After a ‘fatal’ fall at the age of 3, Dorothy Eady Louise, a girl living in London, England, always claimed to be from ancient Egypt and once loved Pharaoh Seti I who reigned between 1291-1278 BC. .
(Photo: British Museum)
Like many other children, as a child, Dorothy Eady Louise, born in 1904, lived in a seaside town in London, England, was also very naughty. At the age of 3, while running down the stairs, Dorothy tripped and fell to the floor. The fall was so severe that the girl was determined to be unsustainable. However, in the last moments of her life, a miracle happened: Dorothy suddenly woke up. The whole family was overjoyed, but the joy did not last long because the girl often acted strangely, such as refusing to sing hymns, or making comparisons between Christianity and ancient Egypt…
(Illustrated image, source: Getty Images)
Four years later, on a trip to the British Museum, Dorothy sat staring at the mummy for a long time, even kissing her feet, and refused to go home to her parents. The little girl pointed to a picture and said, “It’s my house”. The girl said she came from ancient Egypt and wished to return to her true home.
She ended up going to Cairo to marry a man there and give birth to a child. However, the marriage did not last long as she often fell into a trance and scribbled hieroglyphs. Dorothy’s writing spans up to 70 pages, and it tells the story of her life from her previous life.
The painting depicts the love affair between the pharaoh Seti I and the priestess Bentreshyt. (Photo: dreamworlds.ru)
In the text, Dorothy describes being born in ancient Egypt as Bentreshyt and raised as a priestess at the Temple of Seti I in Abydos, Egypt. One day, the pharaoh Seti I who ruled between 1291-1278 B.C.E. came to the temple and talked to her in the temple garden. The two fell in love and “eaten raw goose” (an ancient Egyptian word equivalent to “eating forbidden fruit” – according to Wiki). However, because of the monk’s vow of virginity, Bentreshyt committed suicide to prevent Seti from being implicated.
The ruins of the Temple of Seti I in Abydos, photographed in 1990 (Image: Wiki)
At first, people thought Dorothy was a madman. However, all was later convinced when Dorothy used memories from a past life to point to the former location of the garden in the temple at Abydos, with which archaeologists were able to pinpoint the exact location. of this site. She also revealed that in the temple there is a secret passage on the north side and under it is a library vault with religious and historical records.
Pictured left: Dorothy and her granddaughter in 1976. Right: Dorothy in 1981, a month before her death.
Later in her old age, Omm Seti (a name that showed respect for her) lived at the temple at Abydos in a small village in Egypt. She said that this is where the nun Bentreshyt used to live and worship the gods. For her, it was a peaceful place where she was protected by the benevolent ancient Egyptian gods. She passed away in 1981 in the grief of many.
To this day, the story of Omm Seti remains a mystery to the world.