মেছো ভূত

Mechho Bhoot

Minor Spiritfolk-consensusBengali folkHinduWest BengalBangladesh

The fish-eating ghost of Bengal — the spirit of a fisherman or a person obsessively fond of fish in life, condemned to haunt river banks and fishing boats, stealing the catch and causing boats to capsize. Distinctly Bengali: a ghost shaped by the culture of a river civilization.

Origin

The Mechho Bhoot is a ghost whose defining characteristic is appetite rather than grievance — unusual in a supernatural taxonomy mostly populated by spirits with specific injustices to resolve. It is the spirit of someone for whom fish was the central pleasure and sustenance of life: a fisherman, a fish-seller, or simply someone for whom the smell of fish frying was the most vivid sensory memory.

In Bengali folk belief, strong attachments to specific foods or activities can anchor a spirit to the living world just as grievances can. The Mechho Bhoot demonstrates that the afterlife in this tradition is not only about unresolved justice but about unresolved longing — the simplest kind.

Appearance

The Mechho Bhoot smells of fish before it is seen — an overwhelming scent of river catch and cooking oil that precedes its presence by several minutes. When visible, it appears as a gaunt man near the waterline, usually crouching, sometimes elbow-deep in the water feeling for fish.

It is rarely frightening in appearance. Fishermen who have encountered it describe it as looking almost exactly like a fellow fisherman who died — recognisable, familiar, and unsettling only because of when and where it appears.

Abilities

The Mechho Bhoot steals catch: fishing boats returning home find their nets empty despite having been full. It can also cause boats to capsize in otherwise calm water — not from malice but from the same clumsy desperation that drives its fish-stealing.

Its effects on humans are minor but persistent: fishermen who work in its territory develop chronic bad luck with their catch over a season.

Weaknesses & Wards

Weaknesses

  • substance
    Offering of cooked fish left at the river bank at dawn

Wards

  • ritual
    Shraddha for the dead fisherman, including an offering of his favourite fish variety
Sources
  1. [1]
    Supernatural Beliefs of Bengali Fisherfolk. Bhattacharyya, B. (1965). Supernatural beliefs of Bengal fishermen. Man in India, 45(4), 311–322.academic
  2. [2]
    Mechho Bhoot — Wikipedia. Wikipedia contributors. Mechho bhoot. Wikipedia, 2024.wiki
folk-consensus