(By
Abimbola Adelakun) – There is nothing like ‘money rituals’
The gruesome
murder of the Lagos State University student, Miss Favour Daley-Oladele, by a
self-deluded young man in pursuit of an illusion of “money rituals” is
saddening. According to reports, Favour’s boyfriend, Owolabi Adeeko, had
allegedly connived with a pastor, Segun Philips, who promised to make a potion
that would magically draw money for Adeeko and his mother. Now that they have
been busted, the pastor claimed the ritual failed because “the spirit did not
bring any money.”
I am uncertain if he genuinely believed that money would
magically surface or he was merely making things up for the press, but here is
the truth: There is nothing like money ritual. There has never been, and there
never will be.
There is nobody that claims that “money ritual” is real that can
also substantiate it. The evidence people tender about its efficacy is
typically reportorial, or some fantasy they picked up from home movies.
Meanwhile, Nollywood filmmakers too have never seen money rituals work either.
What they rehash are urban myths and similar tales. Nobody, I repeat, nobody
can make money come out of thin air or conjure it from another location.
The
so-called prophet also promised Adeeko’s mother she would be getting contracts.
That too is impossible. Nobody gets contracts because they draw on supernatural
forces. They either get it because they keep company with those that give out
the contracts, or because they provide unique services.
It
is imperative we vigorously debunk such superstitions for the sake of the poor
people who fall prey to these grifters. Is it not curious that with all the claims
of efficacy of money rituals in Africa, nobody can identify a single
billionaire who made their money from such magic? If spirits can bring cash or
a decapitated head stewed in magic potions can truly make anyone rich, why are
Africans still the poorest people in the world? Should the beneficiaries of
such magic not be standing shoulder to shoulder with the billionaires of this
world like Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg? If it were possible to conjure
money, no pastor or shaman would render such a service to anyone and for a
paltry sum of N210,000 as Phillips collected. They would keep it for their own
benefit!
I
am pretty sure that some readers already disagree with me on this issue. Their
belief in the viability of money rituals is, honestly, understandable. We were
socialised in a culture that constantly bombarded us with such narratives. From
popular culture to religious houses, they told us stories of spirits who ran
errands that enriched certain people. But when you think about it in a broader
context, you find that these accounts of mystical wealth thrive largely in
African societies. From East to West, Central, and South Africa, there are
historical and sociological strands that connect cultures where people believe
money can be magically produced. One is a history of poverty, exploitation, and
consequent disillusionment. While benighted folk are sagged down by the shame
of excruciating poverty, they also see the excessive amount of wealth held by
some other people on the other side of the class divide. These fortunate folk,
unlike them, thrive despite not being engaged in the labour that is
traditionally connected to wealth generation.
When
people do not see a rational link between what some wealthy people do for a
living and the bullion vans that drive money into their compound, they begin to
accept that there must be some truth to the belief that spirits dispense
favours. This belief is further strengthened when religious leaders who cavort
with corrupt politicians to get their own share of resources also promote the
belief in miraculous money to sacralise their ill-gotten wealth. Then popular
culture too churns out stories of money rituals that feed (off) these belief
cycles, not because they know things for a fact but because the stories are easy
for cultural producers to regurgitate without doing the hard work of plumbing
the depths of the mind to find compelling narