Alexander Imich

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Birth Date:
04.02.1903
Death date:
08.06.2014
Length of life:
111
Days since birth:
44277
Years since birth:
121
Days since death:
3610
Years since death:
9
Extra names:
Aleksandrs Imičs
Categories:
Chemist, WWII participant
Nationality:
 american, pole, jew
Cemetery:
Set cemetery

Alexander Imich, a Polish-born psychic researcher who was certified the oldest man on earth, died Sunday morning at a senior residence in Manhattan. He had turned 111 on Feb. 4.

Mr. Imich was born into a well-to-do secular Jewish family on Feb. 4, 1903, in Czestochowa in southern Poland, a city known for its famous painting of the Black Madonna. His father owned a decorating business.

Young Alex was thwarted in an early desire to become a captain in the Polish Navy, which he laid to anti-Semitism. He turned to zoology and was also stymied, so he switched to chemistry.

In the early 1930s, he began researching a Polish medium known as Matylda S., who was renowned for séances that reportedly called up the dead. He detailed the encounters in a German scholarly journal in 1932 and an anthology he edited, “Incredible Tales of the Paranormal,” published by Bramble Books in 1995, when he was 92.

With the outbreak of World War II, he and his wife fled to Soviet-occupied Bialystok, Poland, where they were sent to a Soviet labor camp. Once freed, they moved to Samarkand, in what is now Uzbekistan, and then back to Poland, where they found many family members had died in the Holocaust. In 1951 they immigrated to Waterbury, Conn.

Mr. Mannion said Mr. Imich’s last hours were spent babbling in Polish and Russian and agitatedly communicating with the spirits he felt were around him.

***

Alexander Imich (February 4, 1903 – June 8, 2014) was a Polish-born chemist, parapsychologist, and supercentenarian, who was the president of the Anomalous Phenomena Research Center in New York City. He was born in 1903 Częstochowa, Poland (then a part of Russian Empire) to a Jewish family. Since Imich's death, the world's oldest known man is Sakari Momoi of Japan (born February 5, 1903, one day after Imich).

Until his death at the age of 111 years 124 days, Imich was certified by Guinness World Records as the world's oldest living man since the death of Arturo Licata of Italy on April 24, 2014. He was one of the few supercentenarians known for reasons other than longevity.

Imich stated that, at age 18, he and the rest of his class joined the Polish forces to fight the Bolsheviks in 1918. His older brother served as instructor in the automobile division, so Imich learned to drive trucks for the army until the Bolshevik forces were pushed back and Imich returned to school.

Academic career

He earned a Ph.D in zoology at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków in 1929, but as he could not find an academic position in zoology, he switched to chemistry. During the 1920s and 1930s he did some research on a medium, Matylda, for the Polish Society for Psychical Research. He published a report in 1932 in a German journal, Zeitschrift für Parapsychologie, but all of the unpublished notes and photos from the research were lost during World War II.

World War II

During World War II, Imich and his wife Wela (pronounced Vela) fled to Soviet-occupied Białystok, where he was employed as a chemist. The couple were later interned in a labor camp for the duration of the war due to their refusal to accept Soviet citizenship. They were eventually freed and chose to emigrate to the U.S. in 1952, as almost all of their Polish relatives and friends had died in the war.

Life in the United States

In 1952, Imich and his wife Wela (died 1986) emigrated to the United States, first to Pennsylvania and then to New York, dividing their time between both places. To make a living, Imich initially took up chemistry, but once Wela made a career for herself as a psychologist in 1965, he turned to parapsychology. After becoming a widower in 1986, he continued his lifelong interest in parapsychology, giving out the Imich prize for parapsychology research for several years until he began experiencing financial problems.

Imich wrote numerous papers for journals in the field and edited a book, "Incredible Tales of the Paranormal" which was published by Bramble Books in 1995. He started the Anomalous Phenomena Research Center in 1999, trying to find a way to produce "The Crucial Demonstration", the goal of which is to demonstrate the reality of paranormal phenomena to mainstream scientists and the general public. In 2012, he began to transfer the records of his research into the paranormal to the University of Manitoba Department of Archives and Special Collections. He practiced calorie restriction and attributed his longevity to this.

Imich died on June 8, 2014 at 9:03 AM from natural causes at the age of 111.

 

Source: wikipedia.org, nytimes.com, news.lv, Kresy Siberia virtual museum, delfi.lv

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