In one of the strangest and most chilling tales to emerge from rural Uganda, a 38-year-old man claims he has woken up at his own funeral not once, not twice, but six different times — leaving his community convinced he might be a ghost.
The man, identified as Peter K., says his bizarre ordeal began three years ago when he suddenly collapsed during a family gathering and was pronounced dead by a local health worker. “They put me in a coffin, and I woke up when I heard people crying,” Peter recalls. “At first, everyone screamed and ran away. They thought I was a spirit.”
What followed was a string of similar incidents. Each time, Peter would fall into a deep, coma-like sleep that mimicked death. With no pulse detected and no response to touch, he would be prepared for burial — only to regain consciousness at the last possible moment. His strange “resurrections” have earned him the nickname Omuzimu Omulamu — meaning “The Living Ghost” in Luganda.
Now, neighbors refuse to sit too close to him, children run at the sight of him, and some family members have even stopped visiting. “People think I’m cursed or that I’m not really human anymore,” Peter says. “But I’m alive, I eat, I talk, I walk — I’m just not dying properly.”
Medical experts suspect he may suffer from a rare condition known as catalepsy, which causes the body to enter a death-like state. However, without advanced testing, no formal diagnosis has been made.
For now, Peter lives a lonely life, trying to convince the world that he is flesh and blood, not a wandering spirit. But in his village, the legend of The Man Who Refuses to Die continues to grow — and so does the fear.