Taming the snake. The secret of the snake charmer. Why is music so captivating to cobras? The secret of the magic pipe

Every year in the village of Hadaithala, which is located 100 km from Calcutta, a conference of representatives of one of the most amazing professions on Earth - snake charmers - is held. Thousands of reptile tamers gather together to honor Manasa, the patron goddess of snakes in the Hindu religion. In front of the public, the spellcasters demonstrate various tricks: wrapping poisonous reptiles around their bodies, squeezing drops of poison from a snake’s mouth into their mouths and swallowing them, and also luring cobras out of a wicker basket with a flute and forcing them to sway smoothly, supposedly to the beat of a melody. For some reason, it is the last trick that invariably delights the audience.

As soon as the fakir begins to play the flute, or rather, emit a thin piercing sound from it, shaking his head from top to bottom, the angry reptile that flew out of the basket immediately calms down and, without taking his eyes off the instrument, begins to sway to the beat of the melody. (Although snakes hear virtually nothing, they respond to high-pitched flute music. One theory is that a certain vibration in the air strikes the scales of the snake's skin or the tips of the ribs, much like the feet hitting the ground when walking.) Of course, such a trick makes a great impression on the uninitiated. However, the solution is quite simple. The thing is that the flute for the caster is not musical instrument, but with a baton, with the help of which he trains his poisonous “artist”. This is how one of the eyewitnesses describes the training procedure: “The cobra, already quite stunned from the still unusual way of sitting locked up, opens its hood and rushes at the trainer with quite obvious intentions. He meets it fully armed – and the weapon, as you might guess, is a flute. at once the cobra shows its evil temper, but the “musical blows” eventually force it to flee. She is not allowed even this - the tamer beats her with a flute until the poor fellow is completely exhausted, and the wicker basket in which she is in. has to live, does not seem to her a tempting and desirable refuge. After the first lesson, the trainee fakir takes over the cruel training of the snake, and everything repeats itself...” During the performance, it is not the cobra that bends to the beat of the music, but the fakir moves to the beat of the snake’s movements; when she raises her head, the fakir raises his flute. The snake remembers the brutal blows it received during its “training” and therefore sways languidly, trying to figure out if it will be able to escape. When she gets tired, the caster interrupts the melody, and it seems as if he managed to do it first. That's the trick. In addition, some spellcasters, fearing that they will still be bitten, take extreme measures: they teach snakes not to bite or even sew their mouths shut.

True, the above tricks are used only by simple street charmers who perform in front of gullible tourists for a small fee. As E.P. wrote Blavatsky, “real snake charmers have established their reputation too well in the East to resort to such techniques. On this subject, there is testimony from too trustworthy travelers, including scientists, not to accuse them of charlatanism.”

Despite the fact that India is primarily famous for snake charmers (today there are about 7 thousand representatives of this profession there), this art, according to researchers, originated in Egypt. Sheikh Moussa from Luxor is considered one of the most skilled snake charmers. His skill was unsurpassed. Before the start of the performance, he allowed himself to be undressed and searched; the snakes he conjured were untrained. By pronouncing spells and chanting, Moussa lured them out of their holes and called them to him. If the cobra tried to attack, Moussa carefully threw it away with a stick and, without stopping singing, slowly approached the snake, put his hand on the ground, and the cobra lowered Moussa’s head into his palm. The caster also demonstrated another incredible trick: he placed freshly caught cobras in a circle drawn with a stick in the sand, in which they remained until Moussa allowed them to leave.

However, even excellent knowledge of snake habits does not always protect casters from accidents. Dr. Hamilton Fairley traced life path 25 snake charmers over a 15 year period. It turned out that during this time 19 of them died from snake venom. So this profession is not only mysterious, but also very dangerous.

It is known that snakes have very poor hearing. But they react to high-pitched flute music. Certain vibrations in the air strike the scales of the snake's skin or the tips of the ribs.

