9
THOSE WEEKS OF barbecues in the midst of the fighting were carefree
for me. I had not returned to school. Then one day I found my
mother and stepfather had disappeared from the hotel. They hadn't
told anyone where they were going, and I didn't have any idea
myself. I was worried. Something told me to go to a hospital.
There were several, and I didn't know which. I started walking
down the streets of Nicosia without any idea where I was going.
After about a half-hour, I saw the big general hospital in Nicosia.
I hesitated a moment, then went straight through the main door,
walked into the elevator, and went up to the fourth floor. No
one had told me anything, but I didn't have any doubt as to where
to go and what to do. I walked out of the elevator, turned left,
and went straight down the hall to a room with an open door.
In the room I found my stepfather in bed and my mother sitting
beside him. My stepfather had had a heart attack and had been
rushed to the hospital. On are rival he had seemed in fair condition,
but the doctors were taking no chances. After that, he had to
take things easy and be careful of what he did.
It was a strange experience. My parents were absolutely stunned
to see me. I didn't know what steered me in the direction of the
hospital, or how I could possibly have known exactly what room
and floor to go to.
As my thirteenth birthday approached, the question of my bar mitzvah
came up. Of course, that was a very important thing for a boy
in Israel, but in Cyprus, where there were very few Jews, it presented
a loft of difficulties. With the constant fighting there was no
place to have the ceremony. When the time came, we held it at
the Israeli consulate. I had a friend named Peter who was about
my age, and we had our bar mitzvahs together there. I received
several books and a leather pencil case, which I loved. The combined
ceremony was quiet and simple.
The time finally came when I had to go back to school. My mother
told me one day, "Look, we've found another boarding school
that is not Or away from the house, about a half an hour's drive.
It's up on the hills near Nicosia, and it's a Catholic school."
"What do you mean by that?"
"Well, the teachers are monks, and we've heard it's a very
good school."
"What do you mean, monks?"
She explained to me a little about Catholics and their beliefs,
which I knew a little about from Scripture lessons at the American
school. Being Jewish, I had been excused from many of the Christian
religious activities, so I was pretty ignorant about the New Testament.
The school was on a hill, and the buildings were made of big yellowish
blocks of what must have been sandstone. It had a beautiful entrance,
and the garden was laid out nicely. (The first thing I noticed
was that two sides of the garden were lined with bushes cut in
the shape of crosses.)
I liked the way the school looked. It was new and clean, and the
floors inside the buildings were made of marble. The dormitory
was upstairs, a long room with about fifty beds in it. There were
basketball courts, tennis courts, volleyball courts, and soccer
fields. Surrounding the school were rocks and caves, with no other
houses in sight.
The school, called Terra Santa College, was in some way connected
to the Vatican. There were nuns on the staff as well as monks,
working as both teachers and administrators. Father Massamino
and Father Camillo ran the school. Then there were two other monks,
both American - Brother Mark and Brother Bernard. I liked Brother
Bernard very much. He was to have a lot of influence on my thinking.
Other, on the teaching staff were, laymen, not directly part of
the church. One tough, blustery teacher, Major Jones, who taught
us history, had been in the British Army. Mrs. Agrotis was an
English-woman married to a Greek. I grew to like her very much.
I began to make good friends among the students there. A favorite
of mine was Ardash, a chubby Armenian fellow who was a genius
in mechanics. He was a day student who lived near the school.
He used to collect all kinds of auto parts and rebuild cars.
When I visited him, which was often, he would borrow his father's
car and sometimes let me drive it on one of the dirt roads near
his house. That was exciting. I also learned a lot about racing
cars from him.
Gunther Konig, a blond, good-looking German boy, was another good
friend. He was extremely neat, got good marks, and was very clever
in mathematics. I somehow had the feeling that his father had
been a Nazi and that he was a little ashamed of this. There was
also an American from California named Bob Brooks. Joseph Charles.
whose father was Greek and mother was English, was probably my
best friend, a very funny guy who was always making jokes and
who boarded at the school with me. My other friends were all day
students, and I couldn't see as much of them during the school
week.
The rules of the school were strict. The Fathers wouldn't put
up with any nonsense and wouldn't hesitate to deliver a sharp
ruler across the knuckles if you strayed out of line. We ate in
a big dining room, and I wasn't crazy about the food at all.
