Jonathan Cott - The Search For Omm Sety - Doubleday - 1987 (cover photograph by Alex Gotfryd)



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Jonathan Cott - The Search For Omm Sety - Doubleday - 1987 (cover photograph by Alex Gotfryd)
October 25, 2021 | “‘Dead girl’ comes back to life, knows SECRETS she shouldn’t | The reincarnation of Dorothy Eady” (MrBallen)
MrBallen begins the YouTube video as follows: “In 1979, New York Times’ article described her story as being, quote, one of the Western world’s most intriguing and convincing cases of reincarnation.” This is the story of Dorothy Eady, later known as Omm Sety.
One of the sources MrBallen referenced is the article “She Had Her Life to Live Over” by John Anthony West in the New York Times (which appeared in print on July 26, 1987). According to the article, Dorothy Eady was born in London, England, in 1904. “At the age of 3 she fell down the stairs, was knocked unconscious and declared dead by the family doctor. But an hour later, when the doctor returned to prepare the body, the little girl was sitting up in bed, playing. Shortly thereafter she began to have recurring dreams of life in a huge columned building, and she was often in tears, insisting ‘I want to go home.’” This “home” would be Egypt, and she would later move there.
During her time in Egypt, “she kept on making Egyptological discoveries based on what she insisted was memory, not research or mere intuition.” She believed “that in her former life she had been King Seti’s lover” as well as a “temple priestess.”
Presumably the 1979 article was “a story about Omm Sety/Dorothy Eady by Christopher Wren, a New York Times correspondent, from The Times.”
This 1987 article also mentions the book The Search for Omm Sety: A True Story of Eternal Love—and One Woman’s Voyage Through the Ages (1989), by Jonathan Cott and with contribution from Hanni (Henry?) El Zeini. As written on the book’s cover from the New York Times Book Review, it is “a book for anyone interested in reincarnation.” I have not read the book; have you?
On a side note, I enjoy MrBallen’s YouTube videos—or, as he describes them, the “strange, dark, and mysterious delivered in story format.” I cannot vouch for the authenticity of the stories, but he is an amazing storyteller. Many times I regret listening to the story as some are very dark (and tragic, heartbreaking, etc.), but I have also gone through almost all of his +220 videos, so ... I guess it is a testament to his skill as a storyteller.
Reincarnation advocates cite Dorothy Eady, later known as Omm Sety, who claimed to be reincarnated by a Egyptian Priestess and became impreg
The phenomenon of reincarnation is a fascinating topic. Advocates of reincarnation present the story of Dorothy Louise Eady as a prime example that reincarnation is as much a part of life as birth and death. The story of Dorothy Eady (AKA: Omm Sety) is an interesting one. She was born to Irish parents in January 1904 near London, England. Her life began as that of any normal child. That is – until the age of three – when she suffered a terrible fall down the stairs and pronounced dead.
Omm Sety
Yo.
This woman, this LEGEND, just went. "Imma Do It to 'em" TWICE.
She lived her Best Life.
TWICE.
Dorothy Eady 'died' at the age of three and when she woke up her life had changed forever. She was convinced that she had once been born across the sea in ancient Egypt. She claimed that she had been an Egyptian Princess.
oh my goodness
everyone read this, this is so interesting
Dorothy Eady
Dorothy Eady was born in 1904 in London. She fell down a flight of stairs when she was only three; the fall was so bad, her parents thought she had died. But she woke up, and started begging to be “brought home.” She began to become obsessed with Ancient Egypt, which caused a lot of strife in her Christian upbringing. When her parents took her to the British Museum, she fell in love with Egyptian exhibits and proclaimed it was “her home.” She eventually married an Egyptian man and moved to Egypt, where she began to become aware of what she believed to be her past life. She felt she was a reincarnation of a woman called Bentreshyt, a priestess who committed suicide. She herself had a son, named Sety, and began to call herself Omm Sety (mother of Sety). She devoted her life to the study of Ancient Egypt, and is well known for her research contributions.