12
Waging Peace
On a warm evening in July 1985, a fleet of buses wound its way
along a hillside road in southern Spain. Its destination was a
secluded luxury villa standing in grounds five times the size
of Monaco, and its passengers were some of the 400 guests who
had been invited to a birthday party. Meanwhile, a helicopter
shuttled back and forth from the 285-foot yacht anchored off Marbella
to fetch some of the more distinguished guests.
This was no ordinary party. One of the world's wealthiest and
most influential men was jointly celebrating his son's fifth and
his own fiftieth birthdays, and his guest list must have read
like a draft for Who's Who in the Middle East. Most of
them were Arabs, and many had flown over specially for the event
from the Middle East. There was also a handful of eminent local
residents, and some family friends from other parts of the world.
The buses turned into the driveway, cruised along between rows
of guards dressed in medieval uniforms and holding large pikes,
and drew up outside the huge villa, where the host was waiting
to greet his guests. For three of them, at least, it was their
first meeting with him.
They knew a good deal about him, however. As the Saudi Arabian
chairman of the vast Triad group of companies, he was said to
be personally worth about £2 billion, and to have an income
of around a million pounds a day. He certainly knew how to spend
it: he had eleven other homes around the world in addition to
this Spanish country palace, and his parties tended to leave the
gossip columnists at a loss for superlatives. His yacht Nabila
was the one you may have seen in the James Bond film Never
Say Never Again.
Among the guests who stepped out of their buses and lined up to
shake hands with Mr Adnan Khashoggi were a Jewish-American musician
named Byron Janis and two Israelis, Shipi and myself. What, you
may want to know, were we doing at this glittering gathering of
the elite of the Arab world? Let me explain.
About a year previously, Byron and I had been talking about ways
in which people like ourselves - musicians and entertainers -
could use our talents to bring people together and turn their
minds towards peace instead of conflict. We both felt we could
do more than merely provide audiences with an evening of pleasure
in our respective ways. But where to start? Starting a war was
fairly easy, we agreed, but how do you go about starting a peace?
I had an idea. 'Whether we like it or not, Byron,' I said, 'many
parts of this world are dominated by very powerful individuals.
I don't see any chance of real peace until they can be brought
together and made to sort out the obstacles that keep them apart.'
We drew up a list of those we reckoned to be capable of influencing
the hearts and minds of large numbers of people in various ways,
and the first name we came up with was that of Mr Khashoggi. We
decided to get in touch with him somehow or other, and began asking
around.
He was not an easy man to meet, as he was constantly on the move.
Anyway, we wrote him a letter asking if it would be possible for
us to see him. Nothing happened for six weeks, then Byron received
a telephone call from a man who identified himself as one of Mr
Khashoggi's personal aides. What, he asked, would we like to see
him about?
'We just want to come as human beings,' said Byron. 'We have something
very important to convey to him.'
'I understand that,' said the aide. He must have heard it before.
'But what is it about?'
Byron went straight to the point. 'The world has a lot of problems,
and we think that together we might be able to identify some of
them, and maybe do something about them. Who knows?'
The aide's tone of voice changed at once. 'We're always ready
for that,' he replied, and immediately announced that he would
like to invite us both to Mr Khashoggi's birthday party. It was
as simple as that.
The formal invitations duly arrived, and I telephoned the aide
to ask if he would like some background information about me.
I was a little concerned that he might not know I was an Israeli.
'Shall I send you a press kit?' I asked.
'Oh, that won't be necessary, Mr Geller,' was the reply. 'We know
all about you.'
I shook the mothballs out of my dinner jacket, which I had not
worn since I had been one of the judges at the Miss Universe pageant
several years earlier, and here I was, one of the few Israelis
outside the diplomatic corps ever to meet a Saudi Arabian, let
alone shake hands with one in his own home. As our line moved
forward, I remembered the day I had queued up in the White House
to send my message to President Carter. Now, I had another message
to deliver.
