A weeping statue is a reported phenomenon in which a statue, typically of a religious figure such as the Virgin Mary in Catholic contexts, appears to shed tears or other liquids from its eyes, often interpreted as a miraculous sign of divine sorrow or intervention.[1] These events have been documented for centuries, primarily within Catholicism, where they evoke strong emotional responses among believers, symbolizing Mary's grief over human sin or suffering, as depicted in traditional iconography like the Seven Sorrows of Mary.[1]The Catholic Church approaches such claims with rigorous scrutiny, requiring local bishops to investigate using guidelines from the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, updated in 2024 to allow for the outright rejection of non-supernatural events and to discourage devotion to potentially fraudulent ones.[2] While rare, the Church has authenticated a few cases, such as the Madonna of Syracuse in Sicily, which began weeping in 1953 and was declared miraculous after scientific analysis confirmed the tears as human in composition without natural explanation.[1] Notable examples include a 2018 case in Hobbs, New Mexico, where a statue wept a substance identified as olive oil mixed with perfume, leading to an inconclusive diocesan investigation despite denials of hoaxing.[3]Scientific and skeptical analyses often attribute weeping statues to natural or artificial causes, such as condensation from temperature differences on porous materials, bacterial growth like Serratia marcescens producing red "blood-like" stains, or deliberate hoaxes involving injected liquids or melting fats.[4] For instance, in a 2008 case in Italy, "blood" tears from a statue were traced to the custodian's DNA.[5] These explanations highlight the interplay of psychology—where communal belief amplifies perception—and sociology, as such events foster community and meaning amid hardship, though the Church emphasizes discernment to avoid exploitation.[1]
Overview and Characteristics
Definition and Phenomenon
A weeping statue is a likeness, usually of a religious figure such as the Virgin Mary, that is reported to exude liquid from its eyes in a manner resembling tears, attributed to supernatural causes without evident human involvement.[1] These occurrences are predominantly associated with Catholic traditions, where the statues serve as devotional objects in churches, homes, or shrines.[1]Reports of weeping statues trace back to ancient times in the Graeco-Roman world, where such events were interpreted as prodigies or signs from the gods, as documented in accounts from Republican Rome through the early Christian era.[6] In Christian contexts, the earliest documented cases emerged during the Middle Ages, particularly from the 12th century onward, when material objects like statues were said to manifest miraculous properties amid growing Marian devotion.[7]The phenomenon typically unfolds through eyewitness observation, where individuals notice droplets forming or flowing from the statue's eyes, often during prayer or routine veneration, prompting immediate alerts to clergy or community members for verification.[1] Initial reports may involve simple visual confirmation, followed by collection of the liquid for sensory examination or basic testing to assess its nature.[1]The emitted liquid varies across accounts, including clear water resembling natural tears, blood-like substances evoking suffering, or oily fluids such as olive oil mixed with balsam, which mimic the saline composition and flow of human tears while carrying symbolic connotations in religious rituals.[1] These variations contribute to the perception of authenticity, as the liquids often appear spontaneously and in quantities sufficient to be wiped away or contained.[1] Such events are sometimes viewed as part of broader supernatural manifestations within religious practices.[1]
Reported Features and Variations
Reported weeping statues exhibit tears that typically emerge from the carved or painted eyes, welling up within the eye area before streaming down the face in a manner resembling human crying.[8] In some accounts, the liquid appears to flow directly from the eyes of wooden statues, creating visible streaks along the cheeks.[9] These statues most commonly depict the Virgin Mary, though similar reports involve other religious figures.[1]Variations in the phenomenon often correlate with the statue's material. Plaster statues, being porous, tend to show liquid seeping slowly from the eye regions, sometimes forming droplets that accumulate gradually.[10] Wooden statues, by contrast, may exhibit a more fluid flow of tears, as observed in cases where the liquid streams continuously from the eyes during episodes. Marble and stone examples are less frequently detailed, but when reported, the tears similarly originate from the eye area, though the denser material may limit seepage to subtle surface moisture.Eyewitness sensory reports describe the liquid as varying in composition, including clear, water-like tears that taste salty and resemble human tears, as well as oily substances.[9] Some accounts note perfumed liquids with scents like roses or flowers, while others report odorless fluids.[8] Oily tears have been observed to persist without rapid evaporation, maintaining moisture on the statue's surface.[10] Weeping episodes vary in duration, ranging from brief flows lasting minutes to hours, to intermittent occurrences spanning days or even years in total, with some statues documented as weeping over 100 times across extended periods.[9]Globally, such reports predominate in Catholic-majority regions, including Europe, the Americas, and Asia, where statues of Mary are central to devotional practices.[1] Similar phenomena appear in Eastern Orthodox traditions, particularly with painted icons that exhibit moisture welling in the eyes and flowing downward, often described as myrrh-like oil.[11] Cultural contexts influence interpretations, with Catholic accounts emphasizing sorrowful tears and Orthodox reports sometimes highlighting fragrant, healing oils, though the core visual of eye-originated weeping remains consistent across traditions.[12]
