The mysterious reincarnation of Omm Seti, a woman who has proven that she lived in Ancient Egypt. History of the OMM network Strange mysterious phenomena

It is described that when she was three years old, after a serious fall, she began to awaken conscious memories of her past life as an ancient Egyptian priestess. A revelation for many people was the dramatic story she told about her past life, which she lived in close proximity to the famous monarch of Egypt of the 19th dynasty, Pharaoh Seti I, who lived around 1320-1200 BC.

On his first pilgrimage to Egypt in 1976, one of the Egyptologists began his work by practicing in a temple of an ancient Egyptian religion. He was determined to find answers to questions about long-forgotten spiritual works and their significance today. Books on Egyptology and secret religions could not answer all his questions. He hoped that the solution and answers were to exist in Egypt. It was there that the researcher learned about the Omm Network.

Transformation of Dorothy Eady in Omm Network

Born on January 16, 1904 in London to an Irish family, Dorothy grew up as an only child and was very stubborn. In early childhood, after the girl fell, the doctor declared her death, but soon she surprised everyone by finding herself alive. Since then, she began to constantly talk about how she would like to return home and dreamed of being in an Egyptian temple. When her parents assured her that she was home, she remembered her previous life in Egypt. Sometimes it seemed to her that at night, in her astral body, she really visited the temple.

Omm Seti near one of the walls of the temple at Abydos

She later discovered that the temple she had seen in her dreams actually existed in Upper Egypt in the ancient village of Abydos. After graduating from school, she began to collect information about this place, telling her parents longingly about everything Egyptian and that she would like to “go home.” She read books and listened to all the stories about Egypt and also lived near the British Museum. There she often read and studied hieroglyphs and became friends with the curator of Egyptian and Assyrian antiquities Ernest A. Wallis Budge, whose books on Egyptian myths are published today. Dorothy claimed that she knew this language, she simply forgot. In 1933, she married an Egyptian to go live in the world of her dreams. But the marriage lasted only two years. During the divorce, she said: “He was ultra-modern, and I was ultra-ancient.” They had a son, whom she named after Pharaoh Seti. And years later, she herself adopted the Arabic name Omm Seti (mother of Seti). She happily took a job in Giza, assisting some eminent Egyptologists such as Selim Hassan and Ahmed Fakhri. As personal secretary, she provided invaluable support and assistance during the excavation and description of the extensive burial and pyramid complexes of Lower Egypt.

Two worlds of Omm Network

When she approached the divine house in Abydos, she saw the temple completely different from the one in her dream. In her dreams, she saw it as it was thousands of years ago, replete with barbecues, incense, with priests in white, with shiny multi-colored wall reliefs framed in gold. In these ephemeral visits to her spiritual home, she saw herself moving through the corridors and chambers, performing the rites of the priestess of Isis. Ancient myths told of Set's murder of his brother, the god Osiris. Seth scattered parts of his body throughout Egypt. The goddess Isis, wife of Osiris, collected him and resurrected him with the help of her magic. This event was celebrated in Abydos with festivals throughout the year, honoring the death and resurrection of the god. This rite was the prototype for the funeral tradition of ancient Egypt for thousands of years.

Surviving photographs of Dorothy Eadie

Through her dream life and spiritual visits to this past life, Dorothy learned that her name was Bentrechut (harp of joy). The young girl was an orphan given to the temple, later becoming a young priestess, she caught the eye of Pharaoh Seti I. Despite the religious prohibition, they became close and had a son. Later, when the pharaoh died while hunting, their son was killed, and she was kept in prison for the rest of her life.

After her first visit in 1953, Dorothy became firmly convinced that she could never live anywhere else. A few years later she received a modest job in Abydos as an assistant from the Egyptian Department of Antiquities. Dorothy said that all she wanted was to “live, work, die and be buried here.” She moved to Abydos in 1956 and remained there until 1981, when she appeared before Osiris (the kingdom of the dead). Immediately after arriving in Abydos, everyone was amazed by her knowledge of the ancient city. She accurately pointed out to Egyptologists the location of the temple gardens from her past life, although they had not yet been excavated. Omm Seti also played an important role in the discovery of the wall of bas-reliefs around the sacred site at Abydos. Abydos was known as the "high place of the earth", a time-honored site of spiritual pilgrimage and an ideal burial site. There are tombs here from the pre-dynastic period (before 3500 BC) to the Christian era. Important documents were discovered in the area: the important Nag Hammadi Scrolls were found near the great cemetery, rivaling the Dead Sea Scrolls as the oldest evidence of Christianity.

