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Teke Teke: The Terrifying Urban Legend of Kashima Reiko

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The urban legends of Teke Teke and Kashima Reiko are often so similar, they are thought to have merged or started together. Both of them warn about a vengeful spirit without legs, crawling her way to her victims, only letting you go if you can answer her riddle. 

Japan has no shortage of eerie urban legends, but few are as unsettling as the story of Teke Teke, (テケテケ), a ghostly entity known for its horrific appearance and chilling modus operandi. This tale, often shared among schoolchildren and horror enthusiasts, tells of a vengeful spirit, also classified as an onryō, whose origins are rooted in tragedy and whose presence is marked by a haunting sound—the ominous “teke-teke” noise she makes as she drags her mutilated body in search of victims.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Japan

The name given to the ghost is often said to be Kashima Reiko, although she is only one of the many variations of the legend. The urban legend has many variations and the spirit goes by many names, almost making the story of Teke Teke a type of ghostly fate for many different people across Japan. In almost all of the legends though, seeing her apparition, will most likely seal your own fate. 

Kashima Reiko: The urban legend of Kashima Reiko and Teke Teke are often told together. In 2009 a movie based on the urban legend of Teke Teke came out.

The Legend of Teke Teke

The story of Teke Teke centers around a young woman who met a gruesome fate, often said to be the ghost of a school girl. While variations exist, the most common version tells of a girl who fell—or was pushed—onto the tracks of an oncoming train. The impact severed her body at the waist, leading to her untimely and agonizing death. Being far north in Japan on a winter night, the extreme coldness made her veins freeze and the bleeding to stop. She was kept alive for a while like this, calling out for help, clawing her way up from the rails. 

In some versions she could have been helped, but the station staff and onlookers did nothing, or at least not enough and she died of her injuries. In some versions, the staff saw her and covered her with a tarp where she died slowly. 

Unable to find peace, her restless spirit is said to wander at night, often said to haunt old train stations and dark alleys. dragging her upper torso with her hands or elbows, making a distinct “teke-teke” sound against the ground.

It is believed that anyone who encounters Teke Teke is doomed to die. Many say she will appear to you three days after hearing the story if you don’t forget. She is said to move at unnatural speeds, capable of chasing down even the fastest runners and even cars. Her fingernails turned into claws she drags herself around with. When she catches her victim, she slices them in half, mirroring her own grisly demise. Some versions of the legend suggest that she carries a scythe or other sharp weapon, ensuring that her revenge is as brutal as her death.

Background for the Legend of Teke Teke

Teke Teke: (テケテケ) is a 2009 Japanese supernatural horror film directed by Kōji Shiraishi and written by Takeki Akimoto with a sequel following it. Based on the Japanese urban legend.

Teke Teke is often said to have been a school girl from Northern Japan, mostly said to be Hokkaido. Although very cold in the winter, there is no way it’s so cold to hold a decapitated person alive for a long time. Also, the way a train hits and injures a person, will most likely not result in this type of injury anyway.

It could be however, that this part of legend comes from an actual suicide at Akabana Station in Tokyo back in 1935. A woman threw herself in front of the trains and her legs were cut off but didn’t die because of how they were crushed under the train wheels. She was talking with the train conductor, but died after being taken to the hospital

In some variations Teke Teke is a school student, sometimes she is a grown woman. Often her ghost story is morphed to mirror the age and surroundings of those telling the story. Stories told about Teke Teke being a student are often connected with school bullying, and that she ended her life by leaping in front of a train. This way the legend exists as a sort of cautionary tale of bullying, although her vengeance is seemingly not only limited to bullies.  

She is often classified as an Onryō, a type of vengeful spirit of Japan that are often considered to be some of the most dangerous spirits in Japan, created out of hatred and coming back back for revenge to those who wronged them in life

Read More: Onryō — the Vengeful Japanese Spirit

The story of Teke Teke has been around for decades now in many variations and points of origin. Seemingly a merging of many stories that predates the current one. It seems like it could be inspired by, or at least connected with the tragic story of Kashima Reiko haunting public bathrooms, especially in schools.

