Friday, February 20, 2026

Budu the Duppy Catcher: African Guardian Angels & The Jamaican Story of the Indian Duppy!

 A chilling true Jamaican duppy story featuring Budu the duppy catcher, African guardian angels, ancestral spirits, and the haunted legend of the Indian Duppy Man!

When the Scales Rattled in the Dead of Night

By Brother Cabral

Category: African, Caribbean Duppy Stories & Alien Encounters

There are stories people grow tired of hearing. Duppy stories. Ghost stories. Old Caribbean tales whispered in moonlight and dismissed in daylight. But this one is different.

This one happened to me.

The genesis of this experience began when my family moved from St. James to Trelawny. I was fourteen years old. We took over a small shop in Wakefield that had once been operated by an Indian man, Mr. Chatoo, married to a Black woman. He had died before we moved in.

At first, the shop felt ordinary. Wooden counters. Hanging scales. Troughs for dry goods. But one night, while everyone slept, I heard something.

The scales rattled.

The troughs opened.

No footsteps. No voices. Just the metallic shiver of objects disturbed in darkness.

I told myself it was imagination. Old wood expanding. Wind slipping through cracks. But deep down, something felt deliberate.

The Duppy Catcher Named Budu

Not long after, a hard-of-hearing man named Budu began doing odd jobs around the property. Without prompting, he told me something unsettling.

“The former owners still around. Mi haffi trap dem spirit.”

I laughed. Budu was nearly deaf. I assumed his heightened senses filled the silence of his world.

But the community whispered about him. They said he was a duppy catcher.

He told me plainly: “Mr. Chatoo ghost deh yah.”

One evening he prepared a bottle with a strange liquid. He waited. Then calmly declared he had caught the spirit inside — trapped with two flies. He corked the bottle and buried it.

He looked satisfied. Mission accomplished.

The Bullfrog at the Door


Years passed. I left for Kingston after high school. By 1972 I returned. The shop had passed through hands again and was eventually turned over to me. It needed repairs.

One night, while the place was under renovation, I invited an old friend for a drink. When we opened the door, a large bullfrog sat squarely in the entrance, staring at us.

Its eyes glistened in the lamplight.

I shooed it away. My friend bolted. He ran so fast I checked the gate afterward to ensure he hadn’t broken it in panic.

"A Pure Duppy Inna Di Shop"

The carpenter I hired from Glendevon stayed overnight to save transportation costs.

The next morning he approached me with pale eyes.

“Mr. Johnson… a pure duppy inna di shop an mi caan stay yah.”

He left. Never returned.

The Coin From Nowhere

One night, after returning late from drinking, I forgot to close the window above the bed.

In the deep hours before dawn, something struck me hard enough to wake me instantly.

It was a ten-cent coin.

The window above my bed was open.

There was no opening from the adjoining bar. Only solid wall. My compound was enclosed.

The coin could not have come from outside.

Guardian Angel… or Mr. Chatoo?


In African and Caribbean spiritual traditions, the line between the living and the dead is thin. The ancestors are not gone — they linger, protect, warn, and sometimes disturb.

Some call it superstition.

Others call it memory.

I call it experience.

There are things between earth and sky that reason alone cannot contain.


BOOKS:



The Jamaican African Coromantee Maroon spiritual ancestors still continues to shine a bright light forward like "Peenie Wallie's" fireflies! "Peenie Wallie" setting is in the rural, St. Mary, Jamaica community where the land tells stories of hope, that emerges from the souls of Black Jamaican people. "Peenie Wallie" explores themes such as: rural poverty, internal migration, hardships, sacrifice, self-motivation, self-development, education, love, kindness, hope, traditions and community spirit versus selfishness.





Sunday, February 15, 2026

One More Chance: A Jamaican Duppy Story for the Skeptical Mind!


 
... A Warning to the Faithless!

....The Setting: Bounty Hall, Trelawny

By Brother Cabral, St. James, Jamaica




Some years ago, I was staying at my aunt’s home in Bounty Hall, Trelawny, not far from the parish capital of Falmouth.


My aunt was no ordinary church sister. She had donated half an acre of her land for the building of her denomination’s church in the district. The headquarters of that church stood in Mandeville, and visiting clergy often traveled between parishes.


In gratitude for her sacrifice, she was given the honored title of “Mother” — a position of reverence in that religious body.

The guest room where I slept was not merely a spare room. It was reserved for members of the church hierarchy — pastors, missionaries, and officials traveling from places like Mandeville and neighboring Montego Bay in the parish of St. James Parish.


I did not know then what I know now.


The Death No One Mentioned

Unbeknownst to me, a woman — a missionary from another branch of the church in St. James — had died in that very guest room.

