INTRODUCTION
Once I realized I was involved in an event of immense importance,
I began to retrace those incidents in my life which brought Uri
and me together.
The first of these concerns Dr. D. G. Vinod, a Hindu scholar and
sage from Poona, India, whom I briefly met by chance in New York
City in December 1951. Two months later, on February 16, 1952,
I had my first serious meeting with him. At that time he surprised
me by asking permission to hold my right ring finger at the middle
joint with his right thumb and index finger. He said that he used
this form of contact with a person to read his past and his future.
I agreed. He did this for about a minute, whistling between his
teeth as though he were trying to find a pitch. Then he leaned
back in his chair, and for an hour told me my life story with
utter precision, as though he were reading out of a book. His
accuracy about the past was extraordinary. He then predicted such
a rosy future for me as an Arjuna figure that I was embarrassed.
Nevertheless, I realized that here was intelligence on a scale
I had not imagined to exist. I promised Dr. Vinod that I would
call him to the laboratory in Maine as soon as my next experiment
was ready.
As it turned out, this promised meeting was not to be held for
nearly another year. On December 31, 1952, Dr. Vinod and I took
a plane from New York to Maine. We landed in Augusta at 7:30 P.M.,
and Hank Jackson, the administrator of the laboratory, the Round
Table Foundation, was there to meet us. We drove over the country
roads in the snow, chatting all the way. We entered the great
hall of the laboratory, and without saying a word or even taking
off his overcoat, Dr. Vinod found his way to the library and sat
down on a sofa. Hank and I followed him. We realized that he had
gone into a trance. We sat opposite him, waiting expectantly.
Curiously enough, the house was always bustling with activity,
but on this New Year's Eve there was not a sound in the house
from child, man, woman, or animal. There was the hushed silence
of expectancy as Hank and I watched our entranced sage.
Then, at exactly 9 P.M., a deep sonorous voice came out of Dr.
Vinod's mouth, totally unlike his own high-pitched, soft voice,
saying in perfect English without an accent:
M calling: We are Nine Principles and Forces, personalities
if working in complete mutual implication. We are forces, and
the nature of our work is to accentuate the positive, the evolutional,
and the teleological aspects of existence. By teleology I do not
mean the teleology of human derivation in a multidimensional concept
of existence. Teleology will be understood in terms of a different
ontology. To be simple, we accentuate certain directions as will
fulfill the destiny of creation.
We propose to work with you in some essential respects with
the relation of contradiction and contrariety. We shall negate
and revise part of your work, by which I mean the work as presented
by you. The point is that we want to begin altogether at a different
dimension, though it is true that your work has itself led up
to this.
I deeply appreciate your dedicatedness (sic) to the
great cause of peace which is a fulfillment of finitesimal existences.
Peace is not warlessness. Peace is the integral fruitage of personality.
We have designed to utilize you and thus to fulfill you. Peace
is a process and will be revealed only progressively. You have
it in plenty, I mean the patience which is so deeply needed in
this magnificent adventure. But today, at the moment of our
advent, the most eventful and spectacular phase of your work
begins.
Andrija Puharich (AP ): "It is helpful to have your guidance."
We don't guide, nor do we seek guidance, although we appreciate
the sense in which you mean it. All of us, including yourselves,
can claim no better than being the expressive instruments and
avenues of this purpose.
Einstein has privately felt the need of correcting himself,
Infinitization of any mass, M1, according to him,(1) can be achieved
by equating it with:
An implication of this theorem, as yet unrevealed, will solve
the problem of the superconscious.
The whole group of concepts has to be revised. The problem
of psychokinesis, clairvoyance, etc., at the present stage is
all right, but profoundly misleading - permit us to say the truth.
Soon we will come to basic universal categories of explicating
the superconscious. Just as Jesus said, "It is not work,
but grace." A fruitful, creative approach to the superconscious
is indeed a progressive reception of grace.
We cannot really go on with experimentation in this direction,
but if we get seven times the electrical equivalent of the human
body - if we get it seven times - do you know what would result?
It would result in sevenon of the mass of electricity.
That's a very strange term, but it's true. If it gains sevenfold,
corresponding approximation to light velocity will be ninety-nine
per cent. That is the point where human personality has to be
stretched in order to achieve infinitization. This is one of the
most secret insights.
See Appendix One for the philosophy of the Nine.
(1) This is a form of the well-known Lorentz-Einstein Transformation
equation where c^2 is velocity of light squared, and v is velocity.
Here, M1=E, energy.
When Dr. Vinod awoke from his trance after some ninety minutes
of speech by the Nine, he had no recollection or knowledge of
what had been said. Hank and I worked for a month with Dr. Vinod,
listening to the profound wisdom of the Nine. It was a deeply
moving experience, and we really believed every word that we heard
based purely on the internal evidence. This work was interrupted
in February 1953 when I had to serve as a captain in the U. S.
