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Greek Superstitions, Old Wives’ Tales, and Urban Legends | Greek Beliefs 

Helinika - Greek Language, History & Culture
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Greek Superstitions, Old Wives’ Tales, and Urban Legends | Superstitions, old wives’ tales, and urban legends exist all around the world. Although the people who admit believing in some of them are often ridiculed, we all subconsciously follow some “unwritten rules” that do not necessarily have a rational background. According to Forbes and Psychology Today, superstitions and magical thinking are hardwired to our brain and are essential for our survival.
Here are some of the most common beliefs from (Modern) Greece that are not directly connected to the official Christian Orthodox traditions. The video includes Greek superstitions, old wives’ tales, and urban legends. You will learn more about the vaskania (evil eye) and stories such as the sacrifice to the bridge of Arta.
Greek Superstitions
Superstitions are called “δεισιδαιμονίες” in Greek. Here are some of the superstitions many Greek people still believe:
1. Mati/Vaskania (Evil Eye)
2. Touch Red
3. Gifting Perfume
4. Itchy Palms
5. Knock on Wood
6. Sneezing and Hiccups
7. Owl on the Roof
Greek Old Wives’ Tales
Greek old wives’ tales usually revolve around health issues, pregnancy, and motherhood. Here are a few old wives’ tales from Greece:
1. Getting a Cold from Being Cold
2. Sleeping with Wet Hair
3. Shape of the Baby Bum
4. Using Garlic and Onions Topically
5. Dreaming of the Groom
Greek Urban Legends
Greek urban legends differ, depending on whether they originate from villages, small town, or big cities. In general, urban legends in villages revolve around spirits and hauntings. In bigger cities, urban legends differ:
1. The Dead Hitchhiker
2. Haunted Locations
3. The Stone Bridge of Arta
4. Neraides
5. White Vans
6. Yello, Mormo, Lamia, and Other Boogy(wo)men
7. Vampire Islands
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TIMESTAMPS
00:00 Introduction
00:38 Greek Superstitions
05:56 Greek Old Wives' Tales
09:00 Greek Urban Legends
14:28 Comment Your Stories
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27 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 15   
@KaliYeahbaby
@KaliYeahbaby 2 года назад
Love it! It reminds me of things I remember learning as a little kid! Like eating with your legs crossed is an αμαρτία lol another one my dad would say is not to chew gum at night επειδή είναι σαν μασάς τα κόκαλα του νεκρού We're greek American and from Karpathos :) Thank you for putting this up!!!💗
@helinika
@helinika 2 года назад
Thanks for sharing! Wishing you a wonderful day!
@ol.l.2167
@ol.l.2167 Год назад
Very interesting and spot on information. I've always enjoyed listening to the older members of my greek family telling me stories like these. And what you said about greeks not publicly announcing any important decisions or plans, out of their fear for the "evil eye", is so damn true! 😂 Even people like me who would never admit believing in such things, actually do that! By the way, there's a similar belief ("il malocchio" = "το κακό μάτι", "the evil eye") here in Italy where I live, in the southern part of the country in particular. Thank you! 😘
@helinika
@helinika Год назад
Thank you for commenting and sharing a similar belief from Italy 🙂
@helinika
@helinika 3 года назад
Don't forget to check the description :)
@tizanidin4431
@tizanidin4431 3 года назад
Interesting!
@myragroenewegen5426
@myragroenewegen5426 2 года назад
This is the first I hear of some people being more likely to SEND the evil eye than others, which raises interesting questions. Most of this is about fear of receiving the bad vibes, but are there any number of folks out there afraid that they are unintentionally sabotaging those thy love with their cosmic inherited stink-eye? Kinda funny to me.
@helinika
@helinika 2 года назад
In the Greek culture people might pretent to spit on you to avoid giving you the eye 😅
@sithlordhibiscus9936
@sithlordhibiscus9936 Год назад
Ghosts of Fukushima (sometimes yōkai are good) After 2011 cab drivers in japan reported picking up wet, winter dressed people even in summer, getting rides to various places. They will drive them only to see an empty backseat upon arrival, that is soaked. Residents will hear their doorbell and see winter clad wet people asking for clothing. They go get clothing which they fold neatly and leave on the doorstep but only a puddle of water where they stood and the folded clothing is there when they look back. This is substantiated bc cab drivers have to pay the “phantom fare”. Most don’t mind though. They simply brought home missing tsunami victims from 3 March 2011 and likely lost at least one loved themselves.
@helinika
@helinika Год назад
thanks for sharing!
@sithlordhibiscus9936
@sithlordhibiscus9936 5 месяцев назад
Yw. I’m permanently in Greek 1, but even if I wasn’t, I can never tell the story without crying, so I don’t try to translate. It still doesn’t explain how I can speak Cherokee, a language with 21,262 conjugations per verb, but can’t pass Greek 1. Lol.
@timmylochhead7865
@timmylochhead7865 2 года назад
What about The Golden dawn
@historypandas3457
@historypandas3457 2 года назад
1:59 I was born on Saturday : o I don't mind if I harmed evil people - not likely, nothing bad ever happens to evil people but oh no if I harmed my loved ones : ( is there something I can do to disarm the evil eye in me? seriously, now I'm upset with my damned day of birth
@helinika
@helinika 2 года назад
Don't worry, it's just a superstition. Even according to this belief, not everyone born on a Saturday causes the evil eye :)
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