On October 13, 1917, a remarkable event known as the "Miracle of the Sun" occurred in Fatima, Portugal. Thousands of people gathered near the village of Fatima to witness what had been predicted by three young shepherd children, Lucia Santos and her cousins Jacinta and Francisco Marto.
According to the children, they had been visited by the Virgin Mary several times, who had promised them a miracle on this date to prove the authenticity of their visions. As the crowd waited anxiously, the children saw a vision of the Holy Family blessing the crowd.
Suddenly, the sun appeared to zigzag in the sky, spin rapidly like a wheel, and emit multicolored lights. The sun then seemed to careen towards the earth, causing panic among the spectators who feared it might crash into them. However, the sun stopped short and returned to its normal position in the sky.
Witnesses reported that their previously wet clothes, soaked by the persistent rain, had dried completely within minutes of the sun's strange dance. The event was witnessed by an estimated 30,000 to 100,000 people, including skeptics and journalists who had come to debunk the children's claims.
The "Miracle of the Sun" remains an unexplained phenomenon to this day. Some believe it was a genuine miracle, while others propose various explanations, such as mass hallucination or a rare meteorological event called a sun dog. The Catholic Church investigated the events and, in 1930, declared the apparitions at Fatima as "worthy of belief." The site has since become a major pilgrimage destination for Catholics worldwide.
Regardless of one's beliefs, the "Miracle of the Sun" continues to fascinate people as an extraordinary event that challenges our understanding of the world and raises questions about the nature of faith, miracles, and the unexplained.
2024-10-13T09:51:36.983Z