The Connection to Kashima Reiko

Teke Teke is sometimes linked to another well-known Japanese ghost, Kashima Reiko, more connected with school bathrooms and toilets. Kashima Reiko’s story shares similarities with Teke Teke, as she is also a vengeful spirit with a severed body. It looks like the story of Kashima Reiko predates Teke Teke, although it looks like today, more people know about the Teke Teke version perhaps. Because of the bathroom connection, her story is often told together with the ghost of Hanako-san.

Read More: The Legend of Toire no Hanako-san: The Ghost Haunting School Toilets in Japan 

According to legend, Kashima Reiko is the ghost of a woman who died in Hokkaido, sometimes in Muroran, suffering a similar fate of being cut in half by a train. Most stories start at the end of World War II, or the period after. She was said to be an office worker and attacked and rape by an American soldier stationed there after the war. Some say that the attack happened in a public restroom and that 

The assault was severe, a doctor found her and saved her life, but she had to amputate her arms and legs. Her vanity made her so shocked by her new body, she jumped in front of the train to take her life. In many variants of the legend, she wasn’t an amputee, but the shame and depression after the assault made her take her life.

Today it is always told to be a woman, but when the stories first circulated, the story of the amputee was also said to sometimes be a male military veteran. This is often connected with the shrine in Kashima City where many soldiers visited to pray for victory during the war. Many yokai’s, or ghosts, are often forgotten gods and that this could be one of these instances of the war of God, Takemikazuchi. The shrine was also relocated in 1972 in Hokkaido, about the same time the Kashima story started spreading. 

There are also those claiming that Kashima Reiko is a version of the Slit-Mouth-Woman, scaring children since the 1970s and that the name of this ghost was actually Kashima Reiko. Before 1970, the story often went: A creature came knocking on the door, asking the one opening the door if they needed a leg. If you answered no, it would cut off one and carry it away. If you answered yes, an extra leg would grow on your body. 

Read More: Kuchisake-onna – The Urban Legend of the Slit-Mouthed Woman

Unlike the other variants of Teke Teke, her spirit is believed to haunt bathrooms exclusively, where she asks unfortunate victims questions about her death and where her legs are. Although not said to have died in the toilet, ghost stories of spirits haunting them are fairly big and many in Japan. 

How to Avoid Teke Teke and Kashima Reiko

In some versions, you can survive the encounter with Kashima Reiko if you answer with the phrase: “I need them right now”, where she will follow up with: “Who told you my story?” A riddle, you’re supposed to answer with: “kamen shinin ma“, or “mask death demon” which may be the phonetic root of Kashima’s name. People also say that if you answer that her legs are on the Meishin Expressway, the main way between Osaka and Nagoya.

If they fail to answer correctly, she kills them in a manner similar to her own demise. Some believe that Kashima Reiko and Teke Teke are actually the same entity, or at least different interpretations of the same tragic ghost story.

Like many Japanese urban legends, there are superstitions about how to avoid an encounter with Teke Teke. Some claim that she can be warded off if one answers her questions correctly, while others insist that saying certain protective phrases can save potential victims. In Kashima Reiko’s case, it is said that answering her question about where her legs are with the phrase “They are on the Meishin Expressway” can appease her spirit and spare one’s life.

The Cultural Impact of Teke Teke and Kashima Reiko

Kashima Reiko and Teke Teke’s legend is one of many yūrei (ghost) stories that permeate Japanese folklore, demonstrating the country’s long-standing fascination with spirits, death, and vengeance. Her story has been adapted into movies, manga, and even video games, keeping her terrifying presence alive in popular culture. Some say that if she catches you, you will turn into Teke Teke yourself. 

Teke Teke or Kashima Reiko is not just a tale meant to frighten children—she represents the fear of sudden, tragic death and the idea that spirits can return with unfinished business. Her legend continues to be passed down through generations, evolving with each retelling but always keeping the same terrifying essence: once you hear the sound of Teke Teke, it may already be too late.