A heart attack. Sudden. Unexpected.

She had been staying there, resting between church duties, when death claimed her quietly in the night.



No one thought it necessary to tell me.


The Night the Door Opened

Another relative was in the house that evening — a male cousin sleeping in a different room.

Sometime in the dead of night, I heard it.

The unmistakable sound of my bedroom door opening.

Not wind.
Not wood settling.

The handle turned. The hinges moved.

Someone entered.

I lay still but alert. I assumed it must be my cousin. Perhaps he intended to raid my pockets — country mischief, nothing more.

The figure did not hesitate. It hurried past my bed with purpose and slipped into the adjoining room.


Then something happened that no rational mind welcomes.

I tried to speak.

I could not.



My voice was trapped inside my chest as if held down by unseen hands. My body refused obedience.


No sooner had the figure vanished into the empty adjoining room than the paralysis lifted.


I rose immediately.

No hesitation. No confusion.

I went straight to my cousin’s room.

He was fast asleep.

Deep. Undisturbed.

Breathing evenly.

He had not left his bed.



Duppy or Doubt?

In Jamaican folklore, we call such spirits duppies — restless presences that linger between worlds. Our ancestors did not invent these stories lightly. Rural Jamaica has always respected what cannot be fully explained.

You may call it sleep paralysis.
You may call it dream residue.
You may call it suggestion.

But I tell you this:

The door opened.
Someone entered.
And no living soul in that house moved.

A Final Word to the Skeptic

I am not asking you to surrender your logic. I am not insisting you accept the supernatural as fact.


But understand this — heritage is not superstition simply because it predates modern explanation.


In the hills of Trelawny, where night falls thick and the breeze carries more than just the scent of pimento trees, some things move quietly through memory and space.

Whether you call it a duppy or dismiss it entirely, that night in Bounty Hall remains vivid, undimmed by time.


And if ever you sleep in a guest room with a history you do not know…

Listen carefully when the door opens!




Key Features:

  • Explore Jamaican Folklore: Understand the role of duppies in Caribbean culture and the spiritual beliefs that shape life in Jamaica.
  • Griot’s Tales: Authentic storytelling woven with generations of wisdom and spiritual lore.
  • Survival Secrets: Learn how salt, protection rituals, and knowledge of the spirit world can safeguard your life.
  • Cultural Insights: Dive into the heart of Jamaica’s rich traditions, with ancient practices and modern interpretations of the supernatural.
  • Captivating Stories: Real-life encounters, folklore, and mysteries that keep readers on the edge of their seats.
  • Perfect for Fans of: Caribbean folklore, ghost stories, cultural memoirs, and survival guides.

Perfect for fans of horror, mythology, Caribbean culture, and graphic storytelling, this collection brings to life the untold stories of the Jamaican night. Whether you're brave enough to face the duppy or just want to admire from a safe distance, this book will capture your imagination and never let go.



Disclaimer

The content published on this website is intended for educational, cultural, and informational purposes only.


This blog documents African and Caribbean folklore, spiritual traditions, oral history, and ancestral belief systems as they have been shared through generations. Stories, interpretations, and references to spirits, duppies, rituals, or supernatural encounters are presented within their cultural and historical context, not as scientific, medical, legal, or psychological claims.


This website does not provide medical, legal, mental health, religious, or professional advice. Readers should not substitute any information found here for guidance from qualified professionals.

Folklore and spiritual traditions vary by region, family, and community. The beliefs discussed on this site reflect traditional perspectives, elder teachings, and cultural narratives, and are not presented as literal or universally accepted facts.


By using this website, you acknowledge that you are engaging with cultural storytelling and educational material rooted in heritage and oral tradition.





Thursday, February 12, 2026

SPACE ALIENS LANDED IN MALI, NOMMO DOGON MYSTERY CLAIMS! FACT OR FICTION?


The Dogan Recieve Star Knowledge From the NOMMO?
By Norris R McDonald

The Dogon of Mali have long told stories of the Nommo—visitors said to arrive in thunder, tied to water, and linked to the Sirius star system. Some say this tradition explains the Dogon’s unusual astronomical claims. Others say the real story is about how myths travel, evolve, and get retold. Either way—this is one of Africa’s most debated mysteries.

Who (or What) Are the Nommo?

In Dogon tradition, the Nommo are often described as powerful beings associated with water, order, and instruction. In some modern retellings, the Nommo become “space visitors”—teachers arriving in a storm, bringing advanced knowledge of the heavens.

