Facts about Vanga. Vanga - biography, facts from life, photographs, background information. What kind of illness does the young soothsayer have?

Facts about Vanga.  Vanga - biography, facts from life, photographs, background information.  What kind of illness does the young soothsayer have?
Facts about Vanga. Vanga - biography, facts from life, photographs, background information. What kind of illness does the young soothsayer have?

The name Vanga is heard again today. The words and predictions of the great soothsayer are increasingly being confirmed. What do we know about Wang and how much do we still have to learn?

Her whole fate is woven from mysteries and amazing contradictions. Here are just a few of them:

1. The mystery of the name


Now it is difficult to imagine that the world-famous seer could have received a completely different name at birth. And instead of Vanga she would be... Andromache. But, indeed, the future soothsayer did not receive her name immediately, but only two months after birth. She was born incredibly weak, seven months old. The parents were afraid that the child simply would not survive, so they decided to choose a name only after she was more or less stronger.

According to the old Bulgarian tradition, they went out into the street and asked the name of the first person they met, but the girl’s grandmother did not like the choice of a random passer-by. She immediately rejected the beautiful ancient Greek name Andromache, contrary to all customs. And only the second woman she met named the fateful name Vangelia - bearer of the good news.

2. Strange games


Until the age of 12, Vanga lived the most ordinary life of an ordinary child, but an amazing future seemed to be already on the threshold, waiting for the right moment to meet. Vanga's relatives recalled that she loved her very much. One of the strangest was this: in the yard, in a secluded place, she hid a simple toy; she returned to the house, closed her eyes tightly and, feeling as if blind, went to look for her. Parents were apprehensive about blind games, but despite all the prohibitions, this type of entertainment was one of the girl’s favorites.

3. First love


The young man's name was Dimitar. But Vangelia married much later to a completely different Dimitar. And her first love ended tragically for her - the lovers were separated, Vanga returned to her home to help her family and suffered for a long time from the cruelty of fate. And then Vanga realized her unique abilities and realized that her mission in life was to help others, and love was a luxury inaccessible to her.

4. Keeper of Secrets


It seems that Vanga knew everything about the origin of the world and about each person individually. No one could hide anything from her, but she herself knew how to keep secrets. For example, Wang was often asked whether there is life after the death of a person? “I have no right to answer this question,” she said.

The clairvoyant also avoided answering questions about the apocalypse. She never spoke about the end of the world and never predicted it. She answered questions about the origin of the world evasively, arguing that humanity itself would learn this secret, and she simply did not have the right to reveal other people’s secrets.

5. Civil servant


Since 1967, Vanga was officially considered a civil servant and even received a salary. She became the first soothsayer who was officially allowed to charge money for an appointment.

To get to her, you had to not only stand in a huge line, but first get a special coupon, for which you had to pay a small fee. All the money went straight to the treasury, and Vanga was entitled to only a small salary.

6. Children


Vanga loved children very much, treated her nephews with special trepidation and care and became godmother to almost three thousand children. She said many times that her mission was predetermined from above and was completely different. Although she really wanted to become a mother even after the death of her husband.

Vanga was the first to adopt a 6-year-old girl Violetta(according to other sources - Veneta(Venche). Then the seer baptized a little sick boy who could die at any moment. But he survived, becoming her adopted son. Vanga named the boy after her husband Dimitar. Both children received a good education. Violetta married a wealthy man. Foster-son Dmitry Vylchev is one of the founders of the Vanga Foundation and works as a prosecutor in the city of Petrich.

7. Healer


Vanga not only predicted the future and accurately told about the past, she treated people for a variety of diseases. Moreover, with unusual methods she confused both doctors and representatives of alternative medicine, offering people simple, but sometimes quite strange recipes.

She used herbs as medicines, which, according to experienced herbalists, did not have any medicinal properties. At the same time, she often indicated the exact place where it was necessary to get this or that medicinal plant. This defies explanation, but Vanga’s recipes turned out to be effective and gave results. However, Vanga was never able to cure her beloved husband from alcohol addiction. She knew that tragedy could not be avoided, but she hoped for a miracle. Also, the soothsayer was unable to influence the course of her illness. Vanga died on April 11, 1996, exactly on the day that she predicted for herself.

On August 11, 1996, a resident of Bulgaria, Vangelia Pandeva Gushterova (née Dimitrova), died at the age of 85. The whole world knew her as the famous seer Vanga. But did she really have paranormal powers? Here are some facts.

