A 5-year-old child’s assertions that he was an African American lady died in a fire over 30 years ago are supported by the youngster when compared to the narrative of a woman who perished in a hotel fire.
When Luke Ruehlman, now 5 years old, began claiming nonstop that he formerly lived as Pam Robinson, an African-American lady who leaped to her death from the Paxton Hotel in Chicago to escape the fires, his parents were surprised.
When the five-year-old started talking about Pam, a lady she had never heard of, his mother Erika claimed the youngster had begun to somewhat frighten her.
Luke shared the shocking information about his purported prior life after his mother questioned her young kid about the unknown lady to learn who she was.
He turned to me and replied, “Well, I was,” Erika told Fox 8. “Well, I used to be, but I died and I went to paradise,”
he said.
I saw a vision of God, but finally He pushed me back to a newborn stage, when you gave me the name Luke.
Although they had never taken him to Chicago, Luke’s family in Cincinnati, Ohio, claimed that their kid had claimed to have taken a train there, according to The Sun.
Erika made the decision to look into the strange allegations, and she was horrified to learn that Pam was one of the 19 people who perished in the fire in 1993.
Luke spoke of his attempt to flee the burning building in uncanny detail and the moment he “found God.”
According to Erika, he also discusses other events from his prior life that he “remembers.”
“He used to remark, ‘I used to wear earrings like those when I was a female,’ or ‘I used to have black hair when I was a girl,'” she said.
The “The Ghost Inside My Child” producers, a TV program about paranormal investigations, have also looked into Luke’s case.
During the program, the little kid was instructed to locate the late Pam Robinson after being given a page of images of other black women in their 30s.
Surprisingly, the tape showed that he was able to recognize her right away.
After the unsettling turn of events, Luke’s mother made the choice to contact Pam’s family.
She said that when they characterized her personality, it showed startling parallels between Pam and Luke, such as their shared love of Stevie Wonder and piano playing.