Jeanne later recalled, she could know exactly what President Roosevelt was thinking, he was thinking: "urgent matters need to be dealt with first". Jeanne said she could feel in the president's heart that he had a premonition of death, just reaching out to Jeanne to confirm this fact.
In the last episode, we talked about one of the most famous astrologers and paranormality of the 20th century— Jeanne Dixon. Her unmistakably accurate predictions of many great events have brought her international fame. Politicians, socialites and businessmen from many countries, including the President of the United States, are actively seeking her petition, and many foreign celebrities are willing to give up private parties in White House to see her.
So today, let's start with the story between Jeanne and US President Franklin Roosevelt.
The US Constitution stipulates that the president can only serve two consecutive terms, however, Roosevelt, the 32nd president of the United States, is the only person in the history of the United States to have been elected president three times. see how much he was loved and trusted by the people. And this president also reached out to Jeanne for help.
One morning in November 1944, Jeanne received a phone call in her apartment. After confirming Jeanne's identity, the other line said: "I called you on behalf of the President. We've heard a lot about you, and the President would be happy to talk to you once. After 11 a.m. next Thursday, are you free?"
Franklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd President of the United States.
On the day of the meeting, Jeanne appeared in the Oval Office of the White House as scheduled. President Roosevelt raised his head from his desk, using his strong arms to support his torso. A warm smile crossed his face, then he said to Jeanne, “Good morning, Jeanne. Thank you for coming.” He rolled over to the end of the table and shook Jeanne's hand. In this handshake, Jeanne felt as if the weight of the world was resting on President Roosevelt's broad shoulders.
Jeanne found a chair and sat down, exchanged a few words of courtesy with President Roosevelt, and then suddenly, she felt from the other party "a powerful tidal wave of loneliness hit her". Mr. President, when a person has doubts, it is very smart to find someone to open them up a little bit. President Roosevelt sighed and replied: “Life is short, so are those who live longer. How much time do I have left to finish the work I have to get done?”
Jeanne asked to hold the president's hand, and President Roosevelt extended his large hand. Jeanne felt the vibrations of his life, he didn't have much time left… so Jeanne tried to change the subject to avoid having to answer the question. However, President Roosevelt was still very persistent, he wanted a straight answer. Jeanne reluctantly said: "Six months, maybe less."
As soon as the voice ended, there was a long silence in the room. After that, President Roosevelt talked to Jeanne about the world situation, from Russia to China, from Europe to Africa, they talked for a long time. After that, President Roosevelt seemed disgruntled, and he turned the subject back to the original question. He asked Jeanne slowly, "How much time do you think I have to finish my work, how many years?"
Jeanne kindly corrected: "Not a few years, Mr. President, not in years, but in months. No more than six months.” “Oh, only for so long?” President Roosevelt muttered in a low voice, as if speaking to himself, then turned around, eyes fixed on the sky. Jeanne later recalled, she could know exactly what President Roosevelt was thinking, he was thinking: "Urgent matters need to be dealt with first. " Jeanne said she could feel in the president's heart that he had a premonition of death, just reaching out to Jeanne to confirm this fact. As they parted, President Roosevelt shook Jeanne's hand, bid her farewell, and said, "It's nice of you to be here."
In the blink of an eye, more than two months had passed. In mid-January 1945, Jeanne was invited to the White House to see President Roosevelt again. “Did you bring the crystal ball with you?” President Roosevelt asked, and when Jeanne took the crystal ball out of her pocket, she and President Roosevelt smiled understandingly.
“Okay, how much time do I have?” President Roosevelt asked, like an impatient boy rushing to his birthday present. Jeanne arched her thumb and index finger, leaving two inches between them, and said, "That's all."
As if accepting that the end was near, President Roosevelt nodded amicably: "Time is short." Jeanne grudgingly replied, “Yes, too short for us to have fun thinking about it.”
On April 12, 1945, President Roosevelt, suffering from severe pain, died of a cerebral hemorrhage in Hot Springs, Georgia. Since he first met Jeanne in his office, it is true that he has not lived more than six months.
After the death of President Roosevelt, Vice President Harry Truman became the 33rd president of the United States. Jeanne almost lost her reputation because of this president. What happens here?
Harry S. Truman, 33rd President of the United States.
For many Americans, aside from former President Donald Trump's tumultuous 2016 presidential election, the most dramatic presidential election in American history was President Truman's 1948 re-election campaign.
At the time, President Truman was undervalued in every way, with many polls showing him two figures behind his opponent, and he was also facing the risk of leadership divided within the ruling party. into three factions.
Throughout the campaign, only one person remained convinced that President Truman would win. Yes, she is Jeanne.
When she predicted in January 1948 that President Truman would be reelected, few believed her, even her friends thought, poor Jeanne, her genius ceased to exist.
Walter Maloney, the wife of a Washington lawyer, recalls how she once asked Jeanne to prophesy for her. Jeanne asked Walter to make a wish from within. Then Jeanne looked intently at the crystal ball and said: "Your wish is not for you personally, but you will get it, it will come true." Walter felt he had successfully teased Jeanne, laughing and saying that she wished Truman to be re-elected president, which was almost impossible. However, Jeanne said she saw in the crystal ball that President Truman would win.
