Reclaiming The Power Of Hoodoo: A Beginner's Guide to African American Folk Magic to Cultivate Peace & Abundance Within Your Life Through Rootwork & Conjure
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About this ebook
Going back to the roots: discover the truth about Hoodoo and harness the wisdom of your ancestors to bring happiness, health, and prosperity to your life -- even if you're an absolute beginner.
Do you want to know more about your culture and the spiritual beliefs of your ancestors, but you don't know where to start?
The more you read, the more confused you get, because you're getting lost in an ocean of contradictory information?
This happens more often than you think, and here's why:
Hoodoo is one of those "controversial" topics that are incredibly hard to research and explore.
Not because there aren't many authentic sources -- but because there are so many false, unobjective ones.
Throughout history, various religious and political groups (with the massive help of mainstream media) have depicted Hoodoo as something evil and demonic.
Grave desecrations, devil worship, vandalism, human sacrifices... These are just some of the things associated with Hoodoo.
But the truth is the complete opposite.
At its core, Hoodoo is a practice that relies on love -- the love for your ancestors, your culture, your family, friends, and your fellow man.
Hoodoo is an integral part of African-American communities, and it should be embraced and respected by the rest of the world -- not twisted around or used as a tourist attraction.
Because of its bad history, Hoodoo practitioners have been forced many times to go underground.
That's why learning the truth about the real Hoodoo is so hard -- but not for long.
In this incredible guide, you'll discover the authentic Hoodoo -- the Hoodoo of your ancestors who have used its magic over many centuries to fight oppression and inequality... and bring peace and happiness to their lives.
In Hoodoo, you will discover:
● An objective history of Hoodoo, from its roots in West Africa to modern times
● An overview of Hoodoo cosmology, beliefs, and practices
● A complete walkthrough of the basic tools of Hoodoo practitioners, including a guide on how to make your own Ancestral Altar
● The most comprehensive guide on herbal magic and rootwork, including a plethora of information on harvesting, storing, and drying your herbs
● Powerful White and Red magic spells every beginner can cast effortlessly, regardless of experience
● Detailed instructions on candle-making, including a guide on candle colors and oils for boosting the power of your spells
● Clear and precise instructions on making mojo bags for a variety of personal uses
And much more.
Your roots and your history are incredibly important -- they have shaped the community you live in, your family, your outlook on the world, and ultimately your life.
With this guide, you have a chance to explore that history without the interference of unobjective and fake news.
Discover the real Hoodoo and let your ancestors lead you to a better life.
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Reclaiming The Power Of Hoodoo - Alisha J. Brown
INTRODUCTION
From the abject horror of films like White Zombie and many other early zombie films, to the supernatural absurdity of the Chucky franchise, the average consumer is no stranger to Hoodoo or the idea of Hoodoo that has been popularized by American media. Depictions of Hoodoo are often used to demonize 'foreign' spiritual practices and, in contrast, uplift the values of conservative Christianity in comparison. Compared to white Christians' controlled, holy, pure beliefs and practices, Hoodoo is depicted as dark, savage, dangerous, and, most importantly, ethnic.
Witchcraft is depicted very differently depending on whether the practitioner is black or white. White witches are often depicted playfully as quirky young people in the crystal shop or mysterious but ultimately helpful forces of the supernatural. When black witches are defined, they are antagonistic, duplicitous, often inappropriately sexual, and almost always engaging in something deemed spiritually obscene or unholy like grave robbing and human sacrifice. When they are rarely depicted, black people have little representation in the modern witchcraft scene.
A beginner's search into witchcraft will pull up a lot of Celtic or Greco-Roman practices but very little in the way of uniquely black practices. It's easy to conclude that black people just don't do witchcraft outside of fiction. This couldn't be further from the truth. Hoodoo isn't just a fictional antagonistic force but an actual practice. But if Hoodoo isn't the violent, dangerous, and demonic ritual we're led to believe it is, what is it?
Hoodoo is a folk magic system, meaning that it is a unique practice passed down from generation to generation within a specific culture, in this instance, African American. This practice aims to use charms, spells, and rituals to control the world around the practitioner. Hoodoo has a strong presence in southern black communities, where it is also called rootwork
and practitioners are called rootworkers
or root doctors
rather than the European term witches.
For generations, stretching back to slavery, Hoodoo has existed to provide protection, spiritual and physical healing, and community for African Americans.
Hoodoo is commonly conflated with Voodoo, or the two terms are used interchangeably to refer to any exotic or foreign spirituality. However, the words Hoodoo and Voodoo evolved separately and are only tenuously related. Voodoo is an organized religion with codified leaders, teachings, and its own pantheon. It’s still practiced in many places in the American South and Haiti, and it overlaps with Hoodoo in many ways.
As a folk magic practice, Hoodoo doesn't have much formal organization and isn't strictly tied to a specific religion. Because Christianity has played such an essential role in the lives of enslaved Africans, and thus Hoodoo, many Hoodoo practitioners are Catholic or Protestant. However, it's not necessary. Many practitioners subscribe to West African religious traditions, while others are unaffiliated. Hoodoo is a way for people of any belief system to access the spiritual.