Vanga’s “miracles” are known mainly from her niece’s book

Krasimira Stoyanova's brochure “Vanga” was published in 1989 by the publishing house “Bulgarian Writer”. According to the information presented by Stoyanova, Vanga was born on January 31, 1911 in the Yugoslav city of Strumica, in the family of a Bulgarian peasant Pande Surchev.

At the age of 12, the girl was carried away by a hurricane, and after some time she became blind. Later, relatives recalled how, as a little girl, Vanga hid various objects and looked for them by touch, “blindly.”

At the beginning of 1941, Vanga had a vision - a blond horseman on a white horse. The guest said: “Soon everything in this world will turn upside down, many people will die. You will stay here and speak about the living and the dead. Don't be afraid! I will be there, I will always help you."

During the war, almost all the men in their town were conscripted into the army or taken to Germany for forced labor. Their relatives came to Vanga to tell her about their fate. And the young woman always gave accurate information: this one is alive, this one is not, this one will return then...

The fame of the “witch” quickly spread throughout the area and beyond. People with their troubles came to Vanga from all over the world. In April 1942, the Bulgarian Tsar Boris himself secretly visited her. Before he had time to utter a word, the clairvoyant spoke: “Your power is growing, it is spread wide, but be ready to soon fit your possessions into a nutshell... Remember the date - August 28!” On August 28 of the following year, the king died.

The seer herself explained that she comes into contact with the dead and they tell her everything she wants to know. It was enough for another visitor to enter the room for Vanga to pronounce her “verdict.” She talked with others for a long time and asked questions. She asked many to bring a piece of sugar with them: holding it in her hand, Vanga obviously received information about the person. She categorically refused to accept some petitioners.

Did Vanga collaborate with the intelligence services?

In 1967, a special public service was created, whose representatives kept order in the courtyard of Vanga’s house and kept records of its visitors. Vangelia Gushterova was officially registered as a civil servant with a monthly salary of 200 leva. A fixed fee was established for a visit to her - 10 leva for residents of Bulgaria and other socialist countries and 50 dollars for residents of capitalist countries. Before this, the seer received people for free, unless she took gifts...

At the same time, Vanga’s mysterious gift has been repeatedly challenged by skeptics. There were rumors that the Bulgarian intelligence services were helping Vanga collect information about the right clients, and she also obtained the necessary information through leading questions.

Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences E.B. Alexandrov, who headed the Commission for Combating Pseudoscience and Falsification of Scientific Research, wrote about it this way:

“Do you know who prayed to Vanga the most? Taxi drivers, waiters in cafes, hotel staff - people who, thanks to the “clairvoyant”, had an excellent, stable income. They all willingly collected preliminary information for Vanga: where the person came from, why, what he hoped for. And Vanga then shared this information with clients as if she had seen it herself. They helped with dossiers on clients and intelligence services, under whose cover the state brand operated.”

According to retired KGB lieutenant colonel Yevgeny Sergienko, Vanga was often mistaken, but they tried not to disclose this, since the seer often hosted high-ranking people, and for the special services this was a “way of obtaining information.”

Thus, Anatoly Stroev, who worked as Komsomolskaya Pravda’s own correspondent in Bulgaria in 1985-1989, once came to Vanga with a certain journalist, and she predicted to the woman that she would never get married and would not have children. Within a year, the journalist got married and gave birth to a daughter.

In 1991, Vanga stated regarding Soviet journalists Viktor Nogin and Gennady Kurinny, who disappeared during the war in Croatia, that they were alive and would soon be found. But it later turned out that both were shot on charges of espionage.

She never uttered some of the prophecies allegedly made by Vanga

Vanga is credited with prophecies about the death of Stalin, the Chernobyl accident, Boris Yeltsin's victory in the 1996 presidential election, the sinking of the Kursk submarine in 2000, the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in New York and, finally, the coming end of the world. But nothing like this has ever come from the lips of the fortuneteller; there is no reliable evidence of this.

Krasimira Stoyanova’s book mentions a story about how Vanga was visited by the Soviet actor Vyacheslav Tikhonov, and she allegedly told him: “Why didn’t you fulfill your wishes?”

your best friend Yuri Gagarin? Before his last flight, he came to your house and said: “I don’t have time, so buy an alarm clock and keep it on your desk. Let this alarm clock remind you of me."

Meanwhile, Anatoly Stroev personally asked Tikhonov to comment on this episode. The artist replied: “I didn’t promise Gagarin any alarm clock! Yes, we didn’t even know each other...”

