Tiwari, who set up the Indian Paranormal Society in 2009, visited over 6,000 ghoulish abodes across the world and shaped his research on the paranormal with a deep sense of empathy. He eventually completed a Certified Paranormal Investigator course and traveled across the US to witness 80 spooky investigations. Tiwari was then training to be a commercial pilot in Texas in 2003. Singh said Tiwari’s first encounter with the paranormal was in his hotel room in Texas where he saw an apparition of a young girl. “We were investigating a suspected haunted house in West Delhi’s Janakpuri neighbourhood and Gaurav returned home around 0200 hours,” says Singh. The couple was scared, called Tiwari and after an arduous eight hour operation, the spirit was cleansed out of the home. It was in South Delhi where a couple saw images of a baby girl fleetingly moving in and out of their living room and bedroom. A recent case of the group cleansing a house of the spirit of a baby drew a huge response on YouTube. Singh says methods adopted by Tiwari were extremely scientific. “Bulk of it is sheer hallucination,” says Amit Singh, one of the active members of the group. Very recently, they busted the myth of spirits in Bangarh, an abandoned fort in Rajasthan. They would visit unoccupied houses, graveyards, morgues, even vacant churches to see if ghosts exist. Using electronic voice and image recorders and magnetic plates, Tiwari and his men would help “purging of souls” from homes plagued by mysterious events. The rest need cleansing, popularly known in the West as exorcism. The group has been in existence for over a decade and helped many resolve their problems which are, largely - almost 98 percent - psychological. His ghostbuster partners say they are saddened by the turn of events. Singh said the final word is still not out in the case that has forced Tiwari’s outfit, the Paranormal Society of India to shut shop, reject mails and phone calls for over two weeks. He further said Tiwari's father and wife were questioned for more than eight hours, both unable to offer answers narrating the sequence of event leading to Tiwari’s death. “The two argued for almost two hours the day before Tiwari’s death,” said Ashok Singh, a sub inspector who looked into the case and did the first round of questioning. The cops have found enough information from friends of the family that Arya suspected her husband of infidelity. The film also had examples of a photographer finding black lines appearing from nowhere in his photographs of a priest probing mysterious and ominous deaths.īut the cops at the Dwarka Police Station are not buying such theories, a deputy commissioner has been pushed into the investigating team that has even started looking into the case of a possible murder. Tiwari often cited the example of the American-British 1976 supernatural horror film, The Omen, to narrate such “black line” theories. The Paranormal Society of India received over 250 mails regarding alleged existence of “spirits” at various homes across India, handled over 500 calls a day at their office in Dwarka on the western fringes of Delhi. Arya did not even liked the ghost busting profession, she wanted her husband to wear a tie and suit and carry a leather case to a corporate office.īut Tiwari would ignore everything and routinely leave home in the night. His family believed him at times, mostly ignored him. Such marks, Tiwari often narrated during dinner table conversations, are signs of revenge of spirits in distress. But still, the cops and the doctors have not been able to offer an concrete answer about the black mark on Tiwari’s neck.
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