Dedza district, Leo Igwe, Malawi, Mubarak Bala, persecution, witches
Towards an Effective Advocacy Against Witch Persecution in Malawi
Author: Dr. Leo Igwe
Numbering: Issue 1.B, Idea: African Freethinking
Place of Publication: Langley, British Columbia, Canada
Title: African Freethinker
Web Domain: http://www.in-sightjournal.com
Individual Publication Date: June 3, 2020
Issue Publication Date: TBD
Name of Publisher: In-Sight Publishing
Frequency: Three Times Per Year
Words: 915
Keywords: Dedza district, Leo Igwe, Malawi, Mubarak Bala, persecution, witches.
Towards an Effective Advocacy Against Witch Persecution in Malawi[1],[2]
The need to combat allegations of witchcraft, the attack and killing of alleged witches in Malawi has become quite urgent. The bloodletting linked to witchcraft allegations has become mind-boggling and must stop immediately. In the past years, humanists in Malawi have worked to address this problem, and bring an end to violence and abuses that are related to belief in witchcraft. Unfortunately the efforts of humanists have yielded limited positive outcomes. The campaign has not led to a total eradication of witch persecution and murder in the country.
In fact between December 2019 and January 2020, there have been reported cases of witch murder in districts across Malawi. In December, a mob stoned an alleged witch to death in Dedza district. She was accused of causing the death of a relative through magic. The alleged witch was attending the funeral of the late relative, and her presence annoyed other other attendees. According the media report, this relative was diagnosed of malaria at a local hospital. And the alleged witch had reportedly threatened that this relative would die for interfering in her marriage.
In Karonga district, three elderly persons have been murdered for practicing witchcraft. They were killed after a local ‘witch doctor’ confirmed that they were practicing black magic. While in Ntchisi, a mob lynched an elderly couple following accusations of witchcraft. According to the report, relatives accused the couple of teaching the children witchcraft. In fact it was reported that a child confessed that this couple taught him witchcraft and that their magical plane crashed on their way from Mozambique. This confession angered locals who eventually set them ablaze. Stories of magical planes are pervasive in Malawi. Witches supposedly use these magical planes to attend meetings in their covens in the neighbouring countries. The report further noted that in Malawi witchcraft is associated with curses and spells. Witchcraft is blamed for deaths, diseases and irregular rainfall.
In a related a case, an angry mob attacked and killed a 75-year old woman in Chitipa district. Relatives accused the elderly woman of causing the death of the grand child through witchcraft. The woman did not attend the burial ceremony of the deceased child. And relatives assumed that she stayed away from the ceremony because she was responsible for the death of the child.
While these cases highlighted the dark and destructive impact of witchcraft allegations, they also contained seeds of an effective advocacy against witch persecution in Malawi. First of all there is an urgent need for advocates for alleged witches throughout the country to become more visible and proactive. These advocates must act to ensure that what happened to alleged witches in the above mentioned cases would never happen again to any accused person in the country. The time has come to abandon this lame duck reactive approach and adopt some effective measures against this mindless violence. In pursuant to an effective advocacy for alleged witches, a line on the sand must be drawn to all village, community and district heads. There should be heavy penalties including suspension and summary dismissal for the head of any village, or district where an alleged witch is attacked or killed.
Appendix I: Footnotes
[1] Founder, Humanist Association of Nigeria; Founder & CEO, Advocacy for Alleged Witches; Convener, Decade of Activism against Witch Persecution in Africa: 2020-2030.
[2] Individual Publication Date: June 3, 2020: http://www.in-sightjournal.com/towards-an-effective-advocacy-against-witch-persecution-in-malawi.
License and Copyright
License
In-Sight Publishing and African Freethinker by Scott Douglas Jacobsen is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Based on a work at www.in-sightjournal.com.
Copyright
© Scott Douglas Jacobsen, and In-Sight Publishing and African Freethinker 2012-2020. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Scott Douglas Jacobsen, and In-Sight Publishing and African Freethinker with appropriate and specific direction to the original content. All interviewees co-copyright their material and may disseminate for their independent purposes.
From → African Freethinker, Chronology
Comments are closed.