Saturday, November 19, 2011

Magic

by Leighton Gage


Yo no creo en las brujas,
pero que las hay, las hay

That’s a Spanish proverb that doesn’t translate well into either English or Portuguese. A close approximation of the meaning is “I don’t believe in witches, but they really do exist”.

I quote it here because I can think of no more succinct way to sum up the attitude of most Brazilians about the power of magic to intervene in their daily lives.
  

The intervention can come in the form of “white magic”, in which spirits are enlisted to do good, or it can come in the form of “black magic”, where spirits are enlisted to do evil. Either way, it’s not the kind of magic practiced by people like David Copperfield or Houdini. It’s the real stuff, the magic of primitive peoples, the magic of five hundred, a thousand, ten-thousand years ago. It came here as  part of the cultural baggage of over three million Africans, imported into Brazil as slaves, and it's a magic as old as man.


Nobody in this country believes that a trabalho (ritual) carried out by a Pai do Santo (think of him as  someone who intercedes with the spirits)...


...or a Mãe do Santo (his female equivalent) can bring love, cement a relationship, give success in business, punish an enemy or cure a disease.

Except that almost everybody really does.
And everyone has a story to tell.

We have a friend, a well-educated woman, who is convinced that her brother was cured of a serious eye disease by spiritual intervention. She had a trabalho performed in Salvador, Bahia, on a day when her brother was in the city of São Paulo, almost fifteen hundred kilometers away. She told the Mãe do Santo only that her brother had a problem with his eye. She didn’t say which one. The woman “received the spirits” bent over and began shrieking in pain, her hand over her right eye. (The same one in which our friend’s brother was afflicted.) After about fifteen minutes she quieted down, sat up straight and pronounced him cured. Our friend went home, called him, and he was. 
Just like that.

As a young teenager, my wife knew a girl in her neighborhood who paid a Pai do Santo to have a boy fall in love with her and then, when she tired of him, paid again to have him fall out-of-love with her. My wife accompanied the business at first hand. Each event happened from one day to the next.
Just like that.

Coincidences?
Of course they are.
Or maybe not.

The one thing I can tell you for sure is that the casting of spells in this country is big business. Every town and village has at least one person adept in the black arts. Every big city has many hundreds, sometimes thousands.


And, these days, if you’re in an isolated spot, it’s even possible to enlist help via the internet.

Consultation with your local practitioner often begins with the casting of the buzios.


You have questions about your life or your future? You ask, and the practitioner throws the shells. The spirits direct the way they fall. You can’t read the answer directly, of course. You need the practitioner for that.

Sometimes, the spirits advise that your problem, whatever it is, has to do with a spell cast against you. You’re advised to react, to protect yourself. Sometimes, the spirits know exactly what you need, but they want you to fess up, to ask for it, to obtain their intervention.

Protection often requires procedures like bathing in foul-smelling mixtures of herbs and oils.


More proactive trabalhos, like achieving success in business, or getting someone to fall in love with you, might require a more complicated procedure. Either way, some stuff is going to be required to perform the ritual (or series of rituals).
 

Shops like this one stock everything necessary. They’re to be found all over the country.


And, as you'll note if you carefully inspect the photo above, they even accept credit cards.

Of course I know, Dear Reader, that you don’t believe in any of this silly business.
And never will.

But, just on a lark, if you come to Brazil,


I'd be delighted to refer you to the lady who throws the buziosfor me.

5 comments:

  1. Fascinating article, Leighton. I've been interested since childhood in the occult (my grandmother read coffee grounds instead of tea leaves), and have included Ouija boards and tarot cards in several of my books. Does anyone sucessfully perform a trabalho online? :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Jean,
    I noted the :).
    Which leads me to believe that your question was asked in jest.
    But, in all seriousness, you can.

    One form of Brazilian magic is called Macumba.
    And there is a (very popular) site where you can perform it online.

    Copy this in your browser to check it out:

    http://macumbaonline.com/

    It's free.
    The numbers on the home page are user statistics.

    78130, for example, refers to the total number of "evil" trabalhos, ones in which someone is cursing someone else.
    The number 28996 refers to people who have used the site to have someone else fall in love with them.
    23636 wanted to lose weight.
    18942 wanted money.
    14480 simply wanted sex.
    13521 wanted to win the national lottery.
    12539 wanted to screw up someone's life.
    That kind of stuff.
    Some of the more specific ones are:
    Made someone gain 100kg or more: 6177
    Caused someone to acquire a permanent bad smell: 5453
    Had someone's penis fall off: 4757
    Had someone grow hair on their posterior: 3417
    Had someone choke on semen: 1284
    And so forth.
    You can follow what's going on with Twitter.
    You can do a "trabalho" yourself by pushing the button at the upper left labeled "Fazer Nova Macumba".
    Most amusing of all, if you have a command of Portuguese, you can read the recent curses and wishes and see whom is doing what to whom.
    That's on the lower left under
    "Ultimas macumbas públicas".

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thank you, Leighton! Actually, I'm quite serious about learning more. I don't want to place a curse on anyone (I kill off nasty people in my murder mysteries). I have a Portuguese friend who can translate for me, and the practice will make a great background for a future novel.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Portuguese friend, huh?
    Well, Jean, that's great.
    Because both of you are going to have a lot of fun going through the site.
    See if you don't.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Amazing. Leighton, do the practitioners have anything like the Wiccan "rule of three," in which that which is cast on others returns to the caster threefold? Puts a bit of a damper on the casting of curses!

    ReplyDelete