Religious and Cultural Significance
Connection to Marian Apparitions
In Catholic theology, weeping statues of the Virgin Mary are often interpreted as signs of divine sorrow over human sinfulness and urgent calls to repentance, reflecting Mary's role as a compassionate mother interceding for humanity. This understanding draws from biblical motifs of maternal grief, such as Simeon's prophecy that "a sword will pierce your own soul too" (Luke 2:35) and Mary's vigil at the foot of the cross (John 19:25-27), portraying her tears as an extension of Christ's redemptive suffering. Theologians and Church documents emphasize these phenomena as expressions of Mary's maternal love, urging the faithful toward conversion and prayer rather than conveying new doctrinal revelations.[1][13]Historically, reports of weeping statues frequently correlate with periods of intense Marian devotion following major apparitions, such as those at Lourdes in 1858 and Fatima in 1917, where statues depicting Our Lady of Lourdes or the Fatima seers have been associated with tear-like phenomena in subsequent years. For instance, pilgrim statues inspired by the Fatima apparitions, including the International Pilgrim Virgin Statue, have been documented to exude moisture interpreted as tears during global tours, amplifying devotion in the wake of the original visions. These occurrences are seen not as direct extensions of the apparitions but as reinforcing their messages of penance and peace, often emerging in regions with strong ties to these sites.[14][15]The Catholic Church addresses weeping statues through its framework for private revelations, as outlined in the 2024 Norms for Proceeding in the Discernment of Alleged Supernatural Phenomena issued by the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith on May 17, 2024 (effective May 19, 2024), which replaced the 1978 norms and classify such events alongside apparitions, requiring rigorous discernment by ecclesiastical authorities. These norms establish criteria for authenticity, including positive elements like the credibility of persons involved, adherence to orthodoxdoctrine, unpredictability of the event, and abundant spiritual fruits such as conversions and increased prayer life, while negative indicators include doctrinal errors, fraud, or pursuit of personal gain. The updated process introduces six possible prudential conclusions, preferring a declaration of "Nihil obstat" (nothing hinders devotion) to allow cautious promotion of spiritual benefits without affirming supernatural origin, though outright rejection as non-supernatural is now explicitly permitted if evidence warrants; only the Pope can declare supernatural origin in exceptional cases. Local bishops, in consultation with the Dicastery, issue public judgments to protect the faithful from potential deception.[16]Such approved or tolerated weeping statues profoundly influence Catholic culture by sparking pilgrimages, rosary campaigns, and renewed Marian consecrations, fostering a sense of communal urgency distinct from other miraculous claims by centering on Mary's intercessory tears as a maternal plea. This devotional surge often leads to the construction of shrines and the spread of piety, emphasizing repentance over spectacle and integrating the phenomenon into broader liturgical and spiritual practices.[15]
Interpretations in Other Religious Contexts
In Eastern Orthodox Christianity, weeping icons, particularly those depicting the Theotokos (Mother of God), have been reported across Eastern Europe and Russia, often interpreted as signs of divine intercession and calls for repentance amid societal or personal crises. These icons typically exude a myrrh-like substance from the eyes, accompanied by a sweet fragrance, symbolizing the Virgin's compassion and mercy rather than mere sorrow. For instance, numerous cases in the 20th and 21st centuries, such as the Hawaiian Iveron Icon in the United States (which began streaming myrrh in 2007), are viewed by Orthodox faithful as reminders of spiritual neglect and invitations to renewed devotion.[11][17][18]In Buddhist contexts, reported instances of weeping statues are rarer but carry profound symbolic weight as expressions of compassion for human suffering and omens of divine displeasure with societal upheaval. A notable example is the Leshan Giant Buddha in Sichuan Province, China, a colossal 71-meter rock carving from the 8th century, which locals and witnesses claimed shed tears on multiple occasions: during the Great Famine in 1962, the Cultural Revolution in 1963, the Tangshan earthquake in 1976, and as recently as June 7, 1994, when tourists photographed streams from its eyes. These events are interpreted as the Buddha's sorrow over humanity's abandonment of ethical traditions and moral decay, urging practitioners to return to dharma for solace and renewal; photographic evidence from 1962 is preserved in the Leshan Exhibition Hall.