Gunther, Joseph, Bob, and I used to sneak out of the school grounds
and explore the enormous number of caves that lay just outside
the grounds in the hills sure rounding the school. You didn't
dare go into them without a flashlight and chalk to mark the path
you took inside the caves. Otherwise, you would be lost and finished
for good. There was a story about two boys who had entered one
of the caves before the school was built and never did find their
way out. Their bodies were found many weeks later.
When you entered from the hot, dry sun, it was like going into
a refrigerator. You could go into one cave, find a little opening,
squeeze yourself through it, and come out into another huge cave.
This in turn would lead to another huge cave, which in turn would
lead to another, and so on.
I used to like to enter one big cave alone, then slip myself into
another hole. There would be a long tunnel, and I'd have to crawl
on my hands and knees until I reached another hole that led into
a smaller cave. From that smaller one, I would go through another
slit, which turned into a tunnel sloping down, down, down. You
could feel it getting colder and could see the wetness on the
walls and the water dripping from them. Then, after about a five-minute
walk, you would reach a point with four different ways leading
away from it. You had to take the right path or you would be lost.
I knew which one to take in that cave, 'because I used to go there
many times. It led to a huge opening where the entire bottom of
the cave was covered with a pond.
It was like another world. I could hear the water dripping in
the pond, and I would turn off the flashlight and listen in absolute
pitch darkness. I found peace down there. I wasn't frightened.
It was just peaceful.
We got punished many, many times by the Fathers and Brothers,
because it was dangerous and they knew it. They told us the story
of the boys who had perished. I guess it must have been true.
It could easily have happened.
One day I found another cave that was farther away from the school
than any we had explored. I was alone that day and excited by
the chance to explore an entirely new cave all by myself. I found
that there were many caves inside after I entered. I decided to
go into one of them to see where it led. I had my flashlight and
my chalk with me. I marked my way carefully with the chalk, 'because
I knew how dangerous it could be without these markings to follow
back. As I went farther into the second cave, it seemed to have
no end. After several minutes I decided that I'd better not continue
alone in this strange cave. I had already come a long distance
into it, and I figured I had taken as big a chance as I could
for the first time.
I turned around to go back, and to my shock I couldn't find a
single chalk mark anywhere. I pointed my light everywhere, but
I couldn't see a single arrow. I was lost, completely. It is a
terrible feeling to 'be lost underground in the pitch darkness.
I was in a panic. I was getting cold. My sense of time had left
me. I wondered how long the batteries could last in my flashlight.
I started running. I had no idea which direction 1 was running
in, and there still wasn't a sign of a chalk arrow anywhere.
I sat down and waited and prayed to God. I guess I must have prayed
for an hour or more. I was terrified. There was nowhere I could
go, nowhere I could turn. I had turned my light to every single
section of the walls on all sides of me, looking for my arrows.
It was absolutely hopeless. And then an incredible thing happened.
In the silence, I heard the unmistakable bark of a dog. I would
have known that sound anywhere. I shined my light in the direction
of the bark. There was Joker, as big as life. I was so happy.
I grabbed him and we played together for several minutes. He licked
me and scratched my chest with his paws. Then I held his collar,
and he led me directly out of the cave. We walked home together,
playing all the way.
My stepfather's hotel was on 12 Pantheon Street in Nicosia. It
was at least forty minutes away by car from the area of the caves,
if not more - and much more by walking or running up those hills.
I tried to figure how Joker had known I was in trouble, how he
knew where I was, how he found the cave, how he appeared there
out of the blue. Things were to happen many, many years later
that might explain it. At that moment in Cyprus, I could do nothing
but wonder.
The troubles in Cyprus had not stopped. The school looked straight
down on Nicosia, and we could hear the shooting and see some of
the explosions from bombs. I didn't know quite what to think about
it. The Greeks wanted independence, the Turks wanted the island
divided in half, the British wanted to stay in Cyprus. I didn't
know who was right.
On a visit to Nicosia I saw a horrible scene that still stays
with me. A British soldier was walking down the middle of the
street with his wife and carrying his daughter on his shoulders.
