The mysteries of a great clairvoyant – WOLF MESSING

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Wolf Messing was one of the most enigmatic personalities of the twentieth century. He accurately predicted Hitler’s death, the defeat of Nazi Germany, and the victory of the USSR in World War II. His astonishing predictions created a mystical aura around him, which frightened and fascinated at the same time. Through his phenomenal power of suggestion and mind control, he managed to escape Hitler’s death camps and Soviet gulags. Although his amazing abilities have been studied by scholars around the world, Wolf Messing remained an enigma, a man-legend, known today as the most famous hypnotist and the best telepath in human history. All the documents that belonged to him are today in the FSB archive and maybe one day they will be declassified.

I am Wolf Messing!

Moscow, November 1940. 9.50 a.m. Through the majestic gate of the Kremlin fortress, guarded by armed officers, a short man walks firmly, with a modest, even gray appearance, but with a penetrating gaze, which betrayed a strong nature. Amazingly, he walks past the guards without being asked anything, and penetrates beyond the thick red brick walls. The winding corridors of the palace are crowded with soldiers with guns at their feet. The unknown individual walks past them, as if no one is noticing. He turns left, then right, climbs the stairs and in a few minutes reaches the upper floor, where, at the end of the corridor, is the office of comrade Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin, the supreme leader of the Soviet Union. Arriving at the door of the office, he stops in front of the officer on duty. He springs to his feet in a righteous position and solemnly greets the stranger, as if he were an extremely important person. The man presses the massive, bronze handle, opens the double door and casually enters the cabinet of the most feared man in the Soviet Union. From behind the desk, Stalin looks up and asks in a voice that shows total astonishment: “Unbelievable! How did you manage to get past all the guards and get here?”

“It’s very simple, comrade Stalin! I inoculated everyone in their minds that I am Lavrenti Beria, the head of the police apparatus!”, the man replied smiling.

The unknown individual who had managed to break through all the control filters of Moscow’s best-guarded fortress in just a few minutes was none other than Wolf Messing, the famous clairvoyant.

A few days before, he had had a meeting with Joseph Stalin who, distrustful of his extrasensory powers, subjected him to a test: to enter the Kremlin without documents and to present himself in his office, exactly at 10 a.m. Although such an attempt was tantamount to suicide, Messing immediately accepted the challenge, replying nonchalantly: “I will carry out your order and prove to you that I can penetrate the entire Kremlin defense system! Because I’m Wolf Messing!”
But who was Wolf Messing, this mysterious character, and how did he come to meet the dreaded Stalin himself?

The child-prodigy

The story begins in September 1899, in Poland, in the city of Góra Kalwaria, which at that time was part of the Russian Empire. In the family of the Jewish merchant Messing, a little boy was born who at first glance seemed very strange to everyone: with large eyes, the color of embers, with black hair, unusually thick for a newborn. That is why it receives the name of Wolf, a word that in German means “wolf”. At the age of four, the little boy began to suffer from sleepwalking, a neurological disorder that was then thought to be caused by the phases of the moon. He had often been caught by his family sleeping at the window and looking at the moon.

One day, you tell your parents that the celestial body is inhabited by some strange beings who talk to you. “They told me that I am not like everyone else. That there is incredible power hidden in me, and that all of them, the inhabitants of heaven, will help me bring it out.” Hearing the horrors that the boy was experiencing, Wolf’s father thought that the best solution was to send him to religious school.

 

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Wolf Messing in his youth

From the disease of noctambulism, Wolf was cured by a simple, far-flimsy cure. His parents placed a basin of water next to his bed, so that when he got up, he had to step into the cold water that woke him up at once. From the first years of school, Wolf proved that he had an exceptional memory, quickly learning complex texts of the Talmud. The whole family already saw him as a future rabbi. But religious teaching was not at all to the child’s liking, and one day he decided to run away from the seminary.

With only a few coins in his pocket, Wolf headed to the railway station and boarded the first train that came his way. He just wanted to get a little sleep after the long and tiring journey he had traveled to the station. He hid under a bench and fell asleep at once. This was the decisive moment that marked his entire existence.

Here, in the carriage of the train heading to Berlin, Wolf was given the opportunity to discover for the first time his incredible power of suggestion, the ability to induce certain thoughts in people. The ticket clerk saw him crouching under the bench and asked for his ticket. Frightened, the boy looked around and, seeing a paper thrown on the ground, handed it to the controller, saying in his mind: “This is my ticket!” The conductor took the paper, twisted it between his palms, composted it and handed it back to him as if it were a real note: “What are you looking for under the bench seat if you have a ticket? There are plenty of places. In two hours we will be in Berlin!”

