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1 posted on 03/08/2008 7:05:33 PM PST by HAL9000
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To: HAL9000
PORT-AU-PRINCE (AFP) — In a Haitian dance hall transformed into a temple, dozens of voodoo practitioners dressed all in white, scarves around their necks in red, yellow or green, came Friday to pay homage to their first-ever "supreme master".

Sounds like a good gig. Wonder if the pay is good.

2 posted on 03/08/2008 7:17:24 PM PST by SIDENET (Hubba Hubba...)
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To: HAL9000

3 posted on 03/08/2008 7:19:21 PM PST by dighton
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To: HAL9000


4 posted on 03/08/2008 7:24:49 PM PST by Kolokotronis (Christ is Risen, and you, o death, are annihilated!)
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To: HAL9000

Great. A Voodoo pope. That’s all the world needs right now. I can’t wait until he raises an army of the Undead to do his bidding.

On the other hand, Haiti needs all the order and structure it can get. Maybe this will turn out to have a silver lining after all.

I just hope HMSS has 007 on standby, just in case...


5 posted on 03/08/2008 7:30:22 PM PST by B-Chan (Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?)
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To: HAL9000
That is an absurdist white-washed description of voodoo. Voodoo is incredibly evil. When I was in Haiti, I got to know a young man, Mark, who had grown up around voodoo, as his mother was a voodoo witch doctor. He told me some very scary stories.

We got into a discussion about zombies. Here in the US, we laugh about those things, but in Haiti, it's not a laughing matter. Ed, the missionary I was with, would not discuss them and warned me strongly against talking with Mark about them. Mark believed that the zombies were actually the corpses of dead people who had been reanimated. Ed finally agreed to talk about them. The voodoo method of making a zombie was not at issue. The witch doctor would have someone kidnapped and make them drink some kind of liquid. I have no idea what kind of liquid or what properties it had. The victim was then put in a box and buried for two days. I think both the burial and the digging up were done at night, but don't recall for sure. After digging the victim up, he was forced to swear an oath of allegiance, and if he broke the oath, he was buried again and left there.

Ed believed that the zombies were people who had gone insane from the properties of the liquid and being buried, while Mark believed they had actually died and no longer had any will. However, whichever is true, both agreed that this was the practice, and that zombies were real. Ed was a missionary in Port au Prince for seventeen years, and Mark, who was about twenty, had been born and raised there.

Here is an account from True Crime Library of the murder of University of Texas student Mark Kilroy. It's pretty bizarre reading, and the story doesn't emphasize it, but "palo mayombe," the magic the group practiced, was African voodoo.

6 posted on 03/08/2008 7:50:24 PM PST by Richard Kimball (Sure, they'd love to kill me, as long as they can do it without admitting I exist)
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