Jeanne also spoke this prophecy to many people during the same period. As a result, this prophecy spread rapidly among civil servants. Some social groups in Washington angrily deleted Jeanne's name from their rally guest lists. An embassy secretary even phoned Jeanne, urging her to publicly change the prophecy, “because you are making fun of yourself with it.” However, Jeanne kept her prediction unchanged.
A few weeks later, Jeany on a local radio program also predicted that a race would take place between Thomas Dewey and Harry Truman. " I saw Mr. Dewey disappears from the newspapers, and the laurels of the winners fell on Mr. Truman's head," she said. Political commentator Ray Henle also broadcast her prediction in a nationally televised broadcast.
As a result, abusive letters rumbled to Jeanne from all over the country. No one seemed to believe her, not even her friend Estelle Friedrichs! Estelle, who works in the White House, is the most direct beneficiary if Truman wins the election.
The Saturday before the election, the wife of the lawyer we talked about above, Walter Malone, volunteered to come to Truman's campaign headquarters. Just a day or two earlier, the broadcast of President Truman's political speeches had been cut off due to lack of funding. Volunteers worked hard to raise money to buy airtime for the president with a desperate mentality.
Jeanne goes to donate and complains to Walter: “everybody says I'm crazy. Let's try Poker again, see if I still get the same touch." Jeanne laid out the cards and looked at them for a few minutes without saying a word. Finally, she looked up and said she didn't see any other results: Truman would win the election!
Everyone knew the end result, Truman actually won the election, a lot of windows were broken.
After talking about the 32nd and 33rd presidents of the United States, let's take a look at Jeanne's strange prediction about the 34th president of the United States, Dwight David Eisenhower.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States.
Not long before the U.S. Summer 1952 bipartisan nominating convention, TV presenter Martha Rountree hosted a lavish garden party at her home in Washington. Everyone is invited. Martha asks Jeanne to bring a crystal ball to the meeting.
During the meeting, Jeanne began to prophesy to the congressmen. She told Speaker Sam Rayburn that he would lose his position as spokesman, but would soon regain it. On his 73rd birthday, he will receive the greatest honor of his entire career. After that, Sam actually lost his position of spokesperson, but reinstated it two years later. On his 73rd birthday, Democrats threw him a lavish "Sam Rayburn Dinner," the hall was beyond capacity, and the president honored him with a plaque. The day after her birthday, Sam called Jeanne and said: "I have great confidence in her. That dinner was the greatest honor of my life. Continue what she does for people, her prophecy has always supported me during the most difficult times of my life.”
And at Martha's garden party, Jeanne made another startling prophecy. She said General Eisenhower would enter the White House. Hope Ridings Miller, editor of Diplomat magazine, remembers this very well. Since she was very disappointed at the time, she suggested to Jeanne that, if the prediction changes, she must be informed. As a result, two weeks before the election, Jeanne telegraphed to her that Eisenhower would win overwhelmingly. And the results are exactly the same.
And that wasn't the most magical thing, in late 1955 a report in the New York Daily News wrote the following: As dozens of senators and governors were confidently delivering their New Year's resolutions - running for president, Washington's beloved prophet was quietly observing his crystal ball. If Jeanne Dixon's latest prophecy is corroborated as her earlier surprising prophecies, then running presidents will be able to pack their presidential campaign badges, as the star Her destiny was destined – Dwight Eisenhower would be reelected.
Of course, Jeanne guessed correctly, but the most interesting thing is that when Jeanne predicted President Eisenhower's re-election, Eisenhower himself hadn't even decided whether to run for president again. It seems that Jeanne really foresaw the Divine Will.
Having said many stories about American presidents, let's talk about the meeting between British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Jeanne.
In the early spring of 1945, Winston Churchill visited Washington, the capital of the United States. Lord Halifax and his wife invited Jeanne to a party in Churchill's honor.
Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Term
26 October 1951 – 6 April 1955 3 years, 162 days.
Jeanne, who was in the US, knew nothing about the political situation in Britain, but when she shook hands with Prime Minister Churchill, she felt a special message. She said sincerely: "Prime Minister, please don't call the election too soon, or you will lose the election."
The old British politician turned his head to stare at the brusque young lady, her clear chestnut eyes looking back at him. After a while, he muttered, "England will not dishonor me."
As if not hearing his words, Jeanne continued: "It's okay if you lose this election for the time being, in a few years the power of England will be in your hands again."
What is the result? Churchill remained in the election that June, which resulted in Labor taking control of the House of Commons and Churchill being replaced by Prime Minister Attlee. Six years later, the Conservatives won again, and Churchill was once again crowned prime minister, until he voluntarily retired in 1955.
In 1962, Jeanne gave another prophecy to this great statesman. She said Churchill would die at the end of 1964. Her prediction date was only 26 days different from the actual date.
Many of Jeanne's predictions were made publicly available and known to many people, so their credibility was extremely high. After listening to her story, you may also discover that the prophecy she left behind is quite special, very different from most of the ancient prophecies in China as well as abroad.
Many prophecies, because the divine plan cannot be revealed, are often stated in vague terms, open and closed. However, Jeanne has always believed that her predicting power is a God-given responsibility, so she tries to say it very clearly, a lot of details are described very clearly, there is no way. second interpretation of the prophecy. What's even more commendable is that Jeanne will also clearly explain in detail the various ways in which she obtains prophecies, even pointing out which ones are unchangeable, and which ones can be. opportunity for improvement.