Books
insult Spiritualists and belief in paranormal
UNITED KINGDOM. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, brilliant creator of detective Sherlock
Holmes, was schizophrenic and complicit in the murder of illusionist Harry Houdini.
Those extraordinary claims are made in two recent books which examine the lives
of the two men who held opposing views about the evidence for life after death
and mediumship.
Their
authors are guilty of insulting Spiritualists and others who take an interest
in the paranormal by suggesting that it indicates the presence of a mental illness
and that some would even kill to preserve their beliefs.
The
first culprit is Dr Andrew Norman, a Scottish general practitioner turned writer
(as indeed was his subject, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle), who shares the bewilderment
of many that an educated man capable of writing clever and intricate detective
novels could also declare his belief in communications from the dead and the existence
of fairies.
In
doing so, Norman claims, Sir Arthur was displaying classic signs of mental illness.
In the medical profession when we see something bizarre happening we often
look at the possibility that there is a family trait. It seems that Conan Doyle
may have been suffering from a mental condition.
The
insult, of course, is to suggest that Sir Arthurs interest in such things
was bizarre and that it was even necessary to look for a medical explanation.
If Andrew Norman were to examine any of the recent opinion polls about the paranormal,
such as the Baylor Religion Survey, he would realise that belief in various subjects
that he would term bizarre is extraordinarily widespread, and indeed
that educated individuals are more likely to have an interest in borderline subjects.
Is
he suggesting they are all suffering from mental problems? Various newspapers
picked up on this story but, strangely, none names the book. We suspect it comes
from Dr Andrew Normans Agatha Christie: The Finished Portrait, in which
he argues that during an 11-day missing period in the life of the crime thriller
writer she was in a fugue state a period of out-of-body amnesia
caused by stress.
The
other book that maligns Sir Arthurs character without suggesting
any mental disorder, incidentally has been written by two Americans, William
Kalush and Larry Sloman. It is yet another biography of master magician, illusionist
and escapologist Harry Houdini (left). And like all other books on Houdini, it
deals in depth with Houdinis interest in Spiritualism and his exposure of
many fraudulent mediums. In fact, by announcing his intention of exposing mediums
even before he arrived in a town, he ensured his shows were sold out.
Houdini
died after being punched in the stomach by a student who had asked him if it were
true that he could withstand blows to the abdomen. Houdini said he could, but
was punched before he had time to brace himself against the punch. As a result,
he suffered a burst appendix and died a few days later, on Halloween 1927.
But
in The Secret Life of Houdini: the making of Americas First Superhero, the
authors suggest that a group of Spiritualists among them Sir Arthur
might have orchestrated the blows to the stomach as a way of silencing Spiritualisms
main detractor. They even go as far as to suggest that Canadas then prime
minister, William Mackenzie King, who was a staunch Spiritualist, may have had
links with the plotters.
I
don't think Doyle himself was involved in Houdini's death, co-author Harry
Sloman has said. But he was ruthless and he was a true believer. God knows
what he would stop at to get the Spiritualist agenda promoted.
But
another Houdini biographer, Kenneth Silverman, has dismissed the claim as an
old story. The author of Houdini!!! The Career of Ehrich Weiss (1996), told
Canadas The Colonist: If they have some new evidence, that would be
spectacular. Im just waiting for them to publish their notes. All I can
do for the moment is suspend judgment.
Its
hardly likely that either claim could be proved, particular eight decades after
Houdinis death and three years later, in 1930, that of Sir Arthur. But the
authors clearly know the publicity value of making sensational claims, regardless
of the damage they do to the memory of someone who made an enormous contribution
to Spiritualism and our understanding of mediumship.