Feral Child Raised by Hairy Beings Shares Lost Tartaria Memories
Posted Monday, July 13, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
This one stopped me in my tracks. A video popped up on YouTube from a channel called The Corrupted Century, and it's the kind of story that makes you sit back and really think about what we might be missing in the official history books.
The video tells the story of a 91-year-old woman who died in the winter of 1911 in a small village in the hills of Russia. For most of her life, she refused to talk about where she came from. But on her final night, she asked for a candle, a priest, and a man who could write. What she told them stayed locked in a drawer for almost 80 years.
Here's where it gets wild. Back in 1826, a group of crown surveyors were mapping a stretch of forest far to the east, land that was literally blank on official charts. Deep in that forest, they found a little girl, maybe five or six years old, sitting at the base of a stone wall that had no business being there. The wall ran for nearly a mile. The blocks were massive, perfectly cut, with no mortar, seams so tight you couldn't slide a knife between them. Moss had swallowed most of it, and century-old trees grew straight out of the top.
The child didn't speak Russian. She didn't speak any language the surveyors recognized. But she wasn't wild or feral. She was calm, clean, and when one of the men reached for her, she looked at him with what he described in his notes as pity, like she already knew something terrible about the world he was about to drag her into.
Now here's the part that really matters to anyone who follows Sasquatch research. The old woman told the priest that she had been raised by beings she called "the hairy ones." And her description? Tall, far taller than any person she ever met later in life. Bodies covered in fine reddish hair. They moved through the forest without sound. They didn't hunt her. They found her the way you would find a lost thing that belonged to you, and they raised her like a child they had promised to protect.
This lines up with countless witness reports that have come out of the Pacific Northwest, the Appalachians, and remote regions of Canada and Russia. Researchers like Dr. Jeff Meldrum and John Bindernagel have documented similar descriptions from people who claim to have seen these beings up close. The reddish hair, the towering height, the silent movement through dense forest, it's all there in the folklore and the encounter reports.
But what really got me about this video is how the hairy ones communicated. The woman was very clear about this, and the priest wrote it down twice because he didn't believe it the first time. They didn't speak with their mouths. They communicated through pictures. A thought would arrive in her head fully formed, an image, a feeling, a memory that wasn't hers. That's how they taught her.
For anyone who has followed the work of researchers like David Paulides or read accounts from people who claim ongoing contact with Sasquatch, this kind of telepathic communication comes up again and again. Many witnesses report that the beings seem to communicate without sound, sometimes through what can only be described as mental imagery or emotion.
The video goes on to describe what the hairy ones showed her about the land's true history, an empire called Tartaria that was supposedly erased in a single generation by a wave of dark mud that swallowed whole cities. The hairy ones, she said, were older than that empire. They had watched it rise and watched it drown. They carried no hatred, no worship, only memory. They didn't want to rule anything. They didn't want to be found. All they wanted was for the truth not to die with the last person who remembered it.
That's why they chose a child. An adult would argue, would measure everything against what they already believed. But a small child raised in the forest with no other past to defend would simply accept what she was shown as ordinary. She would carry it without doubting it the way you carry the color of the sky.
This story fits into a much larger pattern that the channel explores across 35 documented cases, different cities, different decades, different types of evidence, all following the same sequence: discovered, documented, acquired, disappeared. The video mentions a document in the pinned comment that lays out the full pattern.
Whether you take the Tartaria angle as historical fact or as something more symbolic, the core of this story is something that resonates deeply with anyone who has spent time in Bigfoot country or studied the lore. The idea that these beings have been here all along, watching, remembering, occasionally stepping in to protect a lost child, it's the kind of account that makes you wonder how much of our history has been shaped by their quiet presence.
The video is worth every minute. It's one of those rare pieces of content that treats the subject with the seriousness it deserves while still letting the story breathe. Go watch it, and don't skip the pinned comment if you want to see the bigger picture the channel is putting together.