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References:

テケテケ – Wikipedia

Teke teke | Yokai.com 

カシマさん – Wikipedia

The Haunted Chittoor Railway Station and the Violent Death of an Officer

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After a violent clash between two factions of officers at the train station, a CRF officer was beaten to death by the time they reached the Chittoor Railway Station. It is said that ever since that fateful day, the station has been haunted by the ghost seeking justice for his death. 

Along the coast of Andhra Pradesh lies the Chittoor Railway Station—a station with 3 platforms and a local rumor passed around. It is said that the station along the Gudur-Katpadi branch line is one of the most haunted stations in India. 

Read more: Check out all of the ghost stories from India

Legend has it that the ghost of a Central Reserve Police Force jawan named Hari Singh from Jharkhand roams the deserted halls of Chittoor Railway Station.

Haunted Railway Station: According to the legend, the Chittoor Railway Station is haunted by an officer who was beaten to death as he was on one of the trains. // Source: Moulalisaheb.g /Wikimedia

The Ghost of CRF Hari Singh

According to local lore, on that fateful day of October 31, 2013, Singh was aboard a New Delhi-Kerala train when he was attacked by Railway Protection Force personnel and a few Traveling Ticket Examiners.

Exactly why this happened is not specified, but there have been situations before this where the two forces have ended up in an argument or fight on the train, often because of unpaid tickets. Although, there was no mention of the cause for this incident in most of the sources.

As the train pulled into Chittoor Station, Singh was badly injured after the fight. He was rushed to a hospital in Chennai, but succumbed to his injuries ten days later.

The Haunted Chittoor Railway Station

Since that tragic day, the ghost of Hari Singh has been said to haunt the grounds of Chittoor Railway Station, forever wandering in search of the justice that eluded him in life. Locals speak of his ghostly apparition, his presence felt in the eerie silence that descends upon the station after dark.

According to a chilling report by The Hindu in 2015, the people of Chittoor have reported feeling the icy touch of Singh’s ghostly presence. This is also the earliest source found for this said incident, although not referring to other sources and if we are to believe the story, we must also believe that the death never reached the news.

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References:

Know The Truth of 8 Most Haunted Railway Stations in India | RailRecipe Report 

‘Ghost tale’ haunts Chittoor railway station | Andhra Pradesh News – The Hindu 

Chittoor railway station – Wikipedia

The Haunted Rabindra Sarobar Metro Station in Kolkata

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On the rails of Rabindra Sarobar Metro Station in Kolkata people claim to have seen and heard ghosts from the departed both on the platform as well as in the tunnels. Who can be haunting the station otherwise known as ‘Paradise of Suicide’?

The Rabindra Sarobar Metro Station (রবীন্দ্র সরোবর) in Kolkata known as the city of joy, holds a chilling reputation as one of the most haunted places in the city. Along Kolkata’s bustling metro line 1, this station, found on Shyama Prasad Mukherjee road, derives its name from the nearby Rabindra Sarobar, an artificial lake. Yet, behind its mundane facade lies a sinister reputation earned from the tragedies that have unfolded within its confines. 

Read more: Check out all of the ghost stories from India

The underground station built in 1986 has earned the grim nickname of the “Paradise of Suicides” due to the alarming number of individuals who have taken their own lives by leaping onto the tracks over the last couple of decades. Shockingly, it’s estimated that a staggering 70 to 80% of the metro’s suicides occur at this particular station, casting a shadow of despair over the station.

Supernatural Encounters on the Rail

Adding to the eerie atmosphere are the numerous accounts of supernatural encounters reported by commuters and station staff alike. Many claim to have felt an otherworldly presence lingering in the air, with sightings of ghostly apparitions and inexplicable shadows haunting the station’s platforms. Distorted figures have been spotted moving aimlessly before vanishing into thin air, believed to be the tormented souls of those who met their end in tragic circumstances. 

Rabindra Sarobar Metro Station: This station on the underground in Kolkata is said to be the most haunted station in the city and many stories from passengers and drivers talk about their paranormal experiences.// Source

Commuters passing through Rabindra Sarobar Metro Station have recounted hearing unsettling cries and moans, echoing through the deserted station late at night, while others have described witnessing ghostly movements inside the trains themselves, especially on the last train for the night.

Ghost Wandering the  Rabindra Sarobar Metro Station

One of the many stories about strange things happening at the station was shared online about a guy that saw a good looking man on the station. The man approached him and asked him to take his picture, but vanished into thin air. 

Read More: For more ghost stories from haunted subway stations around the world, check out Take the Haunted Subway in Beijing and The Ghost Suicide at the Yau Ma Tei Station.

When the guy asked around, there was an older man that told him about a young man that wanted to become a model, but his parents tried to pressure him to become a doctor instead. He committed suicide at the station and now his soul is haunting it, trying to make people to take his photo. This story was originally posted on Instagram, and many people in the comments shared similar experiences. 

The Metro Drivers and Ghosts

Even metro drivers and station attendants have attested to these eerie occurrences, with sightings of ghostly figures and footless apparitions causing delays and disruptions to train services at Rabindra Sarobar Metro Station. 

From an article back from 2015, a driver talked about when he recently had to stop the train when he was crossing Rabindra Sarobar Metro Station. According to him, he had seen someone inside a tunnel, but on closer inspection, there was nothing there. Was it a ghost? Perhaps access to the tunnels is too easy for the living? Either way, the ghost stories are whispered. 

The Haunted Rabindra Sarobar Metro Station

As the clock strikes 10:24, the station falls silent, devoid of any living soul daring to linger amidst the spectral entities that are said to roam its empty corridors. Local residents steer clear of the area after dark, wary of the chilling tales that have woven a web of fear around the haunted Rabindra Sarobar Metro Station. Though these ghostly figures are said to have never harmed anyone, their presence alone is enough to send shivers down the spines of those who dare to tread near this eerie locale.

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References:

https://www.telegraphindia.com/opinion/the-other-side-of-reason/cid/1440430

Rabindra Sarobar Metro Station: Every Passenger Horrified by Distorted Shadows & Moving Figures! 

What’s with these haunted stories from Ravindra Sarovar Metro? : r/kolkata 

Ghost of the Dombivli Railway Station that wants to go Home

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Some of the busiest railway stations can also be the most dangerous. Dombivli Railway Station is said to be haunted by the people that tried to make it home, but never got off the tracks.

Dombivli Railway Station stands as both a vital transport hub and a chilling portal to the unknown according to the local legends. It is an old station and was built in 1886. Amidst the hustle and bustle of commuters and trains, whispers of paranormal activity linger like a haunting melody from the platforms.

Read more: Check out all of the ghost stories from India

Dombivli itself is a suburban city by the Ulhas river in Maharashtra outside of Mumbai where a lot of people are passing by. The station is also the busiest railway station on the Central line of the Mumbai Suburban Railway with five platforms and over 300 thousands of commuters daily. 

Death By Crossing the Tracks

Close by the bigger station in Dombivli you will find Kopar Rail Crossing—a seemingly innocuous intersection that belies its sinister reputation. According to local lore, this crossing has claimed the lives of many unfortunate souls. Before they built a bridge over the crossings, trespassing over the tracks claimed over hundreds of lives each year around the surrounding stations. 

Kopar Station is another stop in Dombivli city and the locals claim there is another paranormal reason for all of these deaths. According to some, there is an evil spirit around this place that lures people on the tracks. They say that they lose their consciousness and walk to the middle of the tracks without a reason to wait for the oncoming train.

Some say that the ghost is from one of these crossing incidents. Other variations say that she is waiting for the trail to arrive at the station. 

Deadly Crossing: The crossing over this train station is said to be very dangerous. Some say that the victims that were hit crossing the tracks are haunting the place. Some say that the place itself has a weird energy that draws people out on the tracks. // Source

The Crying Woman on the Platform

But back to the Dombivli Railway Station itself that are haunted by more than one ghost. There is one ghost story from this stop that are told more than the others:

One chilling account tells of a man on the trains late at night, who encountered a mysterious woman at the platform or crossing, depending on the different sources telling the story. Appearing to be in her forties or fifties in an office outfit, the woman was seen weeping inconsolably. When questioned about why she was crying and if she needed any help, she said she wanted to go home, but couldn’t.

The man returned to Dombivli Railway Station the next day with a friend, and saw the same woman crying. He tried to discuss it with his friend, but to his utter bewilderment, the friend couldn’t see the woman at all. 

The Haunting at Dombivli Railway Station

Commuters talk about not only the story about the crying woman on the platform at Dombivli Railway Station, but a sense of a strange energy seeming to stay on the overcrowded station. 

There are also said to be heard some strange and scary wailing that are echoing through the haunted station. When the haunted rumors really started circulating about Dombivli Railway Station is hard to pinpoint. The earliest sources online at least come from 2014 (at least the earlier English sources.)

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References:

https://hauntingindia.blogspot.com/2015/10/top-10-haunted-places-in-dombivli.html

Track accidents fail to curb trespassing at Kopar railway station | Mumbai news – Hindustan Times 

Dombivli – Wikipedia 

The Haunting Cries of Sohagpur Station

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In central India you will find the haunted railway station called Sohagpur Station. Rumor has it that the station is haunted by the blood curdling screams echoing over the tracks. 

Amidst the sprawling landscapes of Madhya Pradesh in central India, Sohagpur Station is a small stop on the route through the area, its shadowed platforms and deserted corridors bearing witness to a chilling tale of mystery and despair. 

Read more: Check out all of the ghost stories from India

Sohagpur is a town mostly known for its large export of Betel nuts, and luch scenic nature landscapes in the surrounding area. The little railway station with two platforms is known for being one of the most haunted railway stations in the country. 

Sohagpur Station: This train station in central India is thought to be haunted by the desperate cries from a woman. Who is this supposed ghost that are said to linger by the railway tracks? // Source

The Haunting of Sohagpur Station

Legend has it that Sohagpur Station is haunted by the ghost of a woman. Not much is known about this woman, who she is or when the haunting started. Not even her appearance is much discussed in the stories, rather, her screams.

According to local lore, the woman’s anguished screams are said to echo through the deserted platforms, her voice filled with pain and agony, terrifying the passengers. 

But it is not just the woman’s cries that haunt the station. Many travelers have reported hearing other unsettling noises echoing through the empty halls—strange whispers that seem to emanate from the darkness, and eerie footsteps that echo through the deserted corridors like the ghostly remnants of a long-forgotten past.

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References:

Haunted Railway Stations In India 

Sohagpur – Wikipedia 

Sohagpur railway station – Wikipedia 

From Barog To Begunkodar: 8 Of The Most Haunted Railway Stations In India

The Haunted Ludhiana Railway Station and the Ghost the Dedicated Employee

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After a faithful employee died at his station, it is said that the ghost of Subhash is said to be haunting his former workplace at the Ludhiana Railway Station.

Ludhiana Railway Station (लुधियाना जंक्शन रेलवे स्टेशन) is a stop in the Ludhiana district in the northern Indian state, Punjab. It is known for being one of the busiest stations in Punjab, as well as perhaps the cleanest in India. It is an old station from 1864 with 7 platforms. It is also known to be one of the most haunted railway stations in the country. 

Today, the reservation center at the Ludhiana Railway Station where you book your tickets has changed and you can now book train tickets many places because of the notorious long queues. 

Legend has it that a former Computer Reservation System (CRS) officer named Subhash met his untimely demise within the confines of this very room and are said to be haunting the Ludhiana Railway Station. 

Read more: Check out all of the ghost stories from India

Subhash was known for his unwavering dedication to his job at the ticket counter, and was said to have loved his work with a passion that seems to have lasted, even after death itself. It is believed to have bound his spirit to the Reservation Center long after his passing in 2004 according to most sources.

The Haunting of Ludhiana Railway Station

Whispers of Subhash’s ghostly presence have circulated among the employees for years and people that have worked there speak of sudden drops in temperature, flickering lights, and an overwhelming feeling of being watched by unseen eyes.