My turn came. The aide muttered something into Mr Khashoggi's
ear, and after eyeing each other hesitantly for a moment, we shook
hands. I immediately had the feeling that here was no villain,
but a man of great warmth and goodness. This was not the time
for a discussion about world peace, though, and I was ushered
into the enormous glass pavilion that had been built especially
for the occasion.
It was like a Hollywood set. A band was playing on the stage,
and tables had been laid out for a sit-down dinner that was already
well under way. Every beautiful woman in the world seemed to be
there, each of them wearing a new creation from a top fashion
house, and there was more priceless jewellery on display than
you would find in the whole of Bond Street or Fifth Avenue. I
saw emeralds the size of golf balls, clusters of sixty- or seventy-carat
diamonds, and examples of just about every other precious mineral
that ever came out of this earth. Balloons were floating up to
the domed ceiling, the champagne was flowing like the river Jordan,
and the din was tremendous. Despite my experience of high life
in Mexico, West Germany, and the homes of a number of presidents,
dictators and ministers, I have never seen anything like it.
Although Byron and I had been asked previously by the aide if
we would demonstrate our 'powers' - his on the piano and mine
on the cutlery - it was obvious that this was no occasion for
a formal show of any kind. It was a great big noisy family party,
not a show business event. The only celebrities I recognized throughout
the evening were Brooke Shields, a friend of the family, Shirley
Bassey, whose performance was limited to a rendering of 'Happy
Birthday to You', and the original 007 himself Sean Connery. Although
he was there as a neighbour and was not on business as a secret
agent, his presence only added to the illusion that I had wandered
on to the set of the next Bond picture.
For the first hour or so there was no further sign of our host,
and we decided to relax and enjoy ourselves. Eventually, the aide
appeared at our table, took my arm and said he would like me to
meet Mr Khashoggi's wife. This, I thought, was a step in the right
direction.
Whatever I had been expecting the wife of a Saudi Arabian businessman
to look like, it was not what I saw: a ravishingly beautiful Italian
lady of about my own age, who greeted me with a smile that only
Sophia Loren could match.
'Oh, Uri Geller!' she cried. 'I've heard so much about you. Come
and sit down.'
I was too dazzled by her beauty to make much in the way of conversation.
Before long, she handed me an expensive-looking spoon and asked
me to show her what I could do with it. I let her hold it herself
and watch as it began to curl upwards at my command, in the usual
way. Then, all too soon, the aide whisked me away to meet a member
of King Faisal's family and numerous other pillars of Arab society
- Sheikh this and Prince that - all of them clearly men of considerable
power. Like our host, they gave me an impression of great human
warmth, and they greeted me as a fellow creature.
I managed to bend a couple more spoons in my spontaneous strolling
cabaret act, and was getting fairly tired when at last the hard-working
aide found his way to me again and led me into a private room.
I prayed for all available strength, both to bend another spoon
if necessary and to do what I was really there for: deliver my
message.
To my disappointment, there was still no sign of Mr Khashoggi.
His son was there, however, and we made some polite conversation.
He was intrigued to hear that I was from Israel, and I was tempted
to ask if I was the first Israeli he had ever met, also to tell
him that I actually had a Saudi relative. My wife's mother was
at one time married to a Palestinian who had gone to Riyadh after
their divorce, taking their daughter with him, and still lived
there. Thus I have an Arab half-sister-in-law, with whom we are
still in touch.
Before I had time to embark on that rather complicated story,
Mr Khashoggi at last came into the room and greeted me for the
second time that evening. The atmosphere was relaxed and very
private and, as I had expected, the first thing he wanted me to
do was another spoon-bending job. I had already done more than
I can usually manage m one evening, but this was one request I
could certainly not refuse, and mercifully all went well. As I
had also expected, he immediately wanted to know if I could teach
him how to do it!
A few minutes later I was quite exhausted after all the concentration
I had needed, not so much to bend the spoons but to push my silent
message into his mind. Luckily, it was a short one, consisting
of the single word: peace.
