What if a child you know suddenly started sharing vivid memories from a life they couldn’t possibly have lived? It’s a thought that sends shivers down the spine, yet for some families, it’s a reality they face. Researchers, like those at the University of Virginia’s Division of Perceptual Studies, have collected hundreds of such accounts. While some experts believe these point to reincarnation, others suggest explanations like false memories or vivid imaginations. Let’s delve into ten fascinating stories of children who claimed they’ve lived before. Prepare to question what you think you know about life, death, and the unexplained.
10. Suleyman Andary

Suleyman Andary, born in Lebanon in 1954, began recalling a past life from a young age. His family was Druse, a faith that includes the belief in reincarnation. Suleyman spoke of living in a village called Gharife and owning an olive oil press. He even mentioned names he claimed were his children from that previous life, sometimes muttering them in his sleep.
At around age eleven, he remembered a past-life habit of not lending books. He also recalled his former name being Abdallah. Because these memories led to teasing, Suleyman eventually stopped sharing them. However, a visit to Gharife in 1967 seemed to validate his claims. People there confirmed that a man named Abdallah Abu Hamdan, who owned an oil press, had indeed lived in the village. Suleyman also reportedly recognized several landmarks during his visit.
9. Tae

Professor Ohkado Masayuki, a Japanese linguistics professor, researches childhood reincarnation. One of his compelling cases, from a 2015 interview, involves a young girl named Tae. Her story begins with her mother, Atsuko, whose own mother, Midori, passed away in 1993. The following year, Atsuko married, moved, and in 1996, gave birth to Tae.
Atsuko noticed Tae reminded her strongly of Midori. When two-year-old Tae was shown a picture of Midori and told, “This is your grandmother,” the child replied, “Me.” Interestingly, Atsuko’s family practiced Zen, a religion that also believes in reincarnation. Once, when Atsuko was feeling down about her mother, three-year-old Tae said, “I have to cheer her up,” making Atsuko feel as if her mother had returned. By her late teens, however, Tae reportedly had no memory of Midori or a previous life.
8. James Leninger
In 2001, two-year-old James Leninger started making startling statements. He claimed to recall a past life as an American World War II pilot. These memories seemed to surface after his father took him to the Cavanaugh Flight Museum. Soon after, James began having nightmares about an airplane on fire. He even stated that in his previous life, he flew his plane off a boat called Natoma.
James later identified his past self as Jack Larsen. While looking through a book about Iwo Jima, the young boy remarkably pointed out where Larsen’s plane was supposedly shot down. However, the case has faced skepticism in recent years. Critics suggest it lacks solid evidential value and that many details are offered primarily by the boy’s parents.
7. Dorothy Eady (Omm Sety)
Born in London in 1904, Dorothy Eady’s life took an extraordinary turn after a serious fall at age three. While visiting the British Museum with her family, she encountered a photograph of Seti I, an Egyptian Pharaoh. Young Dorothy declared that the place in the picture was her home. She then astonished her family by walking around the museum, kissing the feet of ancient Egyptian statues.
At fifteen, Dorothy had a vivid dream where she met the mummy of Pharaoh Seti I, who, she claimed, helped her remember her past life in ancient Egypt. Her unusual behavior, including sleepwalking and speaking of Egypt, led to her being placed in a sanitarium multiple times. Later in life, Dorothy Eady adopted the name Omm Sety and became a respected Egyptologist, her life deeply intertwined with the land she claimed was once her home.
6. YTK

This case involves a man, referred to as MMS, who lived on an air force base with his wife in the late 1960s. In 1968, during a parachute training exercise, MMS tragically died after landing in a deep pond near the airfield. Several years later, his widow remarried one of MMS’s comrades and gave birth to a boy, YTK. The baby was born with birth defects and peculiar rope-like birthmarks around one leg.
When YTK was three, he began to talk about falling from the sky, getting caught in a rope, and dying. By age five, these recollections stopped. It’s noted that YTK grew up on the same base where parachuting took place and even slept in a cot suspended by parachute ropes. His mother stated that YTK had no prior knowledge of his biological father’s death.
5. Shiva Tripathi

