14
AUGUST 17, 1971, was an important day in my life. Dr. Andrija
Puharich arrived from the United States. He had written some time
before to say that he learned of me through the colonel's friend,
Mr. Bentov. Bentov and Andrija Puharich were friends, I learned.
They had decided to come to Israel to check me out and determine
if the powers were genuine or not. I had known that Andrija was
going to arrive that night, but I hadn't known that they were
going to come to the nightclub where I was performing.
I had learned that Andrija was an American physician who had spent
a lot of time checking out psychic phenomena. He had lectured
some time before at the medical school at Tel Aviv University
on his specialty, diseases of the ear. The colonel was with him
when he came into the club.
The moment I saw Andrija, I knew by instinct that I could work
with him. He didn't look like my picture of a scientist, but more
like a hippie Einstein. He turned out to be very pleasant and
easy to get along with. I felt confident that the forces would
work under controlled conditions with him.
I sat down at their table. The first words I said to Andrija were:
"I think we can work together. Don't be put off or disappointed
about my stage appearance." I knew that my being a stage
performer might not sit well with a scientist looking seriously
into these matters. This, of course, has been a constant problem.
I told Andrija that I appeared on stage because I enjoyed it and
needed to make a living. That night I started in my usual way:
"With the cooperation of the audience, I am going to try
to demonstrate simple telepathy and psychokinesis. I hope I will
succeed."
The demonstrations that night did succeed about 80 per cent of
the time. I didn't feel any hostility from Andrija or the colonel.
Months later, I asked Andrija: "Did you really believe it
the first time?" He told me: "No, I thought you were
doing tricks like any clever magician. Because any magician can
do most of those things on the stage."
In November 1971 Andrija found an apartment in HerzIiyyah Heights
for himself and his several cases of scientific equipment - magnetometers,
cameras, tape recorders, compasses, many kinds of minerals, and
pieces of aluminum, tin, steel, and iron. He had electronic gadgets
that I wasn't familiar with and mirrors so that he and Mr. Bentov
could observe from every angle. As we got ready to start the tests,
I found that I liked him very much and felt at home with him.
So did Hannah, and so did Shipi. He was a jolly man, very open,
young-spirited, and extremely intelligent. Andrija wasn't a conventional
scientist: He told me he had been exploring parapsychological
phenomena for a good many years. This apparently puts a scientist
in the doghouse automatically, just because he's willing to explore
in this area.
His scientific background was impressive. He had a medical degree
from Northwestern and a tremendous technical background in medical
electronics with leading American institutions. He was very precise
in every experiment he did with me, keeping the most meticulous
records and watching out for every kind of trick I could play,
even though I couldn't do tricks if I wanted to.
He would be sticking his neck far out in reporting what was happening,
and I could see a big conflict in store for him. Should he ignore
or hide the incredible things, so that his credibility would not
be damaged? Or should he report everything and risk a lot of ridicule?
It is hard to function normally when science fiction is turning
real in front of your eyes.
I'm sure this worry is one of the big reasons why he later pushed
hard to set up scientific tests in America. Without such verification
of what was happening, the chances for any of his observations
to be believed were slight. What was about to follow was new to
me. My impulse was just to go ahead, let things happen, make a
decent living, and enjoy life while I was doing it. I reaised
that the scientific tests were important but had no idea at that
time how important they would turn out to be. I just had
a feeling I was going to learn a lot. The biggest thing was going
to come very, very soon.
When we began the tests, I didn't feel nervous and tense, as I
had expected. Both Andrija and Mr. Bentov were very sympathetic
and didn't try to push me hard. We first tried some telepathy.
I concentrated on planting three-digit numbers in Andrija's mind.
This, as I have said, is the reverse of what magicians do. Then
I moved his watch ahead without touching it. He was particularly
impressed when the hands of a laboratory stopwatch advanced more
than thirty minutes, which is impossible if the watch hasn't run
that length of time. Moving the hands had taken only a few seconds.
He filmed the whole process for the record.