[19]Ancient pagan traditions provide early cross-cultural precedents for weeping statues, distinct from later Abrahamic miracle claims, where such phenomena signaled disruptions in divine-human harmony. In Republican and early Christian Rome, reports of statues and temple images weeping—documented in sources like Livy and Pliny the Elder—were classified as prodigies indicating a breach in the pax deorum (peace of the gods), often prompting rituals to appease deities amid political instability or natural disasters. These interpretations emphasized communal expiation over personal intercession, viewing tears as harbingers of collective misfortune rather than redemptive signs.[20]In indigenous and folk traditions, weeping motifs appear in animistic beliefs as manifestations of ancestral spirits or nature's lament, contrasting monotheistic views by linking them to earthly cycles and unresolved familial or communal grief. A prominent example is La Llorona ("The Weeping Woman") in Mexican and broader Latin American folklore, rooted in Aztec indigenous legends blended with colonial influences, where the spectral figure's cries serve as warnings from restless ancestors about moral failings or impending doom, often tied to themes of loss and environmental disrespect. This narrative underscores a worldview where weeping entities embody the interconnectedness of the living and spirit worlds, fostering rituals for harmony rather than veneration of a singular divine figure.[21]Cross-culturally, weeping statues transcend Catholic Marian prominence—though such cases dominate modern reports—revealing shared human tendencies to attribute emotional agency to sacred objects as omens or empathetic responses to crisis, whether as Orthodox calls to mercy, Buddhist pleas for ethical revival, pagan alerts to cosmic imbalance, or animistic echoes of ancestral unrest. These interpretations highlight cultural variances: Abrahamic traditions often frame tears as intercessory grace, while animistic and Eastern views emphasize communal reckoning with suffering or disharmony.
Notable Historical and Modern Cases
Pre-20th Century Examples
One of the earliest documented cases of a weeping statue occurred in 1485 in Trevi, Italy, where a fresco depicting the Madonna and Child was reported to shed tears of blood, drawing crowds and prompting local ecclesiastical investigation amid regional plagues and unrest.[22] The phenomenon was attributed by church officials to divine intercession, leading to the establishment of a shrine that became a pilgrimage site, reflecting the era's tendency to interpret such events as signs of heavenly compassion during medieval crises like epidemics.[23]In the late 15th century, a similar report emerged from Ponte Nossa in Bergamo, Italy, where on June 2, 1511, a fresco of the Madonna was seen weeping tears of blood by shepherdesses, coinciding with local hardships and interpreted as a call to repentance by rudimentary church inquiries.[24] This event, verified through witness testimonies collected by clergy, underscored the association of weeping images with communal suffering, such as famines, and fostered devotional practices without advanced scrutiny.During the Renaissance and Reformation periods, reports intensified in regions of religious tension, such as 16th- and 17th-century Germany. In 1615, a wooden statue of the Mother of God in Endingen wept for about an hour on Ascension Eve, seen as a portent of the impending Thirty Years' War, with church records noting pilgrim testimonies and basic verification by local priests.[25] Similarly, in 1608 at Salem, Germany, a statue of Our Lady of Sorrows wept during the war's early phases, recurring in 1697 before a monastery fire, as documented in ecclesiasticalannals linking the tears to divine warnings amid Protestant-Catholic conflicts.[25] These cases often involved tears interpreted as responses to sectarian strife, with church authorities conducting on-site examinations limited to witness interviews and observation.In 17th-century Hungary, multiple instances tied weeping statues to wartime crises, including a 1663 event in Nacy-szombat-Tyrnava where a statue of Mary wept following a Turkish defeat, viewed by clergy as a sign of protection and verified through pilgrim accounts during ongoing Ottoman invasions.[25] Another in 1670 at Klokoosko saw a Madonnastatue bleed when pierced by a soldier during an uprising, prompting relocation and veneration as a relic of resistance, with church reports emphasizing its occurrence amid national turmoil.[25]By the 18th and 19th centuries, such phenomena continued to be linked to broader calamities, though documentation remained primarily ecclesiastical. In 1738, a wooden statue of Jesus in Steingaden, Germany, was reported weeping tears, inspiring the construction of the Wieskirche pilgrimage church and investigated by local bishops as a symbol of solace during economic and religious hardships.[26] In France, reports during periods of war, such as the late 17th-century conflicts, included unverified accounts of Marian images weeping in rural shrines, often associated with famines and verified only through pastoral letters calling for prayer and penance. Common across these eras were themes of divine empathy in times of plague, war, and scarcity, with church verifications relying on eyewitness affidavits and exclusion of obvious fraud, evolving toward more structured inquiries by the 19th century.