Ramses the Great

Omm Seti claimed to have known personally one of the greatest figures in ancient Egypt. In her past life, Pharaoh Seti I already had a son, Ramses II, before meeting her. He became one of the most prodigious monarchs of antiquity and is known to history as “the great one,” and his appearance in Egypt’s most sacred places earned him the name “inevitable.” Omm Seti said: “I cannot think of Ramses as anything other than a teenager. And yet when he died he was very old, I think he was about ninety years old.” She remembered the young Ramses II racing through the halls of his father's temple, where she served as a priestess. Bentrechut died as a young woman in her Egyptian life and was unable to see Ramses in his old age. She secretly said: “even now, when I go to the temple, I often see young Ramses rushing through the corridor - he is a very restless and rather noisy boy.”

Despite her deep knowledge of ancient history and memories of Egyptian life, in modern life Omm Seti was an interesting woman, pleasant to talk to, and had a sense of humor. Omm Sethi loved her cats. Besides, she considered them sacred. Cats, in her opinion, are the only ones in the modern world who could also see ancient spirits. Omm Seti often visited the Divine House Temple. There she met the spirit of her beloved Pharaoh Seti I. One day she was accompanied by a cat, but after entering the chapel, he reared his back, raised his tail, and began to hiss. Omm Seti realized that if for her the meeting was ordinary, then for the cat the meeting with the spirit of her fiancé was a shock and frightened him.

Since ancient times, many religions have had a theory about the transmigration of souls or reincarnation. It is believed that the soul of a being in a subtle body moves from one gross body to the next gross body, receiving the opportunity for improvement and correction. Depending on the spiritual growth and morality of a being’s actions, its karma becomes good or bad, this determines the conditions under which the soul will continue to exist and develop.

Incredible facts

All things that have no explanation remain an intriguing topic for communication among millions of people around the world. Some riddles , however, are more interesting, simply because they are too strange.

10. Chinese village of dwarfs

There is nothing unusual in the villages. Villages in China are also nothing special. There are many remote rural settlements in this country, however, among them there is one that stands out.

Scientists and experts are very interested in the residents of the village of Yangsi, located in Sichuan province. The reason is that Only 80 people live in the village, and almost half of them are dwarfs.


There are rumors among the locals that a mysterious disease struck the village more than 60 years ago. Young children aged 5-7 years are the most frequently affected category of the population: the disease makes them simply stop growing.

Experts say slowing or stopping growth typically affects 1 in 20,000 people, which is why what's happening in the Chinese village seems mysterious. Especially considering the fact that, as historical observations of dwarfs show, several hundred of them lived in the Sichuan region at “one point.”


Moreover, in addition to suffering from a mysterious illness, some of the children began to suffer from various disabilities. As adults, such people gave birth to children, whose height also did not exceed 1 meter.

The Chinese government never allowed visitors to the village, thereby giving rise to many rumors and speculation. Local residents felt as if dark forces had invaded their homes and began to believe that they were cursed by their ancestors due to improper burials.


Others believe that turtles are the source of all problems. Some villagers at one time ate black turtles, and soon after that they were struck by a strange illness.


However, after a while, apparently, the residents “grew” from the disease in the literal and figurative sense. The younger generation got rid of it.

Strange mysterious phenomena

9. Dorothy Eady and Omm Sety


Dorothy Eadie was an ordinary child. She ran, played, laughed all day and, of course, was a treasure to her parents. But something unthinkable happened. One morning, Dorothy was running up the stairs in her house near London when she slipped and fell.

The fall was so serious that the girl was pronounced dead. However, the incredible happened: Dorothy woke up. Over the next four years, the baby grew to the delight of her parents. In 1908 everything changed.

During a routine walk through the British Museum, the parents first noticed strange behavior in their daughter. As soon as they found themselves in the museum room dedicated to Ancient Egypt, Dorothy froze.


She couldn’t get enough of the artifacts, and sat literally spellbound near the glass-enclosed mummy, refusing to go home with her parents. She ran around the mummy and kissed her feet.

