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Wednesday, 2 April 2014

Interesting Bizzare and Odd : Frightful Friday - Exorcism of Anneliese Michel

Source : as per copy pasted ''


The first person to recognize that Anneliese Michel was possessed by demons was an older woman accompanying the girl on a pilgrimage. She noticed that Anneliese would not walk past a certain image of Jesus, refused to drink water from a holy spring and smelled bad — hellishly bad. An exorcist in a nearby town examined Michel and returned a diagnosis of demonic possession. The bishop issued permission to perform the rite of exorcism according to the Roman ritual of 1614.

Half a year and 67 rites of exorcism later, Anneliese Michel was dead at 23.

Anneliese Michel did not die in the Middle Ages, but in 1976, in the small town of Klingenberg, in the heart of one of the most civilized and advanced countries in Europe: Germany.

Two years after Michel’s death, a German court found her parents and the two priests involved guilty of negligent manslaughter and sentenced them to six months in prison, suspended with three years’ probation.

What shocked Germany most was the fact that it could happen in a country that prides itself on being highly rational — and highly secularized.

“The surprising thing was that the people connected to Michel were all completely convinced that she had really been possessed,” says Franz Barthel, amazement still in his voice three decades after he covered the story for the regional daily paper Main-Post.

“Many years later, I visited the woman who first diagnosed the Devil,” Barthel says. “She blessed my microphone with holy water because I was working for the radio then, and it was likely that the Devil was in control of the microphone.”

Michel was raised in a strict Catholic family in Bavaria, which rejected the reforms of Vatican II and flirted with religious fringe groups. While other kids her age were rebelling against authority and experimenting with sex, she tried to atone for the sins of wayward priests and drug addicts by sleeping on a bare floor in the middle of winter.

According to court findings, she experienced her first epileptic attack in 1969, and by 1973 was suffering from depression and considering suicide. Soon she was seeing the faces of demons on the people and things around her, and voices told her she was damned.

Under the influence of her demons, Michel ripped the clothes off her body, compulsively performed up to 400 squats a day, crawled under a table and barked like a dog for two days, ate spiders and coal, bit the head off a dead bird and licked her own urine from the floor.

By 1975 Michel was asking for an exorcism. The Revs. Ernst Alt and Arnold Renz performed the rite 67 times over the first half of 1976. Some of the sessions took up to four hours. Forty-two sessions were recorded on tape.

Michel’s recorded voice can still send shivers up your spine. It is the voice of a demon, growling, barking, inhuman — and surprisingly like the voice of Linda Blair in “The Exorcist,” which had been released in Germany two years earlier.

Sometimes the demons identified themselves — as Cain, Nero, Judas, Lucifer, Hitler and others — and even answered the exorcists’ questions, explaining what was wrong with the church or why they were in Hell. “People are stupid as pigs,” spat Hitler. “They think it’s all over after death. It goes on.” Judas said Hitler was nothing but a “big mouth” and had “no real say” in Hell.

Anyway, it wasn’t the exorcism that killed Anneliese Michel.

At some point she began talking increasingly about dying to atone for the wayward youth of the day and the apostate priests of the modern church, and refused to eat. Though she had received treatment for epilepsy, by this time, at her own request, doctors were no longer being consulted.

She, her parents and the exorcists decided to rely completely on exorcism. By the time Michel died of starvation, she weighed only 68 pounds.

After her death, the Anneliese Michel trial also set reason against faith.

“I personally believe that this case was handled in such a way as to play down the reality of the Devil,” says Norbert Baumert, Jesuit priest and chairman of the theological commission of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal in Germany, which cannot perform exorcism but practices “prayers for deliverance” from “demonic nuisance.”

The trial went to the heart of faith: If the Bible is true, then the miracles must have really happened, and Satan must be real.

But it’s not easy preaching the existence of the Devil to one of the most secularized countries in Europe. A study by research institute Infratest and published in the German newsweekly Der Spiegel last month showed that even among churchgoers, approximately a third of baptized Catholics and half of baptized Protestants do not believe in life after death.