I succeeded in doing nearly everything Andrija asked me to do:
telepathy, the watches, the bending of metals under laboratory
bell jars, moving a compass needle by concentration, and many
other things. He became more excited as the tests went on. Then
he sat down and explained to me what this could mean to science.
He said it is impossible to bend or move metals in ways that defy
the laws of physics. He explained the importance of controlled
conditions, which could prove to science that such events are
real. He explained why he wanted me to repeat the same things
so many times. The bigger a phenomenon was, the more proof it
would need. If all the tests did check out, he said, there would
have to be a complete revision of both philosophy and science.
I began to understand more fully how important it was for me to
work with science.
Andrija told me he planned to take the results of these preliminary
tests back to America, and also to England, to see what support
and interest he could find for deeper research. He had already
written about the tests to a former Astronaut, Captain Edgar Mitchell,
who must have thought at first that Andrija was smoking some new
kind of pot.
However, Captain Mitchell later wrote a nice letter to me in care
of Andrija. In it he said that he would very much like to work
with me on experiments when I came to America, and he was sure
that some top scientific laboratories there would be willing to
make serious studies of the energy forces. I was impressed to
hear directly from him - and flattered. When he had done some
ESP experiments on his Apollo 14 mission to the moon, an Israeli
newspaper had referred to him as "the Uri Geller of the Astronauts."
The first series of tests with Andrija in August 1971 lasted more
than a week. Andrija kept a careful log of everything. He left
Israel to work on his plans for the future research and was gone
for many weeks. He didn't return until the middle of November
1971, this time with more equipment to set up a small laboratory
in another apartment he had rented. He said he would need several
hours each day for several weeks for the new tests, which I would
fit in between my regular appearances in Israel during that time.
The second round of tests was more of the same. They worked well,
over and over again. They were also getting very tiresome. I missed
my usual contact with people. Andrija again kept very careful
records and wrote about them in his book about me, Uri: A Journal
of the Mystery of Uri Geller, published in America by Anchor
Press/Doubleday. What he wrote in the book was more detailed than
what I have in my own memory.
With the tests going so well, the researchers were interested
in learning more about my background. I told them in detail. Andrija
suggested that if he hypnotized me I might recall things that
I could no longer remember consciously. I had known some hypnotists
in the past and had let them try it with me, but it never worked.
Andrija had experience in hypnosis and said he would be glad to
try if I would let him.
At first I was afraid of the idea. But after I had thought it
over something told me to go ahead with it. Maybe I could learn
from it myself. We decided to do it the night of December 1, 1971.
I had just finished a public appearance, and Iris was with me.
With Andrija at his apartment were Bentov and two other Israelis,
friends of Andrija's, who were interested in the experiments.
Andrija began the process of hypnosis.
When I woke up, they told me I had been under for more than an
hour. They had taped what I had said. When they played it back
I was startled to hear my voice speaking in a distant and mechanical
way. Under hypnosis, I apparently had put myself back in Cyprus:
On the tape I was with my dog Joker. My voice said, as Andrija
reports in his book: "I come here for learning. I just sit
here in the dark with Joker. I learn and learn, but I don't know
who is doing the teaching."
Andrija's voice came on the tape to say: "What are you learning?"
"It is about people who come from space. But I am not to
talk about these things yet."
"Is it secret?" Andrija's voice said on the tape.
"Yes," my voice answered. "But someday you too
will know."
I know that hypnosis can produce strange results, that among other
things it can exaggerate fantasies. Still, people say what they
fully believe to be the truth. I didn't know what to make of what
I heard, because my mind was still very fuzzy, and this was very
confusing stuff. On the tape I was getting farther and farther
back in my childhood. I heard myself speaking Hebrew, and Mr.
Bentov's voice took up the questions in that language. I was now
apparently back to the age of three, to that incident in the Arabic
garden when the brilliant light struck me and made me lose consciousness.
A shudder went through me at this point.
