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Darkfire
12-09-2007, 11:46 AM
This is a horrific train of events and my point in posting this wasn't a 'well they're worse than us' attack. I posted this to highlight that it doesn't matter what religion/faith people profess to follow. So long as they're uneducated (check the bold sections) there will always be people using the system to abuse their positions, because this has nothing to do with Christianity.

(edit: Crap, sorry about posting this to the wrong forum, could who ever has the power move to the right forum?)


The rainy season is over and the Niger Delta is lush and humid. This southern edge of West Africa, where Nigeria's wealth pumps out of oil and gas fields to bypass millions of its poorest people, is a restless place. In the small delta state of Akwa Ibom, the tension and the poverty has delivered an opportunity for a new and terrible phenomenon that is leading to the abuse and the murder of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of children. And it is being done in the name of Christianity.

Almost everyone goes to church here. Driving through the town of Esit Eket, the rust-streaked signs, tarpaulins hung between trees and posters on boulders, advertise a church for every third or fourth house along the road. Such names as New Testament Assembly, Church of God Mission, Mount Zion Gospel, Glory of God, Brotherhood of the Cross, Redeemed, Apostalistic. Behind the smartly painted doors pastors make a living by "deliverances" -- exorcisms -- for people beset by witchcraft, something seen to cause anything from divorce, disease, accidents or job losses. With so many churches it's a competitive market, but by local standards a lucrative one.

But an exploitative situation has now grown into something much more sinister as preachers are turning their attentions to children -- naming them as witches. In a maddened state of terror, parents and whole villages turn on the child. They are burnt, poisoned, slashed, chained to trees, buried alive or simply beaten and chased off into the bush.

Some parents scrape together sums needed to pay for a deliverance -- sometimes as much as three or four months' salary for the average working man -- although the pastor will explain that the witch might return and a second deliverance will be needed. Even if the parent wants to keep the child, their neighbours may attack it in the street.

This is not just a few cases. This is becoming commonplace. In Esit Eket, up a nameless, puddled-and-potholed path is a concrete shack stuffed to its fetid rafters with roughly made bunk beds. Here, three to a bed like battery chickens, sleep victims of the besuited Christian pastors and their hours-long, late-night services. Ostracised and abandoned, these are the children a whole community believes fervently are witches.

Sam Ikpe-Itauma is one of the few people in this area who does not believe what the evangelical "prophets" are preaching. He opened his house to a few homeless waifs he came across, and now he tries his best to look after 131.

"The neighbours were not happy with me and tell me 'you are supporting witches'. This project was an accident, I saw children being abandoned and it was very worrying. I started with three children, then every day it increased up to 15, so we had to open this new place," he says. "For every maybe five children we see on the streets, we believe one has been killed, although it could be more as neighbours turn a blind eye when a witch child disappears.

"It is good we have this shelter, but it is under constant attack." As he speaks two villagers walk past, at the end of the yard, pulling scarfs across their eyes to hide the "witches" from their sight.

Ikpe-Itauma's wife, Elizabeth, acts as nurse to the injured children and they have called this place the Child Rights and Rehabilitation Network, a big name for a small refuge. It has found support from a charity running a school in the area, Stepping Stones Nigeria, which is trying to help with money to feed the children, but the numbers turning up here are a huge challenge.

Mary Sudnad (10) grimaces as her hair is pulled into corn rows by Agnes (11) but the scalp just above her forehead is bald and blistered. Mary tells her story fast, in staccato, staring fixedly at the ground.

"My youngest brother died. The pastor told my mother it was because I was a witch. Three men came to my house. I didn't know these men. My mother left the house. Left these men. They beat me." She pushes her fists under her chin to show how her father lay, stretched out on his stomach on the floor of their hut, watching. After the beating there was a trip to the church for "a deliverance".

A day later there was a walk in the bush with her mother. They picked poisonous "asiri" berries that were made into a draught and forced down Mary's throat. If that didn't kill her, her mother warned her, then it would be a barbed-wire hanging. Finally her mother threw boiling water and caustic soda over her head and body, and her father dumped his screaming daughter in a field. Drifting in and out of consciousness, she stayed near the house for a long time before finally slinking off into the bush. Mary was seven. She says she still doesn't feel safe. She says: "My mother doesn't love me." And, finally, a tear streaks down her beautiful face.

