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Anna Ecklund ~repack~ Jun 2026

The primary historical record of the event is the 1935 pamphlet Begone, Satan! by Reverend Carl Vogl, which was later translated into English and gained national attention via ResearchGate and other media outlets.

The primary record of these events is a pamphlet titled (German: Exorcismus: Eine erschütternde Begebenheit aus dem religiösen Leben ). Written by Father Carl Vogl and translated by Reverend Celestine Kapsner, it provided a detailed, "soul-stirring" account of the battle between Father Reisinger and the entities Anna claimed inhabited her—including Beelzebub, Judas Iscariot, and the spirits of her own father and aunt. Cultural Impact and Media

There is a sound the human voice is not supposed to make. It is a guttural, wet, tearing sound—a growl that vibrates in the chest rather than the throat. For the priests gathered in a modest home in Earling, Iowa, in 1928, that sound was the first indication that they were not dealing with a medical condition, but a war for a soul. anna ecklund

Anna Ecklund (whose real name was likely or a derivative) was a German-American woman living in rural Kansas. From childhood, she was reportedly plagued by demonic activity—furniture moving, hearing blasphemous voices, aversion to sacred objects. Her case became infamous because multiple priests, including a theologian from St. Louis named Father Theophilus Riesinger, attempted exorcisms over several years.

By 1928, the local clergy were out of their depth. Father Riesinger was summoned once more. This time, he knew the ritual would not be performed in private. He needed witnesses. He needed strength. The primary historical record of the event is

When the prayers intensified, the entity—identifying itself as Lucifer and later as Judas Iscariot—reportedly spoke through Anna. The dialogue recorded is a mixture of theological debate and gutter-level profanity. The demon mocked the priests, revealing intimate sins of the men in the room, a classic parlor trick of "demonic" possession intended to erode authority.

Modern psychologists suggest Anna likely suffered from severe dissociative identity disorder (DID) or psychosis , exacerbated by possible childhood abuse. The "demonic" behaviors—violent fits, voice changes, aversion to religious objects—fit certain psychiatric profiles. Written by Father Carl Vogl and translated by

To understand the "monster" Anna allegedly became, one must understand the trauma she survived.

For the faithful, the story of Anna Ecklund is proof of the literal battle between good and evil. It remains one of the few American cases cited by the Vatican as evidence of genuine possession.

The exorcism took place at a convent in Earling. The scene was set for a three-week ordeal that would leave the attending nuns traumatized.