After this incident, things went even worse. Dorothy became very depressed, looking at photographs of Ancient Egypt, insisting that this country was her home and she absolutely needed to return home.

One day, when she saw the image of the "Temple of Seti the First at Abydos", Dorothy became very happy and told her father that this place was her home.


Long before Dorothy saw the drawing, she had dreams that featured temples and nature in Ancient Egypt. Over the years, her interest and love for Egypt only grew, and she became a member of a research group to learn more about soul reincarnation and spirituality.


She later moved to Cairo, married an Egyptian, gave birth to a child and named him Seti. Since then, she began to call herself Omm Seti. The woman's marriage, unfortunately, did not last long. The husband could not come to terms with her habit of going into a trance and writing random hieroglyphs at night.


Ultimately, she collected 70 pages of notes in which she talks about Omm's life in Ancient Egypt. She stated that she was a priestess in the Kom El Sultan temple, and that she allegedly had a child with Pharaoh Seti at the age of 14.

However, she broke her priestess vow by losing her virginity, but gave her life in order to protect the pharaoh from punishment for this crime. The hieroglyphs also speak of regular spiritual meetings with Seti, with whom she plans to reunite in the Egyptian underworld.


This story was not dismissed as crazy nonsense because Omm Seti helped archaeologists find the exact location of the Temple garden. She also led a group of researchers to an unknown tunnel located in the northern part of the temple.

Omm Seti died in 1981, living out the rest of her days in the temple at Abydos. There is no rational explanation for her memories, dreams and knowledge of Ancient Egypt. Many believe that Dorothy was indeed the reincarnation of the soul of the ancient Egyptian priestess Omm Seta.

Unexplained Oddities

8. Handprint of Francis Leavy


Francis Levy was a firefighter in the 1920s. He loved his job and his colleagues loved him. He was a very pleasant person, smiling, always ready to help. On April 18, 1924, Francis' colleagues noticed a change in his behavior.

Francis was gloomy, sullen, and cleaning the large window of the Chicago Fire Department, not looking at anyone or communicating with anyone.


A few minutes later, the man said that he felt as if he would die that day. At that very moment, an alarm call came in that a fire was raging in a building located quite far from the fire department. That's why There was no time to waste talking about Francis' feelings.

A few minutes later, the man and his colleagues arrived on the spot, assessed the situation, and began to help those on the upper floors. After they rescued everyone from the upper floors, flames engulfed the lower part of the building and the roof collapsed.


As soon as this happened, the walls collapsed, covering a large number of people, including Levi, with rubble. The man's gloomy premonition came true. He lost his life that day saving others.


The very next day, while trying to come to terms with the loss of Levi, his colleagues were at the fire station, pondering the events of the past day. Suddenly they noticed something very strange on one of the windows. It looked like a smeared handprint. It's scary, but it happened the same window which Levi had washed so diligently the day before.


The firefighters washed the window again, but the print refused to go away. For many years, the imprint remained on the glass, despite countless attempts to remove it, including with the help of chemical means.

The strange mystery remained unresolved until 1944, when a newspaper delivery boy threw newspapers through a window, shattering it.

Strange murder

7. Jeannette DePalma


In 1972, a dog brought something very strange to the back door of his owner's house. She found an almost completely decomposed human forearm on top of a cliff in Springfield, New Jersey, and brought the grisly find to her owner, who With horror he realized what was in front of him.

The man reported to the police, and after a short search, they managed to find the remains of the body that belonged to the terrible find. The deceased was Jeannette DePalma, a teenage girl who had been missing for six weeks at the time.


The police not only found her decomposed body. They also discovered unusual things nearby. Rumors immediately spread that the girl had been sacrificed at a local witches' Sabbath. Others believed that Satanists killed her.

The strangest thing about this case is that no one wanted to talk about it during the preparation of an article about the incident. Even after 30 years, people living in that area refused to comment or express their opinion about what happened there?


None of the people interviewed wanted their real name to appear in this case, even including members of the local police department.

Information on this case was “obtained” in a completely non-standard way. People sent anonymous letters, without indicating their names or addresses. One of the letters said that there were a lot of logs around Jeannette's body. However, the writer added that cannot reveal his name for many reasons that he also cannot voice.


Another anonymous person wrote that he knew about a coven of witches that was planned at that time, who planned to kill a child on Halloween. This anonymous person himself was a child at that time and remembered how he was warned that he should not go out for a walk during this “holiday”.