Snake charmer is an unusual and dangerous profession. The art of snake charming originated in Egypt, so it is there that you can meet the most experienced hunters and charmers in the world. The art of snake charming appeared as a result of the worship of creeping reptiles. The most skilled snake charmers in Egypt are deeply religious people. Cobras, like tiaras, served in Ancient Egypt as a symbol of royal dignity. Cleopatra's snake was a cobra. And the wizards of the pharaohs could turn snakes into wands. This could be done by squeezing the snake’s head so much that its brain was affected, and the snake went into a stupor.

The most unrivaled snake charmer was Sheikh Moussa of Luxor. Sheikh Moussa's skill was unique. At his shows, he cast spells and sang, thereby luring snakes out of their holes. Without stopping these actions, he slowly approached the snake, put his hand on the ground, and the cobra lowered its head and laid it on the palm of the caster. Moussa also showed a trick by placing a wild, freshly caught cobra in a circle, which he outlined with a stick in the sand. The cobra remained in the circle until Moussa allowed it to leave it. Having caught 4-5 cobras, Moussa gathered them in a circle and began to conjure them all together. The spectacle for those around was unforgettable. How did he manage to do this?

Snakes are known to have very poor hearing. But they react to high-pitched flute music. Certain vibrations in the air strike the scales of the snake's skin or the tips of the ribs. Therefore, playing the flute excites the cobra rather than charms it. After all, the open hood of the snake is evidence of this. If you look closely at the movements of a snake charmer, their secret may become clear.

The trick is not in the flute. Snakes crawl out of the basket after a light, imperceptible blow to it by the caster. Swinging to the beat of the music, the cobra follows its movements human hand, but doesn’t dance at all. Thoughtful movements of the caster's hand control the behavior of the snake. He approaches her slowly, trying not to alarm the reptile. The snake charmer always looks into the eyes of the animal in order to catch the moment when the reptile wants to grab his hand. If the snake becomes restless, the caster places it back in the basket and selects another cobra.

Sometimes snake charmers, for the entertainment of the public, show on their hand two bites from a snake that supposedly bit them during the show. He applies a “snake stone” to them - a remedy for their poison. But these two holes were already there before the performance began. And healing with a stone is just a fairy tale. These are not all the tricks and tricks that you may not notice during the show.

Some cunning people manage to repaint completely harmless snakes in the natural colors of the most dangerous of their kind, like vipers. From a distance, such a fake is almost invisible, especially to the eye of a non-specialist. No snake charmer trains his pets from birth. For performances, already mature individuals are caught, since young animals are more aggressive, and adult snakes bite less often. There is no use in training snakes.

It happens that a snake charmer removes the poisonous teeth of the unfortunate reptile or sews up his mouth with ordinary thread and a needle. If the operation is performed skillfully, the thread remains covered with labial shields. In this case, the snake becomes harmless and helpless. She can hiss, stick out her tongue, rush at people, but, alas, she will not be able to bite in this state. Snakes do not live long after such manipulations. By the way, not all snakes participate in the performances. The snake charmer selects only those individuals that are able to hold a stance for a long time and rarely show the desire to rush and bite.

Snake charmers

For many peoples, snakes have been a symbol of lightning - striking energy - since ancient times. The snake, thanks to its striking resemblance to lightning and its striking speed, acquired the symbolic meaning of the punishing but wise will of the gods.

Speaking about the semi-mystical, supernatural connection between believers and their deity, one remembers ophiolatry - the deification of snakes, the oldest example of animal worship. Snake worship has survived. And now you can see the picturesque, risk-filled, chilling “snake” dance performed by young priestesses of the famous snake cults of Myanmar (Burma).

The object of worship here is the king cobra othiphagus hannan, the world's largest venomous snake: its length reaches five meters. Cobra is considered one of the most aggressive snakes. Intending to attack, it stands on its tail, and the front part of its body, raised almost vertically, is at least one meter in length. When meeting with this majestic representative of the fauna, a person tries to increase the distance separating him from the cobra. The snake priestess from Myanmar has a completely different task - to dance with her poisonous deity.