“I understand the complaint that German theologians are too rational,” says Klemens Richter, professor for liturgical science in Muenster. “But exorcism is all about helping the sick. In Anneliese Michel’s case, the sickness was supported. When I go to a patient and support her in her delusion, she gets the impression that she really is possessed.”

Exorcism is far more widespread today than most people imagine. According to Richter, there are about 70 practicing exorcists in France and just as many employed in Italy. In July this year, a congress in Poland was reportedly attended by about 350 practicing exorcists.

Germany is the major European exception. Here, there are only two or three practicing exorcists, and though they have the approval of their bishops, they operate in secret.

Secularization has the church in its grip,” says Ulrich Niemann, a Jesuit priest, medical doctor and psychiatrist who often has been called into exorcism cases by clergymen. “We do a lot for the Third World, but little for faith in a transcendent God. . . . The German church is far too cerebral.”

Niemann doesn’t consider himself an exorcist and doesn’t perform the Roman ritual of 1614. “As a doctor, I say there is no such thing as possession,” he says. “In my view, these patients are mentally ill. I pray with them, but that alone doesn’t help. You have to deal with them as a psychiatrist. But at the same time, when the patient comes from Eastern Europe and believes that he’s been impaired by evil, it would be a mistake to ignore his belief system.”

After the Michel trial, German bishops and theologians formed a commission to review the exorcism rite, and in 1984 they petitioned Rome to change it.

The heart of the problem, they found, was the practice of speaking directly or “imperatively” to the Devil, that is, “I command thee, unclean spirit . . . ” That part of the rite seemed to do the most damage, since it confirmed to the patient that he or she truly was possessed.

The Germans didn’t get what they wanted.

“We were astonished when Rome issued a changed exorcism formula in 1999 which left open the possibility of speaking to the Devil directly,” says Richter. “But you can’t know for certain that a patient is truly possessed of the Devil.”
Photo: Frightful Friday - Exorcism of Anneliese Michel

The first person to recognize that Anneliese Michel was possessed by demons was an older woman accompanying the girl on a pilgrimage. She noticed that Anneliese would not walk past a certain image of Jesus, refused to drink water from a holy spring and smelled bad — hellishly bad. An exorcist in a nearby town examined Michel and returned a diagnosis of demonic possession. The bishop issued permission to perform the rite of exorcism according to the Roman ritual of 1614.

Half a year and 67 rites of exorcism later, Anneliese Michel was dead at 23.

Anneliese Michel did not die in the Middle Ages, but in 1976, in the small town of Klingenberg, in the heart of one of the most civilized and advanced countries in Europe: Germany.

Two years after Michel’s death, a German court found her parents and the two priests involved guilty of negligent manslaughter and sentenced them to six months in prison, suspended with three years’ probation.

What shocked Germany most was the fact that it could happen in a country that prides itself on being highly rational — and highly secularized.

“The surprising thing was that the people connected to Michel were all completely convinced that she had really been possessed,” says Franz Barthel, amazement still in his voice three decades after he covered the story for the regional daily paper Main-Post.

“Many years later, I visited the woman who first diagnosed the Devil,” Barthel says. “She blessed my microphone with holy water because I was working for the radio then, and it was likely that the Devil was in control of the microphone.”

Michel was raised in a strict Catholic family in Bavaria, which rejected the reforms of Vatican II and flirted with religious fringe groups. While other kids her age were rebelling against authority and experimenting with sex, she tried to atone for the sins of wayward priests and drug addicts by sleeping on a bare floor in the middle of winter.

According to court findings, she experienced her first epileptic attack in 1969, and by 1973 was suffering from depression and considering suicide. Soon she was seeing the faces of demons on the people and things around her, and voices told her she was damned.

Under the influence of her demons, Michel ripped the clothes off her body, compulsively performed up to 400 squats a day, crawled under a table and barked like a dog for two days, ate spiders and coal, bit the head off a dead bird and licked her own urine from the floor.

By 1975 Michel was asking for an exorcism. The Revs. Ernst Alt and Arnold Renz performed the rite 67 times over the first half of 1976. Some of the sessions took up to four hours. Forty-two sessions were recorded on tape.

Michel’s recorded voice can still send shivers up your spine. It is the voice of a demon, growling, barking, inhuman — and surprisingly like the voice of Linda Blair in “The Exorcist,” which had been released in Germany two years earlier.

