ISRAEL Healing Hands Israelis rush to be healed by a new Soviet oleh with special powers. AVA CARMEL Special to The Jewish. News J erusalem — One recent immigrant to Israel need not worry about unemployment, for just three months after arriving from the Soviet Union, and barely able to speak Hebrew, he is quickly making a name for himself. His calling card reads simply, "Maxim Abramovich, healer," yet the powers of this unassuming man are legendary in the Soviet Union. Exuding a rare calm and a warm intense gaze, sixty-one- year-old Abramovich shakes my hand. Then, catching me off guard, he passes his hands slowly over my prepared list of questions. Satisfied, he begins to speak, with the aid of a translator. "It was at the age of eight that I first discovered I possessed unusual powers. My father came home from work one night, saying he was late because of a meeting in the factory. But I could see by his 'aura? which had turn- ed red, that he had been drinking. When I said so, he gave me a sound spanking. Only then did I realize that the ability to see people's auras was unusual and I quickly learned that it wasn't always prudent to reveal everything I knew?' At the beginning of World War II, his family, on vacation in their native Lithuania, was rounded up by the Nazis. Twelve-year-old Maxim escaped to a forest near Vilna, where he was adopted by a group of partisans. "There were so many occasions dur- ing the war", he recalls, "when people near me were killed that I became convinc- ed that I remained alive for some higher purpose. I could feel something directing me and felt the need to discover what my purpose in life was." After the war Abramovich was recruited by the Com- munist Party and taught criminal interrogation. "It was there that I saw the dark side of life. During the time of Stalin, many members of my family had been killed, but I still believed in the ideology of Communism and in a Soviet State?' When called upon to interrogate a notorious criminal whose brother held an important position in the Party, he refus- ed to comply with a request to have the criminal released. "I was promptly fired, arrested and jailed. Shocked officials told me I wasn't playing by the rules of the game, but I was later released." Starting over as a simple metal worker in a factory, Abramovich, with his in- genuity and intelligence, was soon promoted to department head. In 1970, however, he left his job and devoted himself to the study of yoga, reading numerous books about spiritualism and mysticism. He himself wrote a samizdat volume entitled The Book of Self-Regulation about energy — the channels through which energy travels (meri- dians) and the centers of energy (chakras) in the body. An incident at home was to once again change the direc- tion of Abramovich's life. "My wife opened the refrigerator and cut her leg on the corner of the door. I automatically jumped up and put my hands over her leg. The bleeding stopped, right before my eyes. Two days later there was not even a scar. It was then I realized I had other unusual powers." By 1982 Abramovich was so renowned that he was the first person • in the Soviet Union to be given a license to heal. This was revoked two years later however. "One hand gives, another takes away," he says, laughing. "A new, skeptical official had concluded that healing was opposed to the ideals of Marx and Lenin and instigated a campaign against me. I kept a detailed journal of my pa- tients, which had 15,000 Maxim Abramovich seeks out disturbances in the energy fields of a patient. names in it, but the KGB in- vestigation couldn't - find a single case in which I had done any harm. My patients began sending letters of pro- test and the harassment stopped. "Because of the nature of the work I had done for the Communist party, I never dreamed I would be able to emigrate. But having made the decision to come to Israel, a Jewish patient of mine then arranged a permit for me and my wife with no difficulty. Our two sons and four grand- sons are planning to join us here in the near future." Now a resident of Haifa, Abramovich is treating Israelis and Russian im- migrants and is being besieg- ed by letters from the USSR with urgent requests to heal people via enclosed photo- graphs. Although he has been giving lectures on healing and is planning a training course for doctors, he con- siders diagnosis his strongest skill. He passes his slender hands, like those of an artist or a musician, slowly over the body, seeking out distur- bances in the energy fields. "Disease is a collection of ten- sions in the body," he ex- plains. "These produce changes in the cells, then in the internal organs. Orthodox medicine only recognizes this as disease when it has damaged the organs. "I treat a person's energy fields. This in turn effects the functioning of the internal organs. Then I instruct the patient in additional techni- ques for the maintenance of health," he says, stressing the importance of meditation, proper nutrition, and positive thinking. "If people simply return to their old habits, their symptoms will eventual- ly return." In the Soviet Union one had to wait a year for an appoint- ment with Maxim Abramovich. Israelis are rushing to be healed before he achieves similar renown in Israel. ❑ World Zionist Press Service THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 107