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Hans Holzer

 
 
(1920-)

Popular writer on paranormal topics. Holzer was born on January 26, 1920, in Vienna, Austria, and later attended Vienna University, Columbia University, and the College of Applied Science, London (M.A. and Ph.D.). In 1945 he became a free-lance writer. He was also a playwright and composer, a drama critic for the London Weekly Sporting Review (1949-60), and a television consultant. He was a member of the American Society for Psychical Research, the Society for Psychical Research, London, the British College for Psychic Science, the Center for Paranormal Studies (executive vice president), American Society for the Occult (research director), the Authors Guild, and the Dramatists Guild, and was research director of the New York Committee for the Investigation of Paranormal Occurrences.

Holzer wrote hundreds of newspaper and magazine articles on psychic phenomena, the occult, and related subjects. Through the 1970s he turned out numerous books on ghosts, the occult, and psychical topics that reached a popular audience despite continual complaints by reviewers and some people that his work contained numerous errors. At his peak he wrote three to four books a year. Several books in the 1970s helped promote the spread of witchcraft and neopaganism. In the early 1980s Holzer wrote two books that perpetuated the Amityville hoax, The Secret of Amityville and The Amityville Curse.

Sources:

Holzer, Hans. The Directory of the Occult. Chicago: Henry Regnery, 1974.

——. The Great British Ghost Hunt. Boston: G. K. Hall, 1975.

——. The New Pagans. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1972.

——. Pagans and Witches. New York: Manor Books, 1979.

——. The Prophets Speak. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1971.

——. The Truth about Witchcraft. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1969.

——. Wicca: The Way of the Witches. New York: Manor Books, 1979.

Pleasants, Helene, ed. Biographical Dictionary of Parapsychology. New York: Helix Press, 1964.

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Wikipedia: Hans Holzer
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Hans Holzer
Born 26 January 1920(1920-01-26)
Vienna, Austria Flag of Austria
Died 26 April 2009 (aged 89)
New York City, New York Flag of the United States

Hans Holzer (January 26, 1920 – April 26, 2009)[1] was an Austrian-born, American pioneering paranormal researcher and author. He wrote well over 100 books on supernatural and occult subjects for the popular market as well as several plays, musicals, films, and documentaries, and hosted a television show, "Ghost Hunter".

Contents

Career

Holzer was born in Vienna, Austria. His interest in the supernatural was sparked, at a young age, by stories told to him by his uncle Henry. He went on to study archaeology and ancient history at the University of Vienna but sensing that war was imminent, his family decided it was unsafe to stay in Austria and left the country for New York City in 1938. He studied japanese at Columbia University and comparative religion and parapsychology at London College of Applied Science - obtaining a Ph.D. He went on to teach parapsychology at the New York Institute of Technology.

His extensive involvement in researching the supernatural included investigating The Amityville Horror and some of the most prominent haunted locations around the world. He also worked with well-known trance mediums such as Ethel Johnson-Meyers, Sybil Leek, and Marisa Anderson. Holzer was famous for creating the term "The Other Side" or in full "The Other Side of Life". He is also credited with having coined the term ghost hunter which was the title of his first book on the paranormal published in 1963.

Holzer believed in life after death, and the existence of ghosts, spirits, and "stay behinds": Ghosts were, according to him, imprints left in the environment which could be "picked up" by sensitive people; Spirits were intelligent beings who could interact with the living; while "stay behinds" were those who found themselves earth-bound after death. He also believed in reincarnation and the existence of "levels of consciousness". He was a vegetarian, then a vegan for most of his life. [link title]

The Amityville Horror

Holzer's most famous investigation was into the so-called The Amityville Horror case. In January, 1977 Holzer and spiritual medium Ethel Myers entered 112 Ocean Avenue in Amityville, New York. Meyers' claimed that the house had been built over an ancient Native American burial ground and the angry spirit of a Shinnecock Indian Chief - "Rolling Thunder" - had possessed the previous occupant, Ronald Defeo Jr., driving him to murder his family. Photographs taken at the scene revealed curious anomalies - such as the halos which appeared in the images of bullet holes made in the original 1974 murders. Holzer's claim that the house was built on Indian sacred land was, however, denied by the local "Amityville Historical Society" and it was pointed out that it was the Montaukett Indians, and not the Shinnecocks who had been the original settlers in the area. Despite this, Holzer went on to write several books about the subject.

References

  1. ^ Grimes, William (April 29, 2009). "Hans Holzer, Ghost Hunter, Dies at 89". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/30/books/30holzer.html. Retrieved on April 30, 2009. 

External links

<http://www.HansHolzer.com>


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Occultism & Parapsychology Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Copyright © 2001 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hans Holzer" Read more