Abstract
Against earlier predictions, witch accusations are proliferating and flourishing in many modern, urban, and Christian environments. And they are taking new forms. One dramatic change involves who is accused, with children now often the prime suspects when misfortunes occur. Another dramatic change relates to who is consulted when witch suspicions are present. Rather than non-Christian diviners or traditional healers, many now consult Christian pastors and prophets for help in identifying witches and dealing with them. Based on a survey of 713 pastoral leaders in Kinshasa from all major church traditions, and on supplemental qualitative research, this report 1) explores the profile of accused children, 2) identifies what these children are accused of, 3) identifies what sorts of evidence are used to establish the guilt of the accused child, and 4) considers the consequences to the child of being labeled a witch. Furthermore, this report explores what it is that church leaders believe, teach, and practice in relationship to child-witch allegations—considering the role of church tradition and theological education on their patterns of understanding and engagement. Specifically, we identify and examine two broad paradigms widely present in Kinshasa churches—a “witch diagnosis and deliverance paradigm” and a “child protection paradigm.” We consider some grassroots strategies of transformative engagement engaged in by l’Équipe Pastorale auprès des Enfants en Détresse [EPED] leaders, and end by inviting African theological and pastoral leaders into a conversation about the impact of theological understandings, congregational discourses, spiritual disciplines, and pastoral practices on the well-being and flourishing of vulnerable children.
Highlights
In recent decades, human rights activists and organizations have expressed alarm at how frequently children in various regions of the world are accused of being dangerous witches and treated as such
6 This development has been observed in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola, Benin, the Central African Republic, Gabon, Malawi, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, and in immigrant communities of Europe
Perhaps the easiest way for readers to gain an initial sense of the dynamics of child witch accusations is to read a first-hand account
Summary
Human rights activists and organizations have expressed alarm at how frequently children in various regions of the world are accused of being dangerous witches and treated as such. Revised understandings of witchcraft that have recently emerged increasingly focus suspicions on children. In a pre-Christian past, people characteristically brought their suspicions about witchcraft to the attention of traditional healers, diviners, and shamans, and depended on them to authoritatively interpret and address misfortunes understood as caused by witches. Scholars who study recent developments related to child witchcraft highlight rather the current trusted role of Christian pastors, prophets, apostles, intercessors, and other church leaders in authoritatively addressing witchcraft suspicions and accusations.. Most scholars who have researched child witch accusations, at best focus only a small part of their research on the church leaders themselves. This report, and the research on which it is based, focuses centrally on the experiences, understandings, and practices of church leaders in Kinshasa as they pertain to child-witch accusations
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More From: OKH Journal: Anthropological Ethnography and Analysis Through the Eyes of Christian Faith
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