BBC: Witches cast 'mass spell' against Donald Trump
...and Maybe this tells the world the ugly truth that black, white, yellow or brown, American, African, Arab or Latino; we are simply human beings.
Witches cast 'mass spell' against Donald Trump
25 February 2017
Most of Donald
Trump's opponents believe they will have to wait four more years to see him
leave the White House.
But America's
witches are more optimistic.
At the stroke of midnight
on Friday, followers of witchcraft across the US performed a mass spell
designed to remove the president from office.
A Facebook group
devoted to the ritual has attracted over 10,500 likes, and coined the hashtag
#magicresistance.
The development has
sparked fury among Christian conservatives, who have accused the witches of
"declaring spiritual war".
Writer Michael
Hughes, who describes himself as a "magical thinker" posted a version
of the spell online, saying he had seen multiple versions on private witchcraft
groups.
In it, he suggests
using a stubby orange candle, an unflattering picture of Mr Trump, and a Tower
tarot card.
Image
copyrightAFPImage captionTarot cards are used all over the world to assist in
magical rituals
Followers of magic
are told to carve the president's name into the candle using a pin, recite an
incantation, and then burn his picture in the flame.
'You're fired!'
The words of the
spell include a plea to the Wiccan deities to "bind Donald J Trump, so
that his malignant works may fail utterly" and so that he "shall not
break our polity, usurp our liberty, or fill our minds with hate, confusion,
fear, or despair".
Mr Trump's
supporters don't escape either, as the spell asks that their "malicious
tongues" be curbed too.
Mr Hughes suggests
that instead of the normal closing line, "So mote it be!", witches
could burn the former Apprentice host's image with the words, "You're
fired!"
The writer said he
published details of the spell because he felt "it would be very welcome
to a lot of people".
Under the tenets of
witchcraft, a "binding spell" does not wish harm on its target, but
aims to stop them from doing harm themselves.
"This is not
the equivalent of magically punching a Nazi," Mr Hughes wrote.
"Rather, it is ripping the bullhorn from his hands, smashing his phone so
he can't tweet, tying him up, and throwing him in a dark basement where he
can't hurt anyone."
MaryPat Azevedo,
who took part in the ritual in Arizona, said she saw the ritual as "a
unity prayer".
She told the BBC:
"A true witch would never cast a spell on anyone without their permission.
This prayer is for wellbeing and peace for all beings."
Ms Azevedo said she
hopes to see "physical, emotional, and spiritual changes in Donald Trump
and American politics".
'Urgent warning'
Participating
witches plan to repeat the spell on days when there is a waning crescent moon,
until Mr Trump leaves the Oval Office. The next ritual is set for 26 March.
Perhaps
unsurprisingly, some of the president's followers are less than thrilled.
Joshua Feuerstein,
an evangelical pastor who has previously condemned Starbucks for taking
Christmas symbols off its seasonal red cups, issued an "urgent
warning", saying "millions of witches" were trying to curse the
president.
"Their
bippity-boppity-boo isn't more powerful than the name of Jesus!" he
declared in an online video.
Image
copyrightAFPImage captionSome of the president's supporters see the spell as an
assault on Christianity (file picture)
The Christian
Nationalist Alliance, a conservative religious group, named 24 February a
"day of prayer" to counter the magical fraternity.
In a post online,
it called the witches "occultists" who want to summon dark spirits
against Mr Trump.
The group said it
will urge people to pray every time the spell-casters reach for their candles.
Thus far, Mr Trump
has failed to comment on the battle between Bible and broomstick.
source: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-39090334
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Tarot cards are used all over the world to assist in magical rituals |
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