Alho village, Kurkijoki, Northern Karelia, Finland, between January and Easter 1917 — Anni Lattu was taken by force aboard a large washbasin-shaped silent craft by many small men. She spent several days traveling over the world and between the stars, was asked to stay, and was returned to the road outside her house. She told the story until her death in 1930. Source: Heikki Virtanen; Kurki Jokelainen No. 23, 1978; UFO Research Finland / Mauritz Hietamäki. Case status: Insufficient Data.
THINK ABOUTIT ABDUCTION REPORT
1917: First Known Abduction Case in Finland?
Between January and Easter of 1917, in a small house on the eastern shore of Kankaanlampi Lake in the village of Alho, six kilometres west of Kurkijoki in Northern Karelia, a woman named Anni Lattu disappeared for several days. Her neighbours assumed she had gone to visit her daughter. When she came back she had a different account entirely. A large machine shaped like a washbasin had landed beside her house. Small men came down a ladder. She could understand a little of their language. She did not want to go. They took her anyway. Inside the craft it was warm and the seats were comfortable and there was a leader she communicated with — possibly without words — and they flew her over the world and between the stars and asked her to stay. She said no. They brought her back to the road outside her house, the same spot they had taken her from. Anni Lattu told this story many times for the rest of her life, to anyone who would listen, and was not believed by a single person. She died in 1930. In 1978 someone who remembered her wrote it down in a Finnish newspaper. A researcher followed the trail. The archive holds what he found.
Date: Between January and Easter 1917 — exact date unknown
Sighting Time: Daytime — Anni was doing her everyday work when the machine landed; duration was several days
Day/Night: Day — initial encounter during daily activities; duration of abduction spanned several days
Location: Jyrinvaara / Alho village, eastern shore of Kankaanlampi Lake — approximately 6 km west of Kurkijoki church, Northern Karelia, Finland (now Russian territory, formerly Finnish Karelia)
Urban or Rural: Rural — isolated lakeside village in Northern Karelia winter
No. of Entity(‘s): Many — described as a lot of small men inside the craft; one identified as a leader
Entity Type: Small humanoid — described by Anni as small men; called devils by the religiously-minded villagers, a designation Anni adopted for lack of better terminology; their actual nature was not understood by the witness or community
Entity Description: Small in stature. Moving quickly inside the craft. A lot of them — many occupants. No description of clothing recorded across multiple retellings — Anni appears to have had no framework for describing what they wore. One among them functioned as a leader with whom Anni communicated — possibly by telepathy per the secondary witness’s comprehension of Anni’s account. They could be partially understood by Anni — she comprehended a little of their language. They asked her to stay with them. They were not violent beyond the initial forcible boarding.
Hynek Classification: CE-IV (Close Encounter IV) — forcible abduction of the witness; transport aboard the craft over several days; world and interstellar travel described; invitation to remain extended; return to exact point of departure
Duration: Several days — the villagers noted her absence for several days before her return
No. of Object(s): 1
Description of the Object(s): Large machine described by Anni as shaped like a washbasin — the washbasin of 1917 rural Finland being a large flat soup-plate shaped vessel, suggesting a wide disc or saucer-like profile with low sides; equipped with a ladder by which the entities descended to the ground and by which Anni was taken aboard; interior described as shining — self-luminous; made no noise like a train — silent operation; interior was conveniently warm; seating inside described as comfortable
Shape of Object(s): Washbasin-shaped — wide, flat, disc-like with raised rim; consistent with disc or saucer profile
Size of Object(s): Large — sufficient to contain many small occupants with comfortable seating and room to move quickly; large enough to be described as a machine and to land beside a house
Color of Object(s): Insufficient Data — not recorded in available source
Distance to Object(s): Landed beside Anni’s house — immediate proximity; entities descended by ladder directly to her location
Height & Speed: Landed on the ground at time of encounter; traveled very fast during the abduction — everything in the world was shown to her; traveled between the stars; returned Anni to the exact road outside her house