The author of another letter said that his mother knew the deceased girl, and in 1972 they were the same age as the deceased. He also said that after the murder In the area, animals were found killed and strung up on trees.


All the letters mentioned witches or Satanists. One of the letters confirmed that Jeannette was a very religious girl, and was in no way connected with Satanist practices. But the author also notes that as she grew up, Jeannette became a little “wild.”

Jeannette's murder shocked everyone. However, for some reason everyone remained silent, which continues to this day. Her killer was never found.

Unusual mysterious events

6. Village Kalachi


Something strange is happening to the residents of the village of Kalachi in Kazakhstan. It seems like they just can't keep their eyes open. Every day, several times, residents fall asleep in broad daylight and remain in this state for at least two hours.

Some of them, according to stories, wake up only after a couple of days. There are no apparent reasons for such “incidents,” however, more than 100 residents fall asleep for inexplicable reasons, despite the fact that they are not tired at all.


In September 2014, several children who attended school on the first day of the new school year also fell asleep for no reason. Medical experts were unable to provide a clear explanation, nor were they able to prescribe a treatment or form of prevention.

Naturally, people in this state are terrified that they might die in their sleep.


Some of the "sleepers" report strange feelings that arise after waking up - memory loss, dizziness, nausea. Other symptoms include hallucinations. Moreover, doctors found in some of them brain dysfunction, and even an increased likelihood of stroke.

“Sleeping” citizens not only pose a danger to the economy (loss of at least three working hours), but they also provoke other people to leave the region. Radiation levels were measured in the area, but nothing abnormal was found.


Currently, research is still being carried out to determine the causes of this disease in the village. Early this year, scientists discovered high concentrations of carbon monoxide in the village. Although the results are not conclusive, they may help shed light on this mystery.

A person with unusual abilities

5. Jo Girardelli


In the early 1800s, Jo was a highly unusual "phenomenon." She revealed to people a different understanding of fire. Ghirardelli could swallow hot objects, and it did not cause her pain or harm.

The people present at her performances were amazed at what was happening before their eyes.


A woman could “rinse” her mouth with nitric acid without any harm to her health. To prove that she really had acid in her mouth, and not an ordinary harmless liquid, she spat the contents onto the iron, which immediately began "there is" metal.

She loved to “play” with boiling oil, also filling her mouth with it. Jo then spat it onto the tree, causing small flashes of fire.

Jo never stopped there. Later she began experimenting with hot wax and molten lead. The woman heated metal objects, such as shovels, over an open fire and then pressed them against her skin.


She even touched some with her tongue. As a result of all these actions, nothing happened to her body; her skin remained completely intact.


Joe Ghirardelli was discussed all over England, but no one could understand how she did it all. Even the most ardent skeptics failed to prove that she was deceiving the people. It is unknown how the life of this unique woman turned out after she moved from England, and her amazing abilities remain a mystery to this day.

4. Le Loyon


Something very creepy is happening in the forests of western Switzerland. A man dressed in a military uniform with a gas mask on his face is an oddity in these places.

For 10 years, people living near these forests have repeatedly reported seeing this man who takes the same route every day. They gave him the name Le Loyon and they fear him.


He never speaks, if he suddenly runs into someone, he simply stares at the person and then silently continues on his way. The photographer who tried to capture the mysterious man reported that his height is about 2 meters.

Children are too scared to play in these places, even though the person does not seem to pose any threat. One day people saw him carrying something like flowers into the forest. According to local authorities, they cannot force a person to leave the forest unless he has done anything illegal.


One day his things were found in the forest, next to which there was a note saying that he was leaving because “the risk of catching the beast” is too great.

It is unknown where this man lives, why he wears a gas mask, and why he does not speak. Some people suggest that perhaps he is mentally unstable, or suffers from some kind of skin disease, so he does not want others to see him.


However, until someone removes his mask, or speaks to him, the mysterious man will remain a mystery.

Otherworldly secrets

3. Hoia Baciu


According to many people, this place is the most mysterious in the world, because it is here, in Transylvania, that many inexplicable, creepy stories happen. The mere fact that the trees in this place are intertwined with each other in strange knots creates feels like a scene from a horror movie.