Gerry was picked out by a "prophetess" at a prayer night and named as a witch. His mother cursed him, his father siphoned petrol from his motorbike tank and spat it over his eight-year-old face. Gerry's facial blistering is as visible as the trauma in his dull eyes. He asks every adult he sees if they will take him home to his parents: "It's not them, it's the prophetess, I am scared of her."

Nwaeka is about 16. She sits by herself in the mud, her eyes rolling, scratching at her stick-thin arms. The other children are surprisingly patient with her. The wound on her head where a nail was driven in looks to be healing well. Nine- year-old Etido had nails, too, five of them across the crown of his downy head. Its hard to tell what damage has been done. Udo, now 12, was beaten and abandoned by his mother. He nearly lost his arm after villagers, finding him foraging for food by the roadside, saw him as a witch and hacked at him with machetes.

Magrose is seven. Her mother dug a pit in the wood and tried to bury her alive. Michael was found by a farmer clearing a ditch, starving and unable to stand on legs that had been flogged raw.

Ekemini Abia has the look of someone in a deep state of shock. Both ankles are circled with gruesome wounds and she moves at a painful hobble. Named as a witch, her father and elders from the church tied her to a tree, the rope cutting her to the bone, and left the 13-year-old there alone for more than a week.

There are sibling groups such as Prince, four, and Rita, nine. Rita told her mum she had dreamt of a lovely party where there was lots to eat and to drink. The belief is that a witch flies away to the coven at night while the body sleeps, so Rita's sweet dream was proof enough: she was a witch and because she had shared food with her sibling -- the way witchcraft is spread -- both were abandoned. Victoria, cheeky and funny, aged four, and her seven-year-old sister Helen, a serene little girl. Left by their parents in the shell of an old shack, the girls didn't dare move from where they had been abandoned and ate leaves and grass.

The youngest here is a baby. The older girls take it in turn to sling her on their skinny hips and Ikpe-Itauma has named her Amelia, after his grandmother. He estimates around 5 000 children have been abandoned in this area since 1998 and says many bodies have turned up in the rivers or in the forest. Many more are never found. "The more children the pastor declares witches, the more famous he gets and the more money he can make," he says. "The parents are asked for so much money that they will pay in instalments or perhaps sell their property. This is not what churches should be doing."

Although old tribal beliefs in witch doctors are not so deeply buried in people's memories, and although there had been indigenous Christians in Nigeria since the 19th century, it is American and Scottish Pentecostal and evangelical missionaries of the past 50 years who have shaped these fanatical beliefs. Evil spirits, satanic possessions and miracles can be found aplenty in the Bible, references to killing witches turn up in Exodus, Deuteronomy and Galatians, and literal interpretation of scriptures is a popular crowd-pleaser.

Pastor Joe Ita is the preacher at Liberty Gospel Church in nearby Eket. "We base our faith on the Bible, we are led by the holy spirit and we have a programme of exposing false religion and sorcery." Soft of voice and in his smart suit and tie, his church is being painted and he apologises for having to sit outside near his shiny new Audi to talk. There are nearly 60 branches of Liberty Gospel across the Niger Delta. It was started by a local woman, mother-of-two Helen Ukpabio, whose luxurious house and expensive white Humvee are much admired in the city of Calabar where she now lives. Many people in this area credit the popular evangelical DVDs she produces and stars in with helping to spread the child witch belief.

Ita denies charging for exorcisms but acknowledges his congregation is poor and has to work hard to scrape up the donations the church expects. "To give more than you can afford is blessed. We are the only ones who really know the secrets of witches. Parents don't come here with the intention of abandoning their children, but when a child is a witch then you have to say 'what is that there? Not your child.'

"The parents come to us when they see manifestations. But the secret is that, even if you abandon your child, the curse is still upon you, even if you kill your child the curse stays. So you have to come here to be delivered afterwards as well," he explains patiently.

"We know how they operate. A witch will put a spell on its mother's bra and the mother will get breast cancer. But we cannot attribute all things to witches, they work on inclinations too, so they don't create HIV, but if you are promiscuous then the witch will give you HIV."

As the light fades, he presents a pile of Ukpabio's DVDs. Mistakenly thinking they are a gift, I am firmly put right.