Although we said little to each other, I know he received the
message. When we parted, he did what I am sure no Saudi has ever
done to an Israeli: he came up to me and planted a kiss firmly
on each of my cheeks.
I felt that I had accomplished my mission, and it was clearly
time to leave. On my way out, before I had fully realized what
had just taken place, I ran into somebody I already knew personally
for the first time that evening. It was NBC television producer
Robin Leach, whom I might have expected to be there, although
he looked surprised to see me. He had filmed an interview with
me a couple of years previously for his series Lifestyles of
the Rich and Famous, and now he was recording an example of
the lifestyle of somebody a great deal richer than I was. The
next thing I knew was that there was a television camera pointing
at me, a microphone under my nose, and Robin was asking me, 'What
do you think of the party?'
I cannot remember my exact words. This is what I was thinking,
and what I hope I said, though I expect most of it was cut:
'How can you ask me such a banal question? What do you want me
to say? It's a great party, the food and the champagne are fine?
Look at the people around me don't you realize that I'm an Israeli?
And I'm among what some people think are my enemies: Egyptians,
Jordanians, Palestinians, Saudi Arabians, even members of the
King's family? Do you realize that Adnan Khashoggi got up and
kissed me on both cheeks? All barriers were demolished when he
gave me that sign. Here I am among my so-called enemies, and all
I am getting from them is feelings of peace, love and unity. That's
what I think of this party. Anybody can celebrate a birthday,
but to celebrate the coming together of "enemies" is
not so easy.'
I was not over-reacting. Nor was I overestimating what had happened.
It is possible to break down barriers by a simple gesture. When
that great man, President Sadat of Egypt, flew to Israel and stepped
on the soil of the country he had fought a few years before, he
made a tremendous and lasting impact without saying a word. Hatred
between Egyptians and Israelis began to dissolve at once, not
because of anything he said, but because of what he did.
It is possible to reshape the world for better or worse by simple
gestures and simple intentions, provided those concerned have
the power and the influence to get them across. Remember how pop
singer Bob Geldof got off his backside and raised over £50
million for starving Africans! It was not just the money, but
a change in attitudes that was his real achievement. That was
mind-power in action, and if he can use it then so can anybody
else. All you need to begin with is imagination.
More than a year after Mr Khashoggi's party, I learned of a curious
sequel to my meeting with him and my delivery of my silent message.
In the autumn of 1986, the NBC team came to film me at home for
their programme, bringing with them a copy of the material they
had shot at the party. After I had left, they had interviewed
the host and asked him if he had any message for the world on
his fiftieth birthday. He had, and it was a short one: 'Peace'.
I was interested to read recently that scientists are making a
study of people who are what they call 'fantasy-prone', and finding
that these people are more likely to have experiences of telepathy,
clairvoyance or precognition than those who do not make much use
of their imagination. It has also been found that such fantasy-prone
people are very good hypnotic subjects, although they are just
as normal and well-balanced in their personal and professional
lives as people who do not go in for much in the way of fantasy
or imagination.
I have been very highly fantasy-prone for as long as I can remember.
Perhaps being an only child without too many toys to play with
helped. I have already mentioned my first experiments in space
travel, when I used to launch my little rockets made from old
bullets towards the moon and the stars. Long before the first
Sputnik went into earth orbit (in 1957) I was designing special
suits for space travellers with all the necessary fittings for
oxygen and heat supplies, pockets for their proteins and liquids,
and so on down to the smallest detail.
When I was at Terra Santa College in Cyprus, I often used to entertain
my class with my imagination: at the end of term, after the exams,
our teachers would ask some of us to come to the front of the
class and make up a story, and I soon became the most successful
of the spontaneous storytellers. One of my classmates, Joseph
Charles, remembered my space-fantasies clearly more than twenty
years later.
'They were all about men going up in rockets and meeting people
from other worlds,' he told me when we met in London in 1985.
'You would describe flying saucers and little spacemen, and your
stories sometimes went on for two or three hours. If you hadn't
finished when the bell went, you would go on from where you left
off the next day, or the next week. I wish I could have written
them all down.' (Later, I did manage to write one of them down
myself in my novel Pampini.)
