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There is no “proven case” of reincarnation, such as that of Lily, the 19th-century Spanish girl

Hoax – Lily, a girl from the 1940s, is claimed to be the only proven case of reincarnation in history.

Analysis

A story has been catching the attention of internet users and circulating on social media and obscure websites: the alleged “case of Lily,” a girl born in the USA in the 1940s who, according to the narrative, had memories and habits of a Spanish woman from the 19th century.

According to the message, Lily allegedly showed fluency in old Spanish, recognized a village unknown to her family, and even pointed out the location of a hidden object in a house in Spain. The story is constructed with typical elements of fantastic and supernatural narratives and circulates as if it were a fact proven by science. Read:

One of the proven cases of reincarnation: that of a 19th-century Spanish woman in Lily. This is the only confirmed case of reincarnation in human history and is truly terrifying. In 1943, in the quiet town of Allentown, Pennsylvania, a young couple had a daughter named Lily. At first, she seemed like an ordinary child, until she started saying words no one could understand. The most frightening were entire sentences in Spanish, a language no one in the family spoke.

Initially, the parents thought it was just baby talk. But as she grew, Lily spoke Spanish fluently, using old expressions that not even modern natives knew. Intrigued, her parents took her to a language expert who made a shocking discovery. Her vocabulary belonged to the 19th century, and then everything got even stranger.

One night, Lily pointed to a map and said with conviction: I need to go back home, the location she pointed to being a remote village in Spain, where no one in the family had ever been. Desperate for answers, the parents took Lily to the village. Upon arrival, she walked straight to an old house and knocked on the door. An elderly lady answered, but before she could say anything, Lily walked in and went to a wall.

Without hesitation, she removed a loose brick and revealed: “A small wooden doll covered in dust.” The room fell silent. Lily held the doll, looked into the old woman’s eyes, and whispered: “Don’t you remember me? This was mine.” The woman, visibly shaken, began to tremble. With tears in her eyes, she murmured a name that was not Lily’s, but which decades earlier belonged to her deceased sister. The most terrifying part is that after that night, Lily never spoke Spanish again. As if that part of her soul had finally rested. One of the proven cases of reincarnation: that of a 19th-century Spanish woman in Lily.

Fact-Check

The publication presents the story as the “only proven case of reincarnation in human history,” sparking curiosity and quickly going viral. To analyze its veracity, three questions must be answered: 1) Is the case truly the only proven one of reincarnation in human history? 2) What is the origin of the narrative that points to Lily? 3) Is there, after all, any scientifically proven case of reincarnation?

Is the Lily case the only proven case of reincarnation in human history?

No. The claim is false. To date, there is no case of reincarnation proven and accepted by the scientific community. Science itself, when dealing with phenomena, requires empirical, verifiable, and reproducible evidence. None of this is present in relation to Lily’s story or any other reincarnation account.

What is the story pointing to the Lily case?

Similar stories have already circulated in sensationalist outlets, such as The Sun tabloid, but without any scientific backing. In the case in question, the same images of the supposed child are used but the girl’s name is different. Just like the Lily case, the content is merely an anecdotal report without proof.

Is reincarnation demonstrably proven?

To answer this question, it is necessary to separate faith and science. And, scientifically speaking, the answer is no. Reincarnation is a theme present in religions and spiritual traditions but is not recognized as a scientific fact.

Researchers like Ian Stevenson from the University of Virginia studied cases of children who claimed to remember past lives, but neither he nor his followers claimed to have found definitive proof, only suggestive evidence. Thus, there is, to date, no scientific proof of any case of reincarnation.

Conclusion

The story of Lily, presented as the “only proven case of reincarnation in human history,” has no scientific basis or factual proof. It is a fictional account, similar to other mystery narratives circulating on the internet. There is no proven case of reincarnation to date, and the use of the expression “proven case” in the hoax is merely a strategy to lend credibility to content that is, in essence, invented.

Fake news ❌

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