As soon as the location of the king cobra is determined, the priestess begins her performance right in front of the cobra, at a distance of one or two meters. With his hem long dress she manipulates like a matador and is very skillful at dodging deadly throws. Soon the priestess’s robe becomes wet, and golden droplets of poison flow down it. But the biggest danger is yet to come. At the end of her performance, the priestess suddenly leans forward and kisses the cobra. Sometimes to the head, sometimes right to the lips. The girl repeats this twice. Then he slowly backs away, joining the rest of the snake worshipers and giving the snake the opportunity to retreat. The snake does this, and very hastily. The dance is completed, the deity has left.

How do you learn to dance with a cobra? Girls with early age undergo training on non-venomous species of snakes or “cold” (lacking a poisonous tooth) cobras. Their task is to thoroughly study the behavior and movements of the snake in order to be able to anticipate them in advance, in a split second. The dance of the priestess has a special musical accompaniment. It distracts or even hypnotizes the snake, reducing the speed and accuracy of its strikes.

The double sting of the snake, which wants to reach the body of the young priestess, speaks of duality. It is further strengthened by the image of two snakes entwined with each other. Duality is two halves interacting with each other. Any interaction generates an energy wave. Being a symbol of duality, the snake denotes “Through the Looking Glass”, the reflected world of material, attracting to itself. There is a legend about the ability of snakes to hypnotize their victims with their gaze or measured swaying, i.e. rhythm.

English writer Lawrence Greene in his book Last secrets of old Africa" ​​wrote: "Snake charming is an amazing and dangerous profession. Almost all the spellcasters I knew died from snake bites. These fearless people could not master one secret - how to stay alive.

The art of snake charming originated in Egypt, which was the cradle of many arts. Snakes are the scourge of the Egyptian village. Perhaps that is why the most skilled snake hunters and charmers appeared there.

Cobras were symbols of royal greatness. Cobra-shaped tiaras crown the heads of Egyptian statues. Cleopatra died from a cobra bite. Magicians at the court of the pharaohs could turn a snake into a stick, repeating the miracle once performed by the prophet Moses. Apparently, they squeezed the snake’s neck so that the brain was paralyzed and the snake became as hard as a stick.

African sorcerers have excellent knowledge of snakes. Europeans in tropical Africa They often turn to witches if they suspect the presence of a snake in their home. And it almost never happens that the mganga does not discover the snake and leaves without reward. And what does five or ten shillings mean when a house gets rid of a mamba?

Usually the sorcerer brings a pipe with him and begins to play his melody in different parts premises, waiting for the mamba to slip onto open place. A lithe, graceful creature, but it carries enough poison in its tooth to kill an elephant. The sorcerer seizes the moment, quickly grabs the snake with a forked stick at the end and throws it into his bag. These days it's almost always a scam. The sorcerer usually throws a tamed snake into the house, whose poisonous teeth have been pulled out, and then uses the power of “charm” to call it out of its shelter.

The best spellcaster of his time was probably Sheikh Musa of Luxor, known to many thousands of tourists. Musa's grandfather and father were also spellcasters and died from snake bites. The same fate befell youngest son Musa, when he went into the desert for snakes. Musa always believed that the same end awaited him. Indeed, he died in 1939 when he tried too persistently to remove a cobra from its nest.

Sheikh Musa never resorted to deception. Before the start of the performance, he allowed himself to be searched and even undressed. The snakes he removed from holes under the mud huts were not tame. He could smell a scorpion hiding under a stone, or a snake in its hiding place. According to Musa, the smell of the snake is reminiscent of ammonia.

With monotonous singing, he lured snakes from their nests and called them to him. Sometimes the cobra attacked him. Musa gently drove her away with his wand. Then the cobra stood up and looked intently at the snake charmer. Musa was waiting for this moment. Continuing to hum, he slowly approached the snake. Then he lowered his hand to the ground, and the cobra laid its head on his palm.

Other charmers, including the head keeper of the London Zoo named Budd, could perform such performances. The snake act was the highlight of the very capable charmer Hussein Mia, who performed it in Cape Town for many years. But old Musa had other amazing numbers, and only a few spellcasters of the past and present could repeat them.

Having drawn a circle in the sand with a stick, Musa put the newly caught cobra there, and it remained in this circle as if tied until Musa let it go. At the end, Musa placed four or five snakes in the same circle and bewitched them all. The spectators clearly saw that the snakes were trying to get out of the circle, but none crawled far while Musa was looking at it.