This is how Wolf arrived in the German capital, alone and without any help from anywhere. Hard days followed, of terrible hunger. The only way to get a few pennies was to squeeze the shoes of passers-by, but the gain was so small that Wolf was always hungry. Until one day, when his frail body gave way and the kid collapsed on the pavement. Found by the police and considered dead, he is taken to the morgue. Three days later, by chance, a student discovers that the boy is still beating his heart. Coming to his senses, he began to shout, “Why take me to the police or to the children’s home?”

Professor Abel, a renowned neurologist who had been called urgently to see the strange case, looked at him in amazement and asked, “Why did you say that?” “Because that’s what you thought just a few minutes ago,” the boy replies. A few days later, Professor Abel found with even more astonishment that Wolf, despite the fact that he had suffered from a very strong anemia, was able to regenerate his own body, by his own will. The German neurologist quickly realized that the boy possesses fantastic extrasensory abilities. And so, Wolf came to be known in the hospital as the “child prodigy”.

 

Visiting Einstein and Freud

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In Germany during the years when he met Freud and Enstein

Under the guidance and careful supervision of Professor Abel and other neurologists and psychiatrists, Wolf began to discover and then practice his unique skills. Gradually, she became aware of her ability to control people on a mental level and learned to discern from the “chorus of voices” that echoed in her subconscious exactly that voice she had to capture and individualize.

After a few years of experiments and exercises, the boy was able to enter a state of catalepsy and could completely suppress any pain. Then he decided together with Professor Abel that he was ready to make himself known to the general public. And so the 16-year-old Wolf got a job at the berlin state circus, where he had his own number of illusionism.

In the first part of the performance, Wolf amazed the audience by walking barefoot on swords and sticking needles in his body, without a drop of blood flowing. And in the second part, he performed demonstrations of hypnosis and telepathy: he read the thoughts of those in the room, “scraped” various objects from the spectators’ pockets, without leaving the stage, or mentally transmitted various commands to the subjects.

“It’s not about mind reading but, more correctly, reading muscles. When a person thinks intensely about something, nerve cells in the brain transmit impulses to all the muscles in the body. This action is not visible to the uninitiated eye, but I capture it immediately and take it under control. And so, they easily transmit commands to the subject at a subconscious level, without having direct contact,” Wolf Messaging explained a few years later.

His unusual psychological experiments had become so well-known that thousands of people were eager to get a seat at the performances that took place throughout Germany. The young man was headlining his show entitled “The Psychological Experiences of Wolf Messing”. Soon, his fame spread throughout Europe, and Albert Einstein himself expresses his burning desire to meet the young medium. Finding out that he is on tour in Austria, the famous physicist invites Messing to visit. In his house, Wolf also meets Sigmund Freud, the great neuropsychiatrist who immediately proposes that they carry out an experiment together. Through telepathy, Freud suggests to the young Wolf to go to the other room, bring a violin from the desk, hand it to the physicist and, on a mental level, send him the request to play a piece of music for them. Wolf has successfully passed the test of the psychiatrist who, delighted beyond measure, proposes a second experiment to him. This time, Messing had to take a pair of tweezers from the dressing table and pluck three hairs from the physicist’s famous lush mustache. Slightly embarrassed, Wolf took the tweezers with two fingers, walked over to the scientist and, apologetically, explained what he was obliged to do. Einstein smiled and accepted the game.

This is how the young Messing was chosen with two famous friends around the world. It seems that the young telepath lived for several months in Freud’s house, where the father of psychoanalysis helped him to broaden his horizons even more, instructing him in the field of hypnosis and self-hypnosis.

Caught between Hitler and Stalin

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At a public demonstration

For years, he traveled all over the world, giving sensational performances throughout Europe, in the Americas, in India and in Japan. Arriving with the tour in Riga, the capital of present-day Latvia, Wolf Messing performed in front of thousands of spectators a unique, completely new experiment: he drove a car on the main boulevard of the city, blindfolded. To his right, the driver was mentally dictating the maneuvers he had to perform. Messing had never driven in his life and this experiment, although successfully carried out to the applause of the crowd, was never repeated.

In 1937, during a performance in Warsaw, Messing dared to utter a prediction that would change the trajectory of his life and his brilliant career. In front of thousands of people, he predicted the exact date of death of Adolf Hitler, then Chancellor of Germany, who was already preparing the policy for the outbreak of World War II. The next day, all the major Polish newspapers headlined in large letters on the front page: “A Jewish prophet predicts April 30, 1945 as the day of Hitler’s death!” Naturally, this news immediately reached the ears of the Nazi leader and the Führer offered a reward of 200 thousand marks, a fabulous sum, to the one who would bring the “head” of the prophet.

