"voodooQueen06" - читать интересную книгу автора (McGrath Adrian Nicholas - The Voodoo Queen)

! The Voodoo Queen: Marie Laveau and New Orleans Voodoo
Voodoo Queen Index
1. All Hail the Queen
2. Voodoo Rising
3. Congo Square
4. Bosswoman of New Orleans
5. Voodoo Doctors and Ceremonies
6. Gris-Gris
7. Zombies and Werewolves
8. Marie Laveau's Legacy

Voodoo Glossary

Charms and Spells


Enigma:
The Paranormal

ParaScope
Main Screen

The Voodoo Queen

6. Gris-Gris

An essential element of Marie's magic was gris-gris. Gris-gris (pronounced "gree-gree") comes from the French word gris which means grey, hence a combination of black (negative) and white (positive) magic. In New Orleans, positive charms were called "juju," and negative were called "mojo" -- terms which emanated from African tribal beliefs. Gris-gris was the most powerful of all charms and also the most expensive, and it could be used for good or ill.

Gris-gris was a potion of herbs and natural or decaying matter, from the mundane to the bizarre, sometimes including powdered brick, ochre, cayenne pepper, fingernail clippings, human hair, and animal skin (usually reptilian) -- all tossed into a small leather bag. Thankfully, this mixture was not ingested, but was worn around the neck from a string, or left near the intended object of the charm. It supposedly brought either good or bad luck, depending on what you believed in. The real power of the gris-gris lay in the psychology of the object of the charm. The power of suggestion, more than anything else, was the real power behind the gris-gris. It was essentially a non-ingested, magical placebo.

Gris-gris lives on today in popular culture. Even nowadays in the New Orleans area, it is not uncommon to hear the expression "to put gris-gris on it," meaning to perform some task so astonishingly well it seems as if magic is being used. Or the expression can be used with a negative meaning, as if a hex were placed on a particular action.

Next: Congo Square


Enigma: Paranormal Phenomena
The ParaStore: Books on the Supernatural

 

! The Voodoo Queen: Marie Laveau and New Orleans Voodoo
Voodoo Queen Index
1. All Hail the Queen
2. Voodoo Rising
3. Congo Square
4. Bosswoman of New Orleans
5. Voodoo Doctors and Ceremonies
6. Gris-Gris
7. Zombies and Werewolves
8. Marie Laveau's Legacy

Voodoo Glossary

Charms and Spells


Enigma:
The Paranormal

ParaScope
Main Screen

The Voodoo Queen

6. Gris-Gris

An essential element of Marie's magic was gris-gris. Gris-gris (pronounced "gree-gree") comes from the French word gris which means grey, hence a combination of black (negative) and white (positive) magic. In New Orleans, positive charms were called "juju," and negative were called "mojo" -- terms which emanated from African tribal beliefs. Gris-gris was the most powerful of all charms and also the most expensive, and it could be used for good or ill.

Gris-gris was a potion of herbs and natural or decaying matter, from the mundane to the bizarre, sometimes including powdered brick, ochre, cayenne pepper, fingernail clippings, human hair, and animal skin (usually reptilian) -- all tossed into a small leather bag. Thankfully, this mixture was not ingested, but was worn around the neck from a string, or left near the intended object of the charm. It supposedly brought either good or bad luck, depending on what you believed in. The real power of the gris-gris lay in the psychology of the object of the charm. The power of suggestion, more than anything else, was the real power behind the gris-gris. It was essentially a non-ingested, magical placebo.

Gris-gris lives on today in popular culture. Even nowadays in the New Orleans area, it is not uncommon to hear the expression "to put gris-gris on it," meaning to perform some task so astonishingly well it seems as if magic is being used. Or the expression can be used with a negative meaning, as if a hex were placed on a particular action.

Next: Congo Square


Enigma: Paranormal Phenomena
The ParaStore: Books on the Supernatural