There is no doubt that Musa simply wanted to influence the public with his singing, since snakes hear almost nothing. However, they perceive high-pitched flute sounds. There is an opinion that the skin of a snake or the tips of its ribs react to certain vibrations in the air, for example from steps on the ground. And the sounds of a flute excite the cobra rather than put it to sleep.

Watch the charmer and his flat baskets, and you will see that he does not lure out snakes with the sounds of a flute. The caster lightly taps the basket, and then a snake appears. There is nothing supernatural in the art of a snake charmer. But viewers rarely understand what is really happening. It seems to them that the snake is wriggling and swaying to the beat of the music, but in reality it follows the movements of the person’s hand. Take a close look at the caster and you will see that the skillful movements of his hand and body direct the actions of the snake. He always removes the snake slowly, fearing to excite it. If the snake shows signs of irritation, he puts it back in the basket and chooses another one for presentation.

Another famous Egyptian snake charmer, Haj Ahmed, a friend of Russell Pasha, claimed that he could bewitch a snake by whistling. He supplied rare snakes to zoos and vaccine manufacturers. Haj Ahmed was a member of Rifan - secret society snake charmers, which was religious in nature and had strict regulations. He got himself vaccinated, like the rest of society. However, there is no complete immunity against snakebite. His career was very successful until the day he died from a cobra bite.

Russell Pasha kept a special expert on the staff of the Cairo city police - the Englishman Bain. Both Russell and Bane studied the spellcasting techniques and came to the same conclusions. They believed that the secret of luring snakes out of their hiding places often lay in the ability of the charmer to imitate the sounds of the snake. Of course, during hibernation, nothing can awaken a snake, but in mating season the caster, imitating the specific hiss of a female, forces the male to crawl out towards the sound.

However, I heard another explanation while I was in Egypt. I was told that an experienced charmer uses snake excrement, the smell of which attracts other snakes. In my opinion, this explanation has a scientific basis. They say this method is effective in catching vipers.

Russell Pasha noted that the caster must have a keen eye and fast hands. I would add to this the ability at any age not to be distracted from the dance of the snake for a moment. Many spellcasters died simply because they were thinking about something else during the performance.

When I first encountered the sands and strangeness of Egypt (this was five years after the First World War), I encountered a special type of young snake charmers whose performances were so exciting that the government had to restrict their activities. In a café on Port Said Boulevard or even on the hallowed veranda of the Shepherd Hotel, these desperadoes would approach your table and offer to watch them swallow a live cobra.

There have always been lovers thrills, ready to pay for such a spectacle. But even strong men they felt bad and the women fainted. And such artists no longer appeared in fashionable hotels.

I remember one young guy, who kept scorpions in his long black hair and wore a cobra. Some spellcasters lubricated their bodies with snake oil, hoping thereby to gain favor from the snake tribe. Perhaps they succeeded. The caster grabbed the cobra by the neck, squeezed it so that its huge mouth opened, and spat into it. Not a very aesthetic sight. But the snake’s reaction was completely unexpected: it instantly became stiff and could be manipulated like a cane. It turns out that there was a drug in the caster’s saliva, which had an instant effect on the snake. This is just one of those tricks that seems supernatural.

Some spellcasters, by showing two small wounds on their finger, pretend that they have been bitten by a cobra. You can be sure that the "bite" was there before the show even started. They usually apply a porous "snake stone" to the wound, a remedy they would never use if they were actually bitten by a snake.

Spellcasters always prefer cobra. Undoubtedly, the ominous hood enhances the impression of the spectacle. It must be said that the cobra inflates its hood only in an excited state. Consequently, moving behind the caster's pipe, the snake is not under hypnosis and, of course, it does not dance. Most likely, she is watching the movements of the caster. Of course, the caster also carefully watches the eyes of the snake to know if it is going to grab his hand.

There are seven species of cobras in Africa, and there are so many of them everywhere that it costs the caster nothing to catch as many as he needs. The so-called Egyptian cobra, which is found from Mediterranean Sea to South Africa, is not a spitting snake, just like the Caen cobra. But the ring-gal and black-throated snake aim directly at the eyes of their prey and strike them at a distance of seven feet. Performances with them would be tantamount to suicide.

