Fr. Malachi Martin, "‘I have smelt the breath of Satan’
Exorcism can be extremely violent.
I have seen objects hurled around rooms by the powers of evil. I have
smelt the breath of Satan and heard the demons’ voices - cold, scratchy,
dead voices carrying messages of hatred.”
Those words, quoted from the
Scotsman newspaper, appear in the obituary of the Co Kerry priest and
author Malachi Martin, published in The Irish Times on Saturday, August 7th, 1999.
Martin’s name has been trickling through newsfeeds in recent days ahead of the release of Hostage to the Devil this weekend. The subject of the dark-looking Netflix documentary is Martin and a spirit he confronted in a career as a “Jesuit priest, an author and an exorcist”.
Malachi was born Co Kerry in
1921 to John and Katherine Martin. One of 10 children, he was educated
first at Ballylongford National School, Dublin’s Belvedere College and then University College Dublin.
According to his obituary, his foray into Jesuit priesthood would take
him to Rome in the 1960s. But, in 1964, he requested a release from his
vows.
“The move was prompted by his
conclusion that many in the church, and particularly in his own order,
the Jesuits, were more interested in power than in saving souls,” reads
the piece.
He left Rome and moved to New
York, where he took odd jobs, including a stint washing dishes and
driving a cab, before eventually finding success as an author. His held
fast his conservative views of the church, which clearly shone through
in his writing, according to the author of the obituary.
Skip to 1976. The Exorcist film
has been out for three years - initially to half-and-half reviews, but
already accumulating the building blocks of the cult status it would
eventually enjoy. Malachi Martin releases a book account of five, he
claims, real-life exorcisms; Hostage to the Devil: The Possession and Exorcism of Five Contemporary Americans. Sharing the title of the upcoming documentary, this is his best-known work.
Each case in the book has a
title and vivid narrative, based on meetings with the exorcists and
excorcees. In one case, “The Rooster and the Tortoise”, a psychology
professor, Carl V, became possessed while re-enacting a ritual he had
seen himself perform in a vision. He travelled to Aquileia in Italy
to carry out the dream he had, which he understood to be a reflection
of events that happened in a previous life. A group of students
accompanied him to document the process.
Martin describes the physical
change that took place as Carl was possessed during the ritual, as
described by the people who accompanied him on the trip: “And around the
eyes, in a way none of his associates and students could ever explain,
there was what they had come to call the ‘twist’-some crookedness, some
wry misshapenness, as if the natural contours of skull, forehead, eyes,
and ears had been splayed out of kilter by some superhuman force
residing in him temporarily with tremendous and awe-full power.”