To make a zombie, a voodoo practitioner makes a potion
that consists of mainly the poison of the pufferfish (one of the strongest nerve
poisons known to man, the clinical drug norcuron has similar effects and is used
during surgery) that is given to the intended victim. This causes severe
neurological damage, primarily effecting the left side of the brain (the left
side of the brain controls speech, memory and motor skills). The victim suddenly
becomes lethargic, then slowly seems to die. In reality, the victim?s
respiration and pulse becomes so slow that it is nearly impossible to detect.
The victim retains full awareness as he is taken to the hospital, then perhaps
to the morgue and finally as they are buried alive. Then, at the voodoo
practitioner?s leisure does he come to retrieve the victim, now become a slave,
as a commodity (at one time it was said that most of the slaves who worked in
the sugar cane plantations of Haiti were zombies. One case in 1918 had a voodoo
priest named Ti Joseph who ran a gang of laborers for the American Sugar
Corporation, who took the money they received and fed the workers only unsalted
porridge). A zombie will remain in a robot-like state indefinitely, until he
tastes either salt or meat(so much for ?The Night of the Living Dead?). Then the
zombie becomes aware of their state, immediately returning to the grave. The
reality behind the zombie has only been taken seriously by medical science
within the last ten years, since the use of CAT scans of the brain, along with
the confessions of voodoo priests, explaining their methods. Previous to that,
zombies were considered mental defective by science or explained as stunts to
try to confuse scientists.
There are many examples of zombies in modern day Haiti. Papa Doc Duvallier the
dictator of Haiti from 1957 to 1971 had a private army that was said to consist
of zombies, called tonton macoutes. These people were said to be in trances and
they followed every command that Duvallier gave them. Duvallier was also a
devout voodooist, as are many people in Haiti, who lead a voodoo church? with
many followers. He also claimed that he was immortal and he would rule Haiti
forever?, promising to return after his death to rule again. After his death (a
heart attack), he did not come back, although a guard was placed at his tomb, to
insure that he would not try to escape, or so someone wouldn?t try to steal the
body (this is a common practice in Haiti, along with the padlocking of tombs,
for the same reason). There are also many stories of people that die, then many
years later return to the shock and surprise of relatives. A man named Caesar
returned 18 years after he died to marry, have three children and die again, 30
years after he was originally buried. Another case involved a student from a
village Port-au-Prince who had been shot in a robbery attempt. Six months later,
the student returned to his parent?s house as a zombie. At first it was possible
to talk with the man, and he related the story of his murder, a voodoo witch
doctor stealing his body from the ambulance before he reached hospital and his
transformation into a zombie. As time went on, he became unable to communicate,
he grew more and more lethargic and died.
A case reported a writer named Stephen Bonsal described a zombie he witnessed in
1912 in this way:?A man had at intervals a high fever he had joined a foreign
mission church and the head of the mission saw the patient die. He assisted at
the funeral and saw the dead man buried. Some days later the supposedly dead man
was found dressed in grave clothes, tied to a tree, moaning. The poor wretch
soon recovered his voice but not his mind. He was indentifed by his wife, by the
psysicain who ahd prounced him dead, and by the clergyman. The victim recognized
no-one, and his days were spent moaning inarticulate words no-one could
understand?.
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Sources Quoted
Arthur C. Clarke?s Mysterious World: Zombies and Voodoo BBC and Discovery
Channel 1996
Cassiel The Encyclopedia of Black Magic 1989 New York Mallard Books
The Haitian Penal Code
Out of This World Volume 20 1975