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Supernatural Fans In Indonesia THE REAL GHOST HUNTER: Demology
The ascription of malevolence to the world of spirits is by no means 
universal. In West Africa, the Mpongwe 
believe in local spirits, just as do the Inuit; but they are regarded as
 inoffensive in the main. Passers-by must make some trifling offering as
 they near the spirits' place of abode; but it is only occasionally that
 mischievous acts, such as the throwing down of a tree on a passer-by, 
are, in the view of the natives, perpetuated by the class of spirits 
known as Ombuiri.
 So too, many of the spirits especially concerned with the operations of
 nature are conceived as neutral or even benevolent; the European 
peasant fears the corn-spirit only when he irritates him by trenching on
 his domain and taking his property by cutting the corn;
 similarly, there is no reason why the more insignificant personages of 
the pantheon should be conceived as malevolent, 
and we find that the Petara of the Dyaks
 are far from indiscriminating and malignant, being viewed as invisible 
guardians of mankind. 
Types
Under the head of demons are classified only such spirits as are 
believed to enter into relations with the human race; the term therefore
 includes:
- angels in the Judeo-Christian tradition that fell from 
grace,
 
- human souls
 regarded as genii or familiars,
 
- such as receive a cult (e.g., ancestor worship),
 
- ghosts
 or other malevolent revenants.
 
Excluded are souls conceived as inhabiting another world. Yet just as
 gods are not necessarily spiritual, demons may also be regarded as 
corporeal; vampires for example are sometimes described as 
human heads with appended entrails, which issue from the tomb to attack 
the living during the night watches. The so-called Spectre Huntsman of 
the Malay Peninsula is said to be a man who scours the firmament with 
his dogs, vainly seeking for what he could not find on Earth -a buck 
mouse-deer pregnant with male offspring; but he seems to be a living 
man; there is no statement that he ever died, nor yet that he is a 
spirit. The incubi and Succubi
 of the Middle Ages are sometimes regarded as spiritual beings; but 
they were held to give proof of their bodily existence, such as 
offspring (though often deformed).
 Belief in demons goes back many millennia. The Zoroastrian faith teaches that there are 
3,333 Demons, some with specific dark responsibilities such as war, 
starvation, sickness, etc.
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
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