Egyptian spellcasters often demonstrate very poisonous horned viper. They also catch the dangerous carpet viper. But these are very rare species.

The spellcaster Hussein Mia sent from time to time for king cobras to Burma. This is an extraordinarily effective and most large snake among poisonous snakes. When presented, she looks very impressive among her smaller (but no less deadly) brothers. The largest king cobras reach eighteen feet in length. These are cannibals, they eat their own kind. Therefore, a spellcaster who has a king cobra may lose the rest of the snakes if he is not careful.

Unfortunately, the king cobra cannot live long in South Africa. Hussein Mia lost fourteen expensive snakes one after another. But when he had king cobras, the performances became livelier. Some cobras are good-natured, while others are malicious. And yet every spellcaster craves that storm of applause that only a huge, obedient king cobra can bring him. This snake is used in the issue " Kiss of Death" Sometimes it is demonstrated by spellcasters. To kiss a cobra on the open mouth, you really need some kind of hypnotism.

Hussein Mia loved Cape Town very much and called himself Charlie from Cape Town. He, as befits a hereditary Indian magician, graduated from Pune University in magic, fire swallowing and snake charming. IN South Africa Hussein Mia arrived in late XIX century, and there is hardly a single village in Northern and Southern Rhodesia and in the Union of South Africa where this bearded, smiling artist in a turban, with a small tom-tom and snakes has not been seen. He claimed that he performed in Buckingham Palace. “I made snakes dance for King Edward and King George,” he boasted.

Among Hussein Mia's performances there was one comic skit. Hussein was placing a small basket with a lid on the ground. Then he chose a suitable victim from the crowd, usually some scoffer who mocked the performance. He was asked to carefully examine the basket and show everyone present that it was empty. Hussein covered the lid with a piece of cloth, played a few mysterious bars on the flute, took out a basket from under the cover and asked the summoned person to put his hand into it and take for himself everything that was there. They hinted to him that the basket had mysteriously filled with money. This was the point special success numbers. The next moment, the frightened “victim” discovered a live snake in his hand. It was non-venomous snake, but she did not look harmless at all.

Hussein Mia could give a performance for several hours in a row without repeating a single number. When his son Ibrahim was little, Hussein Mia performed an exceptionally practiced act with a wicker basket. Ibrahim climbed into the basket, and his father pierced its wicker sides with a dagger. But above all, Hussein was a snake charmer. He sent his son to Pune to properly polish his art and continue his father’s work.

Hussain Mia's performances have entertained me since childhood. When he died, I was already a mature man. Hussein Mia lived to be seventy years old. This is probably a record age for people in such a dangerous profession. During the Second World War, at a performance near the Mount Nelson Hotel, he was bitten on the thumb right hand Cana cobra. His son was urgently called, who at that moment was giving a performance in another place. When he arrived, Hussein was already unconscious; he was taken to the hospital too late.

Dr. Hamilton Fairley, who was interested in this dangerous activity, followed the fate of twenty-one spellcasters over a period of fifteen years. During this period, nineteen of them died from snake venom.

The most famous of them was Bertie Pierce, known to scientists all over the world. His main occupation was selling snakes to museums, as well as “squeezing out” snake venom for serums.

For Pierce, with his weak heart, this was not a suitable occupation. Each bite made him wonder if he could handle the treatment. One day he was bitten on the hand by an African viper. He did not have a vaccine, and he burned the bitten area. There were terrible scars on my arm. Once in Cape Town, in the absence of his assistant, Pierce entered a pit with snakes to entertain the public. A small cobra bit him on the ankle - very dangerous place due to the many small blood vessels located there. Pierce was treated, but this time the treatment did not help. This was the tenth and fatal bite.

Why don’t spell casters “squeeze out” the snake venom before picking up the snake? The fact is that the poisonous sacs very quickly fill up with poison again. And forcing a snake to endlessly bite a rag before a performance until the entire bag is empty is a tedious and lengthy procedure. Of course, the charmer can pull out the snake's teeth. But those who are proud of their profession rarely do this. In addition, snakes without teeth do not live long.

