by Michael Grosso:
The world is full of strange phenomena that challenge the
way we understand ourselves. I’m
drawn to the extreme, the rare but often deeply revealing phenomena. I’m trying to form as accurate a picture
of human potential as possible.
The project calls for a gradual piecing together of many
elements from various sources. The
interesting phenomena prompt us to ask: What does this matter to me, going
forward? Of course, you might not want to probe too deeply. Phenomena are sometimes
ignored because they can’t be explained, or because they challenge our assumptions.
An element of fear also gets in the way. If we admit
telepathy, we might worry about others snooping on our innermost secrets. If we acknowledge psychokinesis, there
would be reason to get paranoid about what people could do to us, in secret and
from a distance—they used to call it sorcery. Or we might not like the idea of some
people knowing our future, which is possible if we accept precognition. Others might grimace at the thought of
life after death for fear of what might happen to them (guilty conscience?). So resistance might be a sign of irrational
fear.
Statues that weep have great ontological shock value. Materialization
is an obscure concept, but sometimes things just seem to spurt into being out
of nowhere. Stone or water
poltergeists are documented examples. Whether to think of materialization as an
apport of something from elsewhere or as creation ex nihilo is another question.
Strange to say, religious artifacts that materialize blood,
tears, and oil have a long history.
There is a famous medieval case of materialized blood, reported and illustrated
by contemporary artists of Orvieto in the Middle Ages. The English psychical researcher,
Everard Feilding, investigated the Abbé Vachere whose communion hosts and
religious paintings bled. Washington Post reporters observed weeping Madonna
statues at the Saint Elizabeth Catholic church in Lake Ridge, Virginia, in the early
1990s. And (last time I checked) there’s
a similar case currently under way in Fresno, California. Moreover, there are
reports of numerous crying statues in
Russia and the Ukraine during their current troubles, which have been compared
to the epidemic of crying statues in Russia at the time of the Revolutions in
1917.
But consider this.
A plastic statue of the Virgin wept on the morning of August 29, 1953,
in Syracuse, Sicily. Antonina
Iannuso was pregnant, ill with toxemia, suffering repeated seizures, paralysis,
and blindness. In the presence of
her aunt and sister-in-law, Antonina had an intense attack, but after a while her
convulsions climaxed, and she became calm and rested in bed for a while.
When she woke up she was relieved of her “nervous” symptoms.
She looked around. Glancing up at
the Madonna cast hanging on the wall, she couldn’t believe her eyes. She saw and then felt with her fingers
what seemed like tears pouring from the plaster eyes of the Madonna image. The tears were wetting her bed sheets
and pillow. Aunt and sister-in-law observed the strange thing that was
happening. Inexplicably, tears were
pouring from plastic eyes of the Madonna relief.
From that moment their lives would be turned upside down,
and the city of Syracuse would never be the same again. Consider some highlights of this story
(see for details The Miracle at Syracuse.
A.R. Bandini, 1956).
The plaster cast Madonna wept copiously, intermittently, for
four days.
Thousands of people witnessed and photographed the
phenomenon.
A committee of chemist, pharmacist, physician, prelates and
officers of the law quickly convened, collected samples of the anomalous
effusions, and determined that they were chemically identical with human tears.
Crowds came from all parts to behold the tears of the
Virgin, miraculous healings were proclaimed, and the story was headlined across
the world.
The first healing occurred with Antonina Ianusso. Once the Madonna image began to
manifest tears, all her symptoms vanished, and, coincidentally, she gave birth
to a healthy boy on December 25, Christmas day.
The tear-stained artifact ended in the hands of the church
and became the basis of a new cathedral that was built to commemorate this
visitation from a new “Our Lady of Tears of Syracuse,” illustrating how a
mysterious psychic event may become the basis of constructing a cult or religion.
What to make of this materialization of tears? Facts of this
type are fairly abundant and extant today. They taunt us as we gape with
befuddlement. Poe’s imp of the
perverse is chuckling behind our backs.
But the tears must be explained, lest we invoke Leibniz’s Principle of
Sufficient Reason!
Many embrace the official story—if ratified by church authorities—that these are tears of the ghost
of the Virgin Mary who decided to make one of her plastic images weep profusely
on a street in Syracuse, in somebody’s bedroom who in fact was at that moment
very sick and distressed. Antonina
was healed of toxemia and hysterical blindness, and thousands of people could
see how the Virgin was crying.
For those who find this incredible, there is another way to
explain the tears. It is possible
that Antonina herself unconsciously caused them to appear on the Madonna’s
plastic eyes. In poltergeist
cases, strange physical effects occur in the presence of emotionally labile
persons, often but not always children. Antonina was in a labile state, prone to hysterical
blindness, itself a bizarre symptom.
It was a known syndrome—a
state between hysteria and ecstasy—often with effects we want to call surreal.
She was suffering from intense pain, economic uncertainty,
and a husband in cahoots with the top communist in Syracuse. Not a very religious family, it seems
like an odd pick for such a divine favor. Once the tears start to flow,
Antonina’s symptoms start to disappear.
Stories like Antonina’s add to an emergent database for a
new healthcare paradigm. We need
to build a paradigm that integrates all our healing potentials, especially
those ignored by the mainline paradigm. Antonina’s healing seems to have been the effect of an
unknown process that left its signature of tangible tears on a plastic
Madonna’s cheeks for all the world to admire, albeit with complete incomprehension.
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I think these things are a manifestation of the power of the mind or collective imagination.. I believe (and plenty of quantum physicists would agree) that when it comes to brass tacks, the world is all mind- that the brain is happening in consciousness, not vice versa. Therefore reality is ultimately more plastic and pliable to mind than is usually supposed; hence stigmatics manifesting wounds that unerringly reflect their particular favourite painting/ sculpture of the crucifixion(hmmm)... and hence all the reports of people contravening so called 'immutable' physical laws throughout the ages..
ReplyDeleteI think you're right about the physicists who nowadays are among the most imaginative scientists trying to pry open the mysteries of the universe.
ReplyDelete