Siberian Zombies - Alternative View

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Siberian Zombies - Alternative View
Siberian Zombies - Alternative View

Video: Siberian Zombies - Alternative View

Video: Siberian Zombies - Alternative View
Video: Zombie fire in Yakutia 2024, May
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Today, in the scientific community, the fact of the existence of zombies is considered almost proven. Over the past several decades, information about this mysterious phenomenon, which is widespread in several regions of Africa and Latin America, has appeared in serious publications and the yellow press, on television over the past few decades. The rituals and methods of creating zombies are described in detail, as well as the horror that they bring to the local population.

Meeting the "unworthy"

Few people know that in the vast territory of the North, Central and East Asia, stretching from the Ural Mountains to the Pacific Ocean, the practice of zombifying living beings has been known to shamans since time immemorial. So, in the legends of the northern peoples - the Ugrians, Khanty, Nanais, Nenets - a certain terrible creature is mentioned, called the word "het". According to an ancient legend, this creature is a man who has risen from the grave, has no heart and is capable of performing the most terrible acts.

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The ancient Scythian tribes used certain censes as warriors - people who were terrible in their appearance, who did not know fear and pity. The censer raids are mentioned in the North Mongolian chronicles of the X-XII centuries, which characterize the censer as people without a soul, with whom the Scythians themselves treated very mercilessly.

In some tribes of southern Tuva, until the twenties of the last century, it was customary to remove the heart from the body of the deceased during burial. According to local beliefs, thus the deceased was protected from the terrible fate of becoming a "servant of the black shaman."

Tomsk ethnographer, Siberian explorer Mikhail Semenovich Nekrasov described in 1912 his meeting with a zombie man, which happened in 1905 during his expedition to the Kuragan-Tura region, located near the confluence of the Yenisei and Angara rivers. Then he visited a remote site where the shaman Sazyrgel, highly respected among the local Tungus, lived. The shaman kindly received the scientist, showed a number of shamanic rituals, treated him to beshurek - stuffed fish and fried ram intestines in badger fat - and presented him with several bone amulets, some of which were made of fossil mammoth bones. But the most curious thing about Nekrasov's description was that Sazyrgel was served by a very strange kind and behavior of a person. A man of indeterminate age, dressed in torn squirrel skins,meekly carried out all the commands of his master, given with just a glance. Nekrasov managed to notice that the servant's dry hands and his small wrinkled face had numerous injuries, similar to "as if the skin on old gloves and boots had cracked and burst." The wounds on this man's body did not bleed and, as could be assumed from his behavior, did not cause him pain. When Nekrasov asked what kind of person he was, the shaman replied with a very strange phrase, translated by the scientist as follows: "This is unworthy, given by the spirits to the great shaman."The wounds on this man's body did not bleed and, as could be assumed from his behavior, did not cause him pain. When Nekrasov asked what kind of person he was, the shaman replied with a very strange phrase, translated by the scientist as follows: "This is unworthy, given by the spirits to the great shaman."The wounds on this man's body did not bleed and, as could be assumed from his behavior, did not cause him pain. When Nekrasov asked what kind of person he was, the shaman replied with a very strange phrase, translated by the scientist as follows: "This is unworthy, given by the spirits to the great shaman."

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Resurrection from the dead

No less interesting can be considered the memoirs of the Irkutsk doctor Dmitry Karavaev, who worked from 1924 to 1929 as a doctor in the district hospital in the village of Palana, Kamchatka. According to Karavaev, the elder of one of the Kamchadal tribal clans, in gratitude for his cure, revealed to the doctor the secret of a potion capable of raising the dead. The composition of this potion in different proportions included: tincture of eleutherococcus, tentacles of a starfish, coral powder and tiger bile. The elder explained to Karavaev that a deceased person must be removed from the ground no later than three days after burial and this elixir must be poured into all the holes of his body through a reed tube. When the muscles on the body of the corpse begin to contract barely noticeably, the deceased must be thoroughly rubbed with the same potion, wrapped in a woven cloth and returned back to the ground. This procedure should be performed during "two moons". After that, a shamanic rite of "awakening" is performed over the corpse, during which the blows of a large tambourine are heard over the head of the deceased throughout the night. By dawn, the dead man is ready to serve his master.

Village of the mad

There are places in Siberia where there are cases of the so-called mass brainwashing. So, in the north of the Krasnoyarsk Territory, near the village of Verkhniye Tula, there is a small mountain plateau overlooking the high bank of the Tura River. This plateau is famous for its numerous hot springs. Until 1934, on the same plateau, there was a village in which the Evenks lived. According to the recollections of the old-timers of the village of Verkhniye Tula, neighboring the Evenk settlement, one summer evening the sky above the plateau suddenly lit up with an eerie red glow, the earth trembled finely. The residents of Verkhniye Tula, deciding that an earthquake had begun, left their houses and soon saw how the Evenks from a settlement located several tens of meters below their village suddenly moved towards Tura, carrying their children and elderly relatives in their arms. After a short time, almost a hundred inhabitants of the Evenk settlement rushed from a high cliff into the stormy waters of the Tura River.

When officers of the district NKVD arrived in the deserted village, they found still smoldering coals in the hearths of houses, linen drying in the wind, remnants of uneaten food in cups on the tables. All this indicated that some force suddenly forced the Evenks to abandon their daily affairs and, contrary to their common sense and a sense of self-preservation, take their own lives on a massive scale.

Hypnotist - nature

According to the Novosibirsk biologist and researcher of paranormal phenomena Dmitry Voronenko, in this case there was a fact of mass zombification of people of a natural, or otherwise - geomagnetic nature. According to the scientist, anomalies of this kind occur due to the fact that a certain frequency of infrasonic waves generated in the bowels of some parts of the planet, reaching the "biological layer" of the Earth, cause very unusual reactions in the brain of living beings. The human brain, caught in a stream of such waves, turns off, giving way to unconditioned reflexes and animal instincts that we inherited from our four-legged ancestors. In such states of altered consciousness, a person can unquestioningly execute commands that are completely absurd and dangerous for him. Often he shows unmotivated aggression or pronounced apathy. Exposure to these waves is extremely dangerous for the physical and mental health of a person and can cause irreversible consequences. Voronenko describes a similar case when a group of Irkutsk speleologists, consisting of three people, who returned after exploring the Kataman cave of the East Altai ridge, were urgently admitted to a hospital. All members of the group, who were completely healthy before, had pronounced symptoms of mental illness, consisting in an irresistible desire to commit suicide. Doctors stated that strange patients had inhibition of physical and mental activity, an abnormally low drop in blood pressure and a lack of body response to stimuli. Later, two members of the group developed malignant schizophrenia, and one of the expedition members died of brain cancer …and one of the expedition members died of brain cancer …

Unfortunately, nowadays, to the already known forms of people brainwashing - ritual, cult and geomagnetic, one more has been added - informational. This massive type of zombie, which today poses a great danger to millions of the world's inhabitants, is capable of causing irreversible catastrophic processes not only in the consciousness or physical health of an individual, but also at the level of entire social and religious groups and even individual states. According to some researchers, by the end of the 21st century, this phenomenon will pose a real threat to the existence of the entire human civilization.

From the book: “VAMPIRES AND ZOMBIES. ALL ABOUT THE LIVING DEAD"