In the late 1940s, in the United States, priests of the Roman Catholic Church performed a series of exorcisms on an anonymous boy, documented under the pseudonym "Roland Doe" or "Robbie Mannheim". The 14-year-old boy was alleged to be a victim of demonic possession, and the events were recorded by the attending priest, Raymond J. Bishop. Subsequent supernatural claims surrounding the events were used as elements in William Peter Blatty's 1971 novel The Exorcist. In December 2021, The Skeptical Inquirer reported the purported true identity of Roland Doe/Robbie Mannheim as Ronald Edwin Hunkeler (June 1, 1935 – May 10, 2020).
Origin of claims
In mid-1949, several newspaper articles printed anonymous
reports of an alleged possession and exorcism. The source for these reports is
thought to be the family's former pastor, Luther Miles Schulze. According to
one account, a total of "forty-eight
people witnessed this exorcism, nine of them Jesuits."
According to author Thomas B. Allen, Jesuit priest Father
Walter H. Halloran was one of the last surviving eyewitnesses of the events and
participated in the exorcism. Allen wrote that a diary kept by attending priest
Father Raymond J. Bishop detailed the exorcism performed on the pseudonymously
identified "Roland Doe" aka
"Robbie". Speaking in 2013,
Allen "emphasized that definitive
proof that the boy known only as 'Robbie' was possessed by malevolent spirits
is unattainable." According to Allen, Halloran also "expressed his skepticism about potential paranormal events
before his death." When asked in an interview to make a statement
verifying that the boy had actually been demonically possessed, Halloran
responded saying, "No, I can't go on
record. I never made an absolute statement about the things because I didn't
feel I was qualified."
Early life
Roland was born into a German Lutheran family in 1935.
During the 1940s the family lived in Cottage City, Maryland. According to
Allen, Roland was an only child and depended upon adults in his household for
playmates, primarily his Aunt Harriet. His aunt, who was a spiritualist,
introduced Roland to the Ouija board when he expressed interest in it.
Exorcisms
According to Thomas B. Allen, after Aunt Harriet's death, the
family experienced strange noises, furniture moving of its own accord, and
ordinary objects such as vases flying or levitating when the boy was nearby.
The family turned to their Lutheran pastor, Luther Miles Schulze, for help.
Long interested in parapsychology, Schulze arranged for the boy to spend a
night in his home to observe him. When parapsychologist Joseph Banks
Rhine learned that Schulze claimed he witnessed household objects and furniture
seemingly moving by themselves, Rhine "wondered
if Schulze 'unconsciously exaggerated' some of the facts." Schulze
advised the boy's parents to "see a
Catholic priest".
According to the traditional story, the boy then underwent several exorcisms. Edward Hughes, a Roman Catholic priest, conducted an
exorcism on Roland at Georgetown University Hospital, a Jesuit institution.
During the exorcism, the boy allegedly slipped one of his
hands out of the restraints, broke a bedspring from under the mattress, and
used it as an impromptu weapon, slashing the priest's arm and resulting in the
exorcism ritual being halted. The family traveled to St. Louis, where Roland's
cousin contacted one of his professors at St. Louis University, Bishop, who in
turn spoke to William S. Bowdern, an associate of College Church. Together,
both priests visited Roland in his relatives' home, where they allegedly
observed a shaking bed, flying objects, and the boy speaking in a guttural
voice and exhibiting an aversion to anything sacred. Bowdern was granted
permission from the archbishop to perform another exorcism.
The exorcism took place at The Alexian Brothers Hospital in
South St Louis, Missouri, which was changed to South City Hospital.
Before the next exorcism ritual began, another priest,
Walter Halloran, was called to the psychiatric wing of the hospital, where he
was asked to assist Bowdern. William Van Roo, a third Jesuit priest, was also
there to assist. Halloran stated that during this scene words such as "evil" and "hell", along with other
various marks, appeared on the teenager's body. Allegedly, during the Litany of
the Saints portion of the exorcism ritual, the boy's mattress began to shake.
Moreover, Roland broke Halloran's nose during the process. Halloran told a
reporter that after the rite was over, the anonymous subject of the exorcism
went on to lead "a rather ordinary
life."
Investigations and
explanations
In his 1993 book Possessed: The True Story of an Exorcism,
author Thomas B. Allen offered "the
consensus of today's experts" that "Robbie
was just a deeply disturbed boy, nothing supernatural about him".