The number of correct predictions made by Vanga slightly exceeds the probability threshold

Several years ago, Vanga’s compatriot, sociologist Velichko Dobriyanov, published a book in which he outlined a thorough analysis of the predictions of the famous clairvoyant. Of the 99 Vanga messages analyzed by Dobriyanov, 43 were completely true, 43 looked ambiguous and only 12 turned out to be completely incorrect. Thus, the number of accurate “hits” was about 70%. This is slightly higher than the probability theory promises. This means that Vanga still possessed some abilities...

Photos from open sources

Let’s immediately make a reservation that the famous Bulgarian fortuneteller Vanga never mentioned 2019, although she sometimes mentioned the end of the second decade of the coming century. Moreover, even at the same time, she did not say anything specific about our time, these were all hints and some general phrases that today everyone can interpret as they like. (website)

Nevertheless, let's look at the most interesting interpretations of the vague phrases thrown by Vangelina regarding the future. Moreover, even a translation from Bulgarian can radically distort the meaning of the prediction, not to mention many other factors (for example, falsification) that can reduce all these prophecies to almost zero.

Photos from open sources

And yet, for those who are interested, let’s read what Vanga allegedly said about our time, and what the most insightful researchers of her heritage think about this:

The actions of a huge country will plunge the whole world into confusion

There can be only three options here: the United States of America, China or Russia. No one can know who the blind seer had in mind, but every nation has the right to interpret this prophecy in its own favor. How else? Many in the world hope that this is, after all, Russia, since Vanga has always called our country the brightest and most spiritual.

The old order will be replaced by a new one, pleasing to man and God.

They say that in recent years Vangelina repeated this saying as a refrain, moreover, often specifically pointing to the end of the second decade of our century. Experts believe that this is the most optimistic forecast of the Bulgarian fortuneteller, but now it is difficult to believe in it. Can everything really change so radically and so quickly?..

People will kill each other for their faith, confident in the justice of such murders

But this prophecy is already coming true. It is enough to trace how the confrontation in the Middle East is growing, the real threat of terrorists allegedly acting in the name of Allah, and so on. In this case, even the migration wave that has swept Europe, its murderous consequences, fits perfectly with this prediction.

The earth will rebel and many will die for this reason

Natural disasters in the form of volcanoes, earthquakes, monstrous hurricanes, and incomprehensible climate disasters are already rampant on the planet today. It seems that in the near future such a protest from the Earth will only increase, as Vanga warned us about.

***

Photos from open sources

Researchers of the predictions of the Bulgarian seer constantly mention that she spoke about victory over cancer, old age, flights to the Sun and many other amazing things that will certainly happen in the future, without naming a specific date, but always emphasizing that much depends on the people themselves , from their faith and love. And if we take into account first of all these words of Vangelina, we can highlight the main thing - she perfectly understood that the future is ambiguous, that it can be radically changed by bringing the Apocalypse closer or, conversely, pushing it back. The main thing is to believe in the best, strive for it and everyone to do for this a little good that is in their power.

And then, it is quite possible that the coming year 2019 will become a turning point for our civilization for the better, when, like , an order will reign on Earth that will please both God and every person living on our planet...

Baba Vanga is a world-famous Bulgarian clairvoyant who has the unique gift of foreseeing the most important events in the world. The biography of the clairvoyant is considered the most mysterious among all famous people of the last century, since it contains no confirmed events. However, Vanga’s predictions are still an unsolved phenomenon, as the popular press claims. Fans of Vanga's gift are finding new evidence that prophecies continue to come true with incredible accuracy in the modern world, while skeptics claim the opposite.

Vangelia Pandeva Dimitrova was born on January 31, 1911 in the family of Bulgarian peasants Pande and Paraskeva in the territory of the modern Republic of Macedonia. The newborn did not receive her name right away, as she was very weak and her family did not believe that the girl would survive. Immediately after birth, she was wrapped in a sheepskin coat and placed under the stove, where two months later she cried for the first time. This became a symbol that the future clairvoyant had grown stronger and would live. Therefore, the girl was immediately baptized in the church and given the name Vangelia, meaning “bringer of good news.”

Until the end of her life, Vanga remained religious. The clairvoyant urged people to believe in, to be kinder and wiser.

At the same time, Vanga interpreted biblical parables in a unique way and came up with her own prayers. The fortuneteller loved to retell to journalists the legend of the flood and Noah's Ark. According to Vanga, the famous ark was ten steps from the clairvoyant’s house, and the woman could touch the warm wood, which Vanga really liked to do. Fans of Vanga's prophetic gift interpret these stories in different ways.