Sometimes the demons identified themselves — as Cain, Nero, Judas, Lucifer, Hitler and others — and even answered the exorcists’ questions, explaining what was wrong with the church or why they were in Hell. “People are stupid as pigs,” spat Hitler. “They think it’s all over after death. It goes on.” Judas said Hitler was nothing but a “big mouth” and had “no real say” in Hell.

Anyway, it wasn’t the exorcism that killed Anneliese Michel.

At some point she began talking increasingly about dying to atone for the wayward youth of the day and the apostate priests of the modern church, and refused to eat. Though she had received treatment for epilepsy, by this time, at her own request, doctors were no longer being consulted.

She, her parents and the exorcists decided to rely completely on exorcism. By the time Michel died of starvation, she weighed only 68 pounds.

After her death, the Anneliese Michel trial also set reason against faith.

“I personally believe that this case was handled in such a way as to play down the reality of the Devil,” says Norbert Baumert, Jesuit priest and chairman of the theological commission of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal in Germany, which cannot perform exorcism but practices “prayers for deliverance” from “demonic nuisance.”

The trial went to the heart of faith: If the Bible is true, then the miracles must have really happened, and Satan must be real.

But it’s not easy preaching the existence of the Devil to one of the most secularized countries in Europe. A study by research institute Infratest and published in the German newsweekly Der Spiegel last month showed that even among churchgoers, approximately a third of baptized Catholics and half of baptized Protestants do not believe in life after death.

“I understand the complaint that German theologians are too rational,” says Klemens Richter, professor for liturgical science in Muenster. “But exorcism is all about helping the sick. In Anneliese Michel’s case, the sickness was supported. When I go to a patient and support her in her delusion, she gets the impression that she really is possessed.”

Exorcism is far more widespread today than most people imagine. According to Richter, there are about 70 practicing exorcists in France and just as many employed in Italy. In July this year, a congress in Poland was reportedly attended by about 350 practicing exorcists.

Germany is the major European exception. Here, there are only two or three practicing exorcists, and though they have the approval of their bishops, they operate in secret.

Secularization has the church in its grip,” says Ulrich Niemann, a Jesuit priest, medical doctor and psychiatrist who often has been called into exorcism cases by clergymen. “We do a lot for the Third World, but little for faith in a transcendent God. . . . The German church is far too cerebral.”

Niemann doesn’t consider himself an exorcist and doesn’t perform the Roman ritual of 1614. “As a doctor, I say there is no such thing as possession,” he says. “In my view, these patients are mentally ill. I pray with them, but that alone doesn’t help. You have to deal with them as a psychiatrist. But at the same time, when the patient comes from Eastern Europe and believes that he’s been impaired by evil, it would be a mistake to ignore his belief system.”

After the Michel trial, German bishops and theologians formed a commission to review the exorcism rite, and in 1984 they petitioned Rome to change it.

The heart of the problem, they found, was the practice of speaking directly or “imperatively” to the Devil, that is, “I command thee, unclean spirit . . . ” That part of the rite seemed to do the most damage, since it confirmed to the patient that he or she truly was possessed.

The Germans didn’t get what they wanted.

“We were astonished when Rome issued a changed exorcism formula in 1999 which left open the possibility of speaking to the Devil directly,” says Richter. “But you can’t know for certain that a patient is truly possessed of the Devil.”

Today, 30 years after Michel’s death, with both exorcists and her father also dead (her mother couldn’t be reached for this article), Michel is still revered by small groups of Catholics who believe she atoned for wayward priests and sinful youth, and honor her as an unofficial saint.

“Buses, often from Holland, I think, still come to Anneliese’s grave,” Barthel says. “The grave is a gathering point for religious outsiders. They write notes with requests and thanks for her help, and leave them on the grave. They pray, sing and travel on.”

For the video :-  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4n9vK0_mdk

Today, 30 years after Michel’s death, with both exorcists and her father also dead (her mother couldn’t be reached for this article), Michel is still revered by small groups of Catholics who believe she atoned for wayward priests and sinful youth, and honor her as an unofficial saint.

