“Roland Doe”/“Robbie Mannheim”
Known as the “real” story behind the novel and Hollywood movie The Exorcist,
the tale of fourteen year-old Roland Doe is one of the most notorious
stories of demonic possession. In fact, Roland Doe is not his real
name; it is a pseudonym assigned to him by the Catholic church in order
to preserve the boy’s privacy. In the late 1940s, Doe’s aunt encouraged
him to use a Ouija board, and many speculate that after her death the
boy attempted to contact his aunt with the Ouija board, an act which
opened the door for the demons who wished to possess him.
The
possession started with strange sounds, like dripping water, that no one
could place. Eventually, religious artifacts began to quake and fly
off the walls, and unexplained footsteps and scratching noises could be
heard around the home. Scratches began to appear on the boy’s body,
including words that seemed to have been carved into his flesh by unseen
claws. The boy spoke in tongues in a guttural voice and levitated in
the air, with his body contorted in pain.
His family brought in a
Catholic priest, who determined that the boy was possessed by evil
spirits and needed an exorcism. The exorcism ritual was performed over
thirty times, with the boy injuring the priest many times throughout.
When, at last, the rite was successful, the entire hospital heard Doe’s
cries of bestial anguish and reported a horrible sulfuric odor hanging
in the air.
(Source | Photo)
Via Oddee