Omm Seti - priestess of the 20th century...Dorothy Eady is one of the most unusual women of the 20th century. No, she did not fly into space, was not a Hollywood star, did not get involved in politics, and did not receive the Nobel Prize. Dorothy became famous in a completely different field. At the beginning of the last century, in conservative and inert Britain, she was not afraid to declare that she was... the new earthly incarnation of the ancient Egyptian priestess.
My people
This strange story began in 1907. Three-year-old Dorothy fell from a high staircase and lost consciousness. They called the doctor. He carefully examined the child and declared: the girl was hopeless. About an hour later the doctor came back with the death certificate and a nurse to “carry out the body.” But, to his surprise, the “body” was alive, healthy and running around as if nothing had happened! True, since then something strange began to happen to the girl. She regularly saw in her dreams the Egyptian temple and herself in it. And later visions began to overcome Dorothy in reality. At such moments, she closed her eyes and began to sway from side to side, and after half an hour she came out of the trance state. The parents tried their best to bring their daughter to her senses, but nothing helped.
The situation worsened after Mr and Mrs Eadie took their four-year-old daughter to the British Museum. Most of all, parents were worried about whether the child would be able to withstand a multi-hour trek through the museum halls. At first the girl was really capricious and crying, but as soon as she found herself in the Egyptian halls, not a trace remained of her former fatigue and bad mood. She began to run around the statues, kiss the feet of the marble giants, and to top it all off, she settled down next to the glass sarcophagus in which the mummy was located, and flatly refused to go further. When Mrs. Eady wanted to drag the girl from her seat, she suddenly shouted to the whole hall in a completely alien - adult - voice: “Leave me here, these are my people!”
Native home
With age, the girl's obsession intensified. One day her father gave her a volume of a children's encyclopedia. There were several photographs and drawings from the life of Ancient Egypt; Dorothy looked at these pages, spellbound, for days on end. But most of all she was interested in photographs of the Rosetta Stone - a granite slab with three identical texts engraved on it, which provided the key to deciphering ancient Egyptian writing. The girl looked at it with a magnifying glass for hours and finally declared that she knew this language, she had simply forgotten it. Further more. One day Dorothy discovered a photograph in one of the magazines with the inscription: “Temple of Seti i in Abydos.” To the surprise and horror of her parents, she said that she had once lived in this temple, and near it there was a beautiful garden. The father tried to object to her: this building was built a thousand years ago, besides, there are no gardens in the desert. But the daughter firmly stood her ground: the temple was her home, it was he who constantly appeared in her dreams.
Since then, the girl has become a regular in the Egyptian rooms at the British Museum. There she met Ernest Wallis, head of the department of Egyptian and Assyrian antiquity, author of numerous books on Egyptology. Under the guidance of a scientist, Eady began to study hieroglyphs and the history of Ancient Egypt. Then the girl entered the history department of Oxford University. At the same time, she attended meetings of people interested in reincarnation. There she could finally openly express her belief that she had once lived in Ancient Egypt.
Modern and ancient
At the age of twenty-seven, Dorothy got a job at a socio-political magazine and began writing articles in support of Egyptian independence. Around this time, she met the Egyptian Imam Abdel Magid. And after two years of courtship, she accepted his proposal. In 1933, the girl packed her things and sailed to the country of her dreams.
