Dear friends,
Those of you who know me are aware that I often speak about resurrection (in Slovenian, "vstajenje"), and you know I’ve been deeply engaged with this topic for a long time. A few days ago, someone messaged me asking if I could connect them with a person who had died and come back to life because they wanted to ask them something... So, I sent them links to Dr. Inna Jarovaja’s and Natalija Taranushenko’s Facebook pages—the first has been teaching about resurrection for years, and the second translates from Russian to Serbian...
Then I started thinking: Who has actually returned to life? Who has been resurrected? And then I remembered... myself.
Because I was resurrected. Grabovoi resurrected me on March 12, 2001, during the birth of my second daughter, Kiki, in Vienna.
Let me tell you the story...
On March 11, 2001, my husband rushed me to the hospital in Vienna’s 14th district because my labor pains had already started, and my water had broken. The nurse had told me to come by emergency transport if that happened. I arrived around 11 PM, and they immediately took me to the delivery room. I even asked the doctors to let my husband in because we had agreed beforehand that he would be present. They grumbled a little but allowed him in.
The birth progressed, and at 12:45 AM, Laetitia—whom we call Kiki—was born.
Everything was fine. My husband left, my baby was bathed, and I sat on the bed holding her. A few other women with their newborns were nearby, sleeping... And suddenly, as I looked at my baby, I was in a state of bliss...
Then I heard:
"Ladies and gentlemen, we are now approaching Vienna Airport. Today is March 12, 2001. The time is 1:25 AM. Humidity levels are..."
The flight attendant was announcing this in German and English, just like they do over the microphone before a plane lands.
I remained calm, holding my child, though it felt a little strange... And then nothing else happened.
But I never forgot that moment.
Nineteen years later, we had the Forum of the Resurrected in Fužine, Gorski Kotar in Croatia. The speaker, Inna Jarovaja, said that all of us who attended the seminar had been resurrected—and asked if we could remember that moment. I immediately remembered that moment in the Vienna hospital. I told her it happened after my daughter’s birth, and Inna said:
"Grabovoi resurrected you."
So, thank you, Grabovoi.
You see... a person doesn’t have to die to be resurrected. Resurrection can come even without dea
May 13, 2025