Army during the Korean War.
What was lacking in our study of Dr. Vinod and the Nine was some
kind of external evidence for the reality of what was being said.
Such evidence was forthcoming and occurred when I returned to
the laboratory in Maine on a military leave.
On June 27, 1953, nine people met with Dr. Vinod at the Round
Table Foundation in Maine. They were Henry Jackson, Georgia Jackson,
Alice Bouverie, Marcella Du Pont, Carl Betz, Vonnie Beck, Arthur
Young, Ruth Young, and I.
Dr. Vinod sat on the floor in the lotus posture holding in his
hands a string of sacred beads, called rakshas. On his
lap was a simple copper plate nine inches in diameter. On the
floor to his side was a small statue of the Hindu god, Hanoum.
Thus, Dr. Vinod was in the center of a circle made up of the nine
people listed above. He entered a trance state at 12:15 A.M. He
spoke for about fifteen minutes and then one of the Nine, R. spoke
through him, saying:
Tonight we want to create Brahmins in this world. Brahmin means
a person dedicated to Brahman.
At this instant all nine observers in the fully lighted room saw
the appearance, in an instant, of what appeared to be a pile of
cotton threads about three feet from Dr. Vinod. It seemed to this
observer that the pile of thread had just popped right out of
the wood floor. Dr. Vinod, still in a trance state, leaned over
to pick up the threads. When he untangled them, he brought forth
loops of finely woven cotton cord. He handed one to each person
and there was exactly one loop for each. He asked each person
to slip the loop over the right shoulder and under the left arm.
What we had witnessed was the appearance of a material sub
stance from nowhere! All present were quite sure that the large
ball of cotton material had come from the floor and no place other
than the floor.
R spoke:
Has everyone received one? This is called the Yadnyobavita.
These are the sacred threads which Brahmins wear on their necks,
as soon as they are through with the ceremony. We have to
be born twice; unless we are threaded, we don't become
Brahmins. This is the sacred thread which makes the human
being the Brahmin. Each one of you becomes a
Brahmin on this full-moon day.
Alchemy had three different areas of function. It really
wanted to solve the problem of deterioration, disease,
and death. All metals are really gold in one way, but deteriorated
gold. So transformation of the lesser, grosser metals into
gold was one idea. The second was to find an elixir to
eliminate all disease from the human body, and the
third was to produce the nectar to eliminate death.
These three threads on this sacrificial thread stand for each
of these functions - altogether there are fifteen threads. I don't
know how many you have, that's perhaps the symbol of the
full moon. Of course, you all know that alchemy
is actually operative whenever we are forcing a crisis
on ourselves, or permitting a crisis to be forced on us,
we are exposed to alchemy. Of course, "Al"
means God, and "Kem" means Egypt; therefore Alchemy
is God of Egypt, and God of Egypt was this.
It's very strange that the life of Buddha had these
same three crises in it; the sight of disease, and
the sight of death, and the sight of old age, which
is deterioration. He had never been exposed to these crises.
He lived like a plant in a green room. Suddenly he came
across these three instances, as he was passing
through a street in a chariot. He came home
and he couldn't rest and asked himself, "Why must
the human body deteriorate? Why disease? Why death?"
And he went out of his palace at midnight. He
left a wife and newly born son.
I don't know why I'm speaking this, but I think it
has some reference to some of you already exposed
to emotional, spiritual,
and perhaps financial crisis. An Alchemist process to which
we are addressed - let us welcome it....
I cannot go into all the details of the meaning of these trance
utterances by Dr. Vinod. The material that was given would fill
another volume, and only a small sample is presented in Appendix
One to give a synoptic view of the philosophy of the Nine. We
took every known precaution against fraud, and the staff and I
became thoroughly convinced that we were dealing with some kind
of an extraordinary extraterrestrial intelligence. But for this
belief we had no solid proof in 1953.
Three years later, I was called to Mexico to help solve an archaeological
problem. With me was Peter Hurkos, one of the great telepathic
talents of modern times. Peter and I arrived in the colonial village
of Acambaro, Mexico, on July 26, 1956. Rooms had been reserved
for us at the only hotel in town. When we got there, we found
that the only two good rooms in the hotel had been given to an
American family by mistake. But it was late at night, so we accepted
two strange windowless rooms and planned to get more decent accommodations
by discussing the problem the next day with the Americans who
had been given our rooms.
