
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Juju, Evu, Witchcraft, the evil eye, Voodoo, black magic. There are many names for beliefs that supernatural forces can be harnessed by people who are out to cause harm. Harm to someone’s health, finances, relationships, even their political ambitions. Mike Williams asks why these beliefs still appear to have such a strong hold across different societies, crossing boundaries of wealth and education. And why some attempts to combat these “evil forces” might help in reinforcing fear in them. He speaks to Indian rationalist Sanal Edamaruku, anthropologists Dr Hermione Harris and Peter Geschiere, Line Mariani Playfair and campaigner Vicky Ntetema.
Produced by Bob Howard
(Photo: Human skull on a book next to the clock. Concept of black magic. Credit: Shutterstock)
By BBC World Service4.6
182182 ratings
Juju, Evu, Witchcraft, the evil eye, Voodoo, black magic. There are many names for beliefs that supernatural forces can be harnessed by people who are out to cause harm. Harm to someone’s health, finances, relationships, even their political ambitions. Mike Williams asks why these beliefs still appear to have such a strong hold across different societies, crossing boundaries of wealth and education. And why some attempts to combat these “evil forces” might help in reinforcing fear in them. He speaks to Indian rationalist Sanal Edamaruku, anthropologists Dr Hermione Harris and Peter Geschiere, Line Mariani Playfair and campaigner Vicky Ntetema.
Produced by Bob Howard
(Photo: Human skull on a book next to the clock. Concept of black magic. Credit: Shutterstock)

78,707 Listeners

11,158 Listeners

26,250 Listeners

7,893 Listeners

378 Listeners

857 Listeners

1,072 Listeners

5,577 Listeners

1,807 Listeners

1,749 Listeners

1,028 Listeners

1,958 Listeners

601 Listeners

959 Listeners

839 Listeners

4,171 Listeners

3,230 Listeners

792 Listeners

15,475 Listeners

2,310 Listeners

787 Listeners