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What has Baba Vanga predicted for 2025?

What has Baba Vanga predicted for 2025?

Vangelia Pandeva Gushterova, also known as Baba Vanga, was a blind Bulgarian woman who died in 1996 at the age of 85.

But even after her death, people around the world are still fascinated by her prophecies.

Baba Vanga made some chilling predictions for 2025, many of which suggest death and destruction.


Her prophecies for 2025, which continue to intrigue people, include warnings of catastrophic global events.

These predictions are disturbing because they seem to predict global unrest that could affect the entire planet, Telegraph reports.

Here are some of her prophecies for 2025:

Destruction of Europe

According to Daily Star, the Bulgarian predicted war and the absolute destruction of Europe.

She said: “Once Syria falls, expect a big war between the West and the East. In the spring a war will begin in the East and there will be a Third World War. A war in the East that will destroy the West".

And in another prediction, she asserted: "Syria will fall at the feet of the winner, but the winner will not be the right one."

Contact with foreigners

Vanga warned: "Humanity will make contact with extraterrestrial life, possibly leading to a global crisis or apocalypse."

With Donald Trump promising to release all the files the United States Government keeps on aliens when he comes to power, it's possible that this prediction is much more accurate than we'd like to believe.

Telepathy is not far away

Baba Vanga predicted that humanity would develop telepathy by 2025, allowing direct mind-to-mind communication.

This advance, she believed, would revolutionize human interaction.

Elon Musk's brain chip already has a form of telepathy where a person controls the technology, but could it transition to a human-to-human version?

A year of scientific advances

Baba Vanga predicted that the year 2025 would bring great scientific and medical advances, including advances in telepathy and nanotechnology.

However, she also warned of the potential dangers of misusing these technologies for destructive purposes, although her exact citations are not now available. /Telegraph/