In the morning we met the Americans, a Dr. and Mrs. Charles Laughead
from Whipple, Arizona. We could not understand why they were so
happy to see us and why they so gladly gave up their lovely, sunny
quarters in exchange for our drab, dark ones. When Dr. Laughead,
who was a medical doctor, found out that I was an M.D. and that
Peter was a psychic, he was beside himself with joy. He then told
us the following story:
"Through the assistance of a young man, who is a very fine
voice channel or medium, we have been in frequent communication
for over a year with the Brotherhood of one of the ancient Mystery
Schools in South America. These sessions covered a wide range
of subjects, from ancient history and life origins on this planet
to science and religion. This Brotherhood also served as a communication
center for contacts with intelligences on other planets and star
systems and on spacecraft. Some of these intelligences obviously
were not human and operated on energy and life support mechanisms
entirely foreign to our
thinking. Their knowledge and wisdom far exceeded our comprehension.
For simplicity, we referred to them as Space Beings or Space Brothers.
"In one of these sessions our attention was directed to the
story of the arrival on earth of men from outer space in very
ancient times. This landing took place on a small island near
Easter Island, called Mangareva. We were then told that the clay
figurines at Acambaro, Mexico, would corroborate by certain clues
the story about these early space travelers. We were then directed
to search out a possible location for continuing study and research
in Mexico, and on this scouting trip we naturally came to visit
the library of figurines at Acambaro.
"Because of the unusual nature of this meeting with you gentlemen
and the work under investigation, we feel you must be related
in some way to the unfolding story of the ancient mystery of man
in space, even though at the present time you may not have recall
of previous life cycles on this and on other planets.
"The voices of our mentors speaking through our young channel
sounded so authoritative that we felt impelled to follow through
with their suggestions and come to Mexico. And here we are, having
arrived only an hour before you. Are you not brothers from space?"
Dr. Laughead stared at us so intently as he said this that for
a moment I thought, "Maybe I am." But then Peter and
I looked at each other and burst out laughing. The whole idea
was just too absurd. Peter hastily said in his broken English,
"Meester, I'm born right in my modder's bed. I'm no space
mensch!"
We talked for an hour to these charming but naive people, to no
avail. They were firmly convinced of the authenticity of their
message. They coaxed us to admit our true space origins. We gently
but firmly backed away. We then bade them good-bye and went off
to take care of our business. During our stay there we carefully
avoided seeing the Laugheads again. This space-brothers talk was
just too wild for our tastes.
On August 15, 1956, I received a letter at the Round Table Foundation
from Dr. Laughead, mailed on August 12, from Whipple, Arizona.
The envelope was addressed to Dr. Andae Poharits (misspelled).
The letter, labeled by me as '`Test No. 1, read as follows:
Test
No. I
Dear Dr. Pharits [again misspelled].
It was indeed a pleasant surprise for us on our recent Mexican
tap to discover and make the acquaintance of others interested
in the same things we are interested in, particularly to find
another M.D. interested in and working in the field of parapsychological
research.
As you well know, a professional man that dares to venture into
this area is certain to have a lot of "pot shots" taken
at him, and I admire your courage in devoting your full time to
this study.
On the evening of August 11th, we received the two enclosed communications,
each through a different channel, and we were instructed to forward
them to you at once. [Author's note: I have labeled these enclosures
"Test No. 2."]
We were told that you would understand and would know what to
do concerning them. We were also instructed to send a copy to
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Young.
After leaving Acambaro we visited the Chicomostoc ruins near Zacatecas
where I had a pick up that my wife Lillian and I had lived there
about 1200 A.D. as Indians and that we had been brothers at that
time. We had started from there north on a journey which eventually
took us as far as Mesa Verde in Colorado, visiting Indian tribes
along the way. At Mesa Verde a great spacecraft landed and contact
was made at that time with the brothers of space.
We trust that our paths shall cross again and that which began
so strangely in an ancient Mexican town is but the beginning of
an interesting association.
Fraternally,
[signed] Charles
Laughead
I just couldn't believe what I was reading, especially when I
read the enclosures that I shall describe shortly. I decided to
use Peter Hurkos's proven ability at psychometry to assess this
note.
"Psychometry" is an old term used to describe a form
of extrasensory perception. In psychometry Peter takes an object
in his hands and simply recounts whatever mental impressions he
gets from it. (This is the way in which Peter would work with
the police; by touching objects belonging to missing persons,
he could get enough information so that the person would often
be found. ) With us was Harry Stone, another telepathic talent,
who often worked with Hurkos.
At 2 P.M. I handed Peter Dr. Laughead's letter, Test No. 1, sealed
in a brown opaque envelope. Here are Peter's psychometric impressions
in English:
"I must tell you, Andrija, this is not a fake. No, it is
not a fantasy. These people have found out something. There is
a professor here. There is a doctor in here, engineers. They don't
get pay from another country."
At this point Harry Stone wanted to participate in the reading.
So we handed him the Test No. 1 envelope.
"I see two lines, like a blowtorch, but it is two jets. It
was red in the beginning, but the fire fumed blue. I see two rows
of fire all shooting out with jets. The fire gets so violent that
it starts searing me."