Author Mark Opsasnick questioned many of the supernatural
claims associated with this story, proposing that "Roland Doe" was simply a spoiled, disturbed bully who
threw deliberate tantrums to get attention or to get out of school. Opsasnick
reports that Halloran, who was present at the exorcism, never heard the boy's
voice change, and he thought the boy merely mimicked Latin words he heard
clergymen say, rather than gaining a sudden ability to speak Latin. Opsasnick
reported that when marks were found on the boy's body, Halloran failed to check
the boy's fingernails to see if he had made the marks himself. Opsasnick also
questioned the story of Hughes' attempts to exorcise the boy and his subsequent
injury, saying he could find no evidence that such an episode had actually
occurred.
During his investigation, Opsasnick discovered:
The exorcism did not
take place at 3210 Bunker Hill Road in Mount Rainier, Maryland
The boy never lived in
Mount Rainier
The boy's home was in
Cottage City, Maryland
Much of the commonly
accepted information about this story is based on hearsay, is not documented,
and was never fact-checked
There is no evidence
Father E. Albert Hughes visited the boy's home, had him admitted to Georgetown
Hospital, requested that the boy be restrained at the hospital, attempted an
exorcism of the boy at Georgetown Hospital, or was injured by the boy during an
exorcism (or at any other time)
There is ample
evidence refuting claims that Father Hughes suffered an emotional breakdown and
disappeared from the Cottage City community
According to Opsasnick, individuals connected to the
incident were influenced by their own specializations:
To psychiatrists, Rob
Doe suffered from mental illness. To priests, this was a case of demonic
possession. To writers and film/video producers, this was a great story to
exploit for profit. Those involved saw what they were trained to see. Each
purported to look at the facts but just the opposite was true — in actuality, they manipulated the facts and emphasized information that fit their own
agendas
Opsasnik wrote that after he located and spoke with
neighbors and childhood friends of the boy (most of whom he only referenced by
initials) he concluded that "the boy
had been a very clever trickster, who had pulled pranks to frighten his mother
and to fool children in the neighborhood".
Skeptic Joe Nickell wrote that there was "simply no credible evidence to suggest
the boy was possessed by demons or evil spirits" and maintains that
the symptoms of possession can be "childishly
simple" to fake. Nickell dismissed suggestions that supernatural
forces made scratches or markings or caused words to appear on the teenager's
body in unreachable places, saying, "A
determined youth, probably even without a wall mirror, could easily have
managed such a feat - if it actually occurred. Although the scratched messages
proliferated, they never again appeared on a difficult-to-reach portion of the
boy's anatomy." On one occasion the boy was reportedly seen scratching
the words "hell" and "Christ" on his chest by using
his own fingernails. According to Nickell:
Nothing that was
reliably reported in the case was beyond the abilities of a teenager to
produce. The tantrums, "trances", moved furniture, hurled objects,
automatic writing, superficial scratches, and other phenomena were just the
kinds of things someone of R's age could accomplish, just as others have done
before and since. Indeed, the elements of "poltergeist phenomena",
"spirit communication", and "demonic possession"—taken both
separately and, especially, together, as one progressed to the other—suggest
nothing so much as role-playing involving trickery.
Nickell also dismissed stories of the boy's prodigious
strength, saying he showed "nothing
more than what could be summoned by an agitated teenager" and
criticized popular accounts of the exorcism for what he termed a
"stereotypical storybook portrayal" of the Devil.
Religious
perspectives
Two Christian academics, Terry D. Cooper, a professor of
psychology, and Cindy K. Epperson, a professor of sociology, wrote that
advocates of possession believe that "although
they are not frequent, exorcisms are necessary for casting out the
demonic" and "cases of
genuine possession cannot be explained by psychiatry". Cooper and
Epperson devoted a chapter of their book Evil: Satan, Sin, and Psychology to
the case and dismissed natural explanations in favor of a supernatural
perspective regarding the nature of evil.
Literature and film
This exorcism case inspired the 1971 novel The Exorcist by
William Peter Blatty, which in turn was adapted into the 1973 horror film of
the same title. The case also inspired the 2000 movie Possessed, which is said
to be closer to the story in Allen's book. A documentary was made of the case,
titled In the Grip of Evil. Another documentary film was made in 2010 titled
The Haunted Boy: The Secret Diary of the Exorcist, where a group of
investigators travels to the location in question and uncovers the diary that
is said to be kept by William S. Bowdern.
Criminal Minds: Season 4, Episode 17 "Demonology" - during an odd investigation into a few
crimes, Agent Rossi mentions Robbie and the exorcisms to Agent Prentiss.
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