This may explain some of the confusion that was caused by Andrija-Puharich's
book Uri (1974), in which he included a lot of material
about extraterrestrial forces that were supposed to be controlling
me. Although much of his book was accurate factual reporting,
many people were put off by the space-fantasy passages, and I
admit that they caused me some embarrassment. You must remember
that all of this fantasy material was obtained while I was under
hypnosis, and I cannot be held responsible for what my imagination
produced under such conditions. One reason I wrote My Story
was to give my own version of events, though I must emphasize
that there is a slight possibility that some of my energies do
have some kind of extraterrestrial connection. Andrija and I are
still the closest of friends and I have never forgotten how much
of my success is due to him.
I have made good use of my imagination in the past, and I shall
continue to do so in the future, whatever the areas into which
it may lead me. If it should lead me astray, as it has once or
twice, I know that my internal alarm system will sound as it did
that morning after my visit to that London casino.
I am glad that more interest is now being shown in the areas of
imagination and fantasy, but it may surprise you to hear that
I really do not want to know what theories or conclusions the
scientists might come up with. When I was very young, soon after
I discovered that I could do things that other people thought
unusual, I accepted my natural gifts without question and made
use of them without worrying at all how I was able to make the
hands of watches move, or how I could tell what other people were
thinking of doing.
There were times when I was curious to know how these things were
done. Yet when I began to work with scientists, in 1972, I found
that I had built a protective barrier around myself between wanting
to know how my powers worked and just using them. The barrier
was put up to keep the explanations out, and every time somebody
drilled a little hole in it and pushed through some scientific
theory or other, I felt threatened. I was afraid that the hole
would explode, like a dam bursting, and that I would be flooded
with information that would destroy me. If Hal Puthoff, Russell
Targ or Wilbur Franklin had come up to me one day and said, 'Hey,
Uri, we finally figured out how you do it!', I know I would not
have wanted to listen to them. My protective barrier would have
been demolished. I was glad to demonstrate my powers for scientists,
for a time, because I was asked to by people I admired and respected,
as I still do. However, I did not and still do not want to know
what any of them discovered.
I do not want to clutter up my mind with theories or conclusions.
In any case, these will probably be disproved in a few years'
time, and then proved again, and so on. People often ask me what
I think about Edgar Cayce, or some other famous psychic of the
past, and I tell them I know nothing about them because I have
never read a book about anything to do with psychical research
or parapsychology in my life. I have never even read right through
any of the books or scientific papers about myself. Some of my
friends think I should, so that I can be better at what I do,
but I would rather go out for a run in a park and enjoy nature
than break my head over theories of the mysteries of life by reading
books about them. I prefer to live the mysteries.
Fantasy has played an important part in the evolution of the human
race ever since our remotest ancestor crawled out of the mud.
Our species is unlike the rest in the way that it has evolved,
and especially in the speed with which it still evolves, both
physically and mentally. Much of this rapid evolution depends
on the way we use something probably no other species can equal:
our minds.
There are people alive today who were born before the first aeroplane
left the ground. They might even remember being told that heavier-than-air
flight was scientifically impossible, and reading all the technical
explanations that proved this. We have forgotten the names of
the scientists who provided the explanations, but we remember
the names of Langley, Santos-Dumont and the Wright brothers. They
were the ones who used their imagination and made their fantasies
come true. It was the same with space travel - learned professors
went on assuring us that it was out of the question right up to
a year or so before Sputnik went into orbit.
The first modern Olympic Games were held in 1896, shortly before
the first aeroplanes flew. In that year, an American named Robert
Garrett threw the discus just over ninety-five feet to pick up
the gold medal. In 1960, the year before Yuri Gagarin went into
space, another American named Alfred Oerter flung the thing more
than twice that distance. If we can evolve both physically and
imaginatively to this extent in a mere seventy years roughly a
human lifespan -what is still to come?
