Il y a omerta sur les NDE chez les pygmées. Encore un mauvais coup de la science officielle, c’est sûr. En remplacement, il y a quelques données provenant de Zambie :
« University of Zambia physician Nsama Mumbwe collected 15 NDE reports
from Africa in order to determine if the elements of the prototypical
Western NDE were cultural products of the Western media (Morse and
Perry, « Transformed » 120-24).
In one case, after being attacked by a lioness protecting her cubs, a
60 year old truck driver reported that a highway opened up for him
going endlessly into the sky, surrounded by stars ; when he tried to go
on to the highway, the stars blocked his way, and he stood there until
the highway and stars disappeared (Morse and Perry, « Transformed » 122).
In another African case, an 85 year old woman reports an NDE that sounds a little more like a prototypical Western NDE :
I was suffering from a stroke. During this time I felt I was put into a
big calabash [the hollow shell of a gourd] with a big opening. But
somehow I couldn’t get out of it. Then a voice from somewhere said to
me, ’be brave. Take my hand and come out. It is not yet your time to
go.’
After some time of being in the calabash I managed to get out on my own
[brackets original] (Morse and Perry, « Transformed » 122-123).
In the first case the man attributed his NDE to a ’bad omen’ ; in the
second the NDEr thought someone was trying to ’bewitch her’ into death.
Clearly these are culture-bound interpretations of the experience ; but what of the reports of what was experienced ?
The single report of being caught inside of a calabash or ’hollow
gourd’ with a large opening has widely been interpreted as a tunnel
experience, but it may indicate feeling caught inside of something more
like a bottle with only one opening, rather than something more
tunnel-like with two openings. After all, the report explicitly refers
to a single large opening rather than two openings. So we have a
single African NDE which may or may not include a tunnel experience.
There is little reason to describe the other African case where a
’highway’ through the stars opens up as either a tunnel experience or an
OBE, since there is no indication of enclosure or of looking down on
one’s body or the ground. »
http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/keith_augustine/HNDEs.html vous y trouverez, aussi, des analyses de cas en Mélanésie, Thaïlande, Japon et un tableau regroupant les données par culture.