People trying to book their tickets have also been tricked by seeing something looking like a human shadow at the ticket counter, although there is no one there. 

But perhaps the most chilling aspect of Subhash’s haunting is the alleged curse that befalls anyone who dares to sit in the very chair where he once worked. According to local lore, those who have attempted to occupy Subhash’s former seat have been met with a series of misfortunes and setbacks, their lives plagued by difficulties and problems.

Despite attempts to cleanse the room of its spectral inhabitant, Subhash’s ghost remains a permanent fixture of the Reservation Center, his presence a chilling reminder of the dangers that lurk in the shadows of the mundane. For those who dare to tread within its haunted confines, the Reservation Center offers a glimpse into a world where the boundaries between the living and the dead blur, and where the past refuses to be forgotten.

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References:

Ludhiana Junction railway station – Wikipedia 

TOP TEN HAUNTED RAILWAY STATIONS IN INDIA

The Ghosts of Freedom Fighters Haunting Naini Railway Station

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It is said that in the depths of Naini Railway Station, former freedom fighters who ended their lives in the nearby prison are haunting the tracks and platforms. 

In the northern state Uttar Pradesh in India, lies Naini, a city in Prayagraj District— the local Naini Railway Station is said to be a place where the echoes of the past reverberate through the mist-shrouded platforms and shadowed tracks. 

Read more: Check out all of the ghost stories from India

Built in close proximity to Naini Jail, a notorious prison, even to this day, of suffering and oppression during India’s fight for independence, this railway station bears witness to a history stained with blood and tears. And if we are to believe the local legends, some of the freedom fighters are said to haunt the train station.

Naini Railway Station: Painted and colorful, it is said that the Naini Railway Station is haunted by the people that died in the prison nearby.

Freedom Fighters from Naini Jail

For generations, Naini Jail served as a grim reminder of, not only what happens to criminals, but of British colonial rule and was a place where countless souls were imprisoned, tortured, and ultimately laid to rest. Some of them simply fight for their motherland.

Among these were the freedom fighters who dared to challenge the might of the empire like Motilal Nehru, Indira Gandhi, Jawahar Lal Nehru (the first prime minister of India), Govind Ballabh Pant, Narendra Dev, Rafi Ahmed Kidwai, Hasrat Mohani, all of these were imprisoned there during Indian independence movement. 

It is from the freedom fighter movement the ghosts haunting the station are said to come from. 

The Haunting of Naini Railway Station

Naini Jail: It is believed that the haunting at the Naini Railway Station comes from the jail nearby that once housed freedom fighters.

Legend has it that the souls of the dead roam the grounds of Naini Railway Station and its surrounding tracks. Locals speak of spectral apparitions that wander the deserted platforms, their silent footsteps echoing through the stillness.

Although believed that the ghost must be the freedom fighters, there are not really any particular names attached to it, how many or what they are doing at the railway station. 

Many believe that the tortured souls of the freedom fighters, denied their rightful place in history, are now haunting the area. Although their presence scares the passengers, it is said that the souls haunting the station is harmless. 

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References:

TOP TEN HAUNTED RAILWAY STATIONS IN INDIA 

Naini – Wikipedia 

Naini Central Prison – Wikipedia 

The Haunted Begunkodor Train Station Reopened after being Closed for Decades

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After a rumor about seeing the ghost of a woman wearing a white sari by the rural Begunkodor Train Station, it closed down for decades. Now after it’s opened, the story of the ghost has returned. What exactly is happening by the tracks?

Far from most things in the remote village of Begunkodor in West Bengal lies a railway station shrouded in mystery that spans decades and supposedly haunted by a spectral presence that continues to send shivers down the spines of those who dare to venture near. 

Read more: Check out all of the ghost stories from India

Built in the early 1960s but closed down pretty quickly because of the haunted rumors, Begunkodor Train Station serves the Purulia district and has since its reopening been seen as one of the most haunted railway stations in India. 

The Lady in White Saree

Legend has it that Begunkodor Train Station is haunted by the ghost of a lady draped in a white saree—a tragic figure whose spirit wanders the platforms and tracks, forever trapped in a spectral dance of sorrow and despair. 