I can visualize two scenarios: the good one and the bad one. I
will describe them in that order.
As the next thousands and millions of years go by, our bodies
gradually change. We have less and less hair on them. Our hands,
feet and legs grow less powerful because we no longer use them
as we once did. Our heads, however, are much larger, especially
our foreheads. As we make increasing use of our intelligence,
we evolve to the point where our brains are more important for
our survival than our limbs and our primitive sensory organs.
Moving ahead still further, I can see a species without anything
we would recognize today as a body. We will have found new ways
of seeing that do not require eyes, new ways of transportation
or teleportation that do not involve the use of limbs, and new
ways of pleasure-seeking and reproduction that do not depend on
the archaic sexual organs we use at present.
Finally, we will no longer have physical bodies of any kind. We
will no longer be men or women, but masses or fields of consciousness
that will be able to travel through the universes and the cosmoses
towards the infinite.
The second scenario is very different. According to this, in a
matter of two or three hundred years we will be forced to abandon
our planet, after making it uninhabitable, and start all over
again elsewhere. Only a privileged few will be able to escape,
for the rest will have polluted themselves to death or simply
exterminated each other. Those lucky survivors will adapt to new
environments and their seeds will create new civilizations, and
for all of them there will always be the choice of futures: evolution
towards the Creator, or self-destruction and starting again from
the beginning.
I wish I knew which of these scenarios is going to come true.
If we make full use of our minds and our fantasies, it will be
the first. If we do not, it will be the second. The choice is
ours.
Real psychic power is not about reading tea-leaves or tarot cards
and telling people what they should already know. It is something
to use to help us evolve. Somerset Maugham once wrote that money
is 'the sixth sense which enables you to enjoy the other five'.
He was wrong, it is not money which enables you to enjoy them,
but the sixth sense itself.
You may be using your sixth sense already without realizing it,
or dismissing it as mere intuition or coincidence. If you are
a religious person, you use it every time you pray. Prayer is
an energy of the soul used for a specific purpose, and if it never
produced any results people would not still be using it.
I have never had to learn how to use psychic power, and I have
never taught anybody to use theirs. All I have done is show them
they have it. Thousands of people all over the world know this,
and they have something to prove it: a drawing, a bent piece of
cutlery, or a watch that has started working again.
There is not much I can say about how I do what I do. To bend
a spoon, I simply hold it and order it to bend, without visualizing
anything at all. I just say silently, 'Bend, bend, bend!' Some
scientists, such as Eldon Byrd, Thelma Moss and Jack Houck, have
developed a way of teaching anybody to do the same, although their
methods are different from mine and involve intense visualization
exercises in which you 'see' a force flowing out of your body
into the spoon, which then becomes warm and flexible.
When I am transmitting a word or a picture by telepathy, I hold
it on my mental television screen and will it into the mind of
the receiver. When the image starts to fade, I usually know I
have been successful. When I am receiving something, the procedure
is similar: I visualize my blank TV screen and wait for something
to appear on it. If it stays there for ten or fifteen seconds,
I know I have picked up-the right message, and I write it down.
In the case of a drawing, it is nearly always exactly the same
shape and size as the original, although all the details may not
be right.
You can practise doing this at home, just by looking at a picture
and trying to send its contents to your partner across the room
or in the room next door. Or you can do 'remote viewing' experiments
like the ones Puthoff and Targ did at SRI, where one of you goes
out to a certain spot at a certain time, and the other describes
whatever impressions come in about the place. Once you have learned
to concentrate and keep your mind under control, it is really
very simple. The difficulty for many people is believing that
they can do it.
I have used my psychic powers to entertain people, to show them
that they too have the same powers, and with them I have diversified
into several professional fields. What you do with yours is up
to you. In a thousand years, if we are still around on this planet,
we will look back at the twentieth century much as we now look
back on our cavemen ancestors. They rubbed sticks together to
make fire for cooking and keeping themselves warm. In a thousand
years, the psychic and paranormal activities of today will seem
as primitive as those cavemen's fire-lighting methods seem to
us.
