It’s the end of the world as we know it — or is it?
Baba Vanga, also known as Vangeliya Pandeva Gushterova, was a blind Bulgarian clairvoyant widely known for her alleged powers of precognition.
The so-called Nostradamus of the Balkans, a reference to the famed French astrologer, is said to have predicted 9/11 and the war in Ukraine, per the Sun.
The mystic healer died in 1996, but the psychic’s followers still await some of the predictions she made before her death.
In fact, some reports have claimed that Vanga warned that the world would end in 2023 due to nuclear bioweapons and a solar storm.
There is no official recording of her premonitions and their veracity.
However, the latest of Vanga’s eerie predictions that have resurfaced is her claim that the end of the world will start in 2025, according to various reports.
Humanity won’t be wiped out until 5079, but the apocalypse will begin in 2025, allegedly according to Vanga.
Vanga’s timeline for the end of humanity
2025: A conflict in Europe will devastate the continent’s population.
2028: Humans will begin to explore Venus as an energy source.
2033: The polar ice caps will melt, raising sea levels to drastic heights worldwide.
2076: Communism will spread to countries across the world.
2130: Humans will make alien contact.
2170: A drought will devastate much of the world.
3005: Earth will go to war with a civilization on Mars.
3797: Humans will have to vacate the Earth because it’s become uninhabitable.
5079: The world will end.
Vanga isn’t the only one to have claimed to preemptively know when the world will end.
Some claimed that the Mayan tribe predicted the world would end in 2012 because their calendar cut off on December 21, 2012.
The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists also announces a yearly estimation with its Doomsday Clock. The Doomsday Clock this year was set to 90 seconds to midnight — for the second year in a row, “reflecting the continued state of unprecedented danger the world faces.”
Last year, the clock was also set to 90 seconds to midnight — the closest it’s ever been to midnight in the history of the clock.
Source Agencies