... Latin American Myths and Legends: Arts and Culture Things You Should Know About..
... Latin American Myths and Legends: Arts and Culture Things You Should Know About..
... Latin American Myths and Legends: Arts and Culture Things You Should Know About..
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...Latin American Myths and Legends
Arts and Culture (/arts_and_culture)
Things You Should Know About... (/things%20you%20shoud%20%20know%20about)
"I'm learning about really scary myths and legends..." my son recently told me,
recounting all the famous Greek tales, Cyclops, The Trojan Horse etc etc. "Ha," I
replied. "Those are nothing compared to the myths and legends from Latin
America." His eyes widened as I began to tell him the characters I grew up
fearing and revering. All Latinos grew up with these tales, from around the
continent, passed down through the generations. Here are my Top Ten...
El Silbón - Venezuela
“The Whistler” is a terrifying man that haunts the Venezuelan and Colombian Llanos
region. According to the legend, the ghost is a black-hearted young man who killed his
father in to eat his organs. Tis apparently rather tall character is forever doomed to
walk the region as a lost soul, carrying a bag filled with his father's bones. The Whistler
gets his name from the harmonic bone-chilling whistling sound he emits: When the
whistling sounds far away, El Silbón is actually near by and vice versa. Some people
barely notice the seemingly long-distant music...and when they do, it’s usually too late.
El Duende - Guatemala
This Guatemalan folktale tells the story of spooky hobbit-like who goes out walking
after dusk. No one is quite sure if it’s a ghost, a demon, a man, or a goblin. All agree
that he’s very small, dressed in all-black, and dons a big shiny belt, a pair of heavy
boots and a large hat that hides his face. El Sombrerón seduces young women,
wooing them with his sweet voice and beautiful melodies. Once they become
bewitched, he stalks them and braids their hair. Under his spell, they become unable to
eat or sleep...until, eventually, they die.
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La Patasola - Colombia
This one legged creature is one of Colombia's scariest tales. It first appears as a
beautiful and seductive women, often looking like someone loved by the unfortunate
soul that happens to see her, that would ultimately lure them away from their
companions deep into the jungles to reveal their true appearance as one-legged freaks
with ferocious vampire-like lust for human flesh and blood, attacking and eating the
flesh or sucking the blood of their victims. They protect nature and wild animals and
attack humans who seem to be harming the wild.
La Planchada - Mexico
The ironed lady , got her name from being dressed in a very pristine and well ironed
nurse uniform. Legend says she was a nurse who was rejected by a doctor and in
revenge she killed one of the doctor's patients. After that she has been regretting in so
she cures people in Mexico DF hospitals, appearing at night healing badly injured
people who then claim to have been visited by the nurse who just came and cured
them!
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