Historical Tale of Yogi who was Buried and Resuscitated
A Clue To Bioelectromagnetic Nature of Life Force

This story makes sense if one looks at the model of life that the study
of Cranio-Sacral Therapy brings to light. Dr. Upledger reported that
the cranial fluid rhythm has been felt in people after clinical death
had been pronounced. Eventually in those cases the rhythm
gradually slowed and stopped and the person was fully deceased.

It is my hypothesis that the cranial fluid rhythm is somehow linked
to the cycles of electromagnetic energies bathing the Earth from the
Sun. This is always present and would explain the Yogi's story
below.

The existence of this rhythm may also be the explanation for the
"Monday Morning Morgue Resurrection" stories. They probably are
true stories. The person in those cases must have had cessation of
breathing and heart activity, but maintained a cranio-sacral fluid
rhythm. Later on this rhythm acted to "jump start" the heart.

The following tale is found in the book: The Future of the Body, by
Michael Murphy [Section 21.7].

The Yogic Burials of Haridas*

In a book entitled Observations on Trance or Human
Hibernation
published in 1850, James Braid, the pioneering
physician who coined the term hypnosis, described an
experiment that typified several scientifically inspired
studies of religious adepts that were conducted during the
nineteenth century. He based his account on a report by Sir
Claude Wade, then British Resident at the court of the
Maharaja Runjeet Singh of Lahore, detailing the burial of a
yogi named Haridas in 1837. To impress doubtful
witnesses, the yogi had asked the Maharaja to supervise his
burial for six weeks. Being skeptical about feats of this
kind, the Maharaja took extraordinary precautions against
fraud. According to Wade's report:

[Quote] On the approach of the appointed time,
according to invitation, I accompanied Runjeet
Singh to the spot where the fakir was buried. It
was a square of the gardens, adjoining the palace
at Lahore, with an open verandah all round, having
an enclosed room in the centre. On arriving there,
Runjeet Singh, who was attended on the occasion
by the whole of his court, dismounting from his
elephant, asked me to join him in examining the
building to satisfy himself that it was closed as he
had left it. We did so; there had been a door on
each of the four sides of the room, three of which
were perfectly closed with brick and mortar, the
fourth had a strong door, which was also closed
with mud up to the padlock, which was sealed with
the private seal of Runjeet Singh in his own
presence, when the Fakir was interred. Indeed,
the exterior of the building presented no aperture
by which air could be admitted, or any
communication held by which food could be
conveyed to the fakir. I may also add, that the
walls closing the doorway bore no mark whatever
of having been recently disturbed or removed.

Runjeet Singh recognized the seal as the one which
he had affixed, and as he was as sceptical as a
European could be of the success of such an
enterprise,--to guard as far as possible against any
collusion,--he had placed two companies from his
own personal escort near the building, from which
four sentries were furnished and relieved every
two hours, night and day, to guard the building
from intrusion. At the same time, he ordered one
of the principal officers of his Court to visit the
place occasionally, and to report the result of his
inspection to him, while he himself, or his
Minister, kept the seal which closed the hole of the
padlock and the latter received the report,
morning and evening, from the officer of the guard.

After our examination, we seated ourselves in the
verandah opposite the door, while some of Runjeet
Singh's people dug away the mud wall, and one of
his officers broke the seal and opened the padlock.
When the door was thrown open, nothing but a
dark room was to be seen. Runjeet Singh and
myself then entered it, in company with the
servant of the fakir, and a light being brought, we
descended about three feet below the floor of the
room, into a sort of cell, where a wooden box, about
four feet long by three broad, with a sloping roof,
containing the fakir, was placed upright, the door
of which had also a padlock and seal similar to that
on the outside. On opening it we saw a figure
enclosed in a bag of white linen, fastened by a
string over the head-on the exposure of which a
grand salute was fired, and the surrounding
multitude came crowding to the door to see the
spectacle. After they had gratified their curiosity,
the fakir's servant, putting his arms into the box,
took the figure out, and closing the door, placed it
with its back against it, exactly as the fakir had
been squatted (like a Hindu idol) in the box itself.

