These reports are pretty typical and adds substantially to the data pool all confirming the whole pattern of the relationship between our physical existence and our spirit body.
What pleases me however is the last story in which it is observed that the spirit in question actually transferred almost immediately upon his death a month after conception. This happens to be direct confirmation of a conjecture that i posted in which such spirit transference takes place around 49 days after conception. There may be some slight variation but this report effectively nails it.
The mother supports the embryo with her own astral body until that moment. The 49 day day calculation is the earliest in which the pineal gland is fully formed. Spirit transferance should be then possible from 49 days through at least several more days providing a time matching flexibility. .
FOUR CASES OF REINCARNATION
Four Fascinating Cases of Reincarnation
https://www.goodreads.com/author_blog_posts/8669753-four-cases-of-reincarnation?utm_medium=email&utm_source=author_blog_post_digest
SOME
OF THE most compelling cases of reincarnation or past-life recall come
from small children. If we have indeed lived previous lives, it is
theorized that young children have sharper “memories” of their previous
lives because they are closer to them, in a cosmic sense, and they
details of those lives have not yet been obliterated by their new lives.
Here
are four remarkable cases in which children have specific knowledge of
people, places, and events – including their own deaths – that they
could not possible have known…
CARL EDON AND HEINRICH RICHTER
When he was just three years old, Carl Edon of Middlesbrough,
England began telling his parents of memories he had as a member of the
Luftwaffe, the German air force during World War II. The memories
persisted throughout Carl’s life, and so strong were these feelings of
this past life that his parents, who were naturally skeptical of Carl’s
claims, grew weary of hearing about it. So did his school friends, who
began to tease Carl about his supposed reincarnation.
Carl
even knew how he died in his past life. His plane, he claimed, was shot
down over Middlesbrough and he was killed, with particular severe damage
to his right leg. Carl believed that a birthmark at the top of his
right leg was evidence of this past life injury.
All of Carl’s claims could easily have been dismissed as a young man’s fantasy… until a discovery seemed to verify his story.
In
1997, two years after Carl’s death (he was brutally murdered by a
friend in 1995 at the age of 22), the wreckage of a German bomber was
found — ironically, just a few hundred yards from where Carl had been
stabbed to death.
What workers found in the plane debris was
astonishing. The plane apparently had been downed by anti-aircraft fire,
and the remains of one of the bodies found was that of Heinrich
Richter, a turret gunner. Richter’s right leg had been detached in the
crash.
All of this could just add up to a number of amazing
coincidences, but one more item dug up by researchers will cause one to
wonder: a photograph of Heinrich Richter. Placed side by side with a
photo of Carl Edon (see photos above), one would be hard pressed to deny
the striking resemblance between the two men.
LUKE RUEHLMAN AND PAMELA ROBINSON
Luke Ruehlman began telling his mother about his past life
almost since he was able to talk at the age of two. According to his
mom, Erika, Luke claimed that he was once a woman named Pam, who was
forced to leap to her death from a burning building.
Now five,
Luke doesn’t talk about his past life anymore, but when younger he
would make such proclamations as, “When I was a girl, I had black hair,”
and “I used to have earrings like that when I was a girl.”
Luke
even recalled the process of his reincarnation, Erika says. “I died,”
he told her. “I went up to heaven, and I saw God, and he pushed me back
down and when I woke up, I was a baby and you named me Luke.”
Curious
about the specifics in Luke’s story, Erika researched any case of a
woman named Pam who leapt to her death from a building afire. She found a
1993 case involving a 30-year-old African American woman named Pamela
Robinson, who died when the Paxton Hotel in Chicago caught fire.
Erika believes Pamela Robinson could be the past life her son recalled.
UPRECHT SCHULTZ AND HELMUT KOHLER
As a child, Ruprecht Schultz often exhibited behavior that
deeply disturbed his parents when he became depressed. He would form his
hand in the shape of a gun, press it against his temple and say, “I
shoot myself.” He repeated this so often that his parents had to
explicitly forbid him from doing it.