“Buses, often from Holland, I think, still come to Anneliese’s grave,” Barthel says. “The grave is a gathering point for religious outsiders. They write notes with requests and thanks for her help, and leave them on the grave. They pray, sing and travel on.”




Anything i copied is truely for my reference and  collection to read  for my past time and if you find there wrong with the source '' Please do inform me as i honoured the article behalf of Analiese michell 

My 2014 _birthday Celebration : Beautiful memorY !

Back on Monday,31st March My mom n dad threw a surprise birthday party for my _rd birthday (confidential age).  I can't believe I am leaving my teen's.  I still feel so young!  It's so confusing!

He had been planning it for months - and I never had a clue.  I think it's pretty much out now that I'm pretty gullible and somewhat unobservant.  But I think it's more that I don't really think about stuff that doesn'tdirectly affect me.  I kinda live life wearing blinders. 

He told me months prior that there was no plan for my birthday and we will be eating outside'' just 3 o us( after im back from work ) so thats wat the actual plan -  So, I secured it on my calendar and went on with life. 

I was supposed to finished work late that particular day.  But, due to another IT Department issue( some sort of legal issue , iwas lucky enough permitted to go back early ) .I was glad that I didn't have to stayback. 

Normally its my dad turn to pick me up from work but that day he said its raining heavy' and i shud sort out myself . I just  Umph myself and walk back home ,wondering why my birthday was too dull '' ...and walking back home thinking what i shud eat .

Soon ,   i reached home and the door was closed and as i opened i saw my aunt and my cousin bro sitting watching tv . My dad were cooking in kitchen and my mom simply tasting her own leomanade +sunQuik juice in a larger Jag) . I assumed there a party for me...but only two guest ???? hmmm...n then i saw there's a cake. LOL ...its a party ...i was happy and wear my new dress which i planned to wear it on the dinner outing' . There's then many family frens and relatives join the day . I was shocked to saw my school mate and tuition mate came for my birthday.So many of my favorite people were there!


im just happy ..It was still a nice party. I learned just to leave things alone that close to the birthday combo. Whatever they plan is always nice.
   And SO much fun!  Luckily, I just happened to have my camera on me.  And I didn't get near enough pictures!  There were so many people that I never got pictures of.  Darn it!  And I admit that it's ridiculous that I'm in every picture.  That was not how I wanted it.  In hindsight I should have asked someone to pass the camera around.  But, I wasn't thinking.  All I was doing was talking!!!  There were so many people to talk to!   It was crazy!






P/S : i got many gifts and ang Pau from frens and family ...and even after my birthday i received unknown bouquet in my office and My frens and manager _ (current emplyment ) belanja makan besar ...KAw KAw 

Tired and most Packed Day in Lrt station_Masjid Jamek : Rip for the fella :(

I was totally frust seeing these type of scenery in masjid jamek station just now (posted on : 1st april) ...at first I don't know what happened ...but as from wat I heard from a girl ' she said somebody fell down onto the track and its going to take few hours to clear the mess'' 
....between the large groups of people and the groups of people eventually wil line up for a train. ...just tooo frustrating me !!! I just want go home .....damn

ps: Rip for the one who fell down .._felt sorry for their family...


Tuesday, 1 April 2014

Where's humanity .......where is the love

Cruel Crimes - The Hello Kitty Murder

In May 1999, fourteen year old "Ah Fong" (name changed) walked into a police station in the Tsim Sha Tsui area of Hong Kong. She told the attending officers that she was being haunted by the ghost of a young woman she had helped torture.
A fairly far fetched story – ghosts and torture, but still the officers followed up on Fong’s story.

