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Black Volga's Driver is the antagonist from the Russian and Polish urban legend of The Black Volga, a legend that appeared in the Soviet Union era.
Biography[]
In the 1960s and 1970s, in some regions of the Soviet Union such as Russia, Poland, Belarus, Ukraine, and Mongolia; There was a legend about a black limousine of the Volga model with white curtains on the windows and going through streets and country lanes; kidnapping people and children at random. According to the different versions, The Black Volga's Driver could have been one or several individuals, be they priests, nuns, jews, vampires, satanists, and even the Devil himself. Children were said to be kidnapped to use their blood as a cure for members of the communist party or foreigners suffering from leukemia; they said their organs were harvested to be sold on the black market or simply used for other secret experiments. The legend resurfaced at the end of the 20th century, changing the detail that the director stopped to ask pedestrians the time; and he fired at them as they approached to answer. In other stories the black Volga was regularly seen on the streets of Warsaw during the 1960s. The car was manned by a group of child kidnappers. These kidnappers are supposed to have been Soviet officers who abducted young women to take them to other high-ranking Soviets during the 1930s.
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Trivia[]
- The Black Volga would also have a license plate number “666”, some also say it also had curtains on the windows. The only way to escape the demonic driver was to say "It's God's timing", and the vehicle would simply disappear.
- Some stories claim that the driver would not kill his victims on the spot, but he tells them that they would die at the same time the next day.