Runjeet Singh and myself then descended into the
cell, which was so small that we were only able to
sit on the ground in front of the body, and so close
to it as to touch it with our hands and knees. The
servant then began pouring warm water over the
figure; but as my object was to see if any fraudulent
practices could be detected, I proposed to Runjeet
Singh to tear open the bag, and have a perfect view
of the body before any means of resuscitation were
employed. I accordingly did so; and may here
remark, that the bag, when first seen by us, looked
mildewed, as if it had been buried some time. The
legs and arms of the body were shriveled and stiff,
the face full, the head reclining on the shoulder
like that of a corpse. I then called to the medical
gentleman who was attending me to come down
and inspect the body, which he did, but could
discover no pulsation in the heart, the temples, or
the arm. There was, however, a heat about the
region of the brain, which no other part of the body
exhibited.

The servant then recommended bathing him with
hot water, and we gradually relaxed his arms and
legs from the rigid state in which they were
contracted, Runjeet Singh taking his right and I his
left leg, and by friction restoring them to their
proper action; during which time the servant
placed a hot wheaten cake, about an inch thick, on
the top of his head,--a process which he twice or
thrice renewed. He then pulled out of his nostrils
and ears the wax and cotton with which they were
stopped; and after great exertion opened his
mouth by inserting the point of a knife between his
teeth, and, while holding his jaws open with his
left hand, drew the tongue forward with his right,--
in the course of which the tongue flew back several
times to its curved position upwards, in which it
had originally been, so as to close the gullet.

He then rubbed his eyelids with ghee for some
seconds, until he succeeded in opening them, when
the eyes appeared quite motionless and glazed.
After the cake had been applied for the third time
to the top of his head, the body was violently
convulsed, the nostrils became inflated, when
respiration ensued, and the limbs began to assume
a natural fulness; but the pulsation was still faintly
perceptible. The servant then put some of the ghee
on his tongue and made him swallow it. A few
minutes afterwards the eyeballs became dilated,
and recovered their natural color, when the fakir,
recognizing Runjeet Singh sitting close to him,
articulated in a low sepulchral tone, scarcely
audible, "Do you believe me now?" Runjeet Singh
replied in the affirmative, and invested the fakir
with a pearl necklace and superb pair of gold
bracelets, and pieces of silk and muslin, and
shawls, forming what is called a khelat; such as is
usually conferred by the Princes of India on
persons of distinction.

From the time of the box being opened, to the
recovery of the voice, not more than half an hour
could have elapsed; and in another half-hour the
fakir talked with myself and those about him
freely, though feebly, like a sick person; and we
then left him, convinced that there had been no
fraud or collusion in the exhibition we had
witnessed.

Wade's careful account was confirmed by Johann Martin
Honigberger, a German physician who in 1839 was told by
the English general Ventura and other credible witnesses
about Haridas' interment. In a book entitled Fruchte aus
dem Morgeniande,
published in 1851, Honigberger told a
story almost identical to Braid's, adding certain details that
Wade's report had omitted. According to Honigberger,
Haridas had severed the ligament of his tongue while
training for his strange profession, and in preparing for his
40-day burial had cleaned his stomach with a long strip of
cloth and his bowels with enemas. Before his burial, his
ears, rectum, and nostrils were sealed with wax, and he
was wrapped in a linen cloth that was also sealed. He was
then laid into a chest, which the Maharaja locked, and
lowered into the enclosure that Wade described. Upon his
resuscitation, Honigberger wrote, the yogi's attendant blew
air into his throat and ears so that the wax plugs in his
nostrils were loudly ejected. Having been sealed up in this
manner, Haridas had survived with virtually no
ventilation.

During a subsequent experiment by the Maharaja, Haridas'
box was buried again and

[Quote] earth was turned [upon it] and trodden down, so as completely to
surround and cover [it]; a crop of barley was sown over it; and a constant
guard maintained on the spot. Moreover, twice during the period of interment,
Runjeet Singh had the body dug up, when it was found to be exactly in the
same position as when interred, and in a state of apparently entirely
suspended animation. At the expiration of this prolonged interment, the fakir
recovered under the usual treatments.