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Can the Holy Spring in France really cure the disease?

There is a small town in France whose spring water has curative properties and attracts countless people. Does everyone want to know if this spring water can really bring back the dead?
For a long time, people have been looking for a panacea for all ailments, but they have found nothing. However, there is a small market town called Laudis in the French Pyrenees. There is a cave in the town. In the cave, there is a clear spring that has been flowing for many years. Thousands of people, this is the world-famous mysterious “Holy Spring”.
There is a small market town called Laudis in the French Pyrenees. There is a cave in the town. There is a clear spring flowing continuously for many years. The spring water has attracted thousands of people from all over the world with its magical healing properties. People, this is the world-famous mysterious “Holy Spring” of the Pyrenees.
About 4.3 million people visit Laudis each year, many of them terminally ill. In 124 years, there have been 64 miracles recognized by the medical profession. What is the mystery of this “resurrection”? Does the Holy Fountain of Lourdes (aka: Holy Fountain of the Pyrenees) really have the magical effect that people say? Both religious and scientific circles have conducted investigations and studies on the Holy Spring of Lourdes many times.
Legend has it that in 1858, a girl named Mary Bernard Sobilas was playing in a cave. Suddenly, the Virgin Mary appeared in front of her, told her that there was a clear spring behind the cave, and directed her to wash her hands and face, and told her She said that this spring water can cure all diseases, but she disappeared.
More than 100 years have passed, and the magical spring water has continued for many years. There is also an endless stream of people from all over the world who come to the holy spring to seek medical treatment.
According to statistics, about 4.3 million people go to Laudis every year, many of them are sick or even terminally ill, and have been sentenced to “death penalty” by modern medicine. They traveled thousands of miles to come here. Just soaking in the holy spring pool will relieve their condition, and some even recover without treatment.
There was an Italian young man named Vittorio Micciari who had a rare cancer that had destroyed the bones and muscles in his left hip. X-rays revealed that his left leg was only connected to the pelvis by some soft tissue bundles, and no bone component could be seen. After going to several hospitals, his left side was cast from the waist to the toes, but he was declared to have no medicine. Doctors, and prophesied to live another year at most.
On May 26, 1963, accompanied by his mother, he made the arduous 16-hour trek to Laudis, and the next day went to bathe in the holy spring. Under the care of several nurses, Michalli took off his clothes and was immersed naked in the cold spring water, but the plastered part was not immersed, and he only used the spring water to shower. After the bath, a miracle really happened. After that, Michali began to feel hungry, and his appetite was better than he had not seen in months.
Only a few weeks after returning home from the holy spring, he suddenly had a strong desire to get up from the sickbed and walk, and indeed dragged his left leg in plaster from one end of the room to the other. Over the next few weeks, he continued to move around the house and gained weight. By the end of the year, the pain had completely disappeared.
On February 18, 1964, doctors removed the cast from his left leg and performed another X-ray, which clearly showed that the completely damaged pelvic tissue and bone had unexpectedly regenerated. In April of the same year, he was able to move freely, taking part-time work, and soon was employed in a wool processing factory. Modern medicine cannot explain this case. What is the mystery of Shengquan’s “resurrection”? I don’t know who can solve this mystery.
According to reports, in 124 years, there have been 64 cases of similar medical miracles recognized by the medical profession.