I know that touching was and still is and always will be the true revolution.
-Nikki Giovani
As reflexologists, we have the opportunity to observe what the power of touch can achieve. Throughout my career, I have observed instances where a troubled mind is transformed into one of tranquillity through the power of touch.
Finnish-born Dr Felix Kersten, the man with magic hands who, through the power of his magic touch, saved the lives of many thousands of people.
After two years, Dr Kersten studied physical therapy in Helsinki and became qualified. He continued his studies in Berlin and became a student of the famed Dr Ko, a Tibetan lama therapist. After completing his training, Dr Ko told him, ‘You have learned all I can teach you’ and then retired to Tibet.
Dr Kersten mentions that his sense of touch enabled him to detect ‘changes’ in muscles and nerves. Describing his treatment as a form of massage which affects the vital nerve centres, and by applying pressure to the right place causes nerves which have ceased to function correctly to resume their normal functioning. Kersten never gave single treatments, only a series spread over eight weeks. Each treatment was strenuous and left Kersten exhausted.
His treatments cured migraine, heart problems, neuralgia, and nervous stomach are a few examples. He built a very successful practice in Holland and Germany before the second world war. He was able to buy an impressive farmhouse. Life was idyllic with his wife and young family. Rumours about the man with magic hands spread, and he was soon treating the entire European aristocracy.
However, things were about to change. In 1939 Kersten was asked if he would treat Heinrich Himmler, commander of the SS and the principal planner of the Jewish genocide. Himmler suffered excruciating stomach pains, which bent him double., often leaving him unconscious. Medical specialists could only prescribe powerful narcotics, which did little for the condition. Dr Kersten refused but was ‘persuaded’ to give Himmler a consultation. The outcome was that the pain disappeared within minutes of giving him an abdominal massage. Himmler realised that he could not be without Dr Kersten being by his side and always on call.
Himmler called Kersten the man with magic hands and my magical Buddha, saying his touch was like a balm.
Dr Kersten refused to give further treatments but was told that if he refused, he would be put into a concentration camp.
Kersten realised that he had power over the devil Himmler and decided to use it to the advantage of humanity. He began by asking Himmler in lieu of payment, to release a man who had been imprisoned by the SS, a request to which Himmler agreed, surprisingly with tears in his eyes. This became a regular occurrence — each treatment meant a release of someone.
Just as Oscar Schindler used his factory as a cover to save Jewish lives, Dr Kersten was using his skills to do the same.
As the war progressed, Himmler’s pains worsened and he became even more reliant on Dr Kersten’s services. This acted as a more persuasive lever for Kersten to demand greater numbers of people be released from concentration camps. This continued to grow to over 60,000.
In 1945 the World Jewish Congress presented Kersten with a letter thanking him for helping to save Jewish concentration camp victims.
After the war, Kersten was awarded the French Legion of Honour, while, in 1950, the Dutch Monarchy awarded him the order of the Orange Nassau.
The healing power of touch is needed more than ever in the world today!
Dr Kersten died while visiting Germany in 1960
There is a very interesting film about Dr Kersten narrated by his son, which tells the more complete story.