Irish mystic achieves worldwide fame talking to angels
Lorna Byrne doesn't look like the kind of person who claims to see angels, which may be part of her success
Irish mystic Lorna Byrne talks to angels. You may or may not believe her, but there’s one thing that’s in no doubt -- she’s not kidding. Angels In My Hair, Byrne’s memoir, is now an international bestseller that sold for a six-figure sum to the publishers of The Da Vinci Code, but she doubts all the money in the world will change her.
When you’re talking to someone who looks over your shoulder to greet an invisible angel it’s an eerie sensation.
But Lorna Byrne talks to the angels as casually as others might turn to speak to someone new in a pub. It’s odd to be in the presence of someone who’s conversing with invisible beings -- and it’s odd how quickly you can get used to it, too.
Adding to the strangeness of meeting her is the fact that Byrne doesn’t really look like the kind of person you’d expect angels to confide in. At 58 she’s slim, youthful and attractive, in enviable shape for her years. She’s also only five foot tall, which accentuates her girlishness.
As mystics go, she’s not exactly a textbook example. But the lingering sadness around her penetrating eyes hints at her difficult childhood and her early adult life.
Byrne grew up in poverty in the grim Ballymun and Edenmore council estates in Dublin, and she lost her young husband Joe to illness early on. Byrne’s supporters, who include famous names like Irish singing star Daniel O’Donnell, have total faith in her vision and have made her book a bestseller.
But her detractors have written that she’s a “despicable person who makes mountains of cash by selling complete nonsense to idiots.”
A recent poll in Time magazine showed that 69 percent of Americans claim to believe in angels. With those kinds of odds it would appear Byrne has her work cut out for her.
But what exactly does she see? We meet last week in the swanky foyer of the Ace Hotel in midtown Manhattan, a place I selected for its air conditioning and because it was the least likely setting for a discussion about the world to come.
“I see angels here,” she says flatly. “I see the light of the Guardian Angel behind you. Even walking down the street I see them.
“From the moment I opened my eyes as a child I can never remember not seeing angels. When I was tiny I didn’t know what they were at first. They were gorgeous and friendly, and I wasn’t afraid of them in the least.”
Why her, though? Out of all the billions of people in the world, why chose a girl with learning difficulties who lived in poverty in Dublin?
“I actually don’t know,” says Byrne. “I’ve asked God and the angels why me -- an ordinary person, uneducated, with learning difficulties. I was considered retarded as a child and I don’t know why God chose me. I give out all the time. They told me to say, ‘Why not you?’”
11 Comments
See all comments
Report abuse
Report abuse
Report abuse
Report abuse
Report abuse
Report abuse
Report abuse
Report abuse
Report abuse
Report abuse
More #TOPTEN
-
Ten castles to rent in Ireland for a vacation fit for a king - PHOTOS...
-
American travel website survey says Prince Harry sexier than Colin Farrell for women...
-
Today's Irish entertainment roundup ...
-
Celebrity stars influences most popular baby names as Liam makes top ten choice for boys...
-
The Celtic disease, recovering from Haemochromatosis or too much iron ...
The IRISH VOICE
-
Andy Lee fights Daryl Cunningham at BB King’s in New York City...
-
After 15 years, what are the challenges ahead for the Good Friday Agreement...
-
LA Galaxy captain Robbie Keane could miss Republic of Ireland’s clash against England...
-
Sports Digest: Graeme McDowell commits to Ireland team to the golf World Cup in Australia...
-
GAA Digest: Donegal’s Jim McGuinness and GAA President trade barbs in Bitegate saga...

11 Comments
Start your feis-filled weekend with these songs - VIDEOS...
Christine Quinn and Khloe Kardashian almost wore same wedding dress - 'I was devastated b...
Report abuse