posted on Aug, 15 2010 @ 04:20 PM
All the information provided in this tread is from a book "Vampirite vo makedonskite veruvanja i predanija",in translation the vampires in the
Macedonian believes and legends.The book is ethnological study published in 1988,in only 1000 copies by the institute for folklore "Marko
Cepenkov",the authors are eminent ethnologists who collected the folk tales in villages mostly in south-western Macedonia(where i live).I can
provide a link to the book,it is free for download,but it is in Macedonian.
Contrary to the western portrayal of the vampire in the popular fiction,the original folk tales of the Balkans paint a different,darker picture of
what the vampire is.Another word that is used in Macedonia for vampire is grobnik,grob meaning grave,so the rough translation is man from the
grave.Believe in vampires in Macedonia and Serbia is recorded in texts as early as the eleventh century.According to the tales and legends anybody
can become a vampire,willingly or unwillingly.They can have physical body,and still be invisible.When one becomes vampire he/she is a blob,mass of
blood enveloped in skin.The most certain way to kill a vampire is to pierce it with a sharp object.If this is done right the vampire will simply spill
out.According to the stories what remains of the vampire is very little blood and some kind of tissue,and needs to be burned.Dogs and wolves often
kill and eat vampires according to the legends.When vampires live long enough they begin growing bones inside their body,and after sometime can return
to normal life in a place where nobody knows them.They do all the things that humans do,have a job,family.but they still feed on blood and only rare
trained persons can recognize them(later about that).They also drink blood of livestock,and often work as butchers,so they can feed undisturbed.Here
in my country,mostly in the rural regions it is a tradition when a person dies to be kept at his home one night and looked after by his family,so no
animal or object crosses above his body,if that happens the deceased will become a vampire.Although rarely anyone except the older people is aware of
the origin of that practice.One of the most interesting things in this book is that one old man when asked about what he knows said that he believes
that there are no more vampires because of vaccines,when his father was young there were vampires,but not now.The vampire killer or vampirdzija was
called when a village had vampire problem.He would put certain plant under his tong and could than see who the vampire was,the knowledge of this
plant was passed from generation to generation and it wasn't for the faint of heart,because unprepared person could die of fear or go mad at the
sight of the vampire.This folk tales are orally passed through the generations,and told from grandparents to grandchildren.My grandmother lived in a
rural village,with no phone or power till her thirties,she had told me similar stories.For people like her it is not some unreal fairytale but a part
of every day life people lived there,you would be surprised how many people here know about this things.
So that is in short about the characteristics of a vampire from the epicenter,from where the legend spread.There is lot more to be said i hope this
tread picks up,and sorry if it is little incoherent I rarely post and of course English is not my mother language.Personally i stand in the middle,i
don't really believe in the existence of vampires but I keep an open mind.