Hoodoo
This article was written by
John Michael Greer on January 20,
2014
posted under
Hoodoo
Source: https://www.llewellyn.com/encyclopedia/article/4707
The traditional
folk magic of
African-American culture, also known as
conjure magic and
rootwork. (The
origin of the word "hoodoo" itself is uncertain, although it may
derive from a West African source.) Hoodoo is to occultism what the
blues are to music: rooted in African culture, transformed and
reshaped through the long ordeal of slavery and segregation, drawing
freely on a wide range of cultural influences but with a distinctive
flavor of its own.
Hoodoo practices can be traced nearly as far back as the African
presence in North America itself. Court records and other sources
from the American colonies show that many of the basic practices of
nineteenth- and twentieth-century hoodoo were already in existence
well before the American Revolution. By around 1760, despite the
brutal realities of slavery, Africans and African-Americans in the
colonies had begun to adapt the magical heritage of their homeland
to the New World, borrowing elements of folk Christianity, European
magic, and Native American tradition in the process. The result was
hoodoo.
Like most traditions of folk magic, hoodoo directs its workings
primarily toward success in everyday life. Spells for drawing money,
winning at gambling, attracting a mate or keeping one from straying,
avoiding legal troubles, or winning court cases play a substantial
role in the hoodoo repertoire. Methods for cursing or "crossing"
another person are also an important part of the tradition, and
there is a correspondingly rich lore of spells for "uncrossing" or
countering curses, either by preventing hostile magic from being
used in the first place by nullifying spells that have already been
set in motion, or by "turning the trick" (that is, sending the spell
back on its originator).