Then, very suddenly, the tone of my voice on the tape changed
to a weird, eerie sound. The moment I heard the change of voice
I was seized with fear, even terror. I can't remember clearly
what happened after that. They told me I grabbed the tape recorder,
stopped it, and ejected the tape. They told me the tape disappeared
as if it had dematerialised. I apparently left the apartment quickly,
and they later found me in an elevator. I have no idea why. Iris
took me home. We never found the tape.
Later, the others in the room reconstructed what this voice, this
flat, mechanical, almost computer-like voice coming through me
in the trance, had said. It said that this was the power that
had found me in the Arabic garden, and that I had been sent to
help man. It said that I had been programed by these forces -
whatever they were - to forget exactly what happened in that garden.
Then it went on to talk about the Israeli-Egyptian crisis. The
next few weeks, it said, were going to be very critical. The voice
said that these energies were revealing themselves because mankind
might be on the verge of a new world war.
Iris confirmed to me that this strange scene had taken place,
but there was no tape to prove it. Who knows what someone will
say under hypnosis anyway, even though an entirely different kind
of voice takes over? What can it prove? However, that was not
going to be the only time that the electronic, computerized-sounding
voice suddenly spoke on a tape, and it was not going to be the
only time that things materialised or dematerialised in front
of our eyes. Who in the world would believe it? It was not controlled
experimentation. It wasn't even like the telepathy or the metal-bending
or the watches. Incredible as those things were - and they still
remain incredible to me - they could be done time after time,
carefully controlled, and within time and space limits that could
be set up in advance. Even so, people have a hard time believing
they could happen, especially if they only read about it.
Now a whole series of mind-blowing events started happening, one
after the other, like a huge waterfall going far beyond anything
in the past. For some reason, Andrija's testing seemed to set
them off. When the routine tests seemed to work better after that
incident, I was gaining confidence. A compass needle would move
30 degrees when I just put my hand near it, without even concentrating
on it. One time Andrija was putting a coded metal ring inside
a wooden microscope box to see if I could bend it inside the box
without touching it. For some reason, I said: "Look, I have
a feeling I can make the thing disappear." I had him take
a film of himself putting the ring in, and then I concentrated.
After a few seconds, feeling sure that the metal ring was no longer
in the box, I told Bentov and Andrija to check it. They opened
the box. It was gone.
I volunteered to let Andrija hypnotize me again, and he and Bentov
recorded the session. I guess I was under about an hour. I had
to rush to an appearance before the troops that night, so I didn't
listen to the tape. Andrija drove me, and for some reason I told
him he should try to remember what I'd said under hypnosis, because
I was convinced that the cassette had vanished from the tape recorder.
Andrija stopped the car and checked the recorder. The cassette
was still in it. He pushed some buttons to check the tape, but
the play button wouldn't work. He opened the recorder to check
inside again. The tape was gone from the cassette. I have no idea
what prompted me to say I thought the tape would be gone. Can
you imagine how you feel when something like this happens? You
doubt your own senses completely. In fact you don't want to talk
about it except to someone who was there, who shared the experience
with you. You know that people flatly will not believe you. But
a point comes where you can't go on worrying about not being believed.
You have to have confidence in your own observations. However,
I knew that the increased strangeness of these events made it
all the more important to have the energies verified by science.
As I was getting ready to go out to the Sinai desert to give more
demonstrations to Israeli troops, Andrija and Bentov tried to
reconstruct what had come out on that second tape. I had said
under hypnosis that I was "flying out of my body" to
a wide, flat place with mountains in the background. Then my voice
apparently changed to the flat, mechanical voice and warned about
new conflicts between Israel and the Arab countries. The voice
said I had to use the energies to help the world in this crisis.
Andrija and Bentov told me that the voice on the tape seemed not
to be coming from me; it seemed to come directly onto the tape.
Now this is, of course, absurd: a disembodied voice speaking on
a Sony cassette tape recorder, making all kinds of ponderous statements.
Later, when I myself heard this voice again on some tapes, it
sounded fantastic, like a computer talking. I said to myself,
what is going on? Then I remembered a thought I had had in other
times: Maybe there's a cosmic clown up there making a big, cosmic
joke. Even though I was hearing this strange voice on the tapes,
I didn't know whether to believe or disbelieve.