A year later, the couple had a son, who, at the insistence of his mother and against the will of his father, was named Seti - in honor of the pharaoh who ruled the country about 1,300 BC. But the common child did not cement the relationship between the young people. “My husband was ultra-modern,” Dorothy once remarked, not without sarcasm, “and I was ultra-ancient.” The Imam wanted to settle in the center of Cairo, Dorothy - on the outskirts to see the pyramids. The Imam was interested in the life of modern Egypt, Dorothy - its glorious past. The husband was annoyed by his wife's nightly vigils, during which she wrote something in her diary. And for Dorothy this was very important: she claimed that in the light of the moon a voice whispered to her in Egyptian. These nightly sessions of automatic writing continued for about a year. Dorothy then put the messages together and deciphered them.
Pharaoh's love
The revelations that Edie had revealed said that in her past life she came from a poor family and was called Bentreshut. As a girl, she was sent to the temple at Komel Sultan, north of the Temple of Seti, the construction of which was then just beginning, to be raised as a priestess. At the age of twelve, the high priest asked her if she wanted to return to the world and get married or stay in the temple. Bentreshut chose the latter and took a vow of virginity. Then she underwent special training that allowed her to participate in temple rituals. One day during a service, Pharaoh Seti the First noticed a beautiful young priestess in the temple and fell in love with her. And a few days later, despite the ban, he called her into his bedroom. Over time, the pharaoh and Bentreshut had a boy, whom Seti loved very much. The idyll lasted for several years until Seti the First died while hunting crocodiles. It was then that the priests took out all their anger on Bentreshut. They killed her son, and she herself was thrown into a dungeon, where she died of illness.
Abydos
Meanwhile, Dorothy's marriage fell apart completely. After three years of marriage, the Imam received a post in the Iranian Ministry of Education, and Dorothy moved with her son to the pyramids of Giza. Having found a job as a draftsman in the Egyptian Department of Antiquities, she became the first woman hired in this institution.
Another twenty years passed before the eccentric Dorothy realized her cherished dream. “I had only one goal in life,” she insisted, “to go to Abydos, live in Abydos and be buried in Abydos. However, something beyond my strength stopped me from visiting Abydos.” When she finally went there for a short visit in 1952, she went straight to the Temple of Seti, where she spent the entire night in prayer. Then she spent a long time trying to persuade her superiors to find her a place to work in Abydos. Her requests were listened to very reluctantly: then Abydos was a tiny village with houses made of clay without running water or electricity, where no one spoke a word of English. Officials, not without reason, considered this place unsuitable for a single woman, especially a foreigner.
Lifetime dream
In 1956, management finally gave the go-ahead and gave her a job in Abydos: sketching temple bas-reliefs for two dollars a day. By that time, Dorothy's son had moved in with his father, and she was free to go wherever she wanted. Without hesitation, Dorothy packed her suitcase and set off for Abydos. There she settled in a modest house, acquired a household - goats, chickens, a donkey - and became friends with the peasants. Soon the stranger became a local attraction, and tourists flocked to the small village. Omm Seti - as Dorothy began to call herself from now on - knew more about Ancient Egypt than any local guide. And when, during archaeological excavations, she discovered at the Temple of Seti the remains of the very garden that had appeared in her dreams all her life, her fame spread far beyond the borders of Egypt. In addition, Omm Seti claimed that somewhere under the temple there was a library with many ancient texts. If it is ever discovered, it will become a real sensation - the same as the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb.
The activities of the Omm Network have been highly appreciated by the international community. In 1960, the British Archaeological Society granted her a pension, and five years later the president of her new homeland himself awarded her the Order of Merit for Egypt.
Omm Seti died in 1981 and, as she had dreamed all her life, was buried in Abydos near the temple of Seti.