Later that night, in another part of town, the hands of the clock edge towards midnight. The humidity of the day is sealed into the windowless church and drums pound along with the screeching of the sweat-drenched preacher. "No witches, oh Lord," he screams into the microphone. "As this hour approaches, save us, oh Lord!"

His congregation is dancing, palms aloft, women writhe and yell in tongues. A group moves forward shepherding five children, one a baby, and kneel on the concrete floor and the pastor comes among them, pressing his hands down on each child's head in turn, as they try to hide in the skirts of the woman. This is deliverance night at the Church of the True Redeemer, and while the service will carry on for some hours, the main event -- for which the parents will have paid cash -- is over.

Walking out into the night, the drums and singing from other churches ring out as such scenes are being repeated across the village.

It is hard to find people to speak out against the brutality. Chief Victor Ikot is one. He not only speaks out against the "tinpot"' churches, but has also done the unthinkable and taken in a witch to his own home. The chief's niece, Mbet, was declared a witch when she was eight. Her mother, Ekaete, made her drink olive oil, then poison berries, then invited local men to beat her with sticks. The pastor padlocked her to a tree but unlocked her when her mother could not find the money for a deliverance. Mbet fled. Mbet, now 11, says she has not seen the woman since, adding: "My mother is a wicked mother."

The Observer tracked down Mbet's mother to her roadside clothing stall where she nervously fiddled with her mobile phone and told us how her daughter had given her what sounded very much like all the symptoms of malaria. "I had internal heat," she says, indicating her stomach. "It was my daughter who had caused this, she drew all the water from my body. I could do nothing. She was stubborn, very stubborn." And if her daughter had died in the bush? She shrugged: "'That is God's will. It is in God's hands."

Chief Victor has no time for his sister-in-law. "Nowadays when a child becomes stubborn, then everyone calls them witches. But it is usually from the age of 10 down, I have never seen anyone try to throw a macho adult into the street. This child becomes a nuisance, so they give a dog a bad name and they can hang it.

"It is alarming because no household is untouched. But it is the greed of the pastors, driving around in Mercedes, that makes them choose the vulnerable."

In a nearby village the Observer came across five-year-old twins, Itohowo and Kufre. They are still hanging around close to their mother's shack, but are obviously malnourished and in filthy rags. Approaching the boys brings a crowd of villagers who stand around and shout: "Take them away from us, they are witches." "Take them away before they kill us all." "Witches".

The woman who gave birth to these sorry scraps of humanity stands slightly apart from the crowd, arms crossed. Iambong Etim Otoyo has no intention of taking any responsibility for her sons. "They are witches," she says firmly and walks away.

And by nightfall there are 133 children in the chicken coop concrete house at Esit Eket. - Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2007

Hastur T. Fannon
12-09-2007, 12:51 PM
A tangent, but this sort of thing is the reason why the Anglican Communion is doing everything it can to stop certain churches in the developing world (and Nigeria is one of the main ones) from leaving the Communion. If you think they're bad now, imagine what they'd be like without any Western influence at all

Goblin Girl
12-10-2007, 05:56 AM
What is with the people in Africa, that they keep coming up with such monstrous things? First raping virgins to cure HIV and now this.

Varaj
12-10-2007, 06:55 AM
This is a horrific train of events and my point in posting this wasn't a 'well they're worse than us' attack. I posted this to highlight that it doesn't matter what religion/faith people profess to follow. So long as they're uneducated (check the bold sections) there will always be people using the system to abuse their positions, because this has nothing to do with Christianity.

I must disagree with to some extent. The underlying faith system does play a part. Without a doubt people are abusing it as you say, but the system of belief they are using allows, and to some extent supports, the abuse.

Ancalagon
12-10-2007, 08:46 AM
What is with the people in Africa, that they keep coming up with such monstrous things? First raping virgins to cure HIV and now this.

Poverty, lack of education and despair usually leads to pretty horrific things.

Darkfire
12-10-2007, 11:16 AM
I must disagree with to some extent. The underlying faith system does play a part. Without a doubt people are abusing it as you say, but the system of belief they are using allows, and to some extent supports, the abuse.

True, but I'd argue that it doesn't matter what sytem of belief (religious or otherwise) these people believe in. So long as they lack education there is always someone who is going to be able to take advantage of that belief system (generally using the classic one line out of context approach).

Varaj
12-10-2007, 11:23 AM
True, but I'd argue that it doesn't matter what sytem of belief (religious or otherwise) these people believe in. So long as they lack education there is always someone who is going to be able to take advantage of that belief system (generally using the classic one line out of context approach).

Very true, just some are easier to abuse than others and any system that happens built in an unquestionable authority is particularly ripe for abuse.

Eliezer
12-10-2007, 11:47 AM
True, but I'd argue that it doesn't matter what sytem of belief (religious or otherwise) these people believe in. So long as they lack education there is always someone who is going to be able to take advantage of that belief system (generally using the classic one line out of context approach).

I don't even believe it to be lack of education per se. "Education" in the sense that you are referring to probably includes a rational methodology to thinking, an ability to analyze evidence, the skills to deduce cause from effect and to associate the two, etc.

Those skills are rational thinking skills that are the direct product of the Greek roots of Western civilization.

So that makes it an issue of culture as well as education.

Darkfire
12-10-2007, 12:05 PM
I don't even believe it to be lack of education per se. "Education" in the sense that you are referring to probably includes a rational methodology to thinking, an ability to analyze evidence, the skills to deduce cause from effect and to associate the two, etc.

I thought about putting 'education/reasoning skills', but to be honest I'm in the camp of intelligence=reasoning and knowledge=education, so I'm sure that even an uneducated person can reason fairly well, but only within the context of limited knowledge.


Those skills are rational thinking skills that are the direct product of the Greek roots of Western civilization.

Ahh no. I'm far from an expert on ancient history, but I'm sure these skills were in evidence in the ancient Indian, Far Eastern and South American civilisations as well.


So that makes it an issue of culture as well as education.

Education is a product of the culture it's created to serve so I would agree.

Darkfire
12-10-2007, 12:07 PM
Very true, just some are easier to abuse than others and any system that happens built in an unquestionable authority is particularly ripe for abuse.

True

Atropine Mama
12-10-2007, 12:15 PM
What is with the people in Africa, that they keep coming up with such monstrous things? First raping virgins to cure HIV and now this.

I've hear the theory that when poverty creates a situation where children starve to death and war kills children at such a rate as happens in those areas, children are not viewed as much more than objects. It's a defense mechanism -- why love something if it's going to die so soon?

I'm not in any way defending the atrocities committed, but I do think destitute poverty helps create monsters like those you're thinking of.

Goblin Girl
12-10-2007, 01:14 PM
I'm sure there's something to that, Bella. I think another part of it is a more magico-religious view of reality than nearly all of us in the western world hold.

And before Atticus goes all apeshit on me, I said nearly all.

Eliezer
12-10-2007, 01:31 PM
I thought about putting 'education/reasoning skills', but to be honest I'm in the camp of intelligence=reasoning and knowledge=education, so I'm sure that even an uneducated person can reason fairly well, but only within the context of limited knowledge.


You might want to check out this post (http://www.kaytastrophe.com/vb/showthread.php?t=1821)
The PDF Varaj provides talks briefly about how some of these reasoning skills have to be taught to some students. Unfortunately, the thought processes we are talking about are neither natural nor intuitive. They must usually be taught.


Ahh no. I'm far from an expert on ancient history, but I'm sure these skills were in evidence in the ancient Indian, Far Eastern and South American civilisations as well.


Elements of them most assuredly were. It was not formalized or put into a cogent process or inculcated into the culture as a common element for discerning truth until the Greeks came along. It was actually quite revolutionary.

Now, normally, I'm very fond of talking about how ancient man was just as smart as we are and in some instances smarter. Outside of geometry, we didn't surpass the math of the ancient Akkadians and Babylonians until we did Calculus. Algebra was a great invention of format, but that's what it really dealt with: the formalized rules of relationships and notational innovations. As far as our basic understanding of math we didn't surpass the Babylonians until Calculus came along. We didn't surpass the Greeks for geometry until the same time-period when we developed non-Euclidian proofs.

Despite all the wonder and innovations of the ancient civilizations the Greeks stand supreme and unique in the inheritance they have imparted to the world as a methodology of thinking.


Education is a product of the culture it's created to serve so I would agree.

I tend to characterize the problems in Africa to culture and look at education as the vehicle to change that. It worked in India pretty well.



As an aside, I've been strongly influenced in my thinking by reading ancient literature. I am constantly amazed at how similar we are today to how the ancient Egyptians and Chinese were. We have the same faults, same issues, same difficulties, same concerns, same desires, hopes and dreams. You can read the literature of ancient China and medieval Japan and see that we are essentially the same today as we were several centuries ago.
As a consequence I am forced to ask the question how are we then different. The answer isn't in intelligence, or family life or any of the basics that make us human. The difference isn't even educational opportunity or technology. The real difference between me and a man of 3 millennium ago is really cultural. Exceptional individuals throughout history have always obtained to the thinking patterns the Greeks taught, but the difference today is the number of those who have been taught that rational thought and the materialistic philosophy that under girds the scientific method.

So to me it is an issue of culture. We teach in our schools a particular pattern of thought that helps define the culture.

Varaj
12-10-2007, 02:08 PM
I'm sure there's something to that, Bella. I think another part of it is a more magico-religious view of reality than nearly all of us in the western world hold.

And before Atticus goes all apeshit on me, I said nearly all.

The mixture of tribal religions and Christianity has usually created interesting and, in many ways, scary religions that are nominally Christian.

Freedom Canadian
12-10-2007, 03:27 PM
Poverty, lack of education and despair usually leads to pretty horrific things.

Plus, more people = higher quantity of twisted minds :)

Atticus_of_Amber
12-10-2007, 06:55 PM
I'm sure there's something to that, Bella. I think another part of it is a more magico-religious view of reality than nearly all of us in the western world hold.

And before Atticus goes all apeshit on me, I said nearly all.

Why would I go apeshit over that perfectly reasonable comment?

Goblin Girl
12-10-2007, 07:04 PM
Why would I go apeshit over that perfectly reasonable comment?
I figured you'd start pointing out those wacko cultists who thought there was a space ship behind the comet a few years back, or Jim Jones, or the assorted other poor deluded souls who actually *do* seem to have a magico-religious world view, in spite of having been exposed to western civilization, and then you'd take that and use it to say again how religion sucks and all religious people are deluded idiots.

Yeah, I think that about covers it. :)

Atticus_of_Amber
12-10-2007, 07:06 PM
I figured you'd start pointing out those wacko cultists who thought there was a space ship behind the comet a few years back, or Jim Jones, or the assorted other poor deluded souls who actually *do* seem to have a magico-religious world view, in spite of having been exposed to western civilization, and then you'd take that and use it to say again how religion sucks and all religious people are deluded idiots.

Yeah, I think that about covers it. :)

I would have thought all of that was covered by "nearly".

Goblin Girl
12-10-2007, 07:06 PM
The mixture of tribal religions and Christianity has usually created interesting and, in many ways, scary religions that are nominally Christian.

Yes, and not only in Africa. About the only example of that kind of hybrid I can think of that isn't toxic are the cargo cults.

Atticus_of_Amber
12-10-2007, 07:19 PM
Yes, and not only in Africa. About the only example of that kind of hybrid I can think of that isn't toxic are the cargo cults.

Not toxic, but not particularly helpful to economic development either.

Hastur T. Fannon
12-11-2007, 04:44 AM
The mixture of tribal religions and Christianity has usually created interesting and, in many ways, scary religions that are nominally Christian.

To be honest you'll get that with any imported religion - you just see it most with Christianity because of it's association with a certain empire that painted most of the globe an interesting shade of pink. Arguably, the Sudanese genocide is fueled at least in part by a syncrinistic (yes I know I've spelt that wrong) religion based on Islam

Heck, you can get scary Buddhist fundamentalists. They're not that common these days, though

Not toxic, but not particularly helpful to economic development either.

But they make up for that in comedy value. Isn't there one that worships Prince Philip?

Varaj
12-11-2007, 06:42 AM
To be honest you'll get that with any imported religion - you just see it most with Christianity because of it's association with a certain empire that painted most of the globe an interesting shade of pink. Arguably, the Sudanese genocide is fueled at least in part by a syncrinistic (yes I know I've spelt that wrong) religion based on Islam

Heck, you can get scary Buddhist fundamentalists. They're not that common these days, though


I certainly don't disagree. I mentioned Christianity specifically because of the article in question.

The Winslow
12-11-2007, 04:11 PM
syncrinistic (yes I know I've spelt that wrong)
The word is syncretistic, but in those cases I'd say syncretinistic.

Snatch
12-11-2007, 05:16 PM
Wow. These guys have gone well beyond e-mail scams!