Blind mystic Baba Vanga who ‘foresaw 9/11’ makes terrifying nuclear disaster prediction for 2023 | The Sun
A BLIND mystic is claimed to have foreseen a nuclear disaster that will destroy Earth before the end of the year.
Baba Vanga, known as the "Nostradamus of the Balkans", was believed to have predicted some of the biggest events in world history – including 9/11.
Vanga's believers say she saw a major nuclear power plant explosion that would cause toxic clouds to settle over Asia.
Her followers believe that other countries could be affected by the explosion due to a spread of serious diseases as the toxic clouds fill the air.
The Bulgarian woman died 26 year ago aged 84, but many of her predictions are said to have come true long after her death.
However, these are hard to verify as only a little, if any, of her "words of wisdom" were actually written down.
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But that didn't stop believers from standing by her rather vague and take-it-with-a-grain-of-salt "prophecies".
It is believed while Baba did make some predictions, many of which are attributed to her actually simply originate in the ether of the internet created by trolls.
From 9/11 and the rise of ISIS to allegedly foreseeing the Ukraine war, Baba Vanga is said to have made her fair share of predictions for 2023.
One of them includes the Earth's orbit changing – meaning we could face a flood or the next ice age, depending on how far the Earth would be from the Sun.
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But hey, at least we won't die of heat.
Born in 1911, mystic grew up on a farm in what is now Macedonia and claimed she was blinded after being sucked up into a tornado.
Vanga began "predicting" the future as a local mystic – and soon after her legend began to grow.
Hundreds would queue to visit her at her home, especially those desperate for news during World War 2.
She was even placed on the payroll of the Bulgarian government in 1966 because of her "psychic ability".
Vanga was even visited by Soviet Union spooks from the KGB.
But her story took on a life of its own after her death in 1996 – mostly thanks to the internet.
Her funeral attracted hundreds of mourners and her last house in Petrich – close to the border with Greece – is now a memorial museum.
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