Oman Daily Observer

40 yrs after death ,‘Gift from God’ Elvis is semi-divine

- JENNIE MATTHEW

Pilgrims come all day every day, filing past in silence, fighting back tears as they place mementos at Elvis Presley’s gravesite, pausing to reflect, take pictures or say a prayer. More than 600,000 fans visit each year, paying tribute to the icon of popular culture, the family entertaine­r of whom John Lennon said “before Elvis there was nothing”. Forty years after his tragic death aged 42, floral tributes from around the world still line the Meditation Garden, where the king of rock ‘n’ roll is buried at his Graceland home in Memphis.

On Tuesday thousands, if not tens of thousands, are expected to attend this year’s candle-light vigil to mark the anniversar­y of Elvis’ death.

Lisa Bseiso will be one of them. She had what she calls a “very spiritual, deep encounter” with Presley’s spirit when she first visited Graceland with her husband in August 2014.

“He was sitting in a chair,” remembers the 36-year-old born and raised in Qatar.

“He had tears coming down his eyes and he said ‘Don’t forget me, spread my legacy in your part of the world,’” she recalls.

So she went home and set up The Official Elvis Presley Fan Club of Qatar, which she now plans to expand to Dubai, Bahrain and Kuwait.

A life-long fan, listening to his music helped her recover from a car accident in 1999 that left her in a coma for two weeks, she says.

The idea that Presley’s spirit lives on is central to his fans of all ages, from all countries, who find his music soothing in times of trouble and are moved by his rags-to-riches story and legendary generosity.

Presley is far more than just another poster child for the American dream or even a man whose looks matched the Greek definition of classical beauty, says British author Ted Harrison.

“The Elvis known today is not the real Elvis, but a mythologic­al figure millions can relate to in their own way,” says the author of ‘The Death and Resurrecti­on of Elvis Presley’.

Bseiso does not elevate Presley to the status of Biblical figure, but has found in him a higher calling as she seeks to spread his music.

“I think when he was born God stamped him to be able to influence people and touch people,” she said.

“His music talks to you... it has a spiritual meaning in his words.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman