Cecil is wise, surprisingly fluent in English

Aug 3, 2015 14:04 GMT  ·  By

Karen Anderson of Washington, US, a self-proclaimed animal psychic - or animal communicator, as she likes to call herself - has recently had a chat with Cecil the lion, killed by American dentist / big-game hunter Walter Palmer in early July in Zimbabwe, just outside the Hwange National Park. Or so she says. 

The animal communicator has been kind enough to share Cecil's words from beyond with us mere mortals who, devoid of psychic abilities, could not possibly hope to get in touch with the lion ourselves.

Late Cecil is wise, oddly fluent in English

He might be dead, but he isn't bummed about it. Rather, Cecil the lion seems to have forgiven and forgotten Walter Palmer's wrongdoings. He asks us to do the same and quit making headlines of his death. Instead, he would have us focus on protecting other creatures that are in pain.

“What happened does not need to be discussed as it is what it is. Take heart my child, I am finer than ever, grander than before as no one can take our purity, our truth or our soul. Ever. I am here.”

“Be strong and speak for all the others who suffer needlessly to satisfy human greed. Bring Light and Love and we will rise above this,” Karen Anderson says the deceased lion told her from yonder.

Quite touched by Cecil's words of wisdom, the animal psychic confesses she nearly broke down in tears when she heard his message of love and acceptance.

Cecil's death was horrific, make no mistake about it

As mentioned, Cecil the lion was killed in early July by American dentist Walter Palmer who, together with a couple of other hunters, first lured him out of Zimbabwe's Hwange National Park and then shot him with an arrow.

The arrow failed to fatally injure the feline, who made a run for it. A couple of days later, the hunting party managed to track him down and shot him dead. They then skinned him and Walter Palmer took his head as a trophy.

The kill, brutal to say the least, sparked a heated debate on the legitimacy of hunting, with many accusing Walter Palmer of being no more and no less than a murderer and demanding that he be extradited to Zimbabwe and made to pay for his savagery.

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