Number of Witnesses: Primary — Anni Lattu (1873–1930), named and confirmed by vital records; Secondary — Mrs. NN. (born 1910), neighbour who as a child heard Anni recount the experience multiple times; interviewed formally by researcher Mauritz Hietamäki of UFO Research Finland
Special Features/Characteristics: Forcible boarding — Anni was not willing to go but was taken aboard against her will; partial language comprehension — Anni could understand a little of the entities’ language, suggesting either a partially shared linguistic root or a telepathic bridging effect; multiple retellings — Anni told her story many times over the years to various neighbours, establishing a broad secondary witness network in the Kurkijoki community; invitation to remain — the entities asked Anni to stay, which she declined; exact return to departure point — Anni was brought back to the road outside her house, the precise location of the initial encounter; universal dismissal — every person Anni told attributed the experience to fever or hallucination caused by a cold house in winter; Anni consistently and firmly rejected this explanation; the case was first published in the community newspaper Kurki Jokelainen in 1978 — 48 years after Anni’s death — by someone writing under the signature Latomäen Aino who had heard the story; researcher Mauritz Hietamäki subsequently traced and interviewed a surviving childhood neighbour who independently confirmed the account details
Case Status: Insufficient Data — named witness with confirmed vital records; corroborated by formal researcher interview of secondary witness; no physical evidence; no contemporaneous written account; community dismissal documented; internally consistent across multiple retellings over 13 years
Source: Heikki Virtanen; Kurki Jokelainen newspaper No. 23, June 9, 1978; UFO Research Finland / Mauritz Hietamäki
Summary/Description: Between January and Easter 1917, Anni Lattu — a woman living alone on the shores of Kankaanlampi Lake near Kurkijoki, Northern Karelia, Finland — was taken aboard a large washbasin-shaped silent craft by many small men who descended by ladder. Taken against her will, she spent several days aboard while the craft traveled over the world and between the stars. The interior was warm, lit, and comfortable. She communicated with a leader, possibly by telepathy, and was asked to stay. She declined and was returned to the road outside her house. She retold the account many times until her death in 1930. It was first written down in a community newspaper in 1978. A formal researcher interview of a surviving childhood neighbour corroborated the account’s consistent details across multiple retellings.
Related Cases: 1914: Alien Abduction in Cochabamba, Bolivia | 1912: Contact Near Vancouver, British Columbia | 1957: Antonio Villas Boas, Brazil | European Abduction Cases Archive | Finland Sightings Archive
Detailed Report
Anni Lattu’s Machine — Alho Village, Northern Karelia, Finland, 1917 By Heikki Virtanen Sources: Kurki Jokelainen No. 23, June 9, 1978; UFO Research Finland / Mauritz Hietamäki
The case first surfaced in the community newspaper Kurki Jokelainen — a publication primarily read by those who had formerly lived in the small community of Kurkijoki in Northern Karelia, territory that was Finnish before the war and Soviet thereafter. In issue No. 23, dated June 9th, 1978, a contributor writing under the signature Latomäen Aino published a short article recounting a memory from 1917. The article prompted a formal investigation.
Anni Lattu — whose full name, birth year of 1873, and death year of 1930 were subsequently confirmed — lived alone in a small house on the eastern shore of Kankaanlampi Lake in the village of Alho, approximately six kilometres west of the Kurkijoki church. She was doing her everyday work when a large machine, shaped like a washbasin, landed beside her house. Small creatures descended by ladder. Anni later called them devils — not as a literal theological designation but as the only available vocabulary in a religious rural Finnish community for something entirely outside normal experience.
She was not willing to go with them. She was taken aboard by force.
Inside the craft it was conveniently warm. The seats were comfortable. There were a lot of small men moving quickly. The machine was shining inside and made no noise like a train — it was silent. They traveled very fast. Everything in the world was shown to her. There was a great deal of wonder. They flew between the stars.
There was a leader. Mrs. NN., a childhood neighbour interviewed by researcher Mauritz Hietamäki of UFO Research Finland, comprehended from Anni’s repeated retellings that Anni had communicated with this leader — perhaps by telepathy. Anni had been able to understand a little of the entities’ language.
She was asked to stay. She did not want to stay.
She was brought back to the same place she had been taken from — the road outside her house.
She told her story many times, in many houses, in the years that followed. Every person who heard it said she had a fever, that her house was cold in winter, that she had hallucinated or dreamed. Anni never accepted this. She could not understand who the small men were, and she could not stop telling people about them. She died in 1930, still telling the story.
Forty-eight years later, Latomäen Aino published the account in Kurki Jokelainen. Mauritz Hietamäki traced Mrs. NN. and conducted a formal interview. The details Anni had told as a child — the washbasin shape, the ladder, the many small men, the warmth, the silence, the stars, the leader, the invitation to stay, the return to the road — all of them were there, preserved in a neighbour’s memory across sixty years.
RESEARCHER’S NOTES
Anni Lattu’s Machine — Kurkijoki 1917 and the Pre-Modern Nordic Abduction Case as Archive Evidence
- Named Witness With Confirmed Vital Records — Unusual Evidentiary Strength: Anni Lattu is not an anonymous witness. Her full name, birth year of 1873, and death year of 1930 were confirmed by the formal investigation. In the context of a 1917 rural Finnish account reaching the research record through a 1978 community newspaper, confirmed vital records are an exceptional evidentiary anchor. They establish that a real person with a documented life existed, lived in the documented location, and died in the documented year — thirteen years after the encounter. The account is not attributed to a nameless figure or a composite village memory. It is attributed to a specific woman whose existence is on record.
- The Secondary Witness Interview as Corroboration Mechanism: Mauritz Hietamäki’s formal interview of Mrs. NN. — a woman born in 1910 who as a child had heard Anni recount the experience multiple times in her home — is the structural corroboration that elevates this case above single-witness testimony. Mrs. NN. was not reporting what she herself had seen. She was reporting what she had heard, repeatedly, from a named adult witness during her childhood — with enough detail retained across sixty years to confirm the washbasin shape, the ladder, the many small men, the leader, the silence, the warmth, the travel between stars, and the invitation to stay. That level of detail retention across six decades of oral memory argues for an account that Anni told consistently, emphatically, and with the kind of specificity that a child’s memory latches onto and keeps.
- The Invitation to Stay — A Recurring Abduction Signature: The entities’ request that Anni remain with them is a detail that appears across multiple abduction cases in the archive — the 1914 Cochabamba Bolivia case, several post-WWII Nordic contact cases, and multiple North American cases from the 1950s onward. In each instance the witness declines and is returned. The archive notes this pattern without asserting its meaning. What it does assert is that the detail of an invitation to remain is not the kind of embellishment a rural Finnish woman of 1917 would invent — it runs counter to the expected narrative of a frightening abduction and adds a complexity to the encounter that fabricated accounts rarely include.
- Community Dismissal as Preservation Paradox: Every person Anni told attributed her account to fever. Her house was cold. The winter was severe. The fever explanation was socially convenient and medically plausible enough to be universally accepted in the Kurkijoki community. Yet Anni told the story anyway — repeatedly, consistently, for thirteen years until her death — and never accepted the fever explanation. The community’s dismissal did not silence her. It preserved her. Because she kept telling it, because she could not let it go, the account survived her death by forty-eight years before it reached print. If she had been believed, the account might have been filed, forgotten, or absorbed into local legend. Because she was not believed, she kept insisting. The insistence is what preserved it.
Anni Lattu was taken from the road outside her house in the winter of 1917 and spent several days between the stars in a warm silent machine with many small men and a leader she could almost understand. She came back and told everyone and no one believed her and she kept telling them anyway until she died. In 1978 someone remembered. In the years that followed a researcher confirmed what there was to confirm. The archive holds the rest — not as proof of where she went, but as the record of a woman who went somewhere and could not pretend she hadn’t.