I was idly watching this soldier when I saw a Greek sneak up behind
him and shoot him in the back. I stood there petrified. The soldier
collapsed, the daughter fell from his shoulders, and his wife
screamed in agony. Everybody in the street ran and hid. There
was nothing else to do. The shots of snipers could come from anywhere,
from roofs, from doorways, from alleys. The British soldiers would
walk up and down the streets carrying machine guns, looking to
right and left, never knowing whether a bullet was going to come
at them or not. Not only were the Greeks killing the English,
but the English were killing the Greeks, and the Turks and the
Greeks were killing each other.
Women and children were murdered and left in their bathtubs. Bodies
were hung on meat hooks and left in the streets. At night you
could hear the shots, the screams, and the sirens. It was there
all the time, and there was no getting used to it.
In spite of the chance to make good friends at the school, I still
felt lonely. From one point on the hill where the school stood
I could look down on Nicosia and spot the area where my home was.
I couldn't see my stepfather's hotel, but I could pick the area
out. Loneliness would come over me at those times, and I would
have to fight it. I kept wishing I could be a day student, the
way many of my friends were, but of course it was too far to go
back and forth, especially with the fighting and the troubles
going on.
Being at a school with boys and teachers of various nationalities,
I found I could pick up languages easily. I was speaking English
without any trouble, and I picked up quite a bit of Greek. Of
course, I could already speak Hungarian, Hebrew, and some German,
because my parents used these languages. In my early years I thought
in Hebrew, but now I usually think in English.
The strange energy powers continued to show up from time to time,
but I didn't use them on watches. I still remembered all the teasing
I used to take back in Tel Aviv, and I didn't want that to start
up again. But I had some problems. I was not a bad student, but
I certainly wasn't a good one. During some examinations, when
I was stuck for an answer, I would wonder what to put down on
the exam paper. I would stare at the rest of the class, and most
of them seemed to be doing very well. One time, during a math
test, I looked at the back of Gunther's head. He was one of the
best in the class. I suddenly saw his answers on the screen of
my mind.
It was sort of like a television screen in my head. I was getting
Gunther's answers on that screen, just as I used to get them with
my mother when she came home from playing cards. I never feel
these things. I see them inside my head. They appear in the front
of my mind, my forehead. The screen is greyish. Now on that screen
I get things. If someone thinks of a drawing, a number, or words,
I see them in writing.
So on this screen I received Gunther's answers. I passed that
exam with flying colors. Then I came to depend on it. I would
pick the brightest kid in the subject, concentrate on the back
of his head, and come up with his answers. I didn't think of it
as copying then, but, of course, when you come right down to it
that's what it was. The only trouble was that, as I continued
doing it, I used to get the same mistakes the others were making,
The teachers began to suspect me of copying. I protested that
I wasn't - which I thought was true. The teachers wouldn't listen
to me. During examinations, they placed me at a desk in a far
corner of the room where I couldn't possibly see the papers of
any of the other students, and they guarded me personally to see
that there was no chance of my copying.
But that didn't make any difference. I would just look at the
best student in the class from a distance and get his answer.
The teachers were baffled, because I was still getting the correct
answers as well as the mistakes. They didn't know what to do,
and I didn't have the nerve to tell them what was going on.
Mrs. Agrotis, who taught English, got very interested in me about
then. We all liked her. She was about forty, with a pretty face,
and very good-hearted. She never punished or beat the children,
as some of the teachers did. One time when she was guarding me
during an exam, I began picking up her thoughts, in words, on
this crazy screen in my mind. She seemed to be worried about something
that had happened at the market the day before, and I forgot myself
and asked her about it. She was taken aback. Another time she
had just come from her doctor's office, and I asked her if everything
went all right at the doctor's. She was shocked, because no one
knew that she had been there. I got the thought by seeing the
word "doctor" on my screen, and then I also saw her
in her doctor's office. This kind of information lasts only for
a split second in my mind. But l can tell that I'm not making
anything up, because what I see is not the least bit relevant
to anything I'm thinking at the time.
Mrs. Agrotis and I used to talk after class. She was sure that
this wasn't something ordinary happening. I finally bent a key
and a spoon for her, and she was really amazed. The word soon
got around again, although no one teased me the way they had when
I was very young. I showed some of what I could do to Gunther,
Bob, and Joseph. They were very impressed.
