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ORDEAL OF FIRE-WALKING

An Englishman who claims to be one |of the only two white men ever to go through the ordeal of "walking the fire" in South Africa is at present working in a Salvation Army hostel in London. He is Mr. A. P. Commins, who, until he returned to England in ;1932, had lived in South Africa since I before the Boer War, when he went out from Aldershot to the Army Service Corps depot at Cape Town. j "Near Pieterinaritzburg,, in front of their temple, the Hindus 'walk the I fire' every Good Friday as a ceremony •of purification," he stated during an interview. "The fire is made' in a trench, 34 feet long and 8 feet wide, in which 11 tons of pit props are set on fire and allowed to burn from early morning until, in the afternoon, they are a mass of red-hot ashes ready for the walk.

"Many white people believed that in some -way this walk across-fire was a fake. I got interested in it and decided that if the Hindus could do it so could I. I had a Greek friend named Hantzakos, and when I told him that I was going to try to walk the fire he said he would do it too. "•

"Special trains are run for people to see the ceremony and there are always crowds to watch it. My wife was there when I walked it, and some idea of the heat can be judged from the fact that, though she stood eight feet away, she had to hold her umbrella in front of her as a shield. There is intense preparation beforehand. We had to eat no meat of any kind, and we had to bathe each ' day and indulge in long periods of prayer and contemplation. This preparation lasted about fifteen days. .

"On the morning of the fire walk we presented ourselves at the Hindu temple. There were two dozen of us who were to walk the fire. We —myself and my Greek friend—were the only white men, but there was a couple of

women. First of ail, a band of twine was placed round our wrists, sealing the oath to walk. Coloured marks were also placed between our eyes. Then we walked barefooted from the temple to a running stream a mile away. "We stood in this stream fram about 1 o'clock until about 3 o'clock in the afternoon. We wore nothing but yellow shorts and a yellow vest.. Just before we left the stream I was doused with water over my head, but I did not feel at all cold. : . .". .

"We then walked '• back ■to the temple gates, in front of which, at a distance of about 20 yards; was the fire. From the temple, gates we' walked straight across the fire. Strangely enough, I felt no emotion. ' Prom the time I offered to do the fire walk I seemed to be at peace: My heart beat more quickly. I felt pleased; The thing did not seem to concern me any more, beyond the fact that it was going to be done—and would be- done.-

"My friend got over without a blister. I was immune until the last three steps of that walk. First Of all in the walk was the Hindu leader, then came my friend the Greek, and then myself. We walked steadily, though some of the Hindus hurried over. ■

"Until the last three steps all : 1 felt was that it was like walking over warm sand. Then; on the third step from the end, I felt my foot burned. The next step the other foot was. burned,' and with- the third and. last step my first foot was burned again. The Hindus knew I had been burned, and they said it was . because of the gold cross which I had insisted on wearing round my neck.

"I stayed with the Hindus for a week because of my injuries and then went back to Johannesburg, where I laid up for several weeks. My feet healed perfectly and today there is no trace of the burns." ■

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19350504.2.215.8

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXIX, Issue 104, 4 May 1935, Page 35

Word Count
685

ORDEAL OF FIRE-WALKING Evening Post, Volume CXIX, Issue 104, 4 May 1935, Page 35

ORDEAL OF FIRE-WALKING Evening Post, Volume CXIX, Issue 104, 4 May 1935, Page 35