Mechho Bhoot

Tradition / Region:  Bengali Mythology
Alternate Names: Mecho Bhoot
Category: Spirit, Ghost


The Myth

The Mechho Bhoot is a spirit from Bengali folklore associated with fish, rivers, ponds, and lakes. Its name comes from the Bengali word machh, meaning “fish,” reflecting the ghost’s well-known obsession with them. According to folklore, people who drown while fishing or die in the water may return as Mechho Bhoots, unable to leave behind their attachment to fish and the waterways where they died.

These spirits are believed to haunt village ponds, riverbanks, marshes, and fishing areas, especially after dark. They are known for stealing fish from fishermen, kitchens, or marketplaces, and many old stories describe fish mysteriously disappearing during the night as the work of a Mechho Bhoot. Because fishing has always been central to life in Bengal and Bangladesh, stories about these spirits became common in riverside villages.

The Mechho Bhoot is usually described as a ghostly human figure connected to water and darkness. Though sometimes portrayed as mischievous rather than openly violent, it is still feared because of its association with drowning and isolated waters at night. Villagers often warned children and fishermen to stay cautious around ponds and rivers after sunset, when spirits like the Mechho Bhoot were believed to wander.

Unlike many malevolent ghosts in Bengali folklore, the Mechho Bhoot is remembered mainly for its endless craving for fish and its lingering attachment to the waters where it died.


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Ghosts in Bengali culture. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghosts_in_Bengali_culture


Nishi Daak

Tradition / Region: Bengali Mythology, Indian Mythology
Alternate Names: Nishir Daak, Nishi
Category: Ghost, Spirit


The Myth

The Nishi Daak is a feared nocturnal spirit from the folklore of eastern India, especially Bengal, Bihar, and Jharkhand. Its name means “Call of the Night,” and it is known for luring people away in darkness by mimicking the voice of someone they trust. The Nishi is rarely seen clearly. Most descriptions portray it as a distant, shadow-like figure that remains just beyond sight, hidden by fog, darkness, or trees. Sometimes it appears in the form of a familiar person, while other stories describe glowing red eyes and a twisted, unnatural face revealed only at the final moment before death.

The spirit hunts primarily at night, especially during moonless evenings or in heavy mist. It calls out softly to its victim using the voice of a loved one — often a parent, spouse, friend, or even a dead relative. The voice sounds completely real, which makes the spirit especially dangerous. Once the victim answers or begins following the voice, they gradually fall into a trance-like state. People under the Nishi’s influence become detached from reality and continue following the spirit no matter how far it leads them. Legends say victims can suddenly gain unnatural strength, forcing their way through obstacles or resisting anyone who tries to stop them.

The Nishi usually leads people into isolated places such as forests, abandoned roads, swamps, riverbanks, or mist-covered fields. Many stories claim the victim simply disappears forever without leaving behind a body or trace. In other tales, victims are later discovered dead, unconscious, or mentally broken after encountering the spirit. Some survivors are said to remain permanently traumatized after seeing the Nishi’s true appearance. Witnesses describe its eyes as burning like red embers and its presence as deeply unnatural and terrifying.

According to local beliefs, Nishis are often the restless souls of people who died violently, were abandoned without proper funeral rites, or failed to attain peace after death. In some traditions, entire families are cursed by such spirits, with the Nishi returning repeatedly over months or years to lure relatives to their deaths one by one. It is also believed that people killed by a Nishi may themselves become wandering night spirits if the proper rituals are not performed for them afterward.

Because of these stories, many villages developed strict warnings about answering voices after dark. People are told never to respond if someone calls their name from outside at night unless they can clearly see the caller. A familiar voice heard near lonely roads, forests, or fields is considered especially dangerous, since it may not belong to a living person at all.


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Ghosts in Bengali culture. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghosts_in_Bengali_culture


Begho Bhoot

Tradition / Region: Bengali Mythology
Alternative Name: –
Category: Tiger, Ghost


The Myth

In the mangrove forests of the Sundarbans, where land and water blur and survival depends on entering dangerous terrain, the Begho Bhoot is believed to arise from those who died by the claws of tigers. The name comes from bāgh (tiger) and bhoot (ghost), marking it as the spirit of a person claimed by the forest’s most feared predator.

The Begho Bhoot is said to haunt jungle paths, riverbanks, and tidal inlets—places where honey gatherers, fishermen, and woodcutters must pass to earn their living. These spirits do not wander into villages or homes. They remain bound to the routes of labor, appearing where people still risk their lives to survive.

Accounts describe Begho Bhoots as frightening travelers, sometimes by imitating the roar of a tiger, other times by whispering or misleading those who are already lost. In doing so, the spirit draws people deeper into danger, reenacting the circumstances of its own death. The ghost does not seek revenge, but repeats the moment of terror endlessly.

The Begho Bhoot is closely tied to Dakshin Rai, the lord of the Sundarbans, who rules over beasts and spirits alike and often appears as a tiger himself. Under his authority, death by tiger is not random—it is an expression of the forest’s law. Those taken by tigers are believed to pass into his domain, becoming part of the forest rather than leaving it.

Within Bengali belief, the Begho Bhoot represents collective loss and shared fear. It is the memory of people who entered the forest out of necessity and never returned. The ghost exists not as a curse upon the living, but as a warning embedded in the landscape itself.

When the forest grows silent and a roar echoes where no tiger is seen, it is said that the Begho Bhoot is near—an echo of lives lost, reminding all who walk the Sundarbans that survival there is never guaranteed, only permitted for a time.


Sources

Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Ghosts in Bengali culture. In Wikipedia, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghosts_in_Bengali_culture