Dorothy Eadie is one of the most unusual women of the 20th century. No, she did not fly into space, was not a Hollywood star, did not get involved in politics, and did not receive the Nobel Prize. Dorothy became famous in a completely different field. At the beginning of the last century, in conservative and inert Britain, she was not afraid to declare that she was... the new earthly incarnation of the ancient Egyptian priestess.
My people
This strange story began in 1907. Three-year-old Dorothy fell from a high staircase and lost consciousness. They called the doctor. He carefully examined the child and declared: the girl was hopeless. About an hour later the doctor came back with the death certificate and a nurse to “carry out the body.” But, to his surprise, the “body” was alive, healthy and running around as if nothing had happened! True, since then something strange began to happen to the girl. She regularly saw in her dreams the Egyptian temple and herself in it. And later visions began to overcome Dorothy in reality. At such moments, she closed her eyes and began to sway from side to side, and after half an hour she came out of the trance state. The parents tried their best to bring their daughter to her senses, but nothing helped.
The situation worsened after Mr and Mrs Eadie took their four-year-old daughter to the British Museum. Most of all, parents were worried about whether the child would be able to withstand a multi-hour trek through the museum halls. At first the girl was really capricious and crying, but as soon as she found herself in the Egyptian halls, not a trace remained of her former fatigue and bad mood. She began to run around the statues, kiss the feet of the marble giants, and to top it all off, she settled down next to the glass sarcophagus in which the mummy was located, and flatly refused to go further. When Mrs. Eady wanted to drag the girl from her seat, she suddenly shouted to the whole hall in a completely alien - adult - voice: “Leave me here, these are my people!”
Native home
With age, the girl's obsession intensified. One day her father gave her a volume of a children's encyclopedia. There were several photographs and drawings from the life of Ancient Egypt; Dorothy looked at these pages, spellbound, for days on end. But most of all she was interested in photographs of the Rosetta Stone - a granite slab with three identical texts engraved on it, which provided the key to deciphering ancient Egyptian writing. The girl looked at it with a magnifying glass for hours and finally declared that she knew this language, she had simply forgotten it. Further more. One day Dorothy discovered a photograph in one of the magazines with the inscription: “Temple of Seti i in Abydos.” To the surprise and horror of her parents, she said that she had once lived in this temple, and near it there was a beautiful garden. The father tried to object to her: this building was built a thousand years ago, besides, there are no gardens in the desert. But the daughter firmly stood her ground: the temple was her home, it was he who constantly appeared in her dreams.
Since then, the girl has become a regular in the Egyptian rooms at the British Museum. There she met Ernest Wallis, head of the department of Egyptian and Assyrian antiquity, author of numerous books on Egyptology. Under the guidance of a scientist, Eady began to study hieroglyphs and the history of Ancient Egypt. Then the girl entered the history department of Oxford University. At the same time, she attended meetings of people interested in reincarnation. There she could finally openly express her belief that she had once lived in Ancient Egypt.
Modern and ancient
At the age of twenty-seven, Dorothy got a job at a socio-political magazine and began writing articles in support of Egyptian independence. Around this time, she met the Egyptian Imam Abdel Magid. And after two years of courtship, she accepted his proposal. In 1933, the girl packed her things and sailed to the country of her dreams.
A year later, the couple had a son, who, at the insistence of his mother and against the will of his father, was named Seti - in honor of the pharaoh who ruled the country about 1,300 BC. But the common child did not cement the relationship between the young people. “My husband was ultra-modern,” Dorothy once remarked, not without sarcasm, “and I was ultra-ancient.” The Imam wanted to settle in the center of Cairo, Dorothy - on the outskirts to see the pyramids. The Imam was interested in the life of modern Egypt, Dorothy - its glorious past. The husband was annoyed by his wife's nightly vigils, during which she wrote something in her diary. And for Dorothy this was very important: she claimed that in the light of the moon a voice whispered to her in Egyptian. These nightly sessions of automatic writing continued for about a year. Dorothy then put the messages together and deciphered them.
Pharaoh's love