 

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In its Soviet years

When German troops invaded Poland, a real hunt was unleashed against Wolf Messing. Aware of the danger, the famous medium hid for months in the basement of a merchant’s house in Warsaw, until one day, when the inevitable happened. Messing was discovered, arrested and cruelly beaten, until he lost consciousness. Only coming to his senses in the dark cell in the basement of the Ministry of the Interior in Warsaw, Messing gathered all his strength and, by the power of his mind, told the guards beyond the cold walls of the prison in which he had been thrown, that they should all gather there. First the guards arrived and, after a few minutes, running, the officer on duty himself came. Messing had nothing left to do but walk past them smoothly, lock the heavy iron door, and leave the building.

In those terrible years, throughout Poland, Jews were arrested and forced to live in ghettos. Those who managed to escape fled across the border, especially to the Soviet Union, in the hope of a more peaceful life. Thus, although the idea did not excite him, Messing decides that his new destination must be the immense country in the East. Although he did not speak Russian and did not know anyone, Wolf Messing was welcomed into the troupe of artists who gave performances in the Brest region, in southwestern Belarus. And behold, once again, his unique, unusual gift would save his life.

During a show in Minsk, on stage, next to Messing, some NKVD (Soviet secret police) agents appeared who, apologizing to the audience, “jumped” the telepath. He was taken directly to the terrible Stalin, who had already heard about the phenomenal powers of the clairvoyant. To check his capabilities, Stalin ordered him to enter the state treasury and obtain a huge sum, one hundred thousand rubles, without any documents at hand, using only the power of his mind. Right under the eyes of the secret agents, Messing entered the Central Bank building, headed for the cashier and, handing the clerk a simple blank page from a dictando notebook, opened his briefcase waiting for the banknotes. The cashier searched the simple piece of paper, then opened the safe and counted a hundred thousand rubles. For the telepath, the experiment turned out to be a piece of cake.

Although in Russia at that time, hypnosis, telepathy or other such “illusionist tricks” were considered charlatans and, as such, completely forbidden, Stalin allowed Wolf Messing to give performances throughout the Soviet Union.

In 1943, during a performance in Novosibirsk, Messing was asked when the war would end. Without thinking, the clairvoyant replied in a grave voice: “I see tanks with Red Army insignia parading through the streets of Berlin. 8 May 1945”.

Messing’s Testament

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Psychologist Olga Migunova

The only person Messing accepted around him and to whom he revealed some of the techniques of his psychological experiments is Olga Migunova, today the president of the Moscow Academy of Hypnosis, psychotherapist and doctor of neuropsychological sciences. Olga Migunova met the famous telepath in 1966 in the city of Gelendzhik in the Krasnodar region.

“I was 17 years old, I had come with my mother to attend one of Professor Messing’s conferences. I remember that day perfectly, as if it were yesterday. The hall was packed. On stage, to the applause of hundreds of people, Wolf Messing appeared. He stopped for a few moments and looked around the room, looking for someone. He went straight to the row where I was standing and stopped in front of my mother. He bent down and said, ‘Please take your daughter out of the room. Olga disrupts my experiments. Wait for me after the performance». I was burning with impatience to watch that fascinating character, but I submitted to his will and left the room crying. Poor mother didn’t know how to reconcile me. But we didn’t go home, and after two hours, Professor Messing came to us and said to my mother: ‘Olga must go with me to Moscow. Her place is next to me, on stage. Your daughter has phenomenal abilities.'”

This is how Olga became Wolf Messing’s assistant and student. And one day the master revealed a secret to him: the lethargic state in which he had fallen as a child had been his first trip to the underworld. It seems that Wolf Messing had crossed the threshold of the world of the lifeless dozens of times, in an attempt to unravel the mystery of death. “I keep this paper that the teacher handed me one day to this day,” says Olga Migunova. “I learned by heart all the strange lines and shapes that were drawn by the master’s hand. When he gave me the paper he had a warm glow in his eyes. I knew it was an important message, but I still haven’t been able to decipher it. I think it’s a coded message about the fact that man can exist in both dimensions: of life and death.”

In the last years of his life, Wolf Messing became more and more closed in on himself. The performances were increasingly sporadic and shorter.

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The Moscow tomb of Messing and his wife Aida

The death of his wife, Aida, with whom he had lived for decades, completely devastated him. He was terribly tormented by the idea that he, Wolf Messing, the one who had helped thousands of people, although he had accurately predicted the day and hour of his beloved wife’s death, with all his phenomenal abilities, had not been able to save her. “Man should never find out his future. Such knowledge could be fatal to him,” the famous telepath had once said.

Wolf Messing died on 8 November 1974. Two days earlier, being sick and about to be operated on, before leaving for the hospital, he stopped in front of his portrait on his desk and said: “Well, that’s it Wolf, the story is over! From now on you don’t come back!”

source: internet

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