Some objects carry more than just history—they carry something else.
In 2001, an antique wine cabinet surfaced at an estate sale in Portland, Oregon. The seller, a woman in her late 90s, warned that the box had been in her family for generations—passed down after surviving the horrors of the Holocaust. She called it a dybbuk box, a vessel for a restless, malevolent spirit.
The man who bought it, Kevin Mannis, soon regretted his purchase. Strange things began happening:
🔹 Unexplainable nightmares of an old, demonic woman
🔹 The overpowering scent of jasmine and ammonia from the closed box🔹 Lights flickering, objects moving on their own
🔹 His mother suffered a sudden stroke right after touching it
Terrified, Mannis sold the box on eBay—where it changed hands multiple times, leaving a trail of misfortune. Owners reported terrifying visions, illnesses, and even shadowy figures lurking in their homes. The last known owner, Jason Haxton, eventually sealed it away in a secret location.
Is the Dybbuk Box truly cursed, or is it just a psychological trick? Whatever the case, those who’ve owned it refuse to open it again.
Would you dare?