AP: "Harry, look into that fire."
Harry: "Now I see the eye of a hurricane fuming around. I
see two men - I think they are two men, but they don't want to
show their faces to anyone. They were covering themselves somehow."
AP: "You said that you think they were men. Why did
you say that? Can you draw what they look like?"
At this point Peter said he would like to make a drawing of what
he saw. His drawing showed a figure in black with a pointed cap,
but no arms or legs. Harry said that this is the same thing he
saw.
Hurkos: "These are people in black, but I also couldn't see
their faces. They are in a costume which can withstand thousands
of degrees Centigrade heat. This is nothing to laugh at. It is
all quite serious."
AP: "Is that all you get?"
Peter and Harry both said they were tired and didn't want to work
anymore. I handed Dr. Laughead's letter and the two enclosures
to Mrs. Ida Gold, the secretary, and asked her to transcribe them
and the tape of the experiment into typescript. She went ahead
with this task immediately.
An hour later she came to me in great puzzlement and said, "Dr.
Puharich, I have been a bonded court secretary for thirty years
and have never seen what I have seen just now. Here is the material
you asked me to type. It covers twelve and one-half pages. I did
not change the carbon paper but kept using the same one over and
over again. Now, look at each of the carbon copies. Notice that
page one carbon is black and clear. Pages two to nine are good
but getting lighter and less clear. Note how pages ten and eleven
are getting very light and still less clear. This continues on
the top of page twelve where the first ten lines are really light
and faint. Then as soon as I began to copy the first enclosure,
Test Number Two, the carbon copy from line eleven and on got black
and clear - just as it was on page one when the carbon paper was
fresh. This is impossible - how can carbon paper suddenly get
rejuvenated?"
I examined the sheets and she was absolutely right: the carbon
copy of the first enclosure, Test Number Two, from Dr. Laughead
was in clear bold black typescript:
Test No.
2
M calling:
At the moment of our advent, December 31, 1952, your most spectacular
phase of work began. We are Nine principles and forces.
The nature of our work is to accentuate certain directions as
will fulfill the destiny of creation.
We used the body or brain of Dr. "V." We can and
are using other bodies also.
Remember the formula:
It is vital that you have a personal conference with Dr. "L"
as soon as possible, for it was not accident that you met him
in Mexico. We will have more - much more for you.
A very similar message (as the reader will recall) was given through
Dr. Vinod almost four years before. I tried for two years to find
out if this material had come into Dr. Laughead's hands from someone
connected with my laboratory, but the search was fruitless. I
talked thereafter many times with Dr. Laughead, and he stoutly
maintained that the material had come directly from the mouth
of a medium whom he did not want to name.
But even if Dr. Laughead had tried to commit some kind of a deception,
it could not account for the rejuvenation of a worn-out sheet
of carbon paper. I could only conclude that some kind of an intelligence
had created this black imprint by means entirely unknown. I was
even willing to admit that there might be some reality to Dr.
Laughead's "contacts" with spacecraft.
But the second enclosure that came with Dr. Laughead's letter
was an even deeper mystery. I could not understand this piece
of writing until many years later when I was in Israel in 1971.
I now give a faithful copy of this piece of writing sent to me
by Dr. Laughead:
Received evening of August 11,
1956
Laughead apartment
Whipple, Arizona
Test No. 2
M: We are in the place where the first of the prophets have had
their origins and wherein they shall be gathered in. And they
shall be put into a place wherein are the people from the planets
of many galaxies; and they shall be the gods which shall create
worlds without end. And ye shall see them and ye shall be within
the holy mount which is within the Galaxy of the Milky Way and
the forest wherein the earth shall be put when she is anchored
and wherein is the new berth which is prepared for her, and so
shall the earth be delivered up. And the people therein shall
be freed from the earth and they shall
be
put into another place wherein they shall be awakened.
These events, and those related to Dr. Vinod, were totally beyond
my imagination to comprehend completely. At this point I was not
fully convinced that these "intelligent beings" existed
independently of the imaginations of all the witnesses who had
shared these experiences. When this question was discussed with
all of my colleagues - which we did many times no one ex pressed
the conviction that what had been said was really true and could
be accepted as such. It boiled down to the simple fact that there
was not enough proof to accept the explanation of the Nine for
what they were. Now, although proof and therefore total conviction
were lacking, I still found myself continually asking, "What
if it were true?"
It was nearly six years later that I was to have my own experience
with what seemed to be "other-worldly" sources. In 1963
I was living in Ossining, New York, commuting each day to New
York City where I was working on an electronic invention which
would help people with a hearing problem. On March 15 I came home
from an exhausting day in the city with a splitting headache and,
without eating dinner, fell asleep in a second-floor bedroom at
the rear of the house.
