Jason Haxton, Director of the Museum of Osteopathic Medicine in Kirksville, Missouri, claimed that he subsequently developed strange health problems, including hives, coughing up blood, and “head-to-toe welts”. He claimed that the dybbuk box caused lights to burn out in his house and his hair to fall out. The last person who auctioned off the dybbuk box was Iosif Neitzke, a Missouri student at Truman State University in Kirksville, Missouri. Every owner of the dybbuk box reported smells of cat urine or jasmine flowers and nightmares involving an old hag accompanying the box. Some of the paranormal events that Mannis reported while having the Dybbuk box in his possession included bad dreams and paranormal attacks, and he also believed that his mother suffered a stroke on the same day he gave her the box as a birthday present-October 28. Numerous owners of the box have reported the strange paranormal phenomena that accompany it. Upon opening the box, Mannis wrote that he found that it contained two 1920s pennies, a lock of blonde hair bound with cord, a lock of black/brown hair bound with cord, a small statue engraved with the Hebrew word “Shalom”, a small golden wine goblet, one dried rosebud, and a single candle holder with four octopus-shaped legs. She told him the box had been kept in her grandmother’s sewing room and was never opened because a dybbuk was said to live inside it. Upon hearing that the box was a family heirloom, Mannis offered to give the box back to the family but the granddaughter insisted that he take it. Havilah’s granddaughter told Mannis that the box had been bought in Spain after the Holocaust. ![]() ![]() ![]() He was told by Havaleh’s relatives she had escaped to Spain and purchased it there before her immigration to the United States. Mannis was able to gather the information that the haunted box had belonged to a survivor of the Holocaust in German-occupied Poland named Havilah. Kevin Mannis, who is a writer and creative professional by trade, owned a small antiques and furniture refinishing business in Portland, Oregon at the time, which lead many to believe whether the “Dybbuk Box” story was even true, to begin with.Īccording to Mannis’ story, he bought the Dibbuk box at an estate sale in 2003. Kevin Mannis created the term “dibbuk box” or “dybbuk box” to describe the haunted wine cabinet he had in his possession for the item information for an eBay auction and as the subject of his original story describing paranormal events which he attributed to the box. Within the past 5 months hundreds of videos have surfaced proclaiming that they have real “haunted demon” boxes, from sensationalist YouTube channels such as Omargoshtv, Proving Demons that proclaim on every video that either video tape Real Black Eyed Kids, ZoZo, themselves playing with themselves with the “lights out”, and there newest videos on their Dybbuk Boxes.
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