But things were continuing to happen. An ashtray might disappear
from a table in front of our eyes and suddenly reappear in a far
corner of the room, rolling over and over. I did nothing to cause
this kind of occurrence. I wouldn't be concentrating to try to
make it happen. It would just happen.
Looking back, I know I flatly did not believe it the first time
I heard that voice on the tape. I thought Andrija and Bentov were
tricking me. The second time, when the tape was not played, my
suspicion was so strong I opened the tape recorder up with a screwdriver
and looked inside for some kind of trick effects, for a second
cassette or something like that. I couldn't find anything out
of the ordinary.
The third time I just shook my head. Now the voice was saying
that the energies were coming from a spacecraft, which it even
gave a name: "Spectra." The voice said it was from a
planet thousands of light years away and that it would help us
work for world peace. This to me really was a joke. Why would
it have such a common Hollywood-type name? Just what was going
on? Sure, I knew I could bend metal, I knew I could read minds,
I knew I could do telepathy, I knew I could fix watches and stop
them. But never before did things fly around, never before did
objects materialise and dematerialise. Previously, in fact, metal
objects did not break as they were doing now. And previously,
I had heard no disembodied voices speaking on tape.
I began to have strong urges I couldn't explain at all. Out on
the Sinai, the night after the tape disappeared, when I'd been
entertaining the troops, I asked the commander to let Andrija
and me go out on the desert in a jeep. I had never thought much
about UFOs, but my interest in them was rising after hearing the
tapes. For no reason at all, I felt we might be able to see something
of this strange spacecraft. Andrija and I did see a red, disc-shaped
light that we thought was following us; oddly, the soldiers with
us didn't see it. I was confident that it was a spacecraft and
felt sure we could get a picture of one if we kept trying. But
cameras were not allowed in that military area, so we would have
to wait until another day to try.
The strange incidents with the tape recorder continued. We would
put a clean cassette, just unwrapped from the cellophane, into
the machine for an interview or for recording an experiment. Sometimes.
before anyone had a chance to push the playback button, it would
seem as if an invisible hand had pushed it, and we would hear
the voice from the Spectra spacecraft. Sometimes we would push
the button just to test the clean tape, and the same thing would
happen. All I can say is that I witnessed this phenomenon, I could
not explain it, and I was wishing it wouldn't happen. Maybe my
psychic power could work the button, but what about that voice?
Where did it come from?
It was one thing to believe in bending objects, telepathy and
the starting up of broken watches - but contact from outer space
was another thing altogether. There's a limit to what we can accept.
Just for me to recount this here is enough to make anyone think
that I'm lying or have flipped my lid. I certainly can understand
that. But after all the things that have happened and continue
to happen, I think it would be wrong not to report it.
Andrija wrote about these events in great detail in his book.
As a scientist, he was sticking his neck out much more than I
was, since I don't have a scientific reputation to maintain. His
book was a little too technical and complicated for me, but he
did report what happened without exaggerating it, as many people
think he must have.
Many incidents he reports sound like science fiction. But Iris
and I experienced them right along with him; we know they happened.
During this period the testers wanted to see if the apparent materialization
and dematerialization could happen under controlled conditions.
Andrija wrote down the identifying numbers of a ball-point pen
and a brass refill cartridge inside it. He put the pen in a wooden
box and closed the lid. I held my hand above the box for several
minutes. I did not touch it.
Finally, when I felt that something had happened, I told Bentov
and Andrija to open the box to see if the pen had dematerialised.
The pen was still there. They picked it up to examine it and discovered
that the brass cartridge had disappeared from inside the pen.
There was no rational explanation, of course. It was somehow stranger
that only the cartridge had disappeared rather than the whole
pen.