I slept for about two hours. When I awakened, I looked at the
luminous dial of my wristwatch in the dark and saw that it was
9:40 P.M. I lay there, awake and fresh, thinking about getting
up and having some dinner. From my position in bed I could see
the wintry clear night sky, full of stars. Then suddenly among
them appeared a bright light. My first thought was that an oncoming
plane had just turned on its landing lights. I slowly got out
of bed, keeping my eyes on the light, and walked to the window.
I now saw that the light was stationary and was located just over
the first hill to the west, which was about three hundred yards
from where I stood. The light was like a flattened egg in shape,
about the size of a full moon and of a steady blue-green color.
The color, in fact, was the same color as one sees in a mercury
vapor streetlamp. I stared at the light object.
I began to have a profound feeling of the gravity of this moment.
I knew that the light was very, very real, and it gave me the
feeling of a living thing. Normally in this kind of situation
I would have taken my movie camera and gone outdoors to take pictures
of the thing I saw. But now I had no desire to prove anything
or to document what I saw. This was for me "pure experience."
It was like nothing that had ever happened to me before, nor was
there anything that I could associate with it.
I stood there for twenty minutes (by clock time) staring unblinkingly
at this light object. I saw that it was only light; there seemed
to be nothing solid associated with it. I could see nothing inside
of the light as I stared at it Suddenly the light was out. There
was no movement; it just went out. I stood there staring at the
bright night sky for another hour, but the light did not return.
After I had recovered from the emotional intensity of being in
the presence of the light, I tried to analyze what this meant.
I first thought of all the reports I had read about or had been
told about concerning unidentified spacecraft. I concluded that
what I had just seen and witnessed did not fit the general description
that went with the most commonly reported types of UFOs. I recalled
what Dr. Laughead had given me as a description of the spacecraft
he had seen. I again recalled what Peter Hurkos had once described
to me as "flying saucers" he had seen (or, the way he
pronounced this phrase, "flying sausages"). None of
these descriptions fit my experience. I finally concluded that
what I had seen had to stand by itself, that I could not fortify
it by getting assurance that others had also had the same experience.
The experience to me was very real, and the memory of it stayed
with me. But I talked to no one about it. It was too private to
reveal and, besides, it had no objective corroboration. I simply
filed it away in my memory. But this kind of experience was to
recur in Brazil.
I first heard of Arigo, the Brazilian healer, from an intelligent,
articulate doctor named Lauro Neiva, who practiced in Rio de Janeiro.
Dr. Neiva told me that Arigo was a man in his early forties who
performed major surgery on humans without using any known form
of anesthesia, bleeding control (hemostasis), or antisepsis. I
was told that Arigo had become a "court of last appeal"
for hopeless medical problems in Brazil and that his rate of success
was phenomenal. On August 21, 1963, I set out from Rio de Janeiro
for Arigo's village, Congonhas do Campo, which was about three
hundred kilometers to the north of Rio in the state of Minas Gerais.
Arigo was of medium height with a powerful muscular build. He
had a hearty outgoing manner which radiated confidence to all
around him. Although I did not understand Portuguese, it was obvious
that his speech had a rough peasant quality. I shall not go into
details of his background or his present social situation because
this material has been adequately covered in other writings.(2)
I was warmly welcomed and given free rein to observe his work,
to interview patients, and to ask any questions I wished. On August
22 I observed Arigo handle about two hundred patients over a period
of four hours. Arigo worked in a small dilapidated espiritista
church. First he addressed the assembled patients and said that
he himself was not the healer but that he acted only as
an agent for a higher power, which, he said, was the spirit of
one Adolpho Fritz, who had died in Germany in 8.
In order to assure the patients that he would not harm anyone,
he said he would demonstrate the safety of his work. He took by
the shoulder a man standing next to him and without a word plunged
a paring knife (a very sharp, four-inch stainless steel blade
with a cocobolo wood handle) toward the man's left eyeball.
The knife was skillfully inserted under the upper eyelid, and
the sharp point plunged deep into the eye socket. The patient
was calm and relaxed, and when queried as to possible pain, he
answered that he felt nothing. Arigo then pressed the point of
the knife up through the upper chamber of the eye socket so that
(2) John G. Fuller, Arigo: Surgeon of the Rusty Knife (New
York: T. Y. Crowell, 1974), with an appendix by Andrija Puharich,
M.D.
the point lifted the skin above the eye (supraorbital forehead
area). Arigo asked me to feel the point of the knife through the
skin, which I did. I affirmed that I could palpate the sharp tip
of the knife. This exercise lasted about twenty seconds. When
the knife was withdrawn from the eye socket, I asked the patient
how he felt. He replied that he felt normal. Examination of the
eye did not reveal any laceration, redness, or other signs of
irritation. I was stunned at this demonstration of surgical and
medical power.