Personal life

Vanga’s personal life, like the entire biography of the clairvoyant, has no official confirmation. It is known that the clairvoyant of the 20th century found her first love in the House of the Blind. Then Vanga was even ready to marry her chosen one, but all plans were changed by her father, who urgently returned the girl home.

Vanga's only husband was Dimitar Gushterov, who married a blind soothsayer in 1942. Then Dimitar took his wife to his hometown of Petrich, which was located on the border of Bulgaria, Greece and Macedonia. The couple lived for 40 years until the death of Dimitar, who passed away due to many years of drunkenness and its consequences for health.

Vanga's children are also one of the most interesting biography of the soothsayer. It is known that the clairvoyant was childless, but during her life she adopted two children - the boy Dimitar Volchev and the girl Violetta. The seer raised her adopted children as worthy people, they were given a good education and the “right” start in life.

Death

Vanga's departure occurred on August 11, 1996. The clairvoyant predicted her own death a month before the incident. The cause of death of the great fortuneteller was breast cancer, which began to progress rapidly in the last months of Vanga’s life.


Vanga accepted her own death with a smile on her lips. The clairvoyant called on the whole world not to mourn her, since the load that Vanga had to carry through life was unbearable.

The achievements of the fortuneteller for humanity are highly valued in modern society. In honor of Vanga, a museum dedicated to the seer was opened in Petrich in 2008, and in 2011, a statue weighing 400 kg was installed in Rupite, where the clairvoyant lived in her last years.

Vanga's predictions that came true

Some of the clairvoyant’s predictions that came true appeared on the Internet in 2001, without primary sources indicating Vanga’s authorship. Skeptics claim that the Vanga phenomenon is a falsification started by the Bulgarian government and intelligence services in order to attract tourist flow and, accordingly, financial investments.

According to popular sources, over half a century Vanga made 7 thousand predictions that came true. In addition to World War II, the clairvoyant predicted events in Syria, Nicaragua and Prague. In 1943, Vanga predicted a fiasco in the war with Russia, to which the German Fuhrer only laughed, which turned out to be in vain.

The debate about Vanga and the gift of clairvoyance attributed to her has not subsided to this day, and “Vanga’s predictions” continue to occupy the top lines of queries in Internet search engines.

Not a saint

One of the most pressing questions that certainly arises when discussing the cult of Vanga is the attitude of the Orthodox Church towards her. Fierce fans of the soothsayer like to claim that she has already been canonized. Particularly furious are those who were canonized during his lifetime: as if the Patriarch of Bulgaria Maxim himself recognized Vanga as a saint in 1994. There is a problem: this year Patriarch Maxim was not the Patriarch of Bulgaria. In 1992, a split in the Bulgarian Church occurred and Metropolitan Pimen became the official head of the Orthodox Bulgarian Church, who dismissed Maxim. In addition, Vanga did not do anything that could become a reason for canonization. On the contrary, she predicted the future for people, which according to Christian laws is a sin. After her visions, when Baba Vanga began to speak in a voice that was not her own and had seizures, she claimed that she was communicating with certain voices, calling them “small forces.” They talked to her and gave her advice. It is not surprising that the Church saw (and sees) demons in these “small and great forces.”

A separate conversation is about the temple that Vanga built in Rupite. The church was built, according to Vanga, in honor of Saint Paraskeva, but in fact there is only one “icon” of her in the church. In quotation marks - because it’s hard to call an image an icon. It looks more like a photograph of a young girl. The frescoes in the church resemble images of the dead, rather than canonical images of saints. A portrait of Vanga above the royal throne, a portrait of Vanga on the fresco at the entrance - it is obvious that the building was built in honor of the Christian saint only in name. The reason that prompted Vanga to build is also interesting - Ivan Blagoy, her guard, hanged himself on the gate of the fortuneteller’s house.

Vanga and the special services

Even at the beginning of her career as a “clairvoyant,” when World War II was going on, Vanga became an object of interest to the Bulgarian police. The competent authorities asked Vanga what the visitors of operational interest were talking to her about. Such contacts between famous “clairvoyants” and intelligence agencies are not uncommon. Further more. Vanga was hired as a researcher at the Sofia Institute of Suggestology and Parapsychology of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. This unusual institute was created in 1968. Vanga, who did not like scientists, was very loyal to the employees of this scientific institution. When communicating with them, she well learned the methods of hypnosis and influencing people. When talented Bulgarian marketers made a brand out of Vanga, very influential guests from all over the world began to come to her. The intelligence services simply could not help but use this. A special hotel was built in Petrich for Vanga’s guests. The staff were properly instructed. The flow of people to Vanga was huge; people waited for their turn for weeks, talked, and talked about life.

