is part of the long letter Avi sent
me, dated 10 June 1985:
The first and only time I remember you demonstrating your powers
was on a warm summer afternoon. We were walking on a footpath
across from the main dining-hall, just past the steps leading
to the new swimming-pool. To our left was a good-sized grassed
area and to our right a hill with young pine trees.
You took your watch off your wrist and gave it to me so that
I could admire it. I think it was a gift from your Dad. I thought
it was a great watch, and you said, 'See what I can do with it.'
I watched you take it in your hand and hold it tightly. Then
the hands started to move forward on their own, and later backwards.
I thought you were playing tricks, so I said, 'I think you're
playing with the knob on the watch.'
Then I took a closer look. At this point we stopped among some
larger trees covering the footpath, and I said, 'Do it again without
touching the knob.'
You laughed, and did it again. I was sure that you did not
touch the knob, but I thought just the same that you were
playing some trick on me. I must admit that I did dismiss it as
just some crazy thing you were doing, but as a kid twelve years
old I put the thought away as 'So what?' We kept on walking to
our class-house and that was it.
I really do not think you even knew what it all meant. It was
very natural to you, and you liked the idea of 'Look what I can
do' . . .
(signed)
Abraham Setton
Victoria, BC, Canada
My arrival in London in February 1985 was the direct result of
yet another of those airline coincidences. This one came about
like this:
When Daniel was three, in 1984, it was time for some serious discussion
between Hanna and me about where we wanted him to grow up and
go to school. We could not go on carting him and Natalie around
the world indefinitely from one of our home bases to another,
as we had done throughout their lives to date. We needed a more
permanent home base somewhere. At about that time, the British
businessman Richard Branson invited me to come along on the inaugural
flight of his Virgin Airlines, from London to New York.
As you would expect from the owner of a successful record company,
he put on quite a show, and the send-off at Heathrow left me fairly
exhausted even before we got off the ground. I made my way to
my seat in the first-class section of the Boeing 747 and collapsed
into it, hardly noticing who was already seated beside me.
He was a comic-looking and amiable fellow with a beard and a lively
glint in his eyes, and before long we began to make polite conversation.
He introduced himself, and although I knew nothing about him I
commented on the fact that we both had the same family name: Freud
- my mother's maiden name.
My mother's family comes from Vienna, although she was born in
Berlin and brought up in Budapest. She has always been told that
her father and Sigmund Freud were second or third cousins, although
I have not been able to trace the exact connection. My fellow
passenger had never had any such difficulty, however, for he was
the grandson of the founder of psychoanalysis.
We had a pleasant flight chatting about food, music, horses and
women, about all of which he seemed to know a good deal. I invited
him to come and spend a couple of days at my mother's house in
Connecticut, and it was only there that I found out who he was:
Clement Freud, Liberal Member of Parliament, veteran radio and
television personality and author of several books. When I happened
to mention that I was looking for a new home base, he immediately
suggested England. 'It's a civilized country,' he assured me.
It sounded like the right choice to me. I had been given an English
education, in Cyprus, and I could not wish for a better one for
my own children. I already had many friends and contacts in London,
and on the whole I had always been well treated by the British
media, which did more than any other to help me make an international
name for myself back in the early seventies. Another advantage
was that my secret hideaway in Europe was only a short flight
away. Finally, after watching one more television item about increasing
crime and drug addiction among New York school children, I decided
that all roads seemed to lead to London.
Clement Freud told me how to go about satisfying the British authorities
that I qualified for residential status, while making it quite
clear that he was in no position to obtain any special favours
for me, for which I never asked him. So, after going through the
normal channels, I and the rest of the Geller family took up residence
in a whole floor of an apartment building overlooking the treetops
of Hyde Park.
Clement and I became good friends. Soon after I arrived in England
we bought a racehorse together, naming her Spoonbender and
entrusting her to the care of the well-known trainer Toby Balding.
She came in sixth in her first race, and third in her second.
On 26 November 1986 I went along to see her in action for the
first time, in the 3.30 race at Huntingdon, having told the press
the day before that I was going to give her a little telepathic
help from my seat in the grandstand.
One racing expert who was not too impressed was Templegate of
The Sun, who announced in the race-day issue of his paper
that he preferred to concentrate his energies on the form book,
reckoning that the favourite, Preacher's Gem 'is more than
good enough to thwart Uri's psychic powers'. He went on:
Uri, who does not gamble, is anxious to point out that should
another horse be leading Spoonbender by a healthy margin
at the last flight, he would not try to will it to fail.
'There is evidence that it can be achieved,' he said. 'But
I would never use my powers in a negative sense. I will be quite
happy if the horse comes second or third providing I believe I
have heightened her performance.'
My horse got off to a slow start, and was lying in eighth position
out of nineteen as the field leaped over the hurdles. On the final
straight, she showed what she could do and moved steadily ahead,
finishing with her nose a couple of feet behind that of the winner.
The favourite was nowhere in sight.
I was relieved, in a way, that Spoonbender had not quite
made it. If she had come in first, I am sure there would have
been allegations that I had been doping her or poisoning the other
horses, or maybe putting a curse on them. I was satisfied with
second place, and from what I saw I reckoned that my horse did
not really need any extra-sensory help to win one day.
On another occasion in 1985, I gave Clement Freud and a number
of his friends a spontaneous demonstration of my own winning methods.
The occasion was a garden party at his country home, where I made
use of my magic number: eleven. When it was time to buy tickets
for the raffle, I asked for the numbers 111 and 121 (eleven times
eleven). The first won me a handsome Wedgwood plate decorated
with the portraits of distinguished Liberal Politicians of the
past, and the second won the top prize, a huge hamper of luxurious
food and drink. I gave this back, in order not to appear to be
overdoing things.
At Clement's party, I met a man who, like John Howard in Australia,
gave me the impression that he could become prime minister of
his country one day. This was Dr David Owen, leader of the Social
Democratic Party. I bent a spoon for him while he was holding
it, and learned that he had been interested in parapsychology
for some time.
My lucky number kept turning up all over the place in 1985. When
Andrija Puharich stopped off in London on his way to a conference,
I booked a room for him at the Royal Garden Hotel, near my apartment.
I went round to see him there.
'That's funny,' I said when I arrived. 'You're in the same room
that Byron and Maria Janis were in last week.' The number was
1105.
Shortly afterwards, another friend of mine called from the USA
and asked me to make a reservation at a hotel near me. I called
the Royal Garden, and once again my friend ended up in room 1105.
Then it happened yet again - four times in a row.
I began to feel slightly paranoid. Were all my friends being put
there on purpose so that their conversations could be bugged?
I had a word with the manager, who assured me that it was pure
coincidence.
In December, I was watching BBC breakfast television without paying
too much attention. An auction was being held for the Leukaemia
Research Fund, and I had a sudden impulse to put in a bid for
a gold bracelet studded with rubies that was being shown on the
screen. I phoned in with my bid, and heard later that I had won
it. I was also told that it had been donated by the well-known
British medium Doris Stokes, and that it was - you've guessed
it - Lot Eleven.
One recent coincidence that I particularly enjoyed involved both
my lucky number and my name, which is one you might think it difficult
to spell incorrectly. In fact, I had never seen it misspelt in
any of the thousands of press items about me that have appeared
over the years, until January 1986, when the journal of the Society
for Psychical Research printed a letter from my old friend Brian
Inglis containing the phrase:
'. . . in circumstances which preclude the kind of deception Gelller
was supposed to have practised . . .'
Next section
Previous section
Chapter list
Book list
Reference site master page