Near Death Experiences in China - A Study of Survivors of the Tangshan Earthquake
Li Ying
(Clearwisdom.net) On July 28, 1976, the monstrous Tangshan earthquake caused
more than 240,000 fatalities and 160,000 serious injuries. Medical workers in
China did case studies on the survivors, most of whom had been buried under the
rubble of collapsed buildings. According to their recollections, more than half of the survivors reported
that during the time they were in danger, not only were they not afraid, on the
contrary, their minds were clear, calm and comfortable. In such a dangerous
situation, there was no panic; some people even had feelings of happiness and
thoughts running rapidly through their minds. Many different thoughts came up.
At this moment, things that had happened in their earlier lives kept flashing
back like a movie and the scenes were mostly happy ones. The recollections were
of such things as funny moments during childhood, wedding ceremonies, and
achievements and awards from work. This phenomenon is called life retrospection
or "full-scale recollection." Even stranger, close to half of the people had the feeling and awareness that
their consciousness or soul had left their bodies. Some of the people equated
this with "the soul coming out from the shell." They stressed that they had felt
their supernormal capabilities were in another dimension outside their bodies,
and not inside their brains. They thought that their physical bodies neither had
these abilities nor the ability to think. One-third of the people had the strange feeling of being inside a pipe or
passing through a tunnel. Sometimes, it was accompanied with loud noises and the
feeling of being pulled and compressed. They called it "the tunnel experience."
Some people had the feeling of getting to the end of the tunnel; they saw light
and felt that "the light would come soon." About one-quarter of those surveyed experienced encountering incorporeal
beings, or ghosts. Most of these unsubstantial beings were their relatives who
had passed away. It was as though they had gone together to another world and
continued to live there. Or, they saw living friends or even strangers. It
seemed like a reunion. These "ghost-like" figures were sometimes described as
being in some sort of "light" form. Some people looked at them as having been
"transformed" according to concepts in religion. From the survivors of the Tangshan earthquake, inquiring researchers came up
with 81 useful survey interviews. They classified the experiences into 40
categories: looking back at one's life, the separation of the consciousness and
the body, feeling of weightlessness, feeling strangeness in one's own body,
feeling abnormal, the feeling of departing from the world, the feeling of one's
body being united with the universe, the feeling of time's nonexistence, and
many more. The majority of these people experienced two or more feelings at the
same time. Although the survey of survivors of the horrible Tangshan earthquake produced
only 81 usable case studies of those experiencing near death experiences, this
is the most data collected among all the research on near death experiences in
the world. After their "return from death," most of these people remembered
clearly their near death experiences even after ten or twenty years. These
research results from China are amazingly similar to the surveys done by
scholars in other countries all over the world. Reference: Popular Medicine, Issue 5 (1993), Page 34-35, Shanghai
Science and Technology Publishing House.
Chinese version available at
http://www.minghui.org/mh/articles/2002/5/30/31067.html
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