The man is immune to electricity and skilled at taming buffaloes.

April 17, 2012 17:17

(Baonghean.vn) -Mr. Hoang Ngoc Hung (born in 1980, residing in Hamlet 6, Nghia Binh Commune, Tan Ky District, Nghe An Province) can touch a 220V electrical source with his hand, connect light bulbs, etc., and still remain safe. He has also tamed thousands of ferocious buffaloes, which many believe he can do with hypnotic powers.

Upon arriving at Nghia Binh commune, if you ask for the house of "Mr. Hung, the man who never gets electrocuted," everyone knows him. He happily told us: Five years ago, while pulling an electrical wire to connect a water pump, a section of exposed wire accidentally got caught around his neck. He panicked, running, jumping, and shouting to get the wire off him. When he calmed down, he saw the wire was still attached, but he only felt a slight tingling sensation. He pulled the wire off his neck and tested it with a voltage tester, which confirmed it was live. Afterward, he repeatedly tested the electrical system and found no signs of electrocution. For several years now, he no longer needs to switch off the circuit breaker when repairing electrical systems.

To verify this, he used his bare hands to pull a section of electrical wire with a lit light bulb attached. We then tested it with a voltage tester, and found that every part of his body was live. Mr. Hung even put the live wire end in his mouth without getting shocked. "Since discovering that my body is not susceptible to electric shocks, my health has remained normal with no other symptoms," Mr. Hung said.



When Mr. Hung touches a power source, every part of his body becomes electrified.



Mr. Hung is controlling the buffalo in a performance.

Not only is he famous as a "superman" immune to electricity, but the people of Nghia Binh also admire him for his ability to tame buffaloes. Even the most stubborn buffaloes, which their owners find impossible to control with whips or shouts, become obedient in about two minutes under his control.

Hung recounted: "When I was 15, I went to the fields to harvest corn. The cart was full of corn, but because I was weak, I couldn't lift the shafts to attach the yoke to the buffalo's neck. I had to sit in the pouring rain waiting for someone to pass by and ask for help. I thought, I must train the buffalo to be able to attach the yoke itself. Thinking is doing, so I went home and took my buffalo to a secluded open field behind my house to begin researching and training it. My efforts paid off; this first buffalo was trained proficiently in skills such as attaching the yoke to the cart, and later learned to crawl, kneel, and lift its legs..."

Mr. Hung added: "The easiest thing to train is attaching the yoke; it only takes 5 minutes for the buffalo to learn. More difficult tasks include crawling, kneeling, and raising its leg to shake hands with a person... For an average person, just training one thing like attaching the yoke takes a whole month, and not every buffalo can be trained. To date, I have trained over a thousand buffaloes in total, and I haven't had to give up on any of them."

Then Mr. Hung smiled happily: "Quite a few of the buffaloes I've trained have been bought by customers at higher prices than usual. So now, everyone here wants their buffaloes to have been trained by me."

It is precisely because of this special skill that his daily work is always busy; people from the village and surrounding areas always seek him out whenever they have a stubborn buffalo. Although he knows it's always time-consuming, he does it to help the people and doesn't dare accept payment, because if he does, it will lose its sacredness.

The greatest joy for Mr. Hung is helping villagers acquire a docile buffalo to plow and cultivate their daily lives. And his ability to tame buffaloes remains a mystery.


Phuong Nguyen

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The man is immune to electricity and skilled at taming buffaloes.
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