The memoirs of Yuri Gorny are indicative in this regard: “During a telephone conversation, I asked a journalist friend what he was doing while he was waiting for a meeting with Vanga, he told me that he was killing time, drinking beer and soon going to the bathhouse. I gave him advice: before going to the steam bath, cover your scrotum with an adhesive plaster, which he did.” When we met, Vanga told the journalist a lot about what a great man he was, that he worked for the Pravda newspaper. Then came assurances that in the future everything would be fine with the guest, but with one caveat - the journalist would not have procreation, since his genital organs were injured...”

Vanga and healing

Thousands of people went to Vanga not only to find out the future. People also believed that Vanga could cure diseases. In fact, her “treatment” was based on well-known folk methods, but people willingly took the recipes expressed by Vanga herself on faith. There were some really strange pieces of advice. One woman who came at the request of her sick husband was advised by Vanga to find a young red rooster that was less than a year old. Catch it, open the bird's chest and tear out the still beating heart. After this, put the heart in a bottle of wine and then put the bottle in a dark place for three days. Then give your husband a glass of this wine to drink for three evenings. Such strange witchcraft methods. And this despite the fact that Vanga could not cure her loved ones, like herself. Her husband died of cirrhosis of the liver caused by alcoholism.

Hype

Vanga’s “phenomenon” can be explained quite convincingly within the framework of psychiatry. It is known that Vanga suffered from hysterical fits. Vanga’s niece also describes them: “Having learned about the approaching disaster... my aunt turns pale, faints, incoherent words fly from her lips, and her voice at such moments has nothing in common with her usual voice.” This severe form of hysteria is popularly called “hysteria” (from the word “click”, that is, heart-rending screaming). This phenomenon is widely known. Back in 1900, when clinical psychiatry was just developing in Russia, psychiatrist Nikolai Krainsky published the book “Damage, cliques and the possessed as phenomena of Russian folk life” with a foreword by academician Vladimir Bekhterev, who defined cliques as a painful condition, “the basis of which is hysterical neurosis".

Tsar Boris and Hitler

Vanga's niece Krasimira Stoyanova claims in her book that in April 1942 Vanga was visited by the Bulgarian Tsar Boris, whom she predicted would die on August 28. “The king, without asking anything, left very embarrassed. He died on August 28, 1943." There is also a legend that in 1943 Adolf Hitler came to Vanga, to whom Vanga prophesied defeat from the Soviet Union. There is no documentary evidence of either the first or second meeting. Most likely, Vanga, like Wolf Messing, created their own mythology, which without significant figures was not so convincing. These “historical” meetings are also refuted by the fact that in the early 40s Vanga was not widely known, and her “clients” were only residents of the town of Strumica.

Business

Vanga has been and remains a very profitable point in the tourism business of Bulgaria. A variety of amulets, books, and things “consecrated” by Vanga are still popular to this day and are well sold by tourists. Vanga herself met with her visitors and predicted for them, not for free. There was a price list. For local visitors the entrance fee was 10 levs (20 euros), and for foreign visitors it was 50 dollars. The money for the reception went to the city treasury and to the Vanga Foundation, which was headed by one of her godsons. It should be taken into account that not all of her guests (who had already paid for the visit) Vanga said at least a word. Many were simply not allowed to enter the door. Thus, considering that the number of visitors to Baba Vanga exceeded a million people, its profitability was extremely high. Towards the end of Vanga’s life, a serious war broke out over her money, which involved the relatives of the soothsayer, the Vanga Foundation, the Bulgarian government and several “spiritual organizations” of a sectarian persuasion.

Were there any predictions?

The conversation about Vanga’s “predictions” deserves, of course, special attention. The problem is that there are almost no recorded prophecies that authentically belong to the Bulgarian soothsayer. Calculations of the “correctness” of predictions are still being carried out, but they do not have an open methodology, without which any scientific research becomes mere speculation. Interesting in this regard is the history of the column “political predictions from Vanga”, which for a year and a half “made circulation” for the magazine “Lights of Bulgaria”. It turned out that the journalists wrote the texts themselves and then brought them to Vanga for verification. This is roughly how newspaper horoscopes are written today. Admirers of Vanga like to refer to psychologist Dobryan Velichko, who allegedly conducted a study of everything Vanga said and showed that 63.8% of her predictions are always correct. Would you be treated by a doctor who makes the correct diagnosis in 63.8% of cases?