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let me ask you a general knowledge question. when did the father of Modern South Africa , Nelson Mandela die?

was it 1980 or 2013?

correct answer is 2013, however if your answer was 1980, don’t be dishearten, there are millions of people who swear in the name of god admitting to remembering Nelson Mandela dying in prison during the 1980s.

False memories can sometimes be shared by multiple people. This phenomenon was dubbed the “Mandela Effect” by paranormal researcher Fiona Broome, who reported having vivid and detailed memories of news coverage of South African anti-Apartheid leader Nelson Mandela dying in prison in the 1980s.

Nobody’s memory is perfect. For instance, do you think that Stouffer’s Stove Top Stuffing existed? Or that there was a children’s book series called “The Berenstein Bears?”

In reality, neither of these references are spot-on. Stouffer’s never made a stove top stuffing, and the books are actually known as “The Berenstain Bears.” But if you got these details wrong, don’t feel too bad — a 2020 memory study in the journal Psychological Science(opens in new tab) found that, when asked to recall information, 76% of adults(opens in new tab) made at least one detectable error.

Although the memory accuracy of the study’s participants was generally “very high,” with around “93-95% of all verifiable details” being correct, the research highlights that a person’s memory is not infallible. Things that never happened, or events that have become muddled over time, can, in one’s head, become real, and knowledge can become distorted or confused.

This is the foundation of the “Mandela effect.”