Books
Towards the Unknown: Memoir of a Psychical Researcher
In 2020, I was dealing with the sudden loss of my parents. So it was only after a year that I noticed that the famous parapsychology researcher and professor of psychology at the University of Iceland Dr. Erlendur Haraldsson had died on November 2020.
Posthumously, his autobiography ‘Towards the Unknown: Memoir of a Psychical Researcher’ has been published.
His works have a kind of intimate personal dimension for me. My father was a staunch Sri Satya Sai Baba (SSSB) devotee. Bal Vikas, the children’s classes of Sai organization, was used as kind of an antidote to my strong love for the RSS shakhas. To add to the tension, it was exactly at the time that I was going to the shakha that I had also got cured of the notions of a theistic deity.
During the dining table debates, one topic that always led to heated discussion was the ‘miracles’ of Baba.
Studying these books also created in me a strong interest in the paranormal, with a healthy overdose of skepticism. Inevitably I arrived at Prof. Haraldsson.
Having gone through the multi-volume biography of SSSB written by Prof. N. Kasturi and other devotional Baba literature including The Man of Miracles (Howard Murphet) and Sai Baba the Holy Man and Psychiatrist (Samuel Sandweiss) I knew almost all the ‘miracles’ of Baba by heart.
Further testimony for the resurrection came from the wife of Walter, Elsie Cowan herself. If true then this is indeed miracle of the highest kind recorded in modern history.
Haraldsson studied the Baba phenomenon in the 1970s and published in 1987 the results of his investigations Miracles Are My Visiting Cards.
In a systematic manner, visiting every medical professional as well as hospital authorities associated with the medical crisis that Cowan underwent on 1971 Christmas night, Haraldsson proves beyond doubt that Cowan had not died on that night.
What is to be noticed here is the objective and thorough way in which Haraldsson had investigated the claims.
In the posthumously published autobiographical book also, two chapters are devoted to his investigation of the Baba phenomenon.
Yet the psychologist and his team were not making any progress in their ‘scientific’ study of the phenomenon and Baba was frustratingly non-cooperative; although he had not denied the possibility of a future cooperation. At one point, Baba lost patience with the debate over scientific experiments and just sat and made his picture disappear from a ring that was in the hands of one of the investigation team members without even touching it. He jovially declared that it was his experiment.
Haraldsson also records that some of Baba's very early devotees belonging to the inner circle who had deserted, and were bitter about him, too insisted on the genuine nature of his power. At the same time he also records this:
Overall, he considered the Baba phenomenon as having definitely unexplainable miraculous parts while not ruling out tricks and hagiographic exaggeration by devotees. It is almost like the UFO phenomenon. You can explain quite a lot of sightings with very clear non-ET explanations and still there remains a significant number of unexplained cases which may or may not be from extra-terrestrial intelligence. No wonder both the devotees and skeptics do not want to talk much about Haraldsson. Also not all are convinced about the academic objectivity of the psychologist.
Equally important and fascinating are the studies of the reincarnation cases – particularly those of children, that he investigated.
Apart from the usual way of investigation of reincarnation claims, like the exhaustive study done by late Ian Stevenson, an authority figure in this field of research, Haraldsson made a study of the psychological profile of these children and how they differed from the other children.
He records that 'for many of them, no individual was found who fitted the child’s description' and the descriptions were often very vague though sometimes the investigators could get very specific details. (p.131)
A Sri Lankan girl claims that she was an incense maker, a male who had died in a road accident. Through investigations the deceased person was identified as one Jinadasa. Haraldsson writes:
In Lebanon he investigated 30 claims of reincarnation – all in Druze families. Druze are a religious group with belief in reincarnation. The boy who remembered his past life as a bodyguard to an ethnic leader claimed that he was shot dead. When his parents took him to the place he remembered as the spot of the shooting, he could actually speak about many specific details with his past family. In this case Haraldsson could not investigate the claims themselves but interviewed many of the eyewitnesses apart from the parents and siblings.
He also points out the children also tend to suffer from phobias – usually related to the ones responsible for their deaths. This psychological profile of the children who claim past-life memories is quite an important addition to reincarnation studies.
Apart from this, the book also contains investigations into the possibilities of life after death, appearance of apparitions and study of famous mediums. The book is rich with data. And data falsifies some very interesting stereotypes Hollywood and Bollywood have cultivated in us about the paranormal.
For example, in the case of ghostly apparitions, both in his own study and in historically collected data, the apparitions are predominantly male – 67 per cent in his own study and 63 per cent in an 1922 study.
It is like the need to study the placebo effect. Even if a fraction of the total claims is true, even then we have a very large body of unexplained phenomena. Then we are pushing to the margins a phenomenon only because it challenges our dominant notions of reality.
Either way constant documenting and investigation of these claims are important for scientific advancement of knowledge. Haraldsson’s is a life spent for doing this work. The book is a must read for all who are interested in the scientific study of the unexplained.