When they investigated a third floor flat, located in the middle of the Tsim Sha Tsui shopping district, they found every indication of a shocking crime. There was evidence of a corpse hidden about the apartment, parts of internal organs kept in the fridge, and some teeth were located.Most shocking of all was the discovery of a human skull, found in a large, stuffed 'Hello Kitty' mermaid toy.
Three men and Fong were arrested and soon the full scale of the horrific crime came to light.The victim was 23 year old Fan Man-yee, also known as Ah Map. Ah Map had been left to a girl’s home as a child, after being abandoned by her parents. By the time she was 16, she had turned to a life of small crime, sex for sale and various addictions.She worked the assorted clubs and brothels of the Tsim Sha Tsui/Kowloon district of Hong Kong, and many of her clientele were known in the various circles of the Chinese underground societies.Ah Map met 34 year old Chan Man-lok in 1997, at one of the various brothels she worked in. He became a regular client, and had violent tendencies when he was on one of his many methamphetamine binges.
It must have been after one of these violent outbursts that Ah Map felt she did not want to see Chan again. Unfortunately she made a mistake; she stole his wallet which contained $4000. Although she did pay back the money, and $10,000 in interest, Chan still wanted more.

Ah Map was unable to pay the extra $16,000 Chan demanded, so on 17th March, 1999, Map was located and abducted from her home by two of Chan's accomplices, Leung Shing-cho (27) and Leung Wai-lun (21).Ah Map had now entered a world of depravity, torture and eventually, death.During the investigation and trial Ah Fong, the fourteen year old girl who led police to the crime, gave intricate details on what horrors Ah Map went through over the next month, leading up to her death. She was there for the entire event, she was Chan's girlfriend.Originally Chan had abducted Ah Map in order to hold her and work her, taking all of her earnings until the debt had been repaid in full. However, with the repeated beatings Map suffered, no one really wanted to pay for the services, so Chan and his two friends used her as a personal play thing instead.At first the torture was limited to repeated beatings, first with bare hands, but soon this escalated to hitting her with furniture and then metal bars. They would force Map to smile, laugh and say how happy she was, during the beatings. If she didn't, the beatings would get worse.
Between beatings she would be left in the kitchen, while the trio (and Fong) would continue on their meth binges and play video games. When the games got boring, they would revisit Ah Map and continue her torture.

They found uses for every kitchen appliance or item of food kept in the fridge and in the cupboards. At times they would melt plastic onto her body, and then, running out of things to melt, they would just burn her directly, followed by smearing different foods into the wounds in some sort of sick experiment in pain.
The torturers soon discovered it was easier to get to Map if she was suspended, so using electrical cabling they tied her to a hook in the ceiling, and between bouts, would leave her hanging in the air.The torturing got worse and worse, and from here I'll leave out the details, as to be honest, their sick ingenuity does not need to be further written about.Eventually (and no doubt mercifully), after a month of extreme torture, Ah Map passed away. She had been left in the bathroom, and died during the night.
The torturers could not work out what to do, so they went back to playing video games. The following day, after another all-night binge, Chan decided that Ah Map needed to be further destroyed. She was placed into the bathtub, where she was dismembered.
Her parts were boiled down, in an effort to cover the smell, the head was stripped of all flesh and placed into the Hello Kitty doll. As Chan and his associates were boiling body parts on one hot plate, they would be preparing their own meals on the other... at times, using the same utensils in both.Although most of the parts of Ah Maps body were disposed of, there were some remains left in the flat when the police started their investigation, along with the head in the 'Hello Kitty' doll, from which the crime received its name.
After the trial, the three men were handed life sentences with no review for parole, for a minimum of 20 years. Although the testimony from Ah Fong was found to be sound, and the evidence found in the flat spoke volumes, the three men were only convicted of manslaughter and unlawful imprisonment.

The jury found that the men had not killed Ah Map with intent, but was rather just an affect of the continual abuse.Before the apartment block where the crime took place was demolished, it became a ground for many people who wanted to make contact with the spirit of Ah Map. People who visited the flat, specifically the kitchen, say that many candles could be found burning in small circles on the floor and on cupboards.When Ah Map died, she left behind a 1 year old son.When Ah Fong was asked how they could all take part in such a horrific crime she replied “She was broken and playing with her wasn’t so much fun after that, but we carried on anyway. There wasn’t anything else to do”
“I did it for fun. Just to see what it was like to hurt someone.”
For her testimony Ah Fong recieved total immunity from prosecution.

Photo: The 'Hello Kitty' mermaid doll
Inset Upper: Fan Man-yee aka Ah Map, the victim of one months extreme torture and eventual death.
Inset Lower: The apartment where the crime took place.