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U.S Interview -2

U.S. Army Intelligence (Mis) Report

Dated: May 12, 1968

Title: Report on the 'Transmigrater'

incident, 1960.

Document Number: PTYX-8766-777373773-65557-WWN

The following interview is with Dr. Jaishankar(53), who ran an internal medicine clinic in (deleted) town at the time of the incident. Material related to the interview can be accessed using application number PTYX-722-SH-140 to 163.

Impression of the interviewer: Dr Jaishankar is a smart man with a paralyzed left leg. He has a calm manner but is very brisk and concise and says exactly what's on his mind. Behind the glasses, his eyes have a very sharp alert look, and his memories seem reliable.

That's correct-at 11 a.m. on that day, I received a phone call from the assistant principal at the local elementary school. I used to be the school doctor, or something close to it, so that's why they contacted me first.

The assistant principal was truly upset. He told me that the entire class had lost consciousness while on an outing. According to them, they were entirely unconscious. Only the teacher in charge remained conscious and ran back to get help. She was flustered and could not explain the details properly, but one thing was clear- around 15 students had fallen unconscious in the woods.

The kids were in the wild, so I thought that they might have swallowed a poisonous plant or mushrooms-Which would be difficult, the reason being the kids passed way too quickly, well of course this is by keeping in mind what the principal had told me.

I packed some basic equipment and rushed to school and then we climbed the hill to where the kids had collapsed.

It was a time of revolution, so I had already convinced myself that I needed to take care of everyone. I was ready for worse- At least that I used to believe.

With me was the principal, teacher, and two police officers. There was a lack of men because of (Deleted) war with (deleted).

So what were the strange things happening to the children?

The entire case was strange. I even consider that they were attacked by some biological weapons.

The children collapsed because of exposure to gas and the teacher survived because the gas could not be effective to adults, probably because of dosage or the structure.

If this was true it would have been beyond my abilities to help them.

But it did not make sense, there was no reason who bomb a remote hill.

We reached the place till 11:45

Can you describe in detail the problem children faced?

Yes, definitely. (Thinks for a moment) The children's eyes were open and were blinking but they were not responding.

When we first saw the scene, we all froze. That's what the scene was like.

All the children's eyes were open and were watching something up in the sky. Even when we put our hands before their faces their eyes behaved in the same way.

Their eyes moved from right to left. Each kid had eyes in sync. They all were watching someone or rather something.

They were breathing and blinking at the right time. Their temperature was a little lower but I remember, normally, a child's temperature is lower than that of an adult.

They were awake and asleep at the same time.

There was no response to any stimuli provided. The eyes did not respond to the light thrown at them. They all followed the same path at the same time.

It was a weird feeling to watch. I am no stranger to cruelty. We were colonized and just got freedom.

But this scene could also shake the spirits of a king.

Was there a weird smell in the air?

No, there were none. I checked properly and found nothing. The smell was of the fresh trees that a mountain usually has.

Was there any response to the stimuli you provided?

No, sir. I did everything I could. I tried to make them vomit, which was a risky move; they can choke on their own vomit. But it was worth trying.

The body did not respond. I, at the time, had a feeling. It was a feeling that I was not watching a human but a shell.

... Can you elaborate on that?

Their bodies were functioning, and their brains were also functioning, but their consciousness was not there.

The reason is that I did not tell this to anyone. There were tales of demons possessing a human body; it was a bad omen.

I muttered my prayer and decided to keep a watch on them and not move them.

So after a few minutes, the children woke up?

Yes, the children were able to wake up. It was twenty minutes after my arrival.

Everyone woke up except one. The one who did not wake up was from the south, from a {deleted} state.

After the children woke up, I checked their body temperature, blood pressure, and all the other basic details. They were all normal.

But when we asked them about the incident, it seemed like they did lack memory of the incident.

The word 'lack' should be highlighted.

There is a difference between lack and forgetfulness.

They lacked the memory.

It was like a time cut.

The children seem to remember climbing up the mountain, but then all of a sudden, the adults surrounded them with a worried look.

I think we made them more frightened than they were before.

The police took the kid who did not wake up, and after that, the family and he vanished from the town.

What were the reactions shown by children after waking up?

Just being hungry. We did try our best to wake up the unconscious children.

Were there any strange reactions in town?

No, sir, in town, the news spread that the children ate something poisonous and fell unconscious, which was then rescued by Congress. The one who did not wake up was sent to a famous hospital.

As humans, we tend to forget pretty much everything. Even though the effects of war fade away in the tides of history, so did this case. After all, there were no deaths.

What was the name of the child who did not wake up?

Rashit Yurievna Gujar

was the name I believed.

His mother was Russian, and his father was Indian. A high at the post. His skin was like that of other kids, and you could not tell the Russian genes.

After all, we lived in a desert-like state.

If I remember correctly, his father was there to oversee the construction of the (deleted) city.