Bas-relief from the Tomb of Seti I in the Valley of the Kings - Goddess Hathor and Pharaoh Seti I
1303-1290 BC (19th Dynasty).

The revelations that Edie had revealed said that in her past life she came from a poor family and was called Bentreshut. As a girl, she was sent to the temple at Komel Sultan, north of the Temple of Seti, the construction of which was then just beginning, to be raised as a priestess. At the age of twelve, the high priest asked her if she wanted to return to the world and get married or stay in the temple. Bentreshut chose the latter and took a vow of virginity. Then she underwent special training that allowed her to participate in temple rituals. One day during a service, Pharaoh Seti the First noticed a beautiful young priestess in the temple and fell in love with her. And a few days later, despite the ban, he called her into his bedroom. Over time, the pharaoh and Bentreshut had a boy, whom Seti loved very much. The idyll lasted for several years until Seti the First died while hunting crocodiles. It was then that the priests took out all their anger on Bentreshut. They killed her son, and she herself was thrown into a dungeon, where she died of illness.


Mummy of Seti I. It is in this form, according to Dorothy,
Pharaoh first appeared to her in the middle of the night in a vision.

Abydos
Meanwhile, Dorothy's marriage fell apart completely. After three years of marriage, the Imam received a post in the Iranian Ministry of Education, and Dorothy moved with her son to the pyramids of Giza. Having found a job as a draftsman in the Egyptian Department of Antiquities, she became the first woman hired in this institution.
Another twenty years passed before the eccentric Dorothy realized her cherished dream. “I had only one goal in life,” she insisted, “to go to Abydos, live in Abydos and be buried in Abydos. However, something beyond my strength stopped me from visiting Abydos.” When she finally went there for a short visit in 1952, she went straight to the Temple of Seti, where she spent the entire night in prayer. Then she spent a long time trying to persuade her superiors to find her a place to work in Abydos. Her requests were listened to very reluctantly: then Abydos was a tiny village with houses made of clay without running water or electricity, where no one spoke a word of English. Officials, not without reason, considered this place unsuitable for a single woman, especially a foreigner. Lifetime dream
In 1956, management finally gave the go-ahead and gave her a job in Abydos: sketching temple bas-reliefs for two dollars a day. By that time, Dorothy's son had moved in with his father, and she was free to go wherever she wanted. Without hesitation, Dorothy packed her suitcase and set off for Abydos. There she settled in a modest house, acquired a household - goats, chickens, a donkey - and became friends with the peasants. Soon the stranger became a local attraction, and tourists flocked to the small village. Omm Seti - as Dorothy began to call herself from now on - knew more about Ancient Egypt than any local guide. And when, during archaeological excavations, she discovered at the Temple of Seti the remains of the very garden that had appeared in her dreams all her life, her fame spread far beyond the borders of Egypt. In addition, Omm Seti claimed that somewhere under the temple there was a library with many ancient texts. If it is ever discovered, it will become a real sensation - the same as the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb.
The activities of the Omm Network have been highly appreciated by the international community. In 1960, the British Archaeological Society awarded her a pension, and five years later the president of her new homeland presented her with the Order of Merit for Egypt. Omm Seti died in 1981 and, as she had dreamed all her life, was buried in Abydos near the temple Networks.

HISTORY OF OMM NETWORK

When Mr and Mrs Eadie took their four-year-old daughter on an excursion to the British Museum one day in 1908, they could not have imagined the consequences it would lead to. What scared them most was the prospect of traveling through the museum halls with a tired and capricious child. At first, little Dorothy behaved like this, but only until they approached the Egyptian exhibit, where she suddenly sprang into action, displaying the most amazing behavior. She began to run around like crazy and kiss the feet of the statues, and then settled down next to the mummy in a glass box and refused to move. Her parents moved to another room and returned half an hour later, finding her in exactly the same position. Mrs. Eady bent down to take the child in her arms, but Dorothy literally stuck to the glass and screamed in a hoarse, unrecognizable voice: “Leave me here, these are my people.” Dorothy's strange behavior began a year ago, when an incident happened to her that she could not forget:

“When I was three years old, I fell down a high flight of stairs and lost consciousness. They called the doctor; he examined me carefully and declared that I was dead. About an hour later he returned with my death certificate and a nurse to “carry out the body,” but to his amazement, the “body” was alive, well, and playing as if nothing had happened!”

After falling down the stairs, Dorothy began to have a recurring dream about a large building with columns and a garden with trees, fruits and flowers. In addition, she developed depression: she often sobbed bitterly for no apparent reason and explained to her parents that she wanted to go home. When the girl was told that she was at home, she denied it, but could not say where her real home was. It was only during a fateful visit to the British Museum that the first signs of her lifelong conviction that she belonged to the Egyptian civilization began to appear.

Dorothy's obsession was confirmed a few months after the incident at the museum when her father brought home a volume of a children's encyclopedia. There were several photographs and drawings from the life of Ancient Egypt that completely fascinated her. Dorothy was particularly interested in a photograph of the famous Rosetta Stone (the trilingual text that allowed Egyptian hieroglyphs to be deciphered for the first time) and spent hours looking at it with a magnifying glass. To her mother's amazement and horror, she announced that she knew the language, but had simply forgotten it.

When Dorothy was seven years old, a recurring dream about a large building with pillars took on a new meaning for her. The impetus for this was a photograph in a magazine with the caption “Temple of Seti I at Abydos.” This photo completely fascinated the girl. “This is my home, this is where I lived,” she shouted joyfully, turning to her father. But the joy immediately gave way to deep sadness: “But why is everything broken here? And where is the garden? Her father told her not to say anything stupid: Dorothy could not see this building, which was very far away and was built thousands of years ago. Besides, there are no gardens in the desert.

Forty-five years later, Dorothy Eady, an employee of the Egyptian Department of Antiquities, went to work in Abydos and settled in a small house near the Temple of Seti. As far as she knew, she was "at home" and remained in her beloved Abydos from 1956 until her death in April 1981. By that time, she had become known throughout the world as Omm Seti, which meant “mother of Seti.” That was the name of her son, who was half Egyptian. As for the garden she saw in her dream, archaeologists eventually found it exactly where she said it would be, on the south side of the temple.

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