@afrocaribvybz #universe #africa #mali #dogan #nasa ♬ original sound - Afrocaribvybz
A depiction of the Nommo Space Teachers from Mali's Dogan Tribe Ancient Wisdom. 
The Dogon, Mali, and the “Sky Knowledge” Question


The deeper question isn’t just “aliens or not?” It’s: how do people preserve cosmic ideas across generations—through story, symbol, dance, and ritual?

The Dogon people of Mali are often described in popular culture as holding “impossible” knowledge about stars and planets—knowledge said to exist long before modern telescopes. The most famous part of this story centers on Sirius, the bright star that rises in many ancient calendars and traditions.

Mask, rhythm, ritual: many Dogon traditions encode knowledge through symbol and ceremony.

Sirius, Orion’s Belt, and What We Can Verify

Here’s the grounded astronomy: Sirius A is the bright star you can see with the naked eye. Sirius also has a companion, Sirius B, a dense white dwarf discovered through modern astronomy. That part is real—and fascinating.


But here’s the key: Many viral posts jump from “Sirius B exists” to “therefore, ancient people must have had alien tutors.” That leap is not proven by astronomy alone.

What’s still debated is how specific Dogon claims became recorded, when, and whether later contact with outsiders influenced what was documented.

So Where Did the Story Come From?

There are multiple ways people interpret this:

  • Spiritual interpretation: the Nommo are sacred teachers—cosmic beings—communicating truth through myth and vision.
  • Cultural interpretation: astronomical ideas can travel via trade routes, Islamic scholarship, regional exchange, and storytelling over time.
  • Documentation interpretation: what the modern world “knows” about Dogon astronomy depends heavily on how outsiders recorded it—and when.
  • Speculative interpretation: “space visitors” literally arrived and taught advanced astronomy.

The point isn’t to mock anyone’s belief. The point is to keep our eyes open: respect tradition, honor Africa’s intellectual legacy, and still ask careful questions about evidence, timelines, and sources.

What Do You Think?

Drop your reasoning in the comments:

  1. Do you see the Nommo as literal visitors—or spiritual metaphors?
  2. Can myths preserve scientific ideas in coded form?
  3. How should we separate verified astronomy from viral exaggeration?

Support + Share

If this post made you think, share it to your circles and tag the blog. More posts coming on African cosmology, spiritual memory, and the battle over who gets to be seen as “scientific.”


By Norris R. McDonald
 • Black Spiritualism / Afro-Caribbean Vybz
Note: This post explores spiritual tradition + popular claims around Dogon astronomy. Where claims go beyond verified astronomy/history, they are presented as questions and interpretations, not settled fact.

***********************************************

How To Catch A Jamaican Duppy: Griot's Tales of Spirits, Salt and Survival! 



Disclaimer

The content published on this website is intended for educational, cultural, and informational purposes only.


This blog documents African and Caribbean folklore, spiritual traditions, oral history, and ancestral belief systems as they have been shared through generations. Stories, interpretations, and references to spirits, duppies, rituals, or supernatural encounters are presented within their cultural and historical context, not as scientific, medical, legal, or psychological claims.


This website does not provide medical, legal, mental health, religious, or professional advice. Readers should not substitute any information found here for guidance from qualified professionals.

Folklore and spiritual traditions vary by region, family, and community. The beliefs discussed on this site reflect traditional perspectives, elder teachings, and cultural narratives, and are not presented as literal or universally accepted facts.


By using this website, you acknowledge that you are engaging with cultural storytelling and educational material rooted in heritage and oral tradition.

© Black-Spiritualism Blog • If you reuse, please credit the author and link back to the original post.


Saturday, February 7, 2026

The Deadly Vampire Jamaican Old Hige Bites Babies In The Night--- Old Folks say!

Jamaican Duppies, and African-Caribbean Ghost Stories!

By Norris R. McDonald

















In the quiet hours of the night, when dogs grow restless and the air feels heavy, Jamaican elders say the spirit world draws near. Long before social media, horror movies, or viral urban legends, Caribbean communities relied on oral tradition to explain the unseen forces around them.

Among the most feared of these beings is the Old Hige, a vampire-like spirit said to slip through the darkness, targeting babies and the vulnerable while families sleep.


These stories are not simply meant to frighten. They are warnings, cultural memory, and spiritual survival knowledge passed down through African-Caribbean ancestry. That world of belief, protection, and ancestral wisdom comes alive in How To Catch a Jamaican Duppy: Griot’s Tales of Spirits, Salt and Survival! by Norris R. McDonald.


More than a ghost story collection, this Kindle Edition serves as a cultural archive documenting how African spiritual systems survived enslavement, colonialism, and modernization in the Caribbean. It preserves the voices of elders who understood that survival meant knowing how to navigate both the physical and spiritual worlds.