A few days earlier, I had picked up the phone to hear the computer-like
voice from the tapes instruct me to take a camera to a specific
location in Tel Aviv. There, it said, I would be able to photograph
this alleged spacecraft Spectra. I rushed with Shipi to the spot,
which was on Petah Tikvah Road, and there, after we had waited
awhile, an oval object appeared in the sky over the Israeli Army
headquarters. There, in the presence of several witnesses, I took
a picture that shows an object resembling what Shipi and I saw.
Right on the heels of the disappearance of the ball-point pen
cartridge, another mysterious thing happened. By then I was getting
what seemed to be impulses or signals one after the other. I suppose
you could call them hunches, but they were more than that. Often
my watch would jump ahead to a certain time, and I'd have an urge
to go to a certain place at the time indicated. This happened
on December 7, 1971. I told Andrija that I felt we had to drive
to a suburb east of Tel Aviv, where there might be another encounter
with the spacecraft, or whatever it was. Andrija, Iris, and I
drove that night to an ordinary suburban area with lots of houses;
it was not countryside by any means. Near an open area that looked
like some kind of excavation, we saw a bluish-white pulsating
light, something like a strobe light. Some kind of inner presence
was urging me to approach it. The three of us got out of the car,
and we all heard an electronic sound, almost like the sound of
crickets. I was immediately drawn to the light. I think I told
the others to stay back. There seemed to be some massive object
under the light, which was still pulsating.
As I got nearer, I felt myself go into a trance-like state. Everything
was vague, hazy. I felt I was inside something. It was hard to
tell why, but the atmosphere felt different. I think I saw some
panels, but I was too dazed to remember. Then a shape that was
dark and impossible to distinguish put something into my hands.
Suddenly I found myself outside again. I got scared. I started
running back to Andrija and Iris. It wasn't until I reached them
that I was aware of what was in my hands. It was the ball-point
refill cartridge that had disappeared from the wooden box.
Andrija checked the serial number. It was the one he had written
down on the day of the experiment: #347299. He had not let me
see the number before, as part of the control for the test.
I was in a state of shock for several days after that. It was
another impossible thing on top of several earlier ones that I
still couldn't take in, and yet it had happened. And it made me
reaise for the first time that, whatever the energy powers were,
they were not from me. They came from some kind of intelligence
that to me reconfirmed the reality of God.
It is very difficult for me to unravel my basic feelings about
the UFO incidents, the metallic voices on tape, the materializations
and dematerializations. It is hard for me to believe that the
energies behind the powers are really beings, or that they are
really extraterrestrial. I think they are intelligent energies.
I don't want to put a form to them. I've never gone to synagogues
or to church. But since I believe in God and in higher civilizations
outside this planetary system and this galaxy, I can accept what
has been happening.
I am convinced that there is no such thing as science fiction,
that what is imagined in the mind a science fiction writer will
eventually take place, or it would never have appeared in his
mind. Maybe it was real in the past. More likely, it will be real
in the future. I believe there is no such thing as time. I don't
think we can ever really reach the core of full understanding,
because we are human beings, and our minds are limited. My mind
is not big enough to reach higher levels, but I do believe that
anything is possible. It is very complex and difficult for me
to explain. Maybe God is the fuel of our souls, the fuel for our
going on to higher levels, and this is what keeps us going.
While all these unbelievable events were going on - there were
so many it would be repetitive to describe them all - I was of
course seeing Iris, but the memory of Yaffa was still with me.
I saw Yaffa only at rare times, but my deepest love was still
for her. The sad day finally came when she said that she could
not go on, it was too much of a strain on her marriage, and it
would be better if we stopped seeing each other. It really broke
my heart to know I would never see her again. I hardly wanted
to go on living. For weeks I saw her in my mind before going to
sleep. I saw her in my dreams, and I saw her when I woke up in
the morning. I could think of nothing else but that she was gone,
that I had to take it and rebuild myself through a full love with
Iris. I did love Iris, but my love for Yaffa was special. No two
loves are the same.
After the long series of tests and experiences with Andrija, we
decided that I should go to America to be tested in some of the
big institutions and universities there. I was still afraid that
I wouldn't be able to repeat the things I could do in Israel.
