Henry Belk
Henry Belk was a department store tycoon and a wealthy benefactor of Andrija Puharich's research into ESP and other anomalous mental phenomena.
Henry Belk
Henry Belk was a department store tycoon and a wealthy benefactor of Andrija Puharich's research into ESP and other anomalous mental phenomena. He was part of the elite circle of individuals who supported the Round Table Foundation in Maine1.
Belk was one of the wealthy individuals who joined the Round Table Foundation, flying to Maine in his private jet for foundation meetings. His financial contributions helped keep the foundation afloat, particularly after it gained prestige from its affiliation with Samuel Rosen's groundbreaking surgical procedure1.
In the spring of 1956, Belk happened upon a Paris Match magazine article profiling Peter Hurkos, a Dutch psychic who was gaining fame in Europe. Belk's idea was to bring Hurkos to the Round Table Foundation to be tested in the lab, which he did in the fall of 19561.
In early 1963, Belk arrived at Puharich's Ossining estate with an enticing research proposition centered on Arigo, a psychic healer in the jungles of Brazil who reportedly performed major surgeries with a pocketknife without anesthesia or pain. Puharich, eager to pursue this, left for Brazil with Belk, a decision that led to Bep Hermans and their children leaving him1.
Sources
- Jacobsen, Annie. Phenomena: The Secret History of the U.S. Government's Investigations into Extrasensory Perception and Psychokinesis. Little, Brown and Company, 2017. ↩
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