For the rest of the four hours I watched Arigo's mode of handling
patients. The patients stood in a long line waiting to see Arigo.
When one stepped up, Arigo looked up at him or her from his desk,
asked no questions, and in a few seconds began a definitive treatment,
either surgical or medical, on each of the two hundred patients.
He sent a dozen patients away, saying that their problems could
easily be handled by any medical doctor. He performed eye surgery
and ear surgery on ten patients, each operation averaging about
thirty seconds. He used the same knife on each patient and wiped
it on his shirt after each operation. No attempt was made to give
any anesthesia or hypnotic suggestion; no sterile precautions
were used; bleeding was minimal; and each patient walked out of
the room by himself after surgery. The rest of the patients were
given long complicated medical prescriptions which used proprietary
pharmaceutical preparations from well-known drug houses. Arigo
never charged for his healing services; he worked at a full-time
job as a civil servant to earn his living.
I was in a state of shock as I witnessed his apparently successful
handling of these patients while violating every rule of medicine
and surgery in which I had been indoctrinated. I simply could
not believe what I was seeing and experiencing.
At the end of the day of August 22, 1963 I pondered how I could
prove to myself and my colleagues that we were not hallucinating.
It occurred to me that if I could persuade Arigo to operate on
a tumor on my right forearm I could get a personal and realistic
evaluation of what he was doing. I approached Arigo with this
request on the morning of August 23, and he cheerfully agreed
to operate on me. I arranged for Jorge Rizzini to film my operation.
I had a lipoma on the elbow over the right ulnar head which measured
by palpation about 0.5 inches X 1.2 inches X 1.4 inches. It had
been there for seven years and had been checked regularly by Sidney
Krebs, M.D., of New York City, during the past two years.
We appeared before Arigo at 10 A.M. There were dozens of patients
crowding the room. I rolled up my right sleeve. Arigo asked if
any of the surrounding patients could lend him a pocket knife.
One man offered a knife, but Arigo said it was too dull. Another
man offered a Swiss army knife; Arigo said, "This is a good
knife."
Arigo told me not to look at the surgery. I turned my head toward
Rizzini on my left, who was running the movie camera, and gave
Osmar, my translator, some advice about the lighting. At the same
time I felt Arigo grasp my arm at the tumor area with his left
hand. All I could feel was something like a fingernail being pressed
into the skin. Within five seconds Arigo displayed an elongated
egg-shaped tumor for all the patients to see and handed it to
me with the pocket knife. I had felt no sensation of pain. When
I looked at the wound, there was a trickle of blood from the incision,
which was about a half inch long.
Arigo then said that Dr. Fritz had told him to make the following
statement: "This is a demonstration only - so that people
will believe. I think every doctor in Brazil should come here
and do what you do. After the legal prosecution against me is
over, you must come back, and I will do major surgery for you."
Immediately after the surgery I took black and white pictures
of the tumor and the knife. I then asked Altamiro, Arigo's assistant,
to place a dressing on the wound. He took some unsterile gauze
squares and taped them over the wound.
I felt that my surgery was not adequate for scientific purposes,
as I was not able to observe it properly, nor did I experience
enough significant data points to evaluate it. However, given
the unsterile conditions of the surgery, I would have a real test
of
Arigo's powers if the wound did not get infected. Hence I determined
not to use any antiseptics on the wound nor to use any antibiotics,
in order to test the postoperative course with respect to possible
infection.
I therefore changed the bandage once a day so that I could photograph
the healing and infective course. By the third day the wound had
healed by primary intention, and not one drop of pus had appeared.
I did not develop any symptoms of blood poisoning or tetanus.
By the fourth day I dispensed with the bandage. With this evidence
I was now convinced that Arigo had extraordinary powers in surgery,
bacterial control, and anesthesia.
Six days later I visited Jorge Rizzini in Sao Paulo and saw the
developed movies of my surgery. The film clearly proved that there
had been an operation, and thus personal and mass hallucinations
were ruled out. The film showed that Arigo had made six "saw
like" strokes of the knife through my skin to make the incision.
This alone should have been painful. And strangely enough the
tumor popped out of my arm without Arigo having dissected it.
The entire procedure lasted five seconds.
It is now ten years since the operation. The surgical scar remains;
the tumor is still in a bottle of alcohol; there have been no
complications.
In September 1967 I went to Brazil to continue my studies of Arigo.
I had seen him many times since that operation in 1963, and it
had never occurred to me to ask him for personal help. One day
as I was working with Arigo, he suddenly fumed to me and said,
"You have otosclerosis." I replied, "I don't know
about that, but I have a chronic infection and drainage in my
left ear from a cholesteatoma."
Arigo said, "Yes, you have had that for a long time, but
the otosclerosis is new. Check it when you get home. I will give
you a prescription that will cure both of your problems."
