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Evil dread
Updated On: 25 December, 2009 06:57 AM IST | | Chandran Iyer
Lakhs armed with voodoo dolls get ready for annual black magic fest near Pune to root out good and bring in evil
Lakhs armed with voodoo dolls get ready for annual black magic fest near Pune to root out good and bring in evil
Gaily wrapped presents, a tree with a decoration or two, peace, love and joyu00a0-- the embodiment of Christmasu00a0-- that wraps itself around the country today, is missing in the lakhs who will congregate at a temple near Pune in a few days. They only want death and destruction.
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Rajiv Dhankawade (name changed), an engineer in an automobile ancillary unit in Pimpri-Chinchwad, will soon visit the Mandher Devi temple near Pune for his boss. "I want him to suffer and die a slow, painful death and this doll I'm carrying will do the trick," he says calmly.
It's a black cloth doll stuffed with sawdust, almost like a gingerbread man, with the face and vital organs marked in white. A few pins to the heart, brain, and vital organs, he says will do the job. Asked how he could believe in superstition, Rajiv explained, "When a feng shui expert tells educated people that keeping a laughing Buddha, a jade tree or a toad with a gold coin in its mouth can bring prosperity, they believe it because it's a foreign practice. But when people practice ancient Indian occult, they immediately dub it as superstitious." Rajiv says he will drive a nail through the heart of the voodoo doll and nail it to a particular tree near the temple in Satara district on a full moon night after cutting a goat or a chicken.u00a0
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Nasty: Devotees believe they have to nail voodoo dolls to a tree near the Mandher Devi temple in Satara district on a full moon night after sacrificing a goat or a chicken. File pic |
District authorities say they have stopped this evil practice since 2005, but sources say the black magic is alive and well.
For three days a year, from December 30 to January 1, lakhs of devotees come to the temple for a pilgrimage. While most come to pray for health, happiness and prosperity, there are as many who come here for black magic. Sources said it wasn't always a death wish, but more often just the desire to debilitate the victimu00a0-- painful disease, an accidentu00a0-- by jealous lovers, husbands seeking divorce, etc.
Advocate Milind Oak, a trustee of the temple, said, "All this superstitious mumbo-jumbo used to take place earli- er, but it is banned now. Some people do carry out these activities outside the temple area, as these beliefs are deep-rooted and can't be wiped out easily. But most others come here with pure faith, devotion and a positive mindset."
In Mumbai, thousands from all religions throng to the Mira Datar dargah at Reay Road for the healing process.
The faithful believe that the saint can cure them of illnesses, black magic and drive away demons that possess their bodies. The process of exorcising demons is performed at sunset every Thursday.
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Narendra Dabholkar, who heads the Andhashraddha Nirmulan Samitim which is crusading against superstition, said, "These acts of piercing a doll representing the enemy whom they hope to harm through is known as Yatukriya. It is a sort of witchcraft. In reality, it's nothing but a superstition, which has no scientific base. Banning such practices is not sufficient. What is needed is a stringent law to curb such practices. We have been asking the government to enact laws to stop these practices, but it has not happened so far." How do you like the new new mid-day.com experience? Share your feedback and help us improve. Read Next Story Trending Stories |