I must note that Hoodoo's history as the spiritual practice of American black folk continues to be important to its practice today. Hoodoo exists because of and for African Americans. It calls upon the power of our enslaved ancestors who suffered at the hand of white oppression. For this reason, Hoodoo is considered a closed practice—meaning it can only be safely and respectfully practiced by descendants of enslaved people.
Respecting closed practices is incredibly important to advancing the lives of oppressed people. African Americans have been stripped of our history and culture. Hoodoo offers us the opportunity to connect to a practice and a way of life that is uniquely and entirely our own, connect with and honor our ancestors, and, most importantly, take control over our lives. That power threatens the forces of white supremacy in America that would seek to destroy our practices and history to assimilate us. This is why Hoodoo is so often demonized, and why it is not respected in the same way as other spiritual and religious practices and ways of life.
However, while a practice can be closed, knowledge is not. Members of any race or ethnicity can and should benefit from educating themselves about Hoodoo. Through studying Hoodoo, you can unlearn the false narratives spread about slavery and the history of black culture. Through this unlearning, you can avoid being complicit in the harmful ideologies that harm not only black people and Hoodoo practitioners but everyone who falls outside of the dominant American culture. An educated ally is a powerful and more empathetic ally.
That is why we are here. Not just to dispel myths but to help guide you through your own spiritual journey. On this journey, you will learn the rich history of Hoodoo in the States, how it came about and took root in America, and what influenced it to become what it is today. You'll learn the core beliefs of Hoodoo and the essential tools a practitioner needs. From there, we'll discuss basic spells and rituals you can use to begin your journey as a Hoodoo practitioner.
All of this new information can be overwhelming, but remember, Hoodoo isn’t a strict doctrine nor a science. It is a way of life. I didn’t learn about Hoodoo through meticulous study, and neither did any other Hoodoo practitioner. I learned it through watching my grandmother perform rituals on her Altar of the Ancestors, surrounded by fellow family members and the black community of our small southern town. I learned it through the spiritual passion of watching old women shout down the church aisle, overcome by the Holy Spirit. I learned Hoodoo through the people I loved, by using it to forge a path through grief and pain and loss.
Hoodoo has done for me what nothing else could, and it is a tragedy that more people have been dissuaded from embracing this practice to better their own lives because of the lies and sensationalizing of our media. Because of this, I have no choice but to push back against ignorance and misinformation. Do not think of this book as a set of rules or demands. Instead, think of this as an introduction to the next chapter of your own life.
1
A FAR-FROM-BRIEF HISTORY OF HOODOO
There are several reasons why it is challenging to understand the history of Hoodoo. For one, misinformation often outweighs and outnumbers the true history of Hoodoo. The colonialist eye in anthropology and history usually scrubs out the specifics of black culture, either entirely omitting them or boiling them down to something more palatable to white audiences. White supremacy has reasons to want to hide the power and beauty of black spiritual practices, as these inherently push back against our dehumanization.
It's also a struggle because, as a folk magic practice, Hoodoo has not been historically inscribed on paper. This is partly because of enslaved people not being taught to read and write and the ensuing low literacy rates amongst free blacks. However, unlike other oral traditions, Hoodoo was not considered important enough for ruling academics to take the time to record. There is also the desire not to write things down so they cannot be stolen from people outside of the community. This means that many accounts of Hoodoo don't include the voices of actual practitioners and are instead written by outsiders.
Despite the fact that Hoodoo does not conflict with Christianity, Christian culture often demonizes magical practices, meaning Hoodoo often has to be practiced underground in majority Christian black communities. In many Southern towns, sick babies are rushed to rootworkers under the cover of night, their services a poorly kept secret that no one would dare admit in the light of day despite the evidence of their efficacy.
There is also the unfortunate reality that much of our history and connection back to Africa have been lost due to the slave trade. Our storytellers and history keepers died of disease or threw themselves into the ocean, choosing death over enslavement. Our mother tongues were banned and beaten out of us. Our bodies, minds, souls, and spirits were broken, and our culture was permanently damaged.
However, all was not lost. Through perseverance and the power of a tight-knit community, information has survived, and we can still piece together a history of how Hoodoo, as we know it today, came to be.
THE ORIGINS OF HOODOO
The word hoodoo
stems from Hudu,
which is the name of a language and tribe that lived in Togo and Ghana and came to America through the transatlantic slave trade first documented in 1875.
The transatlantic slave trade brought an estimated 12 million Africans from their homelands to the Americas between 1514 and 1867. Though it is not often taught in schools, slavery was far more than a mere economic reality or an unfortunate moral blip in America's history. It is among one of the greatest and most vile acts of violence against human beings in recorded history. Slaves were dehumanized in every possible way and forced to survive unimaginable tortures, the first of which was the journey across the middle passage.
The conditions in these slave ships were beyond comprehension. Even if we’re taught these realities in school, we often glaze over the human reality.