20th and 21st Century Cases
One of the most prominent 20th-century cases of a weeping statue occurred in Akita, Japan, involving a wooden statue of the Virgin Mary at the convent of the Handmaids of the Eucharist from 1973 to 1981. The statue reportedly wept 101 times, exuded perspiration, and bled from a wound on its right hand, with samples analyzed by Professor Kaoru Sagisaka of Akita University's Department of Forensic Medicine revealing human blood of type B for the blood and type AB for the tears and sweat. These findings, confirmed by multiple laboratories including non-Christian scientists, led to the local bishop's approval of the apparitions in 1984, drawing pilgrims to the site despite initial skepticism.[27][28]In the 21st century, cases have proliferated in Italy, exemplified by the Madonna of Trevignano Romano statue owned by Gisella Cardia, which allegedly began weeping tears of blood in August 2016 and continued intermittently through the 2010s, attracting thousands of pilgrims and generating media coverage through viral videos of the phenomenon. Church investigations, including those prompted by private detectives, initially raised doubts when tests suggested animal blood, but the events spurred widespread devotion and economic impact on the town near Rome. By June 2024, the Vatican's Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith declared the apparitions non-supernatural under newly updated norms, prohibiting public veneration while allowing private prayer.[29][30][31]A more recent 2024 event involved a statue of Our Lady of La Salette in France, which reportedly wept tears on December 8, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, captured in a viral video that spread rapidly on social media and prompted online discussions of divine warning. As of November 2025, no official Church investigation or statement has been issued regarding the authenticity, though it echoes historical Marian themes associated with the original 1846 apparition site.[32]Developments in the Gisella Cardia case escalated in February 2025 when DNA analysis of the blood on the Trevignano Romano statue matched Cardia's own genetic profile, leading to fraud allegations. In November 2025, an Italian court ordered Cardia and her husband Gianni to stand trial for fraud in April 2026, as prosecutors examined evidence of manipulation dating back to 2016. This outcome highlighted the role of forensic science in modern scrutiny, amid reports of pilgrimages that had drawn over 100,000 visitors annually before restrictions. The Vatican's May 2024 norms update, which shifted from binary supernatural/non-supernatural declarations to six prudential outcomes like "nihil obstat" for pastoral use, has influenced such evaluations by requiring Dicastery approval and emphasizing protection against exploitation, resulting in faster resolutions for global cases.[29][33][16][34]
Scientific Scrutiny and Skepticism
Investigations and Explanations
Investigations into weeping statues typically involve empirical methods to identify the source and composition of the observed liquids, aiming to distinguish supernatural claims from natural or artificial causes. Chemical analysis is a primary technique, where samples of the purported tears are collected using sterilized tools such as pipettes and subjected to laboratory testing to determine their makeup. For instance, in the 2018 case of a Virgin Mary statue in Hobbs, New Mexico, diocesan investigators sent fluid samples to a laboratory, where two independent analytical methods confirmed the substance as scented olive oil rather than water or tears. Such analyses often reveal common household or ecclesiastical substances, including water mixed with salts to mimic tear salinity, or oils that prevent rapid evaporation for prolonged effect.[35][36]Physical examinations complement chemical testing by probing for mechanical aids, such as hidden tubes or reservoirs that could deliver liquids to the statue's surface. Investigators may employ tools like moisture meters or plumbing inspections to trace fluid origins, particularly in cases where statues are positioned near potential water sources. In the 2012 Mumbai incident involving a weeping crucifix, rationalist Sanal Edamaruku traced the liquid to a clogged drainage system, demonstrating how moisture traveled through porous walls via capillary action—a process where liquid moves through narrow spaces due to surface tension and adhesive forces—emerging at the statue without any supernatural intervention. While advanced imaging like endoscopy has been used in broader artifact analyses to detect internal voids or channels, its application to weeping statues remains limited, with most detections relying on non-invasive visual and structural inspections.[37][38]Natural explanations for the phenomenon frequently center on environmental and material factors that produce liquid accumulation without external application. Condensation occurs when statues made of heterogeneous materials, such as gypsum or plaster with varying densities, experience temperature fluctuations in humid environments, causing moisture from the air to form droplets on cooler surfaces that resemble tears. Capillary action in porous statue materials, like unsealed stone or concrete, allows groundwater or ambient humidity to wick upward through microscopic channels, especially if nearby plumbing leaks provide a moisture source. Additionally, applied non-drying substances such as glycerin or oils can absorb atmospheric water and slowly release it, creating a weeping appearance that persists over time; these are often detected through the chemical analyses described earlier.[4][39]Psychological factors play a significant role in the perception and spread of weeping statue reports, particularly in religious communities where suggestibility amplifies observations. Studies on religious experiences highlight how confirmation bias leads individuals to interpret ambiguous moisture—such as natural condensation—as miraculous, especially when primed by expectation or shared narratives. In group settings, this can escalate into collective suggestibility, akin to mass psychogenic phenomena, where social reinforcement encourages widespread belief without empirical verification; research on similar religious events underscores heightened emotional vulnerability in devout contexts as a contributor to such interpretations.[1]In response to rising claims amplified by digital media, the Catholic Church issued updated norms in 2024 for discerning alleged supernatural phenomena, including weeping statues. Issued by the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith and effective from May 19, 2024, these guidelines emphasize rigorous investigation by diocesan bishops with expert commissions, prioritizing negative criteria such as evidence of fabrication, psychological disorders, or profit motives to rule out hoaxes. The norms discourage hasty affirmations of supernaturality, instead favoring outcomes like "nihil obstat" for pastoral use or outright rejection if claims lack credibility, particularly those spread via the internet without verifiable evidence; papal intervention is reserved for exceptional cases.[16]
Documented Hoaxes and Fraud
Several documented cases of weeping statues have been exposed as deliberate hoaxes, often involving rudimentary mechanical tricks to simulate tears. For example, in 2006 in Forlì, Italy, a church custodian was convicted of fraud after applying his own blood to a Virgin Marystatue using simple methods to simulate weeping tears. These deceptions were uncovered through basic inspections revealing applied residues rather than natural seepage.[5]A prominent modern example occurred in Trevignano Romano, Italy, starting in 2010, where a statue of the Virgin Mary reportedly wept tears of blood. Investigations revealed the liquid was human blood matching the DNA profile of Gisella Cardia, introduced via concealed tubes or reservoirs within the statue, orchestrated by self-proclaimed mystic Gisella Cardia. The Vatican Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith officially declared the phenomenon a hoax in 2024, citing lack of supernatural origin. In February 2025, forensic DNA analysis confirmed the blood matched Cardia's genetic profile, providing direct evidence of her involvement and prompting fraud charges. In November 2025, Cardia was sent to trial for alleged fraud related to the statue.[29][40][33]Perpetrators of these hoaxes have been motivated by financial exploitation through pilgrim donations and offerings, personal aggrandizement via fame as visionaries, or in rare instances, efforts to discredit religious authorities. The Trevignano Romano case drew thousands of visitors annually, generating significant income from sales of religious items and contributions before its exposure.[29]Forensic detection methods have proven effective in unmasking such frauds, including chemical spectrometry to identify synthetic or animal-derived substances inconsistent with human tears, and DNA profiling to link fluids to specific individuals. In the 1950s cases, visual and chemical examinations exposed paint and water applications, while modern tools like those used in Trevignano Romano have provided irrefutable genetic matches.[29]
Related Phenomena
Weeping Paintings and Icons
Weeping paintings and icons refer to two-dimensional religious artworks, typically in the Byzantine and Eastern Orthodox traditions, where liquid—often resembling tears or myrrh—appears to emanate from the painted eyes or surfaces of depictions of the Virgin Mary (Theotokos), saints, or Christ. These phenomena are reported primarily in icons painted on wooden panels using egg tempera or oil, contrasting with the solid material seepage seen in three-dimensional statues. In Orthodox theology, such events are interpreted as manifestations of divine compassion or warnings, with the liquid sometimes collected for anointing the faithful.[41]Notable 20th- and 21st-century instances include the Iveron Icon of the Mother of God in Montreal, Canada, which began streaming myrrh in 1982 from a printed image on pine wood, recognized by the Russian Orthodox Church as a source of healing oil with a sweet fragrance. Another example is the Hawaiian Iveron Icon, a 20th-century copy that started exuding myrrh around 2007 and was officially venerated by the Russian Orthodox Church in 2008, drawing pilgrims for its perceived miraculous properties. In Greece, a 2015 case involved an icon of Archangel Michael painted on 200-year-old plane wood near Trikala, where fragrant oil emerged from the wood and painted areas; a chemist examined it but offered no definitive explanation, noting the dried wood could not naturally produce resin. A more recent case occurred in 2024 at the Sokolsky Monastery in Romania, where an icon of the Mother of God began weeping, reported by the Orthodox community as a sign of divine presence.[42][43][44][45]Material challenges in weeping paintings differ from statues due to the layered structure of icons: paint films can crack over time from age or environmental changes, allowing moisture or oils to seep along fissures and pool in the eye areas to mimic tears, while wooden supports may absorb humidity and release it slowly. In contrast to the porous stone or plaster of statues, canvas or panel icons can facilitate capillary action in pigments, where absorbed liquids like condensation or applied oils travel through cracks without deep penetration. Scientific scrutiny, such as wood analysis in the Montreal case revealing ordinary pine unable to account for the flow from the front while the back remained dry, suggests possible fraud or natural exudation in resinous woods, though Orthodox sources maintain the events as supernatural. Skeptical investigations highlight techniques like hidden reservoirs or environmental factors simulating the effect.[46][47]In Eastern Christian cultures, particularly Greek and Russian Orthodox communities, weeping icons hold a central role in veneration, often prompting processions, prayers, and the distribution of the myrrh for blessings, symbolizing the Theotokos's maternal sorrow or mercy. Unlike the sensationalized coverage of weeping statues in Western media, these phenomena receive more localized attention within Orthodox circles, emphasizing spiritual edification over spectacle and integrating into liturgical life without requiring ecclesiastical authentication for personal devotion.[41][44]
Bleeding Statues and Similar Events
Bleeding statues represent an extension of reported miraculous phenomena involving religious icons, where sculptures—often depicting the crucified Christ—exude a red liquid resembling blood from carved wounds, symbolizing divine sacrifice in contrast to the sorrow evoked by weeping tears.[48] These events have drawn particular attention in Latin America, where cultural devotion to Passion imagery amplifies interpretations of such occurrences as signs of Christ's ongoing suffering.[48] Unlike weeping cases, bleeding incidents typically face heightened scrutiny due to the graphic nature of the liquid, prompting immediate concerns over authenticity, potential health hazards, and forensic analysis.[48]A prominent example is the wooden statue of the crowned Christ in Cochabamba, Bolivia, which began shedding both tears and blood from its eyes and wounds starting in March 1995.[48] Local bishops commissioned scientific tests on the reddish liquid, which confirmed it as human blood of type AB, though full results, including DNA analysis, were not publicly disclosed.[48] The Catholic Church has maintained a cautious stance, neither endorsing nor rejecting the event as miraculous, while subsequent investigations by independent researchers raised questions about the methodology and impartiality of the blood testing.[48] In February 2025, a statue of the Virgin Mary in Trevignano Romano, Italy, reportedly wept blood, but DNA testing matched the substance to the custodian, a self-styled mystic, leading to potential fraud charges and Vatican rejection.[29]Related phenomena include reports of statues appearing to bow or nod, as seen in the 1985 Irish moving statues wave where roadside figures of the Virgin Mary were observed swaying or inclining during prayer vigils, often attributed to mass suggestion or subtle mechanical aids.[49] Similarly, color-changing events, such as the 1919 Limpias crucifix in Spain where the figure's face reportedly shifted from pale to bluish during observed agonies, have been interpreted as signs of lifelike torment but frequently explained as lighting effects or artistic weathering.[50] These occurrences, while inspiring devotion, underscore the challenges in verifying supernatural claims amid historical precedents of fraud involving hidden mechanisms.[49]