This story was told by a railway employee working as the station master to the villagers of Begunkodor in 1967, the year they decided to close down the Begunkodor Train Station. After he told about his sightings, he was ignored and nothing was down. Allegedly his first hand account was published, but he wouldn’t survive to tell if for much longer. 

According to local lore, the woman in a white sari has many origin stories. Some claim she is a witch with horrible powers, while other says she is the ghost of a lady who met her untimely demise when she was tragically run over by a train at the station, her life snuffed out in a moment of unspeakable horror. 

Either way, it is said that this very specter holds the power to seriously harm people, perhaps even take their life. 

The Death of the Station Master

Because just seeing the spectral presence of the lady in white is not the only source of terror at Begunkodor Train Station. It is said that the sight of the ghostly apparition led to the death of a railway employee. 

The same year the Station Master tried to warn the villagers about the ghost, the dead bodies of him as well as his family were found in their home. The locals finally took his warning to heard and blamed it all on the ghost or possible witch that were haunting the Begunkodor Train Station. 

After all this controversy and rumors, they closed down the station when the trains passing refused to stop because of the paranormal stuff they claimed they experienced on this platform. 

The Reopened Begunkodor Train Station

Since that fateful day, reports have surfaced of eerie sightings and inexplicable phenomena occurring at Begunkodor Train Station. Witnesses claim to have seen the ghostly apparition of the lady in white, her ethereal form gliding silently along the tracks or twirling in a macabre dance upon the platforms. Some even swear that her mournful wails can be heard echoing through the night, a chilling reminder of the tragedy that befell her.

Despite these chilling reports, the government dismissed the claims of paranormal activity and decided to reopen Begunkodor Station in 2009, after it had lain deserted for 42 years. Some claim that the staff made up the ghost stories to not be stationed there. 

Some even claim that the locals made up the ghost story to get a boost of “ghost tourism”. Perhaps worst is that this particular rationalist group called Paschim Banga Bigyan Mancha, said that the locals then loot the tourists after they scare them away. 

The way that they called it busting the myth about the station being haunted is that they camped out there in 2017 and they saw a group of men in the bushes making the sounds. Although they didn’t manage to catch them, they reckon they were behind the rumors. 

What about the station master and his family’s mysterious death at Begunkodor Train Station? Did it really happen, or was that also a part of the legend created to scare people? For now, no evidence supporting that their death actually happened like they claim. 

Yet, despite the government’s assurances, the whispers of the supernatural persist, casting a pall of fear and unease over the station and its surroundings. People still avoid using this station after sunset and twice a week, it is said that a girl is seen running along the tracks on the same day she died. 

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References:

Begunkodor Railway Station has been reopened more than a decade ago & a few trains stop there – FACTLY 

Myth of West Bengal’s ‘haunted’ Begunkodar railway station busted after 50 years 

Begunkodor Railway Station: West Bengal’s ‘Ghost’ Railway Station That Was Closed For Four Decades 

West Bengal’s Begunkodor no longer a haunted railway station – The Hindu 

The Haunted Metro Stations on Hong Kong MTR’s Island Line

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It is said that more than one station on the MTR’s Island line in Hong Kong are haunted. One of the most well known urban legends are the ghost suicide at the metro in Hong Kong at the Yau Ma Tei Station. It is also one of those rare cases where the urban legend came from a very true story. 

Today the metro in Hong Kong is a convenient transportation method that can take you from Hong Kong Island, Kowloon as well as to the New Territories. 

There are more than one story from the dimly lit underground of Hong Kong that have a more supernatural take. Disappearing train, women in white leaping in front og the trains and construction workers still roaming in the tunnels. 

Read More: Check out all of the ghost stories from China

And one of the stories in this article has yet to be completely debunked. Here is a look at some of the allegedly haunted metro stations on the Hong Kong underground.

