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From: gaura
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  • I saw a documentary that changed how I personally view reincarnation. This documentary called My Reincarnation is a great example of the human experience and the way past lives affect they have on people's lives. myreincarnationfilmdotcom

  • Like the narrator say, in what she says there is all the horror of the Holocaust: whether it's real or fake, she tells a credible story and at least we can listen to that and draw lessons for now and the future.

  • This was not banned. If you are going to assert that this was banned give me evidence.

  • At 2:05 does he say 'Auckland University archives'?? haha that is my university.

  • I'm going to find a hypnotist to be regressed, but I don't want anyone videotaping it. If you watch on other clips, you can act like a real freak.

  • This one looked like a good darama. It seems like good acting.

  • @PakLovesIndia

    Yeah the other two were really convincing, this one seems really acted and stereotypical.

  • Reincarnation does not happen. Demons manifest in people because they are the disembodied fallen angels from long ago. When they enter people's bodies they have 3 options: 1) Make the person believe they lived a former life by giving the person the thoughts of the person the demon possessed before, 2) Become their "spirit guide" or 3) Inhabit the body while hidden. The idea of reincarnation comes from DEMONS, Here's Proof:

    "Jesus Christ has authority over Ascended Masters"

    watch?v=-iQYTN6Q2n0

  • Regardless of whether these 'memories' are of a past life or random events from the Collective Unconscious - or perhaps painful suppressed current life events in 'period costume' - I think there is a case for the efficacy of regression therapy - particularly in the treatment of irrational phobias.

  • I like helen she seems a game old bird

  • @subbtopp id ride the hole of her!!serious body on her mate!!

  • i'm german and i don't understand her german either.

    but from the vocals i would suspect it to be a strong bavarian dialect.

    and the bavarians have the strongest dialects in germany so the fact that i can't understand it is a hint to that too.

  • These cases couldn't be any more convincing. Reincarnation can't be proven any more than this. Anyone who remains a skeptic after the first two cases must deny by principle. Not much more we can do to scientifically prove what a single individual might have experienced in the past. Plenty of room for doubt, still, in the scientific mind, but this is as good as proof of reincarnation gets.

  • Didnt know Colonel Sanders can do hypnosis!

  • IMHO she was talking jidish or smth.

  • I had a past life in Nazi Germany. As a twin. I still cannot watch movies about WW2 but I am fascinated by all the German participants in the atrocities. Even my fascination leaves a very strange taste in my mouth...

  • I remember watching this documentary back in the early 80s and never forgot it. I can still remember details after so many years. BTW. the accent of the woman who spoke with the German accent sounded very authentic. Not many ordinary Australians would be able to pull off such accent. Wonderful to be able to see this again after so many years.

  • My god I felt that

  • Comment removed

  • You know, I've been to Germany and I just happen to know for a fact that some dialects are very old and sound nothing like high German. The average Berliner may find Lower Saxon virtually unintelligible, for example. I only speak Schoolbook German, so any aberrations from the standard give me a hard time, just as happened to the interpreter here. To me that sounded like some obscure German dialect mixed with Yiddish, perhaps. Seems like she was telling the interpreter to go to hell.

  • Every city and even every small town and village had their own very distinctive dialect that nobody else can understand. And of course Jews also had their own different German dialects. And as a German i can tell you her dialect is genuine... it's relatively heavy, relatively old and there is no way she could fake it... even I can't understand exactly what she said, but i can tell you it's genuine.

  • Thank you for confirming my point.

  • @jannevellamo They are many MANY dialetcs in German. But it's still very unlikely that a GERMAN woman would be named Dorothy. It would be Dorothea or Dorothee (which is pronounced nothing like Dorothy.)

  • @Nine00 Obviously, the lady now speaks English and she is being asked questions in English. Naturally, some of her present self is still mixed with the old self in the beginning of the session and of course she uses the pronunciation of the language she is asked questions in. Common mistake, even while awake. People do it all the time, when they unexpectedly have to switch languages, as is the case here. Even I have accidentally done it a few times, though I'm really good at languages.

  • @jannevellamo I have done that as well, but I've never gotten my own name wrong.

  • @Nine00 Oh, but you were never in the middle of moving from one self to another, were you? The matter of name is still kind of ambiguous in the beginning of the process, as is the matter of self, as is the matter of language, nationality etc.

