Matewis: Probably the
Tokolosh. Every region has its fair share of weird superstitions, but what makes this one so funny is what people do to protect themselves from this little creature that carries people away at night: they elevate their beds by placing bricks beneath each leg of their beds so that the tokolosh can't reach up high enough to grab them at night. I don't think it's as common under the middle classes, though I could be wrong, and I don't know how prevalent it is anymore under the lower classes. I'm willing to guess that many people still believe it, if for no other reason that sangomas (witch doctors) are still being taken extremely seriously over here. When people employ workers for construction work or house renovation, then the recruiting pool is predominantly from the lower class, and there you'll often hear stories of how they refuse to sleep on beds that aren't additionally elevated in some way, either using bricks, rocks or cans of paint.
The tokolosh also frequently appears in the media as a joke, and sometimes not, and in the most successful local cartoon strip, Madam&Eve:
For some reason this reminds me of the Faerie folk in British/Irish/European culture. Not the modern, romantic fables, but the gritty, Celtic strain. Nailing an iron horseshoe above the entrance to a building to protect from evil spirits, et al.
It is also believed that iron fixtures were used at Stonehenge (a Neolithic monument in southern England), to prevent evil spirits from disrupting rituals there.