This mysterious box has a
well-documented history.
The Dibbuk is an antique
Jewish wine cabinet. This box is
possessed by a demon called a dybbuk. Its various owners all experienced scary incidents while they possessed the
small cabinet.
Kevin Mannis |
This story first came to
light when Kevin Mannis bought the box from an estate sale in 2001. The
granddaughter of the owner of the dibbuk told him that her grandmother—a Polish
Holocaust survivor—had purchased it in Spain before migrating to America.
The granddaughter warned
Mannis that he should never open the box, for it was believed it was possessed
by a malicious or demonic spirit known as the “dybbuk” in Yiddish folklore.
Mannis owns a furniture store
and placed the box in the store’s basement and then forgot about it.
Out one afternoon doing
errands he received a frantic call from his employee. This man frightened told
him that he had found the store window broken and the gate locked.
Mannis feeling an intruder
must have broken it, pressed for more details, he then attempted to call the
police but his phone battery went dead. He quickly headed to the store.
He found his frantic employee
crying in his office. He told Mannis that all the basement light fixtures were
broken. He also stated there was a strong smell of cat urine even though the
store had never had a cat.
This employee then quit.
Mannis never discovered who the intruder was.
Not believing in what he felt
was a superstition Mannis later opened the Dibbuk cabinet that had the word “Shema”
written on the back.
Box opened. |
Inside he found the following
items. Wheat pennies from 1920, locks of various colored hair, a golden goblet,
dried rose buds, a candleholder and a granite statue with the Hebrew word
Shalom written on it.
Mannis at this point had not
made the connection between the wine box and the disturbing incidents.
He gave the Dibbuk box to his
mother as a birthday present. Within minutes she had a stroke. Later, visiting
his mother in the hospital, Mannis asked her how she was doing. Partially
paralyzed she struggled to write “hate gift.”
Mannis still did not believe
the box was connected. He next gave it to his brother, sister and then his
girlfriend. They all promptly returned it to him—saying no thanks.
Mannis then decided to keep
the box for himself. He began to have nightmares where an old hag beat him up.
He would wake up the following mornings with bruises on his body.
He then discovered his
brother and sister had also had this same nightmare. He now realized the box had
something bad or evil connected to it.
He put it on eBay to sell
with a full disclosure of the disturbing incidents listed. Mannis hoped someone
well versed in the occult would buy the box.
But a college student, Iosif
Neitzke from Missouri curious about the box bought it instead. He wrote a blog
about what happened while the box was in his possession.
He experienced similar
incidents to what Kevin Mannis had. All the lights in his house burnt out on
numerous occasions. Whenever his friends visited they smelled the odor of cat
urine. Neitske like Mannis did not own a cat.
He also experienced health
problems. His peripheral vision became blurred with dark spots and his hair
began to fall out. His doctor could find nothing wrong with him—that would
explain his symptoms.
Neitske’s roommate knew a man
interested in buying the box. Jason Haxton was a medical museum curator he also
collected religious paranormal antiques. Neitske wanted to get rid of the wine
cabinet so he put it up for auction. Haxton bought it.
Jason Haxton with Dybbuk box. |
Haxton not believing in the
stories that surrounded the Dibbuk box bought it as a curiosity.
He too, regretted this
decision. The museum where he worked experienced numerous electrical
malfunctions. His co-workers began to come to him with complaints. They felt
something eerie or evil was now in the museum. Several fell ill.
Haxton also had nightmares
about the demonic hag. He developed mysterious health problems. He coughed up
blood and blisters and hives broke out across his body.
While watching television
with his daughter one night he spotted a large dark figure looming in one
corner of the room.
Haxton contacted Mannis and
the two men went to talk to the granddaughter who had sold the Dibbuk box for
her grandmother. They told her it appeared the dybbuk had been summoned accidentally.
In 2007, they arranged for a
group of Jewish Rabbis to help them reseal the box. A 24 Karat gold lined
Acacia wood ark was used to seal the box.
Haxton then buried the box in
an undisclosed location. He believes it is important not to reveal this
location.
Most of the videos and
pictures used online of the Dibbuk are replicas of the original. There are
several videos on YouTube with interviews with both Mannis and Haxton.
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