The idea of a big laboratory still scared me. I thought it might
be better to go somewhere in Europe first to see if I could perform
outside of Israel, and maybe to meet some scientists in Europe
before I went to America.
A friend of mine, the Israeli singer Zmira Henn, called me to
say that a friend of hers in Germany, who had heard all about
me, would like to manage my appearances in that country. She told
me that her friend, whose name was Yasha Katz, would give me a
very good contract and that I would like him and could trust him.
I finally decided to go to Germany in the spring of 1972, and
to America later. Meanwhile, Andrija returned to the United States
to join with Edgar Mitchell and other scientists in lining up
the formal research that he hoped would scientifically confirm
what had been going on. He was forming what he called a Theory
Group, which was to be headed by Ted Bastin of Cambridge. Andrija
was positive that nothing I was doing would be taken seriously
until I had gone through a long series of rigorous tests by established
scientists in the best possible institutions.
Shipi went with me to Germany. We had grown more like brothers
all the time. His parents agreed that it would be a good learning
experience while he was waiting for induction into the Israeli
Army. He could help out with the tour that Yasha Katz was lining
up. I wanted badly to take Iris, too, but it was not possible.
She cried in my arms the night before we left, but we knew we
would see each other again after I got more experience in the
world outside of Israel. Shipi and I took an El Al plane to Germany,
and everybody came to see us off - my parents, Shipi's parents,
Hannah, Iris. We said a sad goodbye just before we boarded the
plane and took off.
Yasha met us at the airport. He was a warm and friendly man, with
a crinkly face, sensitive eyes, and a lot of enthusiasm about
our prospects in Germany. I liked him right away. He was planning
to demonstrate to reporters how these energy forces worked. After
it became clear that the powers were a real and valid phenomenon,
he would arrange for lecture-demonstrations of the kind we had
been doing in Israel. The controversy over whether or not I might
be a magician started right away in the German press. But we got
a lot of coverage, especially when the Munich newspaper Bild-Zeitung
decided to do a six-part series on me. It was a pure publicity
buildup, but Yasha said that it was important in laying the groundwork
for the lecture appearances.
Yasha urged me to try new experiments to get the attention of
the press. I told him I'd be glad to try but could never be positive
that things would work 100 per cent of the time. I informed Yasha
that I often failed altogether.
One reporter on the series asked me: "Uri, what can you do
that will be very big, astounding, and that sort of thing? For
instance, could you do something like stop a cable car in midair?"
There was a large funicular line not far from Munich that was
advertised as one of the strongest in the world. He had that one
in mind. I laughed when he suggested it. Then I said to myself:
"Now, wait a minute. Maybe I can do it. If I can bend metal,
maybe something in the mechanism would bend enough to stop the
cable cars harmlessly."
I was aware that such a thing would be good publicity and a real
challenge. Before we decided to try it, we checked with a lawyer,
because even if it wasn't dangerous there might be a lot of complaints.
The lawyer found no objection. Yasha, Shipi, and I got into one
of the cars, along with the reporters.
It was a crazy idea. As we went up and down several times, I kept
concentrating on the cars to stop them. It didn't work. I gave
up and announced that we might as well quit. The reporters were
really disappointed. On the way down I was talking to a reporter
about the scenery, when suddenly the cable car stopped right in
midair. There was terrific confusion; the control people didn't
know what had happened. A mechanic with us in our car gave me
a funny look and jumped to the telephone to call the control center.
They knew I was trying to stop the cars, but they were completely
bewildered about what made them stop and how. Finally the control
center announced that the main switch had flipped off for no explainable
reason. Someone flipped it on, and the thing started up again.
Nothing else seemed to be out of the ordinary. The cars had just
stopped when the switch flipped.
By the time we got down to the base a lot of excited people were
milling around. The operators invited us to dinner afterward,
and people couldn't stop talking about it.
The reporters were hungry for more. They asked me if I would try
to stop an escalator in a big department store in Munich. I couldn't
resist this challenge either, ridiculous as the idea seemed. I
wanted to see if the cable car was just a fluke. The story of
the cable car was making headlines all over Germany, especially
Munich, and Yasha was confident that an encore would help the
appearances to follow.