As he grew into adulthood
in the late 19th century and early 20th century in Berlin, Germany,
Ruprecht displayed an aptitude for business and started his own laundry
and delivery service which quickly grew to employing as many as 200
people.
Ruprecht was 51 when World War II began in 1939 and he
was assigned by city authorities to watch for fires. But something
strange began to occur when Ruprecht would sit and review the account
books for his business. He began to have flashes of a past life. You were in this situation once before, he would think to himself.
“I
could see how I looked then,” he said in a recorded statement. “I was
wearing a high collar and formal clothing. I had come from a ceremony on
a special day. My business was finished. An employee had run off with
the money — embezzled it and absconded. So I sat down with the account
books and could see that there was no future. It was all over. Then I
was in a room by myself and put a bullet into my head at the right
temple. You would call these images clairvoyance, but for me, they are
memories.”
As these memories intensified, Ruprecht could also
recall the nature of his past-life business. “Since my earliest years,”
he said, “I have had a distinct impression, with various details, that I
was in a previous life somehow connected with ship building or shipping
and that I shot myself.
I knew that it occurred in an old
small or middle-sized seaport, and is seemed to me later and more
clearly that this seaport was Wilhelmshaven. As for the date of these
events — the suicide of the person I was — it has seemed to me that it
would have been around 1885.”
Eager to verify these visions,
Ruprecht wrote to the municipal authorities of several German seaside
towns, including Wilhelmshaven, to see if they had any record of a
business involved in the timber shipping business who shot himself. An
official from Wilhelmshaven responded with the name Helmut Kohler and
referred him to his still-living son, Ludwig Kohler.
Through
correspondence, Ludwig was able to verify many of the details of his
father’s life that Ruprecht seemed to recall: his business, the
embezzled money and betrayal by his employee, the failure of his timber
shipping business, and Helmut Kohler’s eventual suicide by putting a gun
to his temple and pulling the trigger.
There is one
interesting catch in this possible case of reincarnation: Ruprecht
Schultz was born on October 19, 1887… more than a month before
Helmut Kohler died on November 23, 1887! So how can this be? If this is a
case of reincarnation, is it possible that Helmut Kohler’s soul or
spirit entered the body of Ruprecht Schultz after he was born?
NAZIH AL-DANAF AND FUAD ASSAD KHADDAGE
Little Nazih Al-Danaf had some very worrisome things to say
to his parents before he even reached the age of two. “I am not small, I
am big. I carry two pistols,” he told his mother. “I carry four
hand-grenades. I am qabadai [a fearless strong person]. Don’t
be scared by the hand-grenades. I know how to handle them. I have a lot
of weapons. My children are young and I want to go and see them.”
These
were words and concepts that Nazih’s parents could not imagine that he
would have a grasp of. He even displayed an interest in cigarettes and
whiskey, and spoke of a one-handed friend who was also a mute. He said
he died from gunshots and even recalled the ride to the ambulance to the
hospital.
Nazih told his parents he wanted to visit his
hometown of Qaberchamoun, Lebanon, which was a little over ten miles
from where they lived. His family had never been there, however, and
didn’t know anyone who lived there.
When he was six years old,
Nazih’s parents finally took him to Qaberchamoun. Little Nazih gave his
father specific directions on where to go, which roads and turns to
take. There they met a man, Kamal Khaddage, and explained what the boy
had told them. Kamal said that it sounded like they were describing his
father, Fuad Assad Khaddage, who died many years earlier.
This
led to Nazih meeting the widow of Fuad Assad Khaddage, and she tested
the boy with specific questions. “Who built the foundation of this gate
at the entrance of this house?” she asked the small boy. “A man from the
Faraj family,” Nazih replied. He was correct. She also verified many
other details by questioning the boy that left no doubt about his past
life identity.
When Nazih was shown a picture of Fuad Assad
Khaddage and was asked who it was, he said, “This is me. I was big but
now I am small.”
ARTICLE BY By Stephen Wagner