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Brazil's Sorcerers and Witches Stage Magic Ritual to Heal Mother Earth PDF Print E-mail
Written by Elma Lia Nascimento   
Friday, 26 October 2007

Brazil sorcerers gather in São Paulo Mother Earth's Cure is the theme of Brazil's 7th Annual Sorcerers Meeting taking place in São Paulo this weekend.  Sorcerers and witches from all over the country opened the encounter this Friday night, October 26, with an open-air magic ritual at Ibirapuera, São Paulo city's main park.

The Brazilian wizards will hold their discussions inside the São Paulo's Legislative Assembly, which is located on the park's fringe. Greenpeace, and Brazil's Ministry of Culture are some of the entities sponsoring and contributing to the sorcerers meeting.

The Mother Earth's Cure theme has to with the group's interest in environment preservation. Rodrigo Smokovitz, a sorcerer himself and the meeting organizer, promised that some of the witchcraft to be performed will be to  make the population and the politicians aware of the need to preserve nature.

About 800 people are being expected. Participants will get a chance to listen to lectures and debates on environment but will also hear about other pagan and new age religions such as shamanism and Druidism.

According to Smokovitz, Mother Earth is the sorcerers' goddess and he and his colleagues don't believe in the existence of a devil. "Witchcraft has nothing to with pact with the devil," he explains adding:

"We also don't fly on brooms,  we don't have a big nose and we don't sacrifice animals or little kids. We practice witchcraft using herbs and do it for the benefit of mankind." People who misuse sorcery, he assures, will get triple punishment for what they've done.

He confirmed however that tunics and cauldrons that are shown in movies on sorcerers are for real. The cauldron is needed for the mixing of herbs as well as the burning of written requests and money bills. Burning money helps people get rich, explains the wizard.

There's only so much that sorcerers can do though. They cure diseases as long as they are not terminal and can reunite separate couples as long as both involved are willing to do it. There is something called free will, which they cannot change, Smokovitz explains.

After Saturday's lectures participants of the sorcerers encounter will see a show of Hawaiian dance and then will take part in a Halloween Parade at Avenida Paulista, the location where Paulistas (São Paulo residents) do their main celebrations, mournings and protests.

Abrawicca, the association representing Brazil's sorcerers, was created in 1998, as a way to fight juridically and in the court of public opinion prejudice against wizards and witches. The sorcerer image seems to have improved a lot since then throughout Brazil.

The first encounter of Brazilian sorcerers happened also in 1998 at Hotel Danúbio, in São Paulo. Only since 2001, however, these meetings became an annual event.

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Director, Mercury Poisoning Project
written by Arnold P. Wendroff, PhD, October 27, 2007
There is a widespread use of elemental mercury (Hg) in a variety of Afro-Caribbean and Brazilian religious and folkloric practices. These include Candomble, Palo Mayombe, Voodoo, Santeria, Espiritismo, and Obeah.

Mercury is believed to attract good and to repel evil. Many of the ways mercury is used expose people to mercury metal, and to mercury vapor. A number of rituals involve sprinkling mercury on floors and furnishings of homes, and inside motor vehicles. Such sprinkling contaminates the home or vehicle semi-permanently, as the mercury sinks into porous flooring and persists for decades, while it continually releases neurotoxic mercury vapor.

Eventually all of this mercury enters the larger environment, where it contaminated landfills and surrounding waters.

Please see the MERCURY POISONING PROJECT web site www.mercurypoisoningproject.org for further information, and use the key words < mercury Saneteria > to search the Web for materials on this latent but real environmental health threat.

If you have any information on the ritualistic use of mercury in Brazil, please contact me at: mercurywendroff@mindspring.com
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written by FRANCES CO, October 27, 2007
BRAVO!!!!!!!
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I think we're closing in on the problem....
written by Stephen Smith, November 01, 2007
"Burning money helps people get rich, explains the wizard."

Ah...that's been my problem all along. I haven't been burning enough cash. Brilliant - glad Greenpeace and the Ministry of Culture are getting behind this group.
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