Rahmans (, ) are, according to Romanian and Ukrainian popular beliefs, a mythical nation of righteous Christians.
Neopagans think that Rahmans is the allusion to the Indian caste of Brahmins.
The etymology of the word blajini () is the slavonian blaà ¾ÃÂnà  meaning kind, well-minding person.
Following the Orthodox Christian calendar, Romanians from Banat, Transylvania, Bukovina and MaramureÃÂ regions celebrate the Rahmanish Easter () on the first Monday after St. Thomas Sunday. The Rahmanish Easter is called also Easter of the Dead or Mighty Easter.
Ukrainians celebrate the Rahmanish Easter () on Mid-Pentecost.
Since Rahmans supposedly live in isolation and have no year computation of their own, they have no way of knowing when Easter comes. 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. There is a custom in Oster, Lityn, and Lutsk districts to throw egg shells into the river on Easter Eve.
They are described as anthropomorphic and short, sometimes having the head of a rat. They are either described as malicious or as having great respect for God and leading a sinless life. They are considered to fast the year through, and thus doing humans a great service.
Blajin also means a dead child who did not receive the benediction of Holy Spirit. 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). Some explain them as the descendants of Adam's son Seth. Others think that they used to live alongside humans on the earth, but Moses, seeing his people oppressed by them, split the waters and, after he and his people had retreated to safety, poured the waters back onto them, sending them to their current abode.
According to different beliefs, Rahmans dwell underground or live on the Rahmans' island.