Rahmans

[3] The etymology of the word blajini ([blaˈʒinʲ]) is the slavonian blažĕnŭ meaning kind, well-minding person.

It is for this reason that Romanians and Ukrainians eat dyed eggs and let the shells flow downstream, from there they believe they will get to the Rahmans.

[5][2][7]: 37  There is a custom in Oster, Lityn, and Lutsk districts to throw egg shells into the river on Easter Eve.

[6] For celebrating the souls of dead relatives or friends, Romanians from the above-mentioned regions prepare festive meals and offer them, in the cemetery, nearby the tombs, after the religious mass and benediction, to all who wished to commemorate and pay their respects to the dead.

The ethnograph Marian Simion Florea wrote : Blajini are fictitious beings, incarnations of dead children not baptized who live at the end of Earth, nearby The Holy water (of Saturday).