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Posts Tagged ‘witchcraft’

Teacher Says No to a Student Building an Altar in Wood Shop Class

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

A senior in high school wanted to construct a wooden altar in a shop class which could later be used for Wiccan rituals. This idea has stirred up quite a debate at the high school in Iowa. Dale Halferty, a teacher of industrial arts from Guthrie Center High School for the past three years, has been put on paid leave since this past Monday after admitting that he told the senior student he could not create an altar in the class.

According to Halferty, he turned the senior student down on the idea because he was “practicing his religion” during class time, and it had nothing to do with having a beef with the student, the district, or any religion. Halferty argues that he told a different student at one time that he could not make a cross during class time because Halferty believes in the separation of church and state. Basically, Halferty says, “We as Christians don’t get to have our say during school time, so why should anyone else.”

School officials disagree with Halferty’s assertion and according to school policy, as well as federal and state laws, students cannot be discriminated against on the basis of their method for expressing religious beliefs through school assignments. The principle and the superintendent of the school placed the teacher on leave until they could consult with the school’s attorney to decide what comes next.

As of this moment 70 out of the school’s 185 students signed a petition last week saying they didn’t want witchcraft practiced in their school. Question is; do the students that are signing the petition really know what witchcraft is? Is it a real understanding of witchcraft that they have or a blown up Hollywood image that the students have of witches? Secondly, I hardly see making an altar a practice of witchcraft so much as it is a making of a tool for the purposes of witchcraft. An adept practitioner knows that any and all tools for witchcraft, including an altar are a mere extension of the practitioner; they are tools that help to harness the magick within the practitioner. Third, it’s perfectly okay for all of the school choirs to sing Christian pieces during the holiday concerts that they put on for parents every year, (I know this because I go to all of my kid’s concerts) but it isn’t okay for a student to make an altar in woodshop? What did this teacher think he was going to do, set up a ritual working right in the shop?

Halferty said he was surprised when the student told him he was a practicing witch. When the student began bringing a book about witchcraft to class he decided to tell him he couldn’t make the altar. Halferty explains “It scares me. I’m a Christian…This witchcraft stuff – it’s terrible for our kids. It takes kids away from what they know and leads them to a dark and violent life. We spend millions of tax dollars trying to save kids from that.”

Really? Millions of dollars are being spent on kids that “need to be saved?” That’s ridiculous. His own ignorance and fear of what witchcraft is all about is the driving force behind this controversy. He’s trying to validate his own thoughts with assumed facts and figures to make himself look better. I’d like to see a list of all the millions of dollars being spent on saving kids from witchcraft and Wicca, a harmless earth-based religion that teaches them to cherish life and all that live. I want to know what party of the school or state budget covers the “saving kids from witchcraft.” This is clearly not an issue of separating the church from state, but it is an issue where Halferty’s fears are a source for student discrimination. This entire incident proves that, in this case, the educator needs to be educated.

Read more on discrimination against Wiccans.

Tension Rises Over Witchcraft Killings

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

In an article on that appears on www.iol.co.za it is revealed that a larger than normal police presence has been established at Umlazi’s E Section since three homes were actually burned to the ground a couple weeks back because the homeowners were accused of being witches. One 68 year old man died from smoke inhalation after his home where he resided with his wife, children, and grandchildren was set on fire by an angry mob at the end of January.

According to Sihle Chiliza, the chairman of the Umlazi community policing forum, a family was forced to flee the area just last week when they too were accused of being witches. Allegedly their neighbor suddenly collapsed and died and they were immediately blamed for the incident. The police are working on trying to calm the atmosphere down but are having very little success in doing so; they have since put the accused family in hiding to ensure their continued safety. After a meeting last week where police tried to get people to release of the deadly superstitions that they hold, there was little success as people are still clinging to the notion that they can be victimized by witchcraft. The people do not want those who have been accused of witchcraft to return to their homes at all.

Read the full details on the growing tension on witchcraft.

Women Killed Due to Accusations of Witchcraft in Kucuala Village

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

In an article appearing on Uganda’s Leading website, The New Vision, an article reveals how five women were killed over witchcraft allegations in Kucuala village. A 90 year old woman along with her daughter were killed by a raging mob after begin accused of being witches: Celina Jokocibo, 40, and Veronica Diacwinya, 90, were brutally murdered when they, along with three other women, where kidnapped. The two women were clubbed to death with hoe handles and sticks.