One day, Dr. Desmont Fitzsimons, a South African snake expert, saw a show with a viper. It was so unusual that he began to take a closer look. The viper turned out to be a harmless carpet snake. But it was so skillfully painted that from a distance it was almost indistinguishable from an African viper.

In Southern Rhodesia, in the town of Sinoia, there lived a sorcerer who became famous for fearlessly picking up green mambas. During one of the performances he received fatal bite. A local surgeon sent one of the sorcerer's snakes to Fitzsmons to determine its species. It turned out to be a light green variety of boomslang, or tree snake. Boomslang's poisonous teeth are located deep in the mouth, on the back edge of the upper jaw, so it rarely manages to bite someone and release its deadly poison. The sorcerer was unlucky. This was just such a rare case. But when the species of the snake was determined, the sorcerer’s secret was revealed. No spellcaster, no matter how skillful he may be, could perform so many performances with the mamba with impunity, allowing her to approach the flute itself.

The spell of snakes probably dates back to the ancient cult of snake worship. Each temple had its own snakes. Healers were also spellcasters, and to this day the snake symbolizes medicine. It is therefore not surprising that the rifan - the most skilled snake charmers of Egypt - are religious.

Undoubtedly, snake charmers still have secrets, and they do not reveal them to any outsiders.”

The French naturalist Armand Denis was convinced of this, who in the 30s. XX century I shot the film in Singapore.

For the film's finale, he purchased about a dozen king cobras. These were adults, very warlike individuals. Denis placed them in a tightly built box with a strong wire mesh lid. Soon it was abundantly doused with deadly poison: the snakes furiously protested against the disrespectful attitude towards them.

After some time, a Chinese boy appeared at the hotel, dressed in a strange white outfit with long wide sleeves. He offered Dany his services for working with snakes and asked for one of the king cobras as payment.

The boy said that for him, handling a snake, no matter what condition it was in, was neither difficult nor dangerous. Then he lifted the edge of the box. Denis became terribly worried and asked the boy to leave the snakes alone. In response, the boy lowered the box for a moment and took out a small bottle of green liquid from the folds of his sleeve.

When he removed the plug, the smell of freshly cut grass filled the room. The boy took some liquid into his mouth and lowered himself to the box until his face was very close to the bars. The snake prepared to strike, but the boy got ahead of the cobra, and quite unexpectedly. Moving even closer to the box, he suddenly spat out the liquid, dousing the cobra he had chosen. Then he waited a little and, to Denis’s surprise and boundless horror, he put his hand into the drawer and took out “his” cobra, holding it in the middle with both hands long body. The green liquid inexplicably made the cobra unnaturally sluggish. The snake raised its head, looked at the boy indifferently, but did not make a single attempt to rush at him.

Technique of action in in this case even more inexplicable than in the case of the dancing cobra. Science does not know any substances that can affect the behavior of snakes. About a hundred years ago, journalists reported that in some areas of Ohio (USA) rattlesnakes were repelled by the leaves of a white ash tree, but modern research refuted these data.

The family of snake charmers Mia continues its work in our time. Such a case is known.

...The Bangladeshi police were unable to neutralize the gang of thug Nisar Shah. After the next attack, the bandits disappeared without a trace in the dense tropical forests.

Law enforcement agencies managed to introduce their agent into the gang. Soon he reported that Nisar Shah had launched an armed attack on an agricultural credit bank in the town of Nyryyan-Gan.

At night, on the eve of the raid, an ambush was secretly set up in the bank. As two trucks with bandits shooting in the air rushed along the main street towards the bank building in the central square, the police rained down a barrage of fire on the raiders from the windows. Almost all the bandits were killed on the spot. Nisar Shah himself was not injured. As a precaution, together with his assistant Yakki Khan, he followed the trucks at some distance in a passenger car. When the ambush revealed itself, Nisar Shah turned around and rushed to the exit from the city. The police, who did not expect this, did not pursue him.

