A poll recently
found that belief in magic is widespread throughout sub-Saharan Africa, with
over half of respondents saying they personally believe in witchcraft.
Studies in 18 countries show belief varies widely
(ranging from 15 percent in Uganda to 95 percent in the Ivory Coast), but on
average 55 percent of people polled believe in witchcraft.
As might be expected, the older and less educated
respondents reported higher belief in witchcraft, but interestingly such belief
was inversely linked to happiness.
Those who believe in witchcraft rated their lives significantly less satisfying
than those who did not.
One likely explanation is that those who believe in
witchcraft feel they have less control over their own lives. People who believe
in witchcraft often feel victimized by supernatural forces, for example, attributing
accidents or disease to evil sorcery instead of randomness or naturalistic
causes.
A cultural belief in witchcraft has wider
implications for Africans as well, from law enforcement to aid donations to
public health. In Africa, witch doctors are consulted not only for healing
diseases, but also for placing curses on rivals. Magic (or at least the belief
in magic) is commonly used for personal, political, and financial gain.
African belief in witchcraft has also led to horrific murders and
mutilations in recent years. In 2008, a mob of hundreds of young men killed
eight women and three men in two villages in rural western Kenya.
The victims were accused of witchcraft — having
cast spells that lowered the intelligence of the village's children. Some of
the suspected witches and wizards were hacked to death with machetes, or had
their throats slit before their bodies were burned.
In East Africa, at least 50 albinos (people with a
rare genetic disorder that leaves the skin, hair and eyes without pigment) were
murdered for their body parts in 2009, according to the Red Cross. An albino's
arms, fingers, genitals, ears, and blood are highly prized on the black market,
believed to contain magical powers and are used in witchcraft.
In a continent of dark-skinned Africans, albinos
are often the subject of fear, hatred, and ridicule.
The practice of using body
parts for magical ritual or benefit is called muti. Such attacks are
particularly brutal, with knives and machetes used to cut and hack off limbs,
breasts and other body parts from their screaming victims — including children.
While personal belief in magic and witchcraft may
seem harmless, the actions some people take based on those beliefs clearly are
not.
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