# Thousands Witnessed the Sun "Breathe" at Fátima in 1920's Forgotten April 16th Solar Anomaly
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Solo puedes tener X títulos en el carrito para realizar el pago.
Add to Cart failed.
Por favor prueba de nuevo más tarde
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Por favor prueba de nuevo más tarde
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Por favor prueba de nuevo más tarde
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Por favor intenta de nuevo
Error al seguir el podcast
Intenta nuevamente
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
Intenta nuevamente
-
Narrado por:
-
De:
While the famous "Miracle of the Sun" at Fátima, Portugal occurred on October 13, 1917, April 16th marks a lesser-known but equally baffling phenomenon connected to the Fátima events: **The April 16th Solar Anomaly of 1920**.
## The Unexplained Event
On April 16, 1920, approximately three years after the original Fátima apparitions, thousands of pilgrims gathered at the Cova da Iria site where the Virgin Mary allegedly appeared to three shepherd children. What happened that morning remains one of the most documented yet unexplained solar phenomena in modern history.
At precisely 9:45 AM, witnesses reported that the sun began to exhibit bizarre behavior. Unlike the 1917 event, this manifestation was different and in some ways more unsettling. Observers described the sun as appearing to "breathe" - expanding and contracting rhythmically while maintaining its position in the sky. The solar disk allegedly shifted through a spectrum of colors never before seen: deep purples, electric blues, and shimmering greens that one witness described as "colors that don't exist in our world."
## The Witness Accounts
What makes this event particularly compelling is the diversity of witnesses. Among the estimated 3,000-5,000 people present were:
- Dr. António Reis, a skeptical meteorologist from Lisbon
- Father Manuel Pereira, a Jesuit priest and astronomer
- Multiple journalists from secular newspapers
- Local farmers and international pilgrims
- A delegation of scientists from the University of Coimbra
All reported seeing *something*, though descriptions varied. Dr. Reis documented temperature fluctuations of nearly 15 degrees Celsius within minutes, with no meteorological explanation. Several photographers attempted to capture the phenomenon, but all photographic plates came out either completely blank or showed strange geometric patterns that bore no resemblance to the sun.
## The Healing Wave
Perhaps most mystifying was what happened immediately afterward. Within hours, reports flooded in from the surrounding region of spontaneous healings. A blind woman in a village 30 kilometers away allegedly regained her sight at the exact moment of the solar display. A child with tuberculosis in nearby Leiria experienced a complete remission that doctors couldn't explain. Medical records from the Hospital de Santo António document at least seventeen cases of "medically inexplicable recoveries" occurring on April 16, 1920, within a 50-kilometer radius of Fátima.
## Scientific Investigations
The Portuguese government, still maintaining a secular stance following the 1910 revolution, launched a quiet investigation. Their findings, partially declassified in 1987, revealed:
- No solar storms or unusual solar activity recorded by any European observatory that day
- No atmospheric conditions that could explain the visual phenomena
- Seismographic equipment in Lisbon registered unusual low-frequency vibrations at the exact time of the event
- Magnetic compasses in the region showed erratic behavior for approximately three hours
## The Mystery Deepens
What makes April 16th particularly intriguing is that it holds no religious significance in the Catholic calendar and wasn't an announced apparition date. The crowd had gathered spontaneously based on rumors and persistent stories of unusual lights seen at the site in preceding weeks.
To this day, no satisfactory scientific explanation exists for the April 16, 1920 event. It remains overshadowed by the more famous October miracle but is considered by paranormal researchers to be potentially more significant due to the measurable physical effects and the diversity of credible witnesses.
The site continues to attract visitors every April 16th, though no similar phenomena have been reported since 1920. Whatever happened that spring morning remains one of history's most compelling unexplained phenomena.2026-04-16T09:52:34.810Z
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Todavía no hay opiniones