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that she must be careful not to scald herself. The next time that Jeanne and her mother went to visit
the gypsy, she had bandages on her hands. They had been badly scalded when she had upset boiling
water over herself.
When Jeanne's mother heard that her daughter had a talent for foretelling the future, she seemed quite
unconcerned. She simply expressed the feeling that if God had given her that gift, then she must use it
only for good. Since that day in the 1920s, Jeanne Dixon has done an enormous amount of good with
her remarkable talent. Hers is a most inspiring story.
There is no doubt that her most famous prediction concerned the assassination of an American
president. It is a very interesting exercise to follow these predictions through. How do they come
about?
Jeanne Dixon is a very strict Catholic, and each morning she goes to the church of St Matthew in
Washington for morning prayer and meditation. One damp, misty morning in November, 1952, as she
knelt down to pray, she received a vision. It was as if a small screen, like a television screen, had
suddenly lit up opposite her forehead, at the point often referred to as the 'third-eye.'
On that little screen she saw the White House. Above the building were four numbers, 1-9-6-0. As she
watched the four numbers seemed to form a dark cloud, which hovered over the building, and then
seemed to drape itself down over the building. As she described it; 'like chocolate icing being poured
over a cake.'
Standing in front of the White House was a young man. Jeanne Dixon described him as tall, blue-
eyed, with a shock of thick brown hair. A young man. An inner-voice told her that this man was a
Democrat, and that the President elected in 1960 would meet with a violent death while in office.
Then just as suddenly as it had presented itself, the picture disappeared. But the psychic felt oddly
detached for days afterwards.
Then in 1956, Jeanne Dixon gave an interview to a national magazine called Parade which had a very
large circulation in the United States. Talking about her predictions, she suddenly told the startled
reporters that a blue-eyed Democrat would be elected President in 1960, and that he would be
assassinated while in office. The prediction appeared in Parade dated 13 May 1956 and was read by
hundreds of thousands of Americans. So that the prediction thus far had been recorded for posterity.
In 1960, John F. Kennedy was elected to the presidency, and he bore a startling resemblance to the
young man in Jeanne Dixon's vision eight years before. From the moment of Kennedy's election, she
continued to see the black cloud over the White House.
It was during the summer of 1963, that the Kennedys lost a three-day old son. Immediately everyone
asked if this was the death that had been predicted. But Jeanne Dixon replied that this was not the
death that she had forecast. Now she was getting two further repeated visions. In the first of these, she
saw a coffin being carried back into the White House. She was sure that it would contain the body of
the President, and that he would meet his death outside the White House. The body would be brought
back for national mourning.
In the second vision, she saw the door of an office with a name-plate attached. It read 'Lyndon B.
Johnson-Vice President.' She saw two black hands come up and remove it from the door. The black
hands symbolised death. As the name-plate was removed, the name of a person who would have
something to do with the event flashed past her. She could only make out five or six letters, but the
first letter was a closed letter - like an o or a q. The second letter was definitely an s, while the last one
ended with a little curve that went straight up. Was it a d?
On Sunday, 17 November 1963, Jeanne Dixon dined with John Teeter, executive director of the
Damon Runyon Memorial Fund, the Vicomtesse Fournier de la Barre from Paris, and a close friend,
Lady Eleanor Baumgardner. At the dinner, Jeanne Dixon could hardly eat anything. She explained
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