The leader would have managed to escape if his car had not been stopped by a police checkpoint near the last houses of Nyryyan-Gan. The bandits jumped out of the car and disappeared into a small stone house about a hundred meters from the edge of the rice field.

At this time, the head of the operation, Captain Afzal, arrived at the scene of the skirmish. He came up with a surprising plan to force Nisar Shah and Yakki Khan to surrender.

...In appearance he is not yet old, with lush bright red hair and a thin mustache, Dudu Mia does not look like a movie star, but the whole of Bangladesh knows his face. Not a single herpentologist can compare with him in knowledge of snakes and the ability to catch them. Dudu Mia incomprehensibly knows how to control poisonous reptiles. They say that he knows the language of snakes and can communicate with them at ultra-low sound frequencies, inaudible to the ordinary human ear.

Shortly before the police operation against Nisar Shah's gang, the town of Nyryyan-Gan was attacked by cobras. Dudu Mia, who arrived on call, caught some of the snakes, and the rest disappeared somewhere by themselves. After this, Dudu Mia stayed in the town for some time in case the reptiles decided to repeat the invasion.

The savvy captain suggested using Dudu Mia’s unusual abilities. Half an hour later, his assistant brought Dudu Mia, who took with him two lidded baskets with cobras. On the way, the policeman briefed the snake catcher on the planned plan. He said that he could send the bastards to the house where the bandits were holed up. And so the red-haired magician, bending down, carefully crept up to the house about fifty meters, dragging his baskets behind him. Through binoculars, the captain clearly saw how Dudu Mia took out cobras from them and, having said something, lowered them into the grass. The captain could not believe that after this the cobras would crawl into the house, and not to the neighboring rice field.

The results of the actions of the creeping “capture group” did not have to wait long. No more than half an hour passed before random shooting began in the house, and then both bandits jumped out of it with their hands raised and rushed towards the police. “It was some kind of devilish obsession. Damned cobras suddenly crawled out of all the cracks, and the bullets didn’t take them,” Nisar Shah admitted, barely moving his lips after the horror he suffered, when he was handcuffed.

From the author's book

Snakes Snakes represent the primal energy of the unconscious, they are poisonous. The venom of some snakes (especially those belonging to the cobra family) causes ecstatic visions. Perhaps this is why the snake is also a symbol of wisdom. Since ancient times, snake venom has been used as

While we strive to teach our children to count by age three and read by age five, Veda parents living in Sri Lanka teach their children how to handle... poisonous snakes!