What will be possible once we have learned to control psychic
power and make full use of it? In this book, I have told you what
I have been able to do with my own powers over the past fifteen
years, and whether I have made full use of all of them time alone
will tell. Maybe in ten years' time I will be able to write a
completely different kind of book.
A good example of what can happen when psychic powers are not
controlled was described in detail by the writer Dotson Rader,
in an article entitled 'A Charming Evening with Uri Geller' which
appeared in the March 1976 issue of the magazine Esquire.
It was quite an evening, for both of us. It began with a meal
at the brasserie in the Seagram Building on Park Avenue, during
which Mr Rader noticed the salt-shaker 'moving determinedly by
itself across the white tablecloth toward the edge of the perfectly
level surface' while I was looking the other way. Then we went
back to my apartment to continue our conversation, and things
really got moving.
First, a wooden carving shot off the table right beside him and
'flew across the room, hitting the opposite wall and falling on
the floor'. Then a spoon appeared from somewhere or other and
did the same thing. Next, a lump of rock landed on the floor behind
him, having apparently fallen from the ceiling. This was followed
by a steel tape measure whizzing around the room on its own. By
the end of the evening, my guest was in quite a state. I drove
him back to his apartment, and as he was getting out of the car
his front door key bent in his hand, so that he had to borrow
one from the porter in order to get home.
He came to see me again a couple of days later. While I was in
the bathroom, he took the wooden carving, put it under a cushion
and sat on it, hoping this would stop it flying around. Apparently
it did, but when we went out to the lobby we found it standing
in front of the door of the elevator. I told him I was used to
this kind of thing, which was true, though there had been more
of it than usual in his presence. None of it was caused by me
- I cannot imagine why I would want to throw my belongings around
my own home, even subconsciously, and almost nothing like this
happens when I am on my own. The unusual activity must have been
caused, at least in part, by his psychic powers. That Brazilian
journalist was right. We are all Uri Gellers.
One day, we will be able to teleport objects, and people, much
as we transmit words and pictures today by telex. Space and time
are not what we have been taught to believe, and once we have
learned full control of the mind and all its powers, there will
be no more physical barriers. Even today, some of those barriers
are not as impenetrable as they might seem. Anything is possible.
Everything is possible.
What is very probable is that in the future I shall continue to
be attacked and debunked by all kinds of individuals and committees
who have appointed themselves to save mankind from the paranormal,
and indeed from any kind of religious expression or belief.
According to one of my most persistent detractors, Martin Gardner,
'people who no longer believe in religion are searching for some
sort of substitute', and 'the paranormal provides a way of believing
in the supernatural without having to adopt a traditional religious
point of view'. He laments the fact that the media exploit this
public interest and stimulate it further, thereby 'keeping the
ball rolling'.
He and his colleagues do not seem to appreciate that they are
doing more than anybody to keep the ball rolling. They have made
a religion - a very profitable one - out of their anti-religious
crusade, and by attacking the whole area of human psychic experience
they have only added to popular interest in it. As far as I am
concerned, every time they think they have finished me off for
good all they are doing is oiling the wheels of my publicity machine.
In fact, now and then they actually do me a major favour.
One recent example: on 30 July 1985 the Sunday Times published
a letter from a British member of the 'Committee for the Scientific
Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal' which was, to say the
least, unflattering. However, it was read by the chief of a major
mining company who promptly flew several thousand miles to London
in order to sign a deal with me, which I am happy to say he did.
I hope my critics will keep up their good work. In spite of their
efforts, or perhaps because of them, the magic and the mystery
of Uri Geller will continue to survive, as they have already survived
for fifteen years. This is because the believers outweigh the
non-believers.
I cannot of course omit to mention my chief publicist, James Randi,
who has contributed so much over the years to the boosting of
my career that I am often asked if he is on my payroll! (In fact
in 1986 he won a $272,000 award for his services to the anti-psi
cause.) He has been announcing my professional demise for as long
as I can remember, and life is not long enough to answer all the
allegations he has written, spoken and circulated about me, although
I have already dealt with some of the more blatant ones.