Soon I became aware that the teachers were having arguments about
me. I would sometimes be asked to go to the stationery supply
room, which was next to a room where the teachers gathered, and
I could hear them are Suing. One would say I had supernatural
powers. Another would say that whatever had happened was nothing
but pure coincidence. Another would say it was all tricks.
Then each would tell the others what had happened in his class.
I have to admit that I got a kick out of listening to them. They
kept asking things like: What is he? What is he doing? What is
he up to? Since I hardly knew myself, I couldn't have answered
them.
After I had started two or three broken watches, one of the women
teachers one day brought four broken watches, very old ones, into
class. I passed my hands over each of them, and they all started
working. This raised my stock with many of the teachers, which
I didn't mind at all. The whole faculty was now really amazed
and shocked, including the Fathers and the Brothers.
I am still in touch with some of them today. One of the Brothers
is now in Chicago, and I had a nice talk with him about
those days. Mrs. Agrotis read about me in the British newspaper
News of the World in December 1973, when so many objects
had bent all over England after my television appearance there.
She was still living in Nicosia. Not knowing my address, she wrote
the newspaper:
Dear Sir:
Uri Geller was a pupil of mine for five years in Cyprus. Even
while so young he astonished his friends at the College with his
amazing feats, i.e., bent forks, etc. The stories he told them
of the wonderful scientific things that could, and would, be done
by him, seem to be coming true. I for one do believe in him, he
was outstanding in every way, with a brilliant mind, certainly
one does not meet a pupil like him very often.
Please convey my best wishes to him when next you meet. I only
hope I will be in the U.K. next time he appears on TV. I would
like to meet him again and remind him of the happy years spent
in Cyprus.
Yours sincerely,
(Mrs. ) Julie Agrotis
It was interesting to get a copy of that letter, so many years
after those school days. It reminded me of how long the strange
energy forces have been with me, and how they aroused controversy
and disbelief even back in the 1950s, back in school. I also still
hear from some of my friends there, especially Bob Brooks, who
is in California now working with TV Guide. Joseph Charles
also came to visit me in New York one time. Each had read about
me and remembered all the strange things that happened back at
the school in Cyprus.
There were others who remain in my mind. There was an old, very
learned Turkish man who was the keeper of the large mosque in
Nicosia. We all liked him, I think because he had a mystical quality
about him, He would let us into the mosque during off hours and
take us to look at the big pillars and the strange interior, with
its spiral staircases and mysterious atmosphere. He used to tell
us stories about the Turkish wars, and how brave the Turks were.
But in the meantime I would be hearing elsewhere about how brave
the Greeks were, and each side would be telling how important
it was for its people to be independent. I would sometimes talk
to the Turk about my belief in God, and he would point out that
the Jews, the Muslims, and the Christians all had the same God;
he believed that all men should not only love God but also love
each other.
I wondered how we might really put ideas like that into practice.
We really had to do it if the world was to survive. With all the
terror and the horror in the streets of Cyprus, and with the Arabs
and the Israelis at each other's throats, this seemed a long way
off. Even then, back in Cyprus in the late 1950s, I was thinking
that I would try to work for peace and love in the world, even
though it seemed impossible. Each group was praising its own God,
and yet that God was really the same for all of them. However,
few of them were living up to their own faiths, which called for
love and forgiveness. It seemed we were all lost in the dark caves,
and there was no dog like Joker to come and lead us out.
One bright winter morning I was sitting in a classroom when Brother
Bernard came into the room and told the teacher he would like
to speak to me. This hardly ever happened. He took me out to the
hall and told me that someone had come to the school to take me
home. When I asked him why, he said that something had happened
to my stepfather. And my first question was: Is my mother all
right? I was very concerned. He reassured me, and I went down
the corridor where I met a friend of my mother's. She told me
that my stepfather was very sick, that he had another heart attack.
Somehow I knew right away that he was going to die.
As the car started down the hill toward Nicosia, I burst out crying.
While I felt badly about my stepfather, I never had such a deep
personal feeling for him. My immediate concern was my mother,
and what was going to happen to her. All kinds of emotions broke
loose. I hated living at the school, and yet now that I knew I
would be leaving it I felt bad about it, but glad at the same
time.