We went to a huge department store in Munich and went up and down
so many times between the first and second floors that people
must have thought we were crazy. Still surprised about the cable
car, I didn't have any idea whether this stunt was going to work.
After something like twenty round trips the escalator suddenly
stopped, to my surprise as much as everybody else's. And again
the headlines trumpeted the story across Germany. There was a
serious side to the trip to Germany, too. Quite naturally, the
German press wanted to know if there was a scientific basis for
these events. It was arranged for me to meet in an informal session
with Dr. Freidbert Karger of the Max Planck Institute of Plasma
Physics.
In the presence of the reporter who was following me for four
days and a Bild staff photographer, Dr. Karger volunteered
a ring of his, which he held in his hand the entire time. He was
so cautious that he never took his eyes off the ring and never
let me handle it. I touched it gently and concentrated on it.
The ring not only bent out of shape but cracked in two places.
The interview that appeared in the paper tells a little more about
what happened:
Bild: "What happened in the cable car - which was
allegedly braked by Geller's unknown power and brought to a standstill?"
Dr. Karger: "Obviously it was not an electrical effect, but
a mechanical change, which for the time being is inexplicable.
In Uri's presence, without being touched by anyone - the switch
dropped. How? We don't know."
Bild: "Does science seriously regard as credible these
and other similar incidents?"
Dr. Karger: "In universities all over the world, you will
find an ever growing number of departments of research in this
type of Phenomena."
In Munich Uri Geller had altered a decorative ring that belonged
to Dr. Karger. The ring was not only bent, but it was also cracked
in two places. Immediately after the demonstration, Bild
asked Dr. Karger, "Couldn't the ring be split just by applying
a strong pressure?"
Dr. Karger: "No."
Bild: "A laser beam?"
Dr. Karger: "Nonsense."
Bild: "Did Geller have any chance at all to play a
'trick' on you?"
Dr. Karger: "Actually he could only have tried to hypnotize
me. This I consider not very likely. A disassociation through
hypnosis would have been the 'trick' possibility."
In the Max Planck Institute, Dr. Karger's colleague, the physics
engineer Manfred Lipa, 27, closely examined the cracked ring.
Lipa: "If Dr. Karger had not told me anything, I would state:
The ring has been mechanically altered by a tool, with a pair
of pliers, for example, or with a small chisel or a hammer. Then
near the crack site, one can ascertain clear signs of reworking."
But Dr. Karger assured us, "During the demonstration I never
took my eyes off the ring or let it out of my hand. Geller only
touched it lightly with his fingers." Also the Bild photographer,
Joachim Voigt, who was present during the demonstration confirmed:
"If Uri had been able to conjure up a pair of pliers, or
any other tool, I would have noticed it - I was fully aware."
Uri Geller - a phenomenon? A charlatan? Or a great artist, who
with elegant tricks keeps everybody including science holding
its breath? Heretofore it has not been possible to unlock the
secret of this uncanny man.
Dr. Karger summed up the incident for reporters:
"The powers of this man are a phenomenon that in theoretical
physics cannot be explained. Science already knows of similar
cases. It is like atomic science. At the turn of the century,
it was already known as a reality. It was just that at that time
one could not yet explain it in terms of physics."
Dr. Karger wanted to start a research program of his own as soon
as possible. He put in an overseas call to Andrija in New York.
Because the plans with Captain Mitchell and other American scientists
were moving along at the time, Dr. Karger agreed instead to join
Andrija's Theory Group and postpone his own investigations until
later.
I could see how hard it would be to control all that was happening
for a concentrated research program. I faced the scientific studies
in America with mixed feelings. The material I was using in my
lecture demonstrations was pretty much under control and could
probably serve well for a start in the experiments. But how would
it be possible to tame the amazing and startling uncontrolled
events that lately had seemed to be taking me over? Only time
could tell. I would just have to go along and play it by ear.
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