
This apparition of the Virgin Mary was captured on September 3, 1989, in Karascond, a village in the northern Hungary. There were people in the church at the time, although only one claimed to see the BVM--a restaurateur named Karoly Ligeti, whose driver snapped this photo at his instruction. The most unusual aspect of the picture is the BVM's halo, which appears to be made of hundreds of individual lights.
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"Too nervous to snap a picture herself, she asked a stranger to do it, at a point about 50
yards from the steeple. Her daughter then took the camera to a Wal-Mart where,
according to store procedure, an employee would have opened it by hand inside a
portable 'dark box,' then placed the film inside an automated processor. There were only
two exposures on Ginski's film--a murky vertical shot of what appeared to be St. Stan's
steeple washed in flood lights, and the bizarre close-up. The face shocked Ginski and the
three other Fells Point women who claim to have seen the Virgin Mary on the steeple.
Ginski believes it is the Virgin Mary, appearing at St. Stan's perhaps to deliver the
message that the church's closure--and possible sale--makes the Holy Family unhappy."
Reporter Roddick seems not to have asked the pivotal question of Ginski: Did the passerby
who took the image look anything like the image? If the image is not an accidental shot of
the photographer, then the Virgin Mary is sporting an unexpected haircut. "Bangs," Ginski
is quoted in the article. "I can't believe the Blessed Mother has bangs." |
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