Bosniak women - the women that gave birth to dragons
One of the most mysterious Bosnian traditions is the one about the birth of
snijet. Tabooed and of a holly status, this tradition existed in Bosnia for
centuries, until today where it only exists in stories and sayings of older
women. Some of them claim that they themselves gave birth to snijet or dragons.
The beginning of this tradition should be sought in the forefathers of
the Bosnians, the ancient Illyrians who saw the snake i.e. dragon as a central
animal of their national and also religious cult. In favour of this the
ethnological records can be found among the Bosnians living in Montenegro and
Albanians on Kosovo and Albania, lands that once made up the vast Illyrian
empire. We also need to mention another tradition which is specifically
connected to the Bosnian people and that is the one that mentions snakes
entering and living inside humans who happened to fall asleep outside, in the
field or under a tree. This clearly points to the ancient belief that snakes or
dragons are directly connected to people and that physical permeations and
mergers are possible.
Mola hydatidosa or infanticide
The legend about dragons and their descendants which is
called among the Bosnian folk snijet are an inalienable part of the fascinating
world of mythology of this country which sometimes seems so real and tangible as
in this sense. A long time before the twentieth century, when the ethnologists
started gathering ethnological data around Bosnia and Herzegovina, among the
Bosnian folk one could hear, through an oral tradition, a story that a woman
gave birth to a snijet, a mysterious creature which was considered to be a baby
dragon. Since the ethnologists never saw a birth of a snijet they concluded that
this is a phenomenon which is called hydatidosa in medicine, a disease of the
placenta where there are degenerative and proliferative process's in the
placenta, specifically in the part that stems from the fetus.
However the
medical explanation doesn't mention the possibility of mola hydatidosa and the
child being born together or the possibility that the embryo develops into a
fetus inside the diseased placenta. The same way, when we look at the pictures
of mola hydatidosa from a layman's perspective, we quickly ascertain that the
appearance and description of that disease have nothing in common with the
claims made by the ethnologists during their field work. The only similarities
to the medical claims are the accompanying symptoms of profuse bleeding after
birth of the snijet, yet that phenomenon is common for most normal births,
especially those in the past. Namely, up until the last few decades of the past
century, most childbirths were done at home, individually or in the company of
an experienced woman which is called a midwife, far from the hospital and the
doctor.
In
such completely unprofessional conditions the tradition about the snijet was
misused and women and girls used it to hide abortions or the birth of deformed,
retarded or extramarital children which they would kills right after birth.
Since the snijet has been tabooed from its beginnings each infanticide went
unpunished. If someone showed some interest for the childbirth the midwife would
claim that "she had a snijet!" and that would stop any further
discussion.
But, such criminal behaviour and attitude recorded in
isolated cases is not a justified reason to cease the investigation about the
snijet. Especially since the author of this text had the opportunity to meet an
old lady who vividly described her experience of giving birth to a snijet, which
leaves little room for doubt.
God's punishment or
blessing?
The ethnologists equated the word snijet to
Ustilago maydis, because of the appearance, white colour and shaped like a corn
parasite. However, in some places there is a different opinion based on the
white colour of the placenta which uncommonly resembles an egg shell. The women
usually described snijeti jaje i.e. carry down an egg. With this interpretation
we are getting close to the mythological theory of the birth of a dragon, for
which many legends claim that he actually came from a large egg.
There
are a few versions of how a snijet is brought to this world. According to one of
them if the woman has intercourse during her menstrual cycle, and a child is
conceived, God will punish her for that blasphemy and she will give birth to a
monstrous creation known as snijet. In the second version the woman is
impregnated by a dragon, when he sees her resting somewhere in the field after
work or when he visits her while she is sleeping. In a few ethnological
publications we come across a few contradictions when it comes to the birth of
snijet, namely, while some parts of BIH experience snijet as God's punishment,
others don't see anything bad in it and claim that each Bosnian woman has given
birth to snijet at least once in her life.
A woman can be pregnant with
both a child and a snijet, which has catastrophic consequences for the fetus.
There were cases that a woman gives birth to a child with a dead snijet on its
head, after which the child would also die soon after. In the same way, if both
are born alive, the folk belief is, that the child will die when the snijet is
killed or when it dies.
The dread that a woman will give birth to a
snijet appeared if the birth process took longer than usual. According to folk
belief, snijet is delivered much harder than a normal child, the woman bleeds
profusely and recovers slowly. Influencing the woman's psychological state
depended on the climate, especially if she gave birth to a dead child. If the
woman who gave birth to a snijet belonged to the part of the country that
thought it was punishment from God, she would go into deep depression and
psychological crisis, spending most of her days in bed. However if her
surrounding saw snijet as a good thing (sevap) then her recovery would be much
faster and her psychological state stable.
Snijet can be born along a
child or by itself. If that happens in most cases the baby would be born dead or
would die soon after birth. There were cases when the child survived but that
happened only if the snijet didn't come to life inside the woman's womb. When
the snijet is alive inside the womb, it then attacks the child and eats it,
that's why the child is born with a deformity or disease. Apparently, the snijet
bites and eats the child's head, arm, leg or bites it on its back "and eats its
entire lungs while it is still in the mother's womb".
According to the
confessions of women that gave birth to a snijet or that witnessed such an
event, the child leaves the woman's body first followed by a snijet. Each woman,
no matter the geographical location inside Bosnia, describe the snijet
identically: "Snijet resembles a mole, it's the same colour and size, except it
doesn't have any hair" or "Snijet mostly resembles a mole, it's black, has no
hair on it, but everything else resembles a mole, the nose, body and legs". This
description is also interesting: "it looks like a black piece of liver that has
skin".
Escape from the mother
As
mentioned earlier, snijet can be born by itself, or with a child, in a white
placenta. If the pregnant woman is only carrying snijet in her womb, then her
pregnancy doesn't last for nine months, but three to four. But, nevertheless,
all through that short pregnancy she feels standard accompanying symptoms which
are similar during normal pregnancy.
In most cases snijet was born alive
and as soon as it came out of the woman, it showed strength and a developed
instinct for survival, because according to the testimony of numerous women,
"the moment it comes out it runs away from people, you can't catch it, it runs
like a mouse and climbs walls". If the pregnant woman would give birth by
herself, without anyone's help, which was frequent in the past, then the snijet
escaped without much problems and later it transformed into a
dragon.
According to the statement of an old lady from Žepa, who gave
birth to two snijet besides her eleven children, sevap (good thing) is when
someone gives birth to a snijet "it's as if the woman gave birth to two healthy
children". The same lady said the following: "a woman who gives birth to a
snijet three times, has all of her sins forgiven and after death she will go
straight to heaven, that proves how happy God is when a snijet is
born!"
Even though the birth of a snijet was tabooed for fear of
judgement or ridicule of the environment, it was treated with respect, besides
the fact it was killed, which can be seen in the fact that it was forbidden to
throw a dead snijet into the garbage can, one needed to bury it wrapped in a
cloth together with the placenta, under a young tree or farmyard manure. Behind
such a rule one can see the human fear of a dragon retaliation because of the
death of its cubs, therefore the wrapping inside a cloth and burying needed to
hide such a deed.