The Ghosts of the Construction Workers at Rumsey Station

Rumsey Station: MTR Sheung Wan Station passageway (Rumsey Station reserved platform)

There are more than one stop on the metro that are said to be haunted since the construction on the tracks started in the late 1960s. Like Rumsey Station, an abandoned platform by Sheung Wan station. The Rumsey Stations platforms are located near Exit E, forming part of the passageways between the concourse and the open platforms, and they run perpendicular to the Island line platforms below.

They said that during construction there were so many fatal accidents that they had to abandon the project. Allegedly the ghosts of the construction workers can be seen and their screams can be heard around the East Lobby in the night. 

Another story is that a worker there had seen a woman in white falling off the platform. Even after Sheung Wan station opened in 1986, there were stories of passengers who faced the same fate in the unopened station.

The Mental Patient at Whitty Station

MTR had planned to build Whitty Station as part of the Island Line, but the project was also abandoned. Some say that it was because of all the paranormal things happening during construction. Where Whitty Street Station would have been is now the HKU Station (formerly named Shek Tong Tsui Station). 

There have also been claims that construction workers hear the screams inside of the Whitty Station tunnels. When they investigated the claims, they allegedly found a woman dressed in white on the platform that leapt onto the tracks when they approached her. 

People have since speculated that it could be a patient from the nearby mental hospital, who have also a couple of haunted rumors. It used to be called High Street Mental Hospital, but today it is called Sai Ying Pun Community Complex. For more on this haunted story, check out High Street Ghost House, The Sai Ying Pun, in Hong Kong.

The Train that Disappeared at the Choi Hung Station

At the Choi Hung Station there are three, not two railway tracks like the other stations have and if we are to believe the legends, it is because of something dark. According to one urban legend, when they used the middle railway track, they found out the hard way that apparently this was a track leading directly to hell. 

The story goes that when they constructed it the engineer decided it was time for a test run and brought some people along. They were supposed to drive toward Kowloon Bay Station, but after a good 30 minutes, they still hadn’t arrived and they had lost contact with the train. 

The missing train did arrive at last though, but there was something wrong with the passengers. The people onboard seemed disoriented, some even passed away after they were being sent away to the hospital. It wasn’t clear what was wrong with them other than pure shock and fear. 

When they investigated it they brought along a medium to help them shed light to the strange case. The medium claimed that the track led straight to hell and that the passengers had all seen something they would never recover from. 

Because of this, they abandoned the track and built new ones that would lead to the meant destination and not pass through hell. Although the hellway track has been seen to be used to transport trains to the depot in Kowloon Bay at the end of the day.

The Ghost Suicide at Yau Ma Tei Station

Most of the hauntings in the underground stations can somehow be explained with a more rational and factual origin. But the ghost story from Yau Ma Tei Station is something a little more strange and difficult to explain. In November 1981 things were going fine at the MTR and the Yau Ma Tei Station. Passengers were coming and going as the trains stopped to pick up their passengers and take them away to their destination. 

On this day though, something happened that no one has really been able to explain and even made the news. Passengers on the train reported seeing a young woman falling into the tracks at the station as one of the trains was rapidly approaching and running over her. 

The passengers on the platform as well as the staff claim to have heard her screams as she was hit by the train and the driver of the train remembers the horrible bump as she ended up under the train. 

They called for medical aid and sounded the alarm that a horrible accident had just happened. When the medics arrived to help, they didn’t find anyone. There was no young woman on the train tracks, not even a drop of blood could be spotted. 

A Collective Hallucination in the Dark Tunnels

What was this strange incident about? The investigation couldn’t find anything and the whole thing was called a collective hallucination as more than one present at the station had witnessed it all. 

There is also speculation of it being a ghost of a woman that maybe didn’t die that day, but had so in the past and now relieved her dying moments as a ghost. 

When the story came back in 2012 in internet forums, a writer decided to dig into the story. The writer claims that someone contacted him and said that the person on the tracks back then was really a living 22 year old woman wearing white that fell into the tracks. In this version though she survived it all and is allegedly alive to this day as well.

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References:

Get spooked by these MTR urban legends in Hong Kong | Honeycombers 

Top 10 spooky stories in Hong Kong

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