In Uttar Pradesh, India, a woman named Sumitra Singh experienced strange episodes in 1985. She would lose consciousness, her eyes would roll, and her teeth would clench. Sometimes, she spoke during these states, once predicting her own death in three days. Astonishingly, three days later, she appeared to pass away.
After a period of confusion, Singh began acting like a completely different person. She didn’t recognize those around her and insisted her name was Shiva. She claimed she had been murdered by her in-laws in a town called Dibiyapur and even rejected her own children. Her statements reportedly matched details of a woman named Shiva who had died violently in 1985. When Singh later visited Sharifpura, a man recognized her as his daughter. During this time, she also surprisingly began to read and write, despite having little prior education. The Indian Express covered this perplexing case in 1985.
4. Manisha

In 2005, an incredible event unfolded in South Delhi, India. A four-year-old girl named Manisha walked into a family’s home and made a startling claim: she was their daughter, Suman. Suman had tragically passed away from typhoid in 2000 at the age of fifteen. The little girl ended up living with the couple she identified as her “new” parents.
Manisha was born to a couple near Rajasthan, India. At only two years old, she began telling her biological parents that she was reincarnated. She later provided them with details about her previous birth, including the names of her “new” parents in Delhi whom she eventually sought out.
3. Cameron Macauley
Cameron Macauley was born in Glasgow, Scotland, in 2000. From the tender age of two, he started talking about a past life on the remote island of Barra, located in Scotland’s Outer Hebrides. This was unusual, as Barra was not a widely known place. Cameron became increasingly insistent about going to Barra to be with his “other family,” providing multiple details about them, including their surname, Robertson.
He also claimed that his previous father had been tragically killed after being hit by a car. When Cameron was five, his family took him to Barra. Remarkably, he was able to locate the Robertson family home. While inside the house, Cameron became very sad, telling his mother that he missed his previous mother dearly.
2. Luke Ruehlman
In 2017, two-year-old Luke Ruehlman from Cincinnati began to express concerns about his safety. He also developed an unusual habit: naming things Pam. He named a ladybug Pam, even though his family didn’t know anyone by that name. Soon, toys and drawings were also named Pam. Luke then started claiming that he had previously been a girl with black hair who used to wear earrings.
When his family asked who Pam was, Luke replied that it was his name from a previous life. He described Pam dying, going to heaven, seeing God, and then being sent back to Earth as Luke. Strangely, Luke’s family was not religious and had never discussed such topics with him. He later revealed that Pam had been killed in a fire while jumping from a building in Chicago, a city he didn’t even know. His mother later researched and found information about the Paxton Hotel in Chicago, which housed mostly African Americans. A fire did occur there in 1993, trapping many residents on the upper floors.
1. Bishen Chand
Bishen Chand, born in Northern India in 1912, was nicknamed Visha Natha by his mother because she had visited the Vishwanath temple before his conception. At just ten months old, upon hearing his family discuss Pilibhit, a town about 31 miles (50 kilometers) away, Bishen began to speak about it. He gradually shared many details about a previous life there, even stating his former name was Laxmi Narain.
At age four, while on a train journey that passed Pilibhit, Bishen heard the town’s name and demanded to get off, but his request was denied. When he eventually visited Pilibhit, he reportedly recognized various locations and provided more statements about his past life. He also discovered he could play a type of drum he had never encountered before. As he grew older, these memories began to fade. Reincarnation researcher Ian Stevenson interviewed a forty-year-old Bishen Chand in 1969. Chand expressed that his previous life felt better because he had more money and freedom.
These ten stories are just a peek into the vast collection of childhood reincarnation claims. Each case, with its unique details and verifications, makes us wonder about the mysteries of life and consciousness. Whether you lean towards reincarnation, intricate memory play, or something else entirely, these accounts challenge our understanding of what it means to be human. They invite us to keep an open mind and explore the unexplained.
What are your thoughts on these reincarnation stories? Do you believe it’s possible to remember a past life? Leave your comment below and share your perspective!