At the hotel I found my mother sitting beside my stepfather's
bed. His eyes were closed, and he seemed to be sleeping. He died
that night. At the funeral, as my mother cried, I knew that she
was both grieving and worrying about what we were going to do
now that Ladislas was gone.
We were alone now, my mother and I, and I knew I would have to
take on many responsibilities and try to help run the inn. I would
say this was my real bar mitzvah, because, I suddenly became a
man that day.
I started going to school as a day student, which made me feel
better. The hotel passed down to my mother, and we set about to
keep it going. The property was only rented, my stepfather hadn't
owned it, so we had to continue to pay the rent and try to make
ends meet. My stepfather had also had a music shop in partnership
with another man, and his interest there had to be sold while
my mother and I tried to carry on the work at the hotel. The warfare
was making things tough. Many of the cabarets were closing, and
performers had always been our best customers. Everybody loved
my mother, as well as her Hungarian cooking. All the guests who
had stayed there before came back or planned to come back. Our
problems stemmed from the times and the troubles.
Everyone at school was kind to me after the funeral. Father Massamino
called me into his office, which was a very rare thing for him
to do with anyone. He was a tall, powerful man with glasses and
always wore a little cap. He called me over to his desk and told
me he had been sorry to hear about my stepfather's death. Then
he told me he wanted to give me a little present.
From under his shirt he drew out a chain with a cross on it, and
near the cross on the same chain was a mezuzah, a Jewish symbol
that I had never seen him wear. He said, "I want you to have
this." And he took it off the chain and placed it in my hand,
then closed my hand over the mezuzah. He told me that he believed
in my religion very much. I had never talked to him personally
before, and I was moved by his gesture.
With my stepfather's interest in the music shop sold out, my mother
felt we were able to rent a newer and maybe larger inn. I was
feeling the sense of responsibility very much now, so I got on
my bicycle and rode all over Nicosia to look at every building
I could find with a "For Rent" sign on it. I guess people
must have thought it was funny for a fifteen-year-old boy to come
to the door and ask what the rent would be. But I was determined
to find the best possible place for my mother. I came upon a nice,
fairly modern villa with eleven rooms. It was on a quiet street
and at one time had been a club. It was quite beautiful.
I went home and told my mother about it. After she had looked
at it, she decided that it would be a good move. The rent was
not too high, and we got ready to move in. The new responsibilities
I was taking on gave me a sense of independence, of growing up.
I made all the arrangements for the trucks and drivers to come
and take the furniture from the old inn and did all the planning,
down to tipping the movers.
After we got settled, I continued on in school, bicycling up the
long hill from the town of Nicosia every day. Going up was terribly
difficult, and I was practically exhausted when I arrived. But
coming back I never even had to touch the pedals - that wonderful
sense of freedom again. It was a strange time, this halfway period
between boyhood and manhood.
I always had a good imagination, and I would have all kinds of
future dreams and future realities planned. I wasn't afraid to
talk about them to Mrs. Agrotis, who had a sympathetic ear. I
used to tell her the most far-out stories of what I believed in.
I believed that there was definitely life outside of our planet,
for example, and my instincts told me such a thing was not a myth
or a science-fiction story. She listened and was fascinated. She
would ask me to tell these fantasies to some of the younger classes
she taught. I would tell them that I'm in a rocket, and I'm traveling
at great speeds, and I'm arriving at very strange places with
strange colors.
Mrs. Agrotis wanted to know more about the telepathy that kept
occurring during exams or other times, about how I could read
teachers' minds. She sometimes used to give us a half-hour in
class to write a fast composition. Joseph Charles sat at least
five rows behind me. I never moved from my chair, and he didn't
from his. Yet several times my composition was the same as his,
almost word for word. She would ask him: "Joseph, did you
copy from Uri?" He would of course deny it. And I would then
look at his paper and say: "My God, it's nearly exactly the
same thing!" She kept asking: How did I do these things?
And the only thing I could tell her was: "I don't know. I
just don't know."
And I didn't. All I knew was that I sometimes knew what other
people were thinking. It really didn't make life any easier. In
fact, with all the doubts on the part of the teachers who thought
I was deliberately cheating, it made life harder. It was something
of a strain.
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