This same raging mob burned eighteen homes to the ground: all homes belonging to those individuals being accused of witchcraft. The mob blamed all of the women for supposedly bewitching their daughter who had recently become mentally impaired. The three women that survived the ordeal were not named, but police managed to rescue them after receiving a tip. The people accused of starting up the angry mob were picked up by the police.

Read more on the lynch mob and accusations of witchcraft.

Be Careful with the Herbals Because They Could Be Dangerous

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Witches often have a propensity for preferring natural remedies and herbals for treating a variety of common ailments. A news article on Science Daily warns however, that herbal medicines can prove lethal if one is not careful. According to a pathologist from the University of Adelaide, herbal medicines in large quantities, or injected herbal remedies can combine with prescription medications and can result in death.

Professor Roger Byard recently published a paper appearing in the Journal of Forensic Sciences which examines the severely toxic nature of herbal substances. Byard asserts that people hold a false perception that herbal remedies are safe, even safer than prescribed medications, and some herbals actually have high levels of mercury, lead, and arsenic. What’s more, access to herbal remedies is largely unrestricted and many people do not discuss the use of herbals with their doctors before using them. A study on over 250 Asian herbal products which are available in the US have been found to contain either arsenic, lead, or mercury: 36 contained arsenic, 35 contained mercury and 24 contained lead.

One example of a highly toxic herbal can be identified in the herbal medicine called Chan su which is commonly used for heart palpitations, boils, and throat irritations. The herb actually contains the venomous secretions from Chinese toads which can lead to a heart attack or it can render a person into a coma. Herbals can also have a negative effect on the liver and can cause cardiac failure or renal failure as well as seizures, movement disorders, muscular weakness and strokes.

Anyone using herbals should do so with great care. The herbal should be researched thoroughly and you should familiarize yourself with the potential side effects. Look it; researching these things on Wikipedia is not enough; even though Wikipedia is a great launching point for research, it is not the be all and end all answer to all of your questions. Wikipedia can be edited by anyone so the information you are supplied with might not be totally correct. What’s more, reading one or two books on herbals is not enough. You will need to know what you are working with, what levels is safe to consume and if it is safe to consume at all. Talking with your doctor about the use of herbals is important, especially if you are on prescribed medications too; you do not want to run the risk of drug interactions.

One example of a drug interaction with herbals can be identified in the use of St. John’s Wort, which can intensify the power of a drug like warfarin and it can result in intermenstraul bleeding. Garlic and Gingko Biloba also interact with anticoagulants. If you are planning for surgery, you should cease use of any herbal remedies two weeks prior to the surgery to reduce your risks for excessive bleeding too. As a general rule, pregnant women as well as women that are breastfeeding should avoid herbals until after the pregnancy or until finished with breastfeeding to avoid the potential risk of passing on herbals to the child via breast milk. Witchcraft is the “craft of the wise,” so be wise, and always play it safe. Take care when using herbals of any kind. Don’t take a person’s word for it that an herbal remedy will work; question the purity of the products you buy, and always know how to use an herb safely before using it.

Read more about the dangers associated with herb use.

Man in Malawi Put In Prison for Two Months for Practicing Witchcraft

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

In an article appearing in the February 13th edition of ABS-CBN News, a story reveals that a man in Malawi has been imprisoned after accusations of sorcery. After going to court, Chikumbeni Mwanatheu, age 35, was sentenced to 60 days in prison where he will have to do hard labor. The man admitted to practicing witchcraft after he was accused of putting a spell on his neighbor in order to prevent rain from falling on his neighbor’s field. Why would somebody admit to something like this? One has to wonder if he was tortured or forced to confess. Maybe he gave up after hour upon hour of questioning and interrogation.

According to the report, the Magistrate Lameck Mkwapatira ruled that Mwanatheu required a custodial sentence so that the community could enjoy peace in the suspect’s absence and so that Mwanatheu could not harm himself. Malawi is located in Southern Africa and the entire region has been suffering from drought since last year: yep, a very good chance that the man is actually innocent of any crime here.