There is not much need to explain the items in the prescription
except to state that the first drug was an ear drop solution,
the second was a bile salt, and the third was gabromicina, a primitive
form of streptomycin, which had largely been dropped from use
by physicians. The prescription involved two successive treatments.
When I resumed to the States, I had the audiologist in my own
laboratory run a hearing test on me with an audiometer. When the
test was done, she volunteered the diagnosis: "You have otosclerosis."
I checked the audiogram. Arigo was right; I did have otosclerosis,
a hardening of the bony tissue over the stapes in the middle ear
chamber. I decided then and there to start Arigo's prescription.
Because of my odd working hours, it was easiest for me to give
myself the gabromicina injection just before I went to bed each
night. I started the first treatment series on October 7, 1967
- including the injection of the gabromicina once a day. By October
14 I had developed a reaction to this form of streptomycin. I
had a swelling and tenderness of my hands and palms and on my
feet and toes. Therefore, I had to stop the injections and wait
for the allergic reaction to go away. By October 25 I was in good
enough shape to begin the second treatment. In my opinion it was
too dangerous to try to continue with the streptomycin. Therefore,
I never did fully complete the first treatment. I finished the
second treatment on January 11, 1968.
I was now free of the ear drainage problem that had plagued me
all of my life, and have continued so to this day. Over the next
six months my audiograms showed that my otosclerosis had disappeared.
My hearing improved. I want to make one other point here, for
the record: I never told another human being that I had not finished
the first treatment because of an allergic reaction. ( See page
159. )
In early 1968 I was busily engaged in preparations to lead a team
of medical researchers to Brazil to study Arigo. We arrived in
Congonhas do Campo on the afternoon of May 22, 1968. To house
our group we had rented a large fazenda, or ranch, some
two miles out of the village. As the sun set, we all assembled
on the huge lawn to observe the incredible brilliance of the wintry
stars. The night was cold and the air very dry. At 6 P.M. one
of our researchers, John Laurance, noted a bright white light
moving across the sky from south to north. He brought it to our
attention because, as he explained, it was not a plane or a satellite.
John could make this statement with some authority because he
worked for the Astroelectronics division of RCA in New Jersey,
designing and building satellites for NASA. For about six minutes
we watched this light move slowly overhead, resembling a very
bright star. It was impossible to determine its distance from
us. Then it suddenly winked out in mid-course and was gone. We
discussed what it could possibly have been and concluded that
it was an unknown type of aerial light. The owner of the fazenda,
Walter de Freitas, joined us, and we told him what we had seen
and asked for clarification of our observation. He laughed and
told us the following story.
"You see, the common folk around here always see what you
just saw, mostly between May and August. They call them Rivers
of Gold in the sky because they believe that these lights will
lead you to gold. I don't believe these superstitions, but I have
an idea why they believe such things. One day, two years ago,
I was standing where we are now, and I saw one of these lights
slowly come down from the sky. It landed about five hundred meters
from here, in that direction by the river. It was just after sunset,
as it is now. I could see pretty well in the dark, so I started
to walk toward the light to see what it was. When I came to within
fifty meters, I could clearly see moving figures under what looked
like a metal craft, looking like a giant lens. I still am not
sure whether the creatures were more like people or more like
animals. But I could see and hear that they were digging in the
earth. As I got closer, about thirty meters away, three or four
of these figures suddenly disappeared into the metal hull which
I now saw was standing on legs. The lens hull shot out fire and
smoke and rose straight up in the air. When I examined the ground
where the metal hull had been, I saw many small fresh holes. I
went there the next morning looking to see if there was any gold,
but I didn't find any."
We quizzed Walter for a few minutes, and then Dr. Luis Cortes
called out, "Hey, there is another one!" Again we saw
a very bright white light at an indeterminate distance, going
slowly overhead from north to south. It, too, lasted for a long
time - twelve minutes - and then winked out.
I immediately set up my Hasselblad camera, but I had only an 80-mm
lens. But fortunately I had a Polaroid back for this camera and
very fast 3000 ASA black and white film, which allowed me the
possibility of getting some pictures. I set my camera on a stable
tripod, and we all sat watching the skies. Fortunately, being
in the country, there were absolutely no streetlights around to
mar either the viewing or the photography.
Soon another light appeared, moving slowly from east to west,
and I was able to photograph it, as a streak, through time exposure.
Moreover, the film was so sensitive that I was able to get a background
star map photo as a reference frame. We set up a night watch,
and I was able to get three more photographs that night. After
comparing our collective observations we all agreed unanimously
that the lights we had seen and photographed were indeed unidentified
aerial light effects.