The Old Hige and the Fear of the Night

According to Jamaican folklore, the Old Hige is a shape-shifting entity, often described as an elderly woman by day who sheds her skin at night to fly in search of victims. Elders say she slips through keyholes or cracks in walls, leaving bite marks on sleeping babies or draining their life force. These stories echo African vampire myths and reflect deeper fears surrounding vulnerability, protection, and community responsibility.



In traditional Jamaican households, these beliefs encouraged vigilance. Windows were sealed, prayers were spoken, and salt was kept close. Folklore became a system of safety, especially in rural communities where colonial medicine and protection were unavailable.


What Is a Jamaican Duppy?

A duppy is a restless spirit, neither fully gone nor fully present, believed to roam at night, linger at crossroads, and interfere with the living. Rooted in West and Central African spiritual traditions, duppy lore was shaped by the brutal realities of slavery and displacement. Spirits were not abstract ideas but active forces requiring respect, awareness, and boundaries.




In How To Catch a Jamaican Duppy, Norris R. McDonald explains how duppies are identified, avoided, confronted, and sometimes outwitted using ancestral knowledge. These stories reflect a worldview where the dead are remembered, the unseen is acknowledged, and survival depends on spiritual literacy.


Griot Storytelling and Oral History

McDonald writes in the tradition of the griot, the African storyteller entrusted with preserving history, culture, and wisdom through narrative. His stories combine lived experience, folklore passed down by elders, humor, fear, and spiritual instruction. This style transforms folklore into living history rather than superstition.


Each tale carries lessons about awareness, respect, and resilience. In this way, Afro-Caribbean storytelling becomes a form of resistance, ensuring that ancestral knowledge is not erased or dismissed.


Salt, Rituals, and Spiritual Protection

One of the book’s most compelling themes is the use of salt as spiritual protection. In Jamaican tradition, salt is not symbolic alone; it is practical. Elders used it to mark boundaries, repel spirits, and protect homes. Alongside prayer and ritual, salt represented control in a world where unseen forces were taken seriously.




These practices reflect a broader African cosmology in which spiritual balance is maintained through everyday actions. Knowledge, not fear, is what ensured survival.


Culture, Memory, and the Supernatural

The stories in this book explore Jamaican culture through encounters with runaway coffins, crossroads spirits, Dead Dread, and clever duppies baited with food. Wise elders, armed with prayer and tradition, stand at the center of these narratives. Their knowledge shaped communities and reinforced collective memory. 




Rather than treating folklore as fantasy, How To Catch a Jamaican Duppy presents it as cultural reality, revealing how myth, history, and belief intertwine in African-Caribbean life.


Why This Book Still Matters

Readers drawn to Jamaican folklore, Caribbean spirituality, African ancestral wisdom, and supernatural history will find this book both entertaining and educational. It balances fear with humor, spirituality with practicality, and tradition with storytelling. In an era where African and Caribbean spiritual systems are often misunderstood or misrepresented, this work restores context and dignity.


About the Author


Norris R. McDonald

Norris R McDonald is a cultural researcher and storyteller focusing on African and Caribbean spiritual traditions, oral history, folklore, and ancestral survival knowledge. His work preserves elder knowledge while making it accessible to modern audiences.Through humor history, and lived experiences, he ensures these stories are not lost over time. The intention, therefore, is to explores how African cosmology, Caribbean folklore, and spiritual practice have shaped community identity across generations.


Final Reflection

How To Catch a Jamaican Duppy: Griot’s Tales of Spirits, Salt and Survival! is more than folklore. It is a reminder that African-descended communities survived by understanding both visible and invisible threats. Whether read for cultural insight, spiritual curiosity, or chilling stories of the night, this book offers a deeper respect for the wisdom that kept generations safe after dark.




Disclaimer

The content published on this website is intended for educational, cultural, and informational purposes only.


This blog documents African and Caribbean folklore, spiritual traditions, oral history, and ancestral belief systems as they have been shared through generations. Stories, interpretations, and references to spirits, duppies, rituals, or supernatural encounters are presented within their cultural and historical context, not as scientific, medical, legal, or psychological claims.


This website does not provide medical, legal, mental health, religious, or professional advice. Readers should not substitute any information found here for guidance from qualified professionals.

Folklore and spiritual traditions vary by region, family, and community. The beliefs discussed on this site reflect traditional perspectives, elder teachings, and cultural narratives, and are not presented as literal or universally accepted facts.


By using this website, you acknowledge that you are engaging with cultural storytelling and educational material rooted in heritage and oral tradition.

Budu the Duppy Catcher: African Guardian Angels & The Jamaican Story of the Indian Duppy!

  A chilling true Jamaican duppy story featuring Budu the duppy catcher, African guardian angels, ancestral spirits, and the haunted legend ...