Premonitions before the assasination of J.F Kennedy

Two and a half years before his assassination, John F. Kennedy seemed to have had a premonition of his own death. A paper that Kennedy’s longtime secretary, Evelyn Lincoln, tucked into her diary was included in 60,000 pages of documents made public in Washington by the National Archives and the Assassination Records Review Board, which accumulates documents that could shed light on the Nov. 22, 1963 assassination. Lincoln said she found a note on June 5, 1961, in which Kennedy wrote: “I know that there is a god and I see a storm coming. If he has a place for me, I am ready.”
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In October 1963, Jeane Dixon claimed that she had foreseen President Kennedy's death in office, and her biographer records that the famous "Capital Seer" made several attempts to warn him.

Billy Graham, the well-known evangelist, said that he tried to reach JFK by phone before he left for Dallas.

"I had the strongest premonition that he should not go to Texas," the preacher later told newsmen.

Months before the fatal Friday, Mrs. Helen Greenwood of Los Angeles stated that she had a dramatic precognitive dream of the assassination. In the dream, she found herself in Dallas; she heard the throngs cheering and saw the Kennedys waving from their open car. As the smiling President drew nearer, Mrs. Greenwood became aware of a rifle being aimed at him from a window high across the street. Shots rang out, and the President clutched at his throat.

Mrs. Greenwood was treated patronizingly when she tried to inform the FBI. Only one secretary at the Los Angeles office of California Governor Edmund Brown would even listen to her, and no official action was forthcoming.

In a desperate attempt to be heard and heeded, Mrs. Greenwood managed to convince the Rev. Maurice Dawkins of the Independent Church of Christ, who was a delegate from Los Angeles to the White House conference of religious leaders, that she was sincere and that she considered the dream to constitute a warning.

Reverend Dawkin's letter to Mrs. Greenwood was later quoted in the press:

"I recall so clearly your warning to me and your urging me to deliver a message to the White House to the President or to his brother ... that the Kennedys must not be permitted to go South.

"On May 18th ... I spoke to Pierre Salinger and delivered your message of warning. At the White House Conference of religious leaders in June, I spoke of it again to the President and his brother in general terms."

In retrospect, many comments which President Kennedy himself made seem to have been precognitive.

On March 3, 1963, while touring Arlington National Cemetery, President Kennedy remarked:

"The view up here is so beautiful. I could stay here forever."

Leaving church just a few months before the assassination, he remarked to reporters and Secret Service men:

"I wonder if they'll shoot me in the church?"

Then, seeing the startled reactions, Kennedy tried to make a joke of it.

"Well, if they do," he chuckled, "They'll probably get one of you fellows first!"

Pierre Salinger, former press secretary to President Kennedy, made public a statement of JFK's that seems particularly precognitive.

"Somehow, I wish I didn't have to go to Dallas," the President sighed wearily. "I guess it is because there is so much to be done there."

Did President Kennedy have a premonition that he was about to add another tragic page to the history of prophecy and the presidency?
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