During the next few days we discussed for the first time the theory
that Arigo's powers may not be due to a Dr. Fritz, but to some
intelligent beings associated with spacecraft of extraterrestrial
origin. This seemed to be a perfectly logical hypothesis, but,
of course, there was no way to test it. We spoke to Arigo about
this possibility, and he just laughed away the question.
For the next three years I made plans to undertake a concentrated
study of Arigo's powers, but other work intervened. At about 11
A.M. on January 11, 1971, I was working in my office at Intelectron
Corporation in New York City when the telephone rang. Normally
my secretary, Lorraine Shaw, would pick up the phone first. But
this time, for no reason, I picked it up, and a woman whose name
I don't recall blurted out the following: "I am looking for
Dr. Puharich."
I replied, "This is he speaking."
"Dr. Puharich, I just got a telephone call from a TV station
in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, asking for you to make a comment on
the death of Arigo."
"Would you please repeat that? I don't think I clearly heard
what you said," I stuttered.
She repeated her statement. I said, "Are you sure of what
you are saying, that Arigo is dead?"
She replied that all she knew was what had been relayed to her.
I told her I could not then reply because of my shocked state.
If she would give me her name and telephone number, I would call
her back. This she did, and I wrote these items down on my desk
calendar pad.
I sat back in my chair. It did not seem possible for Arigo the
greatest healer in the world - to be dead! He was too young, too
vital. Besides, he was the hope of thousands, perhaps millions,
of people who looked to him as the witness for higher powers.
"There must be a mistake," I thought. "I will have
to check this out myself."
I called the Brazilian consulate in New York, and they had no
such news. I called the Brazilian embassy in Washington; they
had no such news. I called the various press services; they had
no such news. Finally by 4: 30 P.M. I called friends in Brazil,
who finally confirmed the dread news that Arigo had been killed
that very morning in an auto accident
I proceeded to return the phone call from the woman, and looked
at my desk calendar pad. Her name and phone number were not there;
the sheet was clean. I thought I had perhaps written the information
somewhere else. But I could not find any such paper. I checked
with my secretary; she had not heard the phone ring at 11 l A.M.
nor had she logged any incoming calls at that time. Then I began
to worry; had I really received the call as I remembered it? Perhaps
she would call me again. But she never did call back.
In any case, I was personally despondent over the loss of Arigo.
Humanity had lost its great luminary. It was as though the sun
had gone out. The shock was so deep to me that I decided to go
on a fourteen-day fast and re-examine all of my life and weigh
the meaning of Arigo, both in life and in death.
During my fast my sorrow was lightened by information I received
from Dr. Juscelino Kubitschek, the former President of Brazil.
Kubitschek said that he had visited Arigo two weeks before his
death, and in the most simple and casual way Arigo had said, "I
do not like to say this, Mr. President, but I will soon die a
violent death."
The former President was shocked and disturbed. "You don't
mean that," he said.
Arigo nodded and repeated in a sad, soft tone, "I am sure
I will die violently very soon. So I say good-bye to you with
sadness. This is the last time we will meet."
Later Arigo said to Gabriel Khater, editor of the local paper,
O Propheto, "I am afraid, Gabriel, that my mission
on earth is finished. I will leave soon."
But two years later I was to learn from John G. Fuller, who wrote
a book about Arigo, that he had received a report that Arigo had
been killed at exactly 12:15 P.M. in the car crash. Since the
time in Congonhas is one hour earlier than New York, he had been
killed at 1 l :15 A.M. New York time. How did I get the news of
his death at least fifteen minutes before the event occurred?
This mystery was not solved until my experiences with Uri in Israel.
But the answer will be given later in this story.
The knowledge of Arigo's foreknowledge of his death helped me
a great deal. That his death was not the result of blind chance
eased my pain. Near the end of my fast, I came to some strong
conclusions. The first was that I had failed both Arigo and humanity
by not completing my studies of Arigo's healing work. I realized
that I should have dropped my other work in 1963 and concentrated
all of my efforts on Arigo. I was sure there would never be another
Arigo in my lifetime. But if there were, I would not fail the
next time.
I looked back over the ten years since I had moved to New York.
I had become a slave to my company, to my inventions, and to a
complex and costly way of life. While it was true that I had been
issued some fifty patents for my inventions, which promised to
help many people with deafness, I could not really make any more
creative contributions in this area. Others could carry on what
I had started. But most of all I wanted to get into the full-time
study of the mysterious powers of the human
mind. One day I made my decision. I would resign from all my duties
and jobs from foundations, companies, and laboratories and give
myself two years in which to find a new place in full time research
on the mind.
When I informed my family and colleagues of my decision, they
tried to talk me out of it. But I was determined in my course.
By April 1, 1971, I had freed myself of all these ties and began
my new way of life. I had two goals: one was to develop a theoretical
base for all of my mind researches, and the other was to find
human beings with great psychic talents who would cooperate as
research subjects.
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