About FETIDUS

The Foundation for the Ethical Treatment of the Innocently Damned, Undead and Supernatural (FETIDUS) was established in 1620 by Johannes Kepler. It is the oldest known advocacy organization in the world that seeks to protect the rights of meta-humans and promote better understanding, peace and compassion among all people, of whatever biological or non-biological form and background.

FETIDUS helps protect the rights of zombies (of any type, including type IV), vampires, were-people (such as lycanthropes), non-corporeals, ghouls, hybrids, skidders, genelons of any type, post-humans, semis and supernaturals. This also includes individuals who are genetically mutated or have been altered in other ways, or have been infected by a state-changing pathogen or metagen, as well as those naturally born. FETIDUS works to help not only the individuals themselves, but their families and loved ones in a compassionate mission for meta-humanity.

Since the Undead Outbreaks and historical upheaval of the early 2020′s, there has been widespread misinformation about the nature, origins and communicability of the various meta-human afflictions and transformations that mankind has so recently witnessed. FETIDUS expanded its presence in the US in the late 2020′s in an effort to help counter this rising misinformation and its effect on public perceptions, particularly of zombies, and to help alleviate the suffering of afflicted families and individuals.

As an advocacy group, FETIDUS seeks to help raise public awareness of the needs of the afflicted, help liaise between public groups on local, national and international levels, and promote safe, compassionate treatment and co-existence of all meta-humans, building bridges between all known and unknown life forms.

The international headquarters of FETIDUS is located in Geneva, Switzerland, with independent regional headquarters around the globe. The US headquarters is located in New Orleans, with US branch offices of varying sizes in Atlanta, Charleston, Chicago, Cleveland, Colorado Springs, El Paso, Fargo, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Lexington, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis, Mystic, New Orlando, New York City, Oklahoma City, Philadelphia, Provo, Roswell, Salem, San Antonio, San Francisco, Seattle, Sioux Falls, Trenton, Tucson and Washington, D.C..

In the US, FETIDUS is registered as a 501(c) non-profit organization, and has recently received provisional HSARA-3 (Homeland Security Approved Reanimated Advocate – Level 3) certification.

Click here to read more about FETIDUS – The Novel and Music by James Durham

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{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }

spacer Mary Laura July 9, 2010 at 10:54 pm

Is that Lexington in Massachusettes, Virginia, Kentucky, or one of the various other states that have a city/town of the same name?
I grew up in a Lexington, so I’m curious. I won’t tell you which one yet, because I don’t want to bias your answer!

spacer ScienceD October 6, 2010 at 1:26 pm

I’m curious, will you be creating some sort of reference for the various types of entities you refer to in your ‘About FETIDUS’ text? Zombies, vampires, and non-corporeals have been relatively self-explanatory, but what about all the others?

spacer James Durham October 6, 2010 at 2:13 pm

I’m hoping to add a section that can act as a reference for story and world elements in FETIDUS, including more on the back story leading up to the great outbreaks of the 20′s. Not quite sure yet how I will implement that… possibly as a series of short stories or story fragments, perhaps with some fun multimedia and/or illustrations, maybe as a FAQ, or just as a quick reference/definition list… or maybe all of the above! Best, James

spacer James Durham October 6, 2010 at 2:46 pm

Mary Laura: So sorry I missed your question! Re: Lexington, that’s Lexington, Kentucky, which has a great, long tradition of paranormal activity… both now, and in 2034! Although, I’ve heard of great stories in Massachusetts (the “oldest” Lexington, if memory serves) and Virginia too. All rich with great material to have their own FETIDUS branch offices. spacer

spacer D. January 12, 2011 at 6:43 pm

Utterly awesome accomplishment. Wish I could come up with a clever acronym like FETIDUS… how about UuuuAA(?)! Seriously, very happy for you and your cast. Great job. No doubt this is your year. Cheers!

spacer Chris C. February 17, 2011 at 12:49 am

I was bored of listening to the same music on my Ipod while at the gym so I investigated podcasts for the first time. Long story short, I stumbled across FETIDUS and downloaded the first episode and was soon hooked. I listen in my car as well. It is so fun hearing zombie growls while sweating away on the evil Stair Master torture device! Thanks for your work. I will tell all my friends about it.

spacer Jason July 28, 2011 at 1:01 pm

Jeff,

I have listened to the story and have loved every moment of it. I’m not as in tune with historic events as I should be, but I LOVE how you reference the Donner Party of the 19th century and base a lot of the backstory on that. I loved the reference, and as a DC Metro area native, loved the fact that this amazing story takes place right in our backyards! Great work!!!

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