Anthropologists classify the Veda as a Negrito - a black Australoid race. Negritos once inhabited most of Southeast Asia. But later they were pushed aside by the happier modern inhabitants of these places for inconvenience. The Vedas live practically in the Stone Age. No radio, no other achievements of civilization, not even money. Unless, of course, you count the small coins attached to the bracelets of their women as decoration as money. They feed on everything they can catch. Monitor lizards, of which there are a huge number in Sri Lanka, are often eaten. There they replace our cats - they rummage through garbage dumps. Naturally, Vedas do not receive any education, in the European sense of the word. But you still have to live. This is where it comes to the rescue ancient art handling snakes, including poisonous ones that are deadly to humans. That’s why they start teaching children this craft right after they start walking. Our compatriot visited the Veda village. His goal was to look at children's learning. According to him, on initial stage during training, the poisonous teeth of snakes are removed, just in case. The teacher, whose name was Kahlua, sat several kids in a circle and began to show them how to handle the snake: under no circumstances grab the tail, do not wave your hands in front of its head. There is a lot of wisdom in this science; the entire “course” takes more than one month. Children three to four years old can handle adult cobras. Veda's pythons are completely tame and, if you feed them in time, are generally indifferent to what is done to them. They just need a kilogram of mice a week! One cute little girl, getting excited, picked up a huge cobra by the tail and began swinging it, bursting into laughter. The bespectacled queen of the jungle could not tolerate such mockery and, dodging, made a throw. In the blink of an eye, the girl released the snake and quickly jumped away. She hissed and went into the basket. This is how another of our compatriots describes the performances of snake tamers: “They don’t write posters for their performances and don’t sell tickets. It all starts very simply... Fakirs can be found everywhere. For a small fee they offer their performance. Having received your consent, the fakirs position themselves directly on the ground, open the lids of the baskets, and the performance begins... From a large basket, feeling the fresh air, a snake 2-2.5 meters long sluggishly raises its head, which is immediately grabbed by the neck. This is, so to speak, an overture. Then you are shown other snakes of different colors and lengths - thin and long, medium and very small. And finally, to the sound of a pipe, the most terrible snakes rise from the baskets - “king” cobras; in India, thousands of people die from their bites every year. The cobra is called the "plague of India." But now this “plague” obediently listens to the melody that the tamers extract from their pipes. This ends the first part of the show. The heroes of the second section are a poisonous snake and a mongoose, between whom a mortal battle immediately begins. The mongoose, very dexterous, fast and cunning, tries to grab the enemy by the neck. And the snake, for its part, tries to defeat the mongoose with its bite. A ten-minute struggle in most cases ends in victory for the mongoose. A dead snake, the victim of an interesting performance, will still be useful to the owner. Her skin is worth more than paying for a show with eight to ten people in attendance.” In total, 98 species of snakes live in Sri Lanka; the most dangerous species is the “king” cobra. Cobras are most active from mid-April to June and from September to mid-November. In July, the female lays 9-19 eggs, from which juveniles emerge in late August - early September. Cobras feed on rodents, amphibians, and birds, but, like other adders, they readily eat snakes, including poisonous ones. Cobra poses an undoubted danger to humans and animals, but, unlike vipers, it always warns of its presence. Only in case of an immediate threat does the cobra make several lightning-fast attacks towards the enemy, one of which, as a rule, ends with a targeted bite. At the same time, unlike vipers, cobras do not bite instantly, but rather “chew”, moving their jaws several times before releasing the victim. If you do not take an antidote, death will occur 2-3 hours after the bite. Antidotes made from snake venom are purchased by the Veda from local healers. They don't trust modern medicine.

Shami is a hereditary healer, his father and grandfather worked here. Now he is the main one who prepares antidotes, local residents trust him more official medicine, so he doesn’t sit without work. Near the house there is a special extension in which snakes live. To prepare the antidote, the healer collects snake venom. IN lately things are not going well, tourists help out, to whom he shows his pets for about 5 dollars.

01. Snake house.

02. Certificates and publications hang on the wall.

03. Cobra. In total, there are 4 species of cobras living in Sri Lanka.

04. Cobras are most active from mid-April to June and from September to mid-November. In July, the female lays 9-19 eggs, from which juveniles emerge in late August - early September. Cobras feed on rodents, amphibians, and birds, but, like other adders, they readily eat snakes, including poisonous ones. The cobra poses an undoubted danger to humans and animals, but unlike viper snakes it always warns of its presence. Only in case of an immediate threat does the cobra make several lightning-fast attacks towards the enemy, one of which, as a rule, ends with a targeted bite. At the same time, unlike vipers, cobras do not bite instantly, but rather “chew”, moving their jaws several times before releasing the victim.

05. If you do not take an antidote, death will occur 2-3 hours after the bite.

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08. In total, 98 species of snakes live in Sri Lanka.

09. Chain viper. Very strong poison. After 30 minutes the kidneys begin to fail.

10. Even if you take the antidote, there will be bite marks on your body. This is what a finger looks like after being bitten.

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13. Indian krait, as Shami said, it is the most poisonous on the island. Death occurs within 40 minutes.

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16. A chain viper tries to bite its owner.

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18. This is the most fast snake. It moves at a speed of 2 km per hour and loves to live on coconut plantations. Not poisonous.

19. Grassy-green whipweed. They grow up to 2m in length. and only 1.5-2cm thick. Has excellent vision. In the depths of the mouth there is a pair of poisonous teeth, which do not pose any particular danger to humans. Leads an arboreal lifestyle.

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22. Python.

23. Father Shami, also a healer, but has now retired. He was bitten poisonous snakes 32 times.

24. Family photo.

25. There are a lot of snake tinctures in the closet.

26. Medicines for all diseases are made from snakes and poison. These balls help with headaches.

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