In 1969, while speaking on TV, the American Joseph Delius predicted that there would be a plane crash at the end of the year. The man said that 79 human lives would be cut off as a result. He could not indicate exactly what and when will happen, but in his visions he saw the number 330. A few months later, on September 9, McDonnell Douglas DC-9-31 crashed over Indianapolis. All passengers and crew were killed. It happened at 3.30. This is not the only case when predictions come true, at first seeming delirium. They will be discussed in our material.
Clash over Indianapolis
The largest plane crash in the United States at that time. An Allegheny Airlines McDonnell 78 with 78 passengers and four crew members flew from Cincinnati.
Already when the ship was approaching Indianapolis, a small private jet Piper PA-28-140 Cherokee, at the helm of which was a trainee, crashed into the rear of it.
The Piper's cockpit collapsed from the impact, and McDonnell lost its tail, and then both collapsed. The crash killed 83 people.
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It is curious that the disaster might not have happened if the flight had not been delayed. The plane was scheduled to leave Cincinnati at 2:57 pm, but there was a group of 64 passengers at the same airport waiting for Flight 69, which was an hour late.
These passengers were asked to transfer to Allegheny Flight 853 as they were on their way. 38 people agreed to this, and flight 853 was forced to be delayed.
Attack on Pearl Harbor
The battle was predicted by a US Army soldier, General Billy Mitchell. He was known for his successful flight program against Germany during the First World War.
In addition, back in 1925, Mitchell saw a future air attack, which would be carried out as follows: “On Ford Island (Pearl Harbor) at 7.30 am there will be a bombardment. Clark Field (Philippines) will be attacked at 10.40 am.
The command acted as expected. Despite a convincing display of professionalism, Mitchell was tried by a military tribunal. The general was fired from military service.
In 1945 he was posthumously awarded the rank of Major General, at the same time awarded the Medal of Honor.
However, Mitchell died in 1936, never knowing what honors await him nine years after his death.
The collapse of the submarine "Kursk"
The nuclear submarine sank on August 12, 2000. 20 years earlier, in 1980, Vangelia Gushterova (according to other sources - Dimitrova or Surcheva) mentioned Kursk in her predictions.
"At the end of the century, in 1999 or 2000, Kursk will be under water, and the whole world will mourn it." Some thought that we were talking about a city in the Black Earth Region, while others thought it was a woman’s mind, clouded by old age, that said.
After all, it is known that an interview with Vanga could not be recorded on a dictaphone or video: every time the journalists discovered that all the data from the cassettes had somehow been erased.
Therefore, Vanga's predictions were recorded in solid text on paper. Many were confused, they were written in an incomprehensible handwriting, therefore no one vouched for the reliability of the words relayed by the clairvoyant assistants.
And for the first time the phrase about "Kursk" appeared in "Komsomolskaya Pravda", and in the books of Vanga's niece with the predictions of her aunt, there was not a single mention of such words.
Collapse in the mining village of Aberfan
This happened on October 21, 1966 in the British village of Aberfan. The waste dump collapsed, and under the descending landslide, two dozen residential buildings and an elementary school were buried.
At school it was the last school day before the holidays. Classes had not yet begun, the children were leaving for classes from the assembly hall, where the meeting was taking place. If it had ended a few minutes later, there would have been significantly fewer casualties, since it was the classes that bore the brunt of the landslide.
As a result, 28 adults and 116 children died.
The day before the tragedy, a school student, 10-year-old Eryl Jones, had a prophetic dream. She dreamed that she was going to school, but instead of a building she saw only a mountain of black mud.
Despite her premonition, Jones still went to class and died along with the rest of the children. Since then, there has been a cemetery in Aberfan with people killed in the collapse.
The assassination of John F. Kennedy
Jean Dixon, a famous astrologer from the United States, wrote in her Parade column in 1956 that a Democrat would become president in four years.
But in the end he will be killed, or he will die a natural death in the workplace, she said.
Eleven years before the tragedy, Jean had a vision. On a gloomy rainy morning, Dixon, she went to church and stood in front of the statue of the Virgin Mary.
Suddenly there was a flickering image of the White House, over the roof of which the numbers 1-9-6-0 began to appear, soon obscured by a black cloud descending on the dome. Young John F. Kennedy stood in front of the main entrance.
The revelations attending Jin during her meditations often flashed in the whirlwind of advertisements and information hitting the masses through the press and television at the time, but few believed her. However, in many ways she was right.
The terrible death of Richard Parker
In 1838, American writer Edgar Allan Poe wrote The Adventure Tale of Arthur Gordon Pym, which became prophetic.
In one of the parts, three starving sailors, drifting on a lifeboat in the South Seas, eat their comrade - the cabin boy Richard Parker.
46 years later, the tragedy described by Poe was exactly repeated in life. The ship "Mignonette" was wrecked. In the boat, as in the story, there were four people: Captain Thomas Dudley, his assistant Edwin Stevens, sailor Edmund Brooks and the cabin boy, 17-year-old Richard Parker.
16 days of hunger forced the sailors to eat the cabin boy. They survived thanks to Parker, but upon returning home the ship's captain was convicted of first-degree murder.
It was rumored that Edwin Stevens, the yacht's mate, soon went insane, and the sailor Brooks died for the rest of his life.
Captain Dudley left for Australia to start a new life, where he was nicknamed "Cannibal Tom". He suffered all his life from a sense of guilt and, wanting to at least to some extent atone for it, paid for the monument to Parker.
It is also said that Dudley secretly sent money to Parker's sister so that she could graduate from high school. He also paid for the maintenance of the monument in good condition. Dudley soon died of the bubonic plague, but back in the 1930s, the Parker monument was the tidiest of them all.
Anime predicted the Columbia shuttle disaster
In 1999, the popular anime "Cowboy Bebop", which is about the future, came out with an "ancient" shuttle called "Columbia" (which looks like most real spaceships), called on to a rescue mission.
The operation almost fails due to the "heat resistant tile" which has begun to flake off.
In 2003, the real space shuttle Columbia crashed - the disaster happened during launch.
As it turns out, the collapse of "Columbia" happened after the peeling of heat-resistant tiles …
MH17 crash over Donetsk
Dutchman Kor Pan posted pictures of the infamous MH17 on Facebook before landing on July 14, 2014.
The photos were most likely posted minutes before the man got on board.
Under the picture, he wrote as if he felt that he was laying it out in case the plane went missing: "If it disappears, then it looks like this."
The plane depicted in the photo took off from Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam and was shot down a few hours later on the Russian-Ukrainian border near the village of Snezhnoe in Donetsk region. 298 people died.
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