  • schema lol some1 is a teacher me thinks .. that gave me shivers compared to the rest of them mabye its a cross between yiddish n german

  • The point of this video is to provide certain information, ask what is the evidence offered, add it to your existing schema, and try to figure out what is the nature of existence. When has any organized christian religion offered you a shread of evidence other than a contradictory book written by man-kind, and a few threats if you don't believe. Why is it so difficult to think that there may be some credibility to these accounts, and what they mean on a very large scale

  • Even worse an incomplete book written by man-kind

  • @vikkipollard5 Also read the book Talmud of Jmmanuel, the true account of Jesus after the so called resurrection , absolutely amazing. Also the Book of Barnabus and The Book of Enoch, "they" consider them Apocrypha-- of doubtful authority but tell remarkable contradictions to the so called Bible.

  • Like I mentioned in an earlier post ..the young blond lady and the older heavy-set lady , are very impressive cases ..This brunette however , who claims to have been a victim of the holocaust , should not have been in this documentary .

    I really dont know why they included her ..she obviously was mistaking her imagination with supposed past life memories . I'm not convinced at all by this lady , however the other ones were very convincing and impressive .

  • Well I know that for me it's very easy to mix up memories. I think we all do it. So I think it's very easy to mix up past life memories more so. It is even easier to confuse memories when trauma is present (or was)

  • Oh I agree with that , however nonetheless she can't produce ..like the others . She might have been a victim of the holocaust ..but when you see how she "performed" in the test , in this segment and in the next ..You find that she fails miserably .

    I don't intend to appear insensitive or mean , but in a program like this , that is presenting proof or evidence of reincarnation . I wouldn't have included her in the film ..She seems out of place , due to her poor performance .

  • this one is weird indeed , but they didn't know what was coming and they were making the documentary and give us a wide vieuw,.. we can just guess

  • @Xronix1 = she speaks german and jiddish under deep hypnosis, why she is so unbelievable? how would an aussie know these languages?

  • @Xronix1 Yes, just emotion on this one, I think we should know why she was included. Any chance to interject the "holocaust" can not be passed up!! I am tired of this and I know many others have also become just as tired...

  • why is her english with an german accent?....And why can't she speak german with the interpreter?....

  • Dorothy in Germany? Very unlikely. Sarah is prononced differently in German, too.

  • good point..i cant imagine any woman being named "Dorothy"in germany,specially in those days around world war 2..its a real english name,my country is next to germany and Dorothy is also a name not used here,atleast very uncommon

  • I once knew a woman, Jewish, from E. Europe or possibly Austria, with that name. She had been a young woman during that time (luckily, she'd moved here earlier & missed the German occupation). So the name is apparently not all that rare.

  • I feel so sorry for her. :o(

  • if my life would turn out to be nothing but misery, I would wanna be reincarnated as soon as possible, even the same day my body dies!

  • i'm passionate about reincarnation-regression i'd like to go through it for scientific purpose. i believe i lived before and will live again, sometimes i have feelings, deja vu experiences, dreams that come true, i sort of know people without knowing them when face to face i have an idea who they are and sometimes i m able to tell them things about themselves and they wonder how i know, when i say i just know it seems weird to tem but natural to me. i wonder what i did before and who i was.

  • Where exactly was this film banned?

  • Yeah , im asking my self the same question .."Banned" hmm.

  • @ConfederateFlorida

    In the Vatican. lol.

  • I am really enjoying this!

    Thank you!

  • better yet "die haupt drat stadt" loosely means "the main city square".

  • "Probste nien (pronounced nay-n)"?? I do not understand this part it could mean "rehearse lines"... the next word is Polish and the loudest and most angry "WIECZNA" which means "century".

  • When she gets more emotional, it's hard to avoid to get more conscious or awake again. There she stops using the native language of the person of a past live, and starts to speak English again. The language she uses when she is more conscious. Getting more emotinal = getting more awake. In a more subconscious state, emotions are more absent even if you undergo the strangest situations.

  • Did anyone ever consider the possibility that the language the woman talks is Yiddish? I don't know Yiddish but who knows? She only speaks it when someone speaks German to her. I don't have the impression that it's expressing fear, it rather has a tone like "fuck off you German bastard" or something like that.

  • It's not German but closer to Yiddish. Yiddish with a more Baltic influence, kinda nasal. It was especially acceptable in this era for Yiddish to be personalized by it's user and it seems that is what she is doing. Almost like a young child's grammar, aswell. "die haupt drats da" - the main square since .."kommen die Herbste ihn-ihm?"- It/he came in the Autumn... "It/he has come to the main square since Autumn".

  • Wow. That is incredible...

  • Very amazing - thanks for posting these!

  • So sad, deeply moving. It sure makes you realise how we are still traumatised by our past lives without even knowing.

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