He admitted to reporter Connie Woodcock of the Sunday Sun (26
December 1976) that he wrote a book about me to 'destroy' me.
'With great pleasure', the reporter wrote, 'he waves his book
and claims smugly he has "put him [Geller] out of business".'
He claimed on the Long John Nebel WMCA radio programme (22 March
1977) that 'You don't hear anything about Geller. He's not heard
of at all now. He's pretty well out of business.' Three years
later, he was still at it, assuring an interviewer (Omni, April
1980) that I was 'generally discredited'.
Randi has in fact come very close to going out of business himself,
according to the Toronto Sun (5 November 1974):
The Amazing Randi, magician by trade, almost died of embarrassment
yesterday, not to mention lack of oxygen - while bound and locked
in the Sun's office safe.
The world famous magician was pulled unconscious from the safe
nine minutes and 35 seconds after he entered it while horrified
staffers looked on . . . It had started out as a demonstration
of how to crack a safe from the inside. It turned out to be a
brush with death for Randi.
He described himself to the reporter as 'a professional fraud',
and took the opportunity to refer to me as 'a very good magician'.
He must have been somewhat surprised when I turned up on the NBC
television special Magic or Miracle? (8 February 1983)
and was given virtually equal time on what had originally been
planned as a show entitled The Miracle Seeker and featuring
him. (Our contributions were filmed separately, and we did not
meet.) At one point on the programme, I was asked to give an example
of what I considered to be a miracle. My answer was 'The birth
of a child', to which Randi, a bachelor and self-confessed agnostic,
commented 'Messy!' To me, this epitomized the fundamental differences
between his attitude to life and humanity and mine. A well-known
sceptic later told a friend of mine that 'Uri made Randi look
terrible'.
'We could have been good friends, you and I,' he says in one of
his books. No, Randi, we could never have been good friends. Not
even friends. You have told a newspaper reporter that you admired
me as you admired Adolf Hitler. You have seen fit to mention my
name in the same breath as that of a mass-murderer, and also with
that of Jim Jones, who brought about the suicide of hundreds of
religious fanatics in Guyana. You have circulated a statement,
dated May 1986, alleging that I have blackmailed and defamed you,
which is absurd because I would not resort to such activities.
You have alleged that one of the scientists who investigated me
'died not long afterward under conditions described as not natural'.
I will merely repeat the self-analysis Randi gave on the PM
Magazine television programme on 1 July 1982: 'I'm a charlatan,
a liar, a thief and a fake altogether. There's no question of
it.'
I do not have to challenge, confront, argue with or even defend
myself against anybody. Individual opinions, however extreme,
cannot outweigh those of the hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions
of people who have experienced a little real magic in their lives
after seeing what I and they - can do, or those of countless millions
who have been experiencing the same thing in many forms throughout
recorded history.
I am now able to afford the luxury of being able to tell any of
my witch-hunters exactly where they can go and what they can do
there. As I have indicated throughout this book, there are more
important challenges to be confronted: those that can lead to
new possibilities and new realities.
It is for those challenges that I will save my energies.
I have made a good living, by making the best use I can of my
natural abilities. This has brought me comfort, and something
much more important to me: the 'quality time' I can spend with
my wife and children and with my close friends, or in pursuing
my other interests of painting, writing and enjoying nature.
I only regret one thing in my life, and that is that my father
did not live to see his grandchildren.
I thank God every day for having given me and my family health,
love and peace. I pray every day for the sick in body or mind
to be healed, and for a better world to come for us all.
I also give thanks for my share of some mysterious human abilities
which neither science nor I can explain, but the reality of which
can no longer be denied.
Almost exactly ten years ago, I ended my first book with the words:
'Either the people accept My Story or they don't. There
is no in between.' So it is with The Geller Effect. You
are free to accept or to reject this effect, as you please. I
do not think you can deny its existence.
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