Agnieszka Pilchowa (pseudonym Agni P., 16 December 1888 – 21 November 1944) was a Polish clairvoyants as well as a bioenergotherapeutist and herbalist.
As a child, she frequently broke into unusual condition, in which she saw exotic places, faraway countries and never-before seen people.
Pilchowa would often find herself near a local convent, but at the age of 18, she changed her mind and joined the Spiritist Society of Cieszyn Silesia.
[2] President Tomas Masaryk and his daughter Alicia were so impressed with her, that he asked her to stay in Prague and work for him, but the clairvoyant refused and returned to Wisła.
Also, the angel found her a spot on a hill in Wisła, where in 1931 the Pilch family completed a spacious villa called “Sfinks” (Sphinx).
As those who knew her later recalled, even after several years she spoke "a weird, outdated Polish, based on the 19th century authors, such as Andrzej Towianski".
She liked to sing religious songs and in her diary, Pilchowa wrote that while examining patients, she physically felt their pain.
Among the people she treated there were Michal Grazynski, voivode of the Autonomous Silesian Voivodeship as well as President Ignacy Mościcki and Józef Piłsudski.
Her name was frequently mentioned on Polish Radio, mostly due to the broadcasts and articles of Zofia Kossak-Szczucka, who lived in the nearby village of Górki Wielkie.
The prophecy, whose author foresaw the outbreak of World War I and II: In twenty years the will come dozens of time, When the firm will pour forth from the sky.
(..) When the black eagle sign of the cross filthy, The wings spread across a sinister, The two countries will fall, which no one save, Strength is still against the law.
But the black eagle will come to crossroads; When you turn your eyes to the east, Teutonic spreading their customs, With a broken wing back.
as well as the Polish Pope: The three rivers of the world will give three crowns Anointed from Kraków, Four on the outskirts of the allied parties Vow to supply his words.
was a sensation, mentioned multiple times in several sources as well as movies, such as Leonard Buczkowski's film Forbidden songs (1946).
Pilchowa's numerous activities were terminated in September 1939, after the joint Nazi and Soviet attack on Poland.
[6] During the same session, she saw a group of soldiers at the Brandenburg Gate, then a topographic map with miniature American and Japanese flags.