Bathorys Daughter wrote:If that's all it takes, there must be a whole lot of baby and child vampires in the world. Newborns and children are cast off and forgotten every day. Poor nations must be overrun with them. The Untouchables of India, especially in the past, would be great candidates. The ones not burned that is.
Presumably, that's not
all that is required... it may be a "necessary but not sufficient" condition. As others have suggested, babies and young children may not yet be sufficiently mature (physically and as egos) to support the transition to an undead form. And, there may be other special conditions which Paul has not yet described. Even then, some cultures do have traditions of "demon" children (sometimes the victims of infanticide) who have a distinctly vampiric nature.
As to the "Untouchables" of India (the Dalits) and similar outcast subcultures elsewhere (Burakumin, Cagots, etc.) I'm not sure the situations are comparable. "Untouchables" are shunned or excluded by the majority population
as a group... they have their own family structures, professions, sometimes a distinct subculture, and social continuity. Within their own group, their family and interpersonal dynamics don't seem to be greatly different from those of the majority cultures. They may be at somewhat greater risk of being "alone and lost" than a higher-caste individual, but I would guess this to be a difference in degree rather than being anything fundamental.
Being a member of a functional (if stressed) family, part of a "low" caste that the nose-in-the-air Hoity-Toities won't allow into the school or church, isn't quite the same as being an individual out on the cold streets who knows that s/he has no family, no friends, no person who gives a damn about you, nowhere to turn, and no hope at all.