Showing posts with label love spell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label love spell. Show all posts

Thursday, April 26, 2012

The spell to bring your lover back to you



  Looking for some love in your life desperately? Read on to get your answers. Read on patiently as the world of love magic is slowly going to be revealed before your eyes.  In the darkness of the night, stand right in front of the window sill, light a crimson colored candle and stand diagonally opposite to it. Do not let the flame extinguish. Believe me, if the powers with which you invoke the sprits around are able to awaken with your chants, your flame would not be extinguished even in the toughest of winds or storm, as that’s the power of universe and the nature around us. 
 
Now coming back to the love spell , stand diagonally in front of the lighted candle and chant the spell as written below with utmost faith in mind that it would bring your ideal lover back to you.

As this lighted candle sheds it light around the window sill
Let oh beloved your presence
Fill my life with all the love and joy
As this candle slowly burns and gets off
Let my unhappiness and sorrow which has filled my love life disappear with it
Let me life once again take anew turn
A new lease of life with you my love
I don’t know who you are
But I know you love me ardently
Come to me to make my life happy
Come to me oh beloved
Come to me to me happy
I’m there always for you
Oh come to make my life happy I implore”.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

African Witchcraft - The History, the Practices and the Controversies


African Witchcraft is a collective term used to describe the spiritual traditions (both past and present) of the various ethnic groups in Africa. From a historical point of view, Egyptian Witchcraft and Arabic Sihr traditionally formed a part of the mix. These two ceremonial forms of Witchcraft are nearly extinct, and have been replaced by the Islamic faith.

The witchcraft practiced in the rest of Africa is shamanistic in nature. Long before the East and the West converged on the continent, the shamanistic practices of Africans were remarkably similar in spite of the ethnic and tribal diversity that prevailed.

This is no longer the case, though. The influences of the Christian and the Islamic religions on African Witchcraft are noticeable. The colonization of Africa by the English, Dutch, French, Portuguese and Germans, brought its own set of cultural influences too. This accounts for the diversity now to be found in the practice of African witchcraft from ethnic grouping to ethnic grouping and from tribe to tribe.

This diversification should not be interpreted as dilution or intensification, though. It merely implies that African witchcraft in its purest form has been exchanged for African shamanism of an eclectic form.

The heinous practice of slave trading led to the export of African witchcraft to the Americas, where it now survives under the auspices of religions such as Voudun, Obeah, Santera, Quimbanda and Candombl.

What is African Witchcraft?

African witchcraft is a nature based religion, where one or more Deities, nature spirits and ancestral spirits are worshipped. The witchdoctor, with his or her ability to commune with Deity, nature spirits and ancestral spirits, is traditionally held in awe - an awe which is an odd mixture of respect and fear.

The reason for this fear is simple. Magic in the African sense may be used for both positive and negative purposes. It can be used to bless and to curse, to cure and cause disease, to bring peace and to initiate battle, to protect and to harm, to create and to destroy.

The witchdoctor can be either male or female. Although there is no gender equality in African culture, no distinction is generally made where spiritual practices are concerned. The witchdoctor is responsibile for divination, healing, presiding over rituals, conducting rites of passage, performing sacrifices, finding lost cattle, protecting warriors, casting and removing spells, and narrating the history and myths of old.

For harmony between the living and the dead, which is an essential component of leading a trouble-free life, ancestors are shown respect by means of daily offerings, prayers and songs, elaborate rituals and animal sacrifice.

Source: Rose Ariadne