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Thunder Bay convention puts the supernatural in the spotlight
CBC
Ghosts, Sasquatch, unidentified aerial phenomena — a convention taking place in Thunder Bay next month has all the paranormal bases covered.
The first-ever Lake Superior Paranormal Convention kicks off on Oct. 4.
"I think it's going to be awesome," said Gail Willis, convention organizer and member of Thunder Bay ghost hunting group Lucky Paranormal.
"We're super excited about doing it," she said. "It really is for people who love the paranormal, are interested in the paranormal, might have stories to share. And this will be like a safe space, and an open place, for people to share their stories, talk about UFOs, Sasquatch, spirits, and any of their experiences."
"And also for skeptics, too."
Science writer Chris Rutkowski, known as "Canada's UFO guy" will be one of the speakers.
"I've been at this for quite some time," he said in an interview with CBC News. "Back in the 1970s, I was taking my astronomy degree at University of Manitoba, and there had been a lot of UFOs being seen across Canada at that time, and I was curious."
"My profs didn't think much of UFOs at all, but that gave me more incentive to try and understand them a little bit more, so I started talking with people," he said. "I went to their homes out in the community and farms and other places, and found that most people were simply not making stories up. They were just seeing things that they couldn't understand, they couldn't explain. And in most cases, I could explain what people were seeing as stars and planets and planets and whatever."
"But there were a couple of cases that were very, very curious and I couldn't understand what those things were either."
Rutkowski said he was eventually asked to give a presentation on the phenomenon at his university, which led to more opportunities to write and speak about the subject.
He's since published several books - the most-recent of which is 2022's Canada's UFOs: Declassified - and will give a talk titled Canada's Unseen Skies and Thunder Bay's Unexplained UFO Mysteries at the convention.
"Things have changed to a great degree," he said. "There's a lot of scientists around the world now who are taking the subject of UAP very seriously — they don't call them UFO's because of the stigma."
"There's projects such as the Galileo project, in the United States, which is developing observatories dedicated to looking for UFOs in the sky and detecting them and in many other ways," he said. "There are scientists who are, you know, taking the subject seriously enough to write and publish papers in peer-reviewed journals."
"As long as the subject is actually what people are seeing and not necessarily the interpretation, it's all fair game. But once you start talking about whether aliens are really here, and they're walking among us and they're abducting people and they're taking him on board for flights to and from Venus and places like that, that's where you get into some difficulty, because there's no proof of that."