The practicing of witchcraft holds a maximum sentence of up to five years in prison in Malawi. That’s if you are lucky enough to wind up in prison. Many people are simply killed off by enraged, filled with fear, superstitious mobs. I wonder what kinds of methods of interrogation the officials are using in the region to get people to ultimately confess to witchcraft, especially with the understanding of a harsh prison sentence and the possibility that you might be later killed by a vicious mob. I’m sure it can’t be a positive encounter.

Read the full source for this article.

Albinos Being Killed Due to Witchcraft Accusations

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

In an article appearing on MediaGlobal on February 11th, it is reported that in January, United States Congressman, Gerald Connelly filed a statement requesting that President Barack Obama take some sort of action against the unwarranted and vicious killings of albinos in Burundi and Tanzania. The story reveals that in the past two years more than fifty albinos have been killed in Tanzania and over ten albinos have been murdered in Burundi.

The killings are supposedly occurring due to ancient tribal beliefs that albinos have some kind of supernatural power or that they practice witchcraft. The albinos are wrongfully feared because people believe that they can use witchcraft to cause harm to others, to destroy other people’s property, and to hurt members of the African communities. A massive rise in these types of murders can be noted today. Just this month, four men were sentenced to death for some of the albino killings occurring in Tanzania: this was done in an effort to try to put a stop to some of the murderous actions going on in the region.

A report which was compiled by the Commission of Inquiry into Witchcraft, Violence and Ritual Killings, an organization from the Northern Province of South Africa, reveals that since the mid 1990s thousands of people have been accused of practicing witchcraft rituals, and there are ten farms which have been established for refugees who have been forced from their homes due to such accusations. What’s more, due to a lack of education in the area, the peoples are blaming diseases like HIV/AIDs on demonic activity, and they sometimes hold the belief that demons can be removed by causing harm to an ailing person or to the ailing person’s family. What’s even more disturbing is that some people hold the belief that the limbs of an albino person can bring them riches. According to the zone communications manager from the eastern African division of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, Andrei Engstrandneascu, the going price for an albino “body part kit” consisting of the genitals, the hair, the arms, the legs and the ears of an albino person can cost as much as $75,000.00. My question is, what the heck would you do with something as grotesque as this? Moreover, if you can afford to pay $75,000 for a “body part kit,” you don’t need to be doing any kind of twisted rituals for prosperity. The whole thing is quite sickening. One has to wonder how human beings can do these kinds of things to one another.

Read the full story about the rash of albino killings.

Burundian Man and Children Killed After Witchcraft Allegations

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

An article on www.iol.co.za it is revealed that this past Tuesday in a village located in central Burundi near Itaba, a man and his three children were killed due to allegations of witchcraft. Someone threw a grenade into the man’s home. The grenade landed in the kitchen killing Emmanuel Nyandwi, his children ages 7 to 15, but his wife escaped with minor injuries.

Officials believe the crime is somehow connected to a family feud involving witchcraft, and Nyandwi was recently accused of having caused the death of a relative through sorcery.

In central African, grenades can be purchased for as little as a dollar. They are commonly used by civilians to settle disputes over land, to settle family arguments, and they were responsible for over 130 deaths in the year 2008.

Do you see what ignorance, superstition, and access to weapons can do?

Read more on the witchcraft killing in central Africa.

Also in recent news, in an article appearing on RNW, human rights groups are now accusing Gambia of unfair treatment of prisoners; prisoners are being locked away in secure cells without any kind of trial. According to a report recently released by Amnesty International and Women Advocates Research and Documentation Center, detainees are jailed inside secret prisons within the capital of Banjul. These detainees are then forced to consume hallucinogenic medicines and to confess to practicing witchcraft. The report does not reveal who these prisoners are or why they are being detained, but there is evidence that some of the prisoners are Nigerians; this is because the activists groups are now encouraging the Nigerian government to demand that the detainees will suffer no further human rights violations. Activists are also hoping the Nigerian government will demand compensation for the torture of the Nigerian detainees.

Read more on the Nigerian prisoners and the violation of their human rights.

Witchcraft Killing in Tapodana

Friday, February 12th, 2010

In January, three men wearing masks rushed into a villager’s home in Tapodana and killed a mother and a father for alleged witchcraft. A 14 year old girl and her younger brother are now left orphaned and remain in hiding because Pinki, 14 has also been accused of being a witch or a “dayan.”

Another villager, Sushila Devi, hides her injuries with a sari pallu as she talks about how she, along with four other women in the village, the majority of them widows, were paraded around naked in front of the other 10,000 villagers, beaten and forced to eat excreta last October. They too were accused of being Dayans. The villagers simply watched as these women were tortured.

These women got away with their lives when so many don’t. Hundreds of women are being killed in regions like West Bengal, Jharkhand, Assam, and Bihar every year. Between 2001 and 2008, a seven year period, more than 450 women were killed in Jharkhand alone. The region is poor and there is widespread illiteracy which further encourages the ongoing superstitions and violence against women. Usually, those accused of practicing witchcraft are targeted by those that are interested in taking their property or in settling some kind of score. If someone has a grudge against you, you can be accused of witchcraft and then all bets are off.

Read more on the witchcraft killings in Tapodana.

Being a Witch in the Central African Republic Puts You in Danger

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

If you are a witch in the Central African Republic, of if you are not a witch but you are accused of being one, chances are you’ll be convicted and imprisoned, or worse. Hundreds of individuals are imprisoned annually for practicing witchcraft in the region.

One man, Ange Mberkoulat was convicted and received a four year sentence after his fellow villagers accused him of trying to use magick to kill off one of his relatives. Mberkoulat is serving his sentence outside of prison because of the serious lack of prisons in the country, or at least he was, until he was imprisoned again. One United Nations study revealed that some fifty percent of people that are imprisoned in the Central African Republic are there because they have been accused of witchcraft. Here’s an idea; the Central African Republic should stop condemning people for witchcraft and maybe they will have improved prison resources and they will be able to imprison those criminals that really need to be behind bars. Just a thought.

Mberkoulat asserts that the accusations were false, but that didn’t stop the government from sentencing him, and it didn’t stop some people from beating his wife and burning down his home either. Mberkoulat’s wife, and child are now residing with another family member having lost everything, and Mberkoulat has been re-imprisoned at this time.

Witchcraft is considered a criminal offence in the Central African Republic and if one is accused of using witchcraft to cause the death of another, if convicted, one can be executed. The region is famed for abuse of prisoners, questionable and unethical investigative practices, and it practically sounds like the Salem witch trials, which actually occurred in Danvers, Massachusetts and not Salem (but that’s another story), are happening all over again, only this time on the opposite side of the globe.

According to the mission priest Father Aurelio Gazzera, the people that are often the target of accusations are the weak, those that live alone, and those that do little to stir up any kind of problems.

Read more information on the atrocities in the Central African Republic.

India Plans to Make Witchcraft Illegal

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

The government of India will make witchcraft illegal in the very near future; this plan is being pushed forward in a hope to cease all witch hunting and witchcraft practices. According to a report in the Examiner.com, witchcraft is being practiced in a variety of locations throughout India including Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Bihar, and Jharkhand.

The United Nations is very concerned over the number of women being murdered that are presently accused of practicing witchcraft. Statistics reveal that from 1987 to 1993, a fourteen year period, more than 2500 women were accused of witchcraft and killed. The women, after being accused of witchcraft are put on display in front of the entire village and stripped naked, then beaten to death.

Just last month three men wearing masks broke into one villager’s home and killed a man and a woman after accusing them of witchcraft and their children were left orphans. According to reports, financial instability in certain regions in India are the cause of the witchcraft uprising and that people are getting involved in witchcraft because of the poor financial conditions.

This is another clear case where fear overrides sensibilities in every regard. It seems to me that some people are turning to witchcraft because they feel hopeless about their situations and are seeking a method of changing their lives for the better. Again, misunderstandings and misconceptions about witchcraft are fueling the fires of ignorance and it is leading to unnecessary deaths. It is a shame that even today there are people in the world that are either being accused of witchcraft and are innocent of the accusation, or there are people that are actually practicing the craft and being persecuted for it. It seems that in some parts of the world, it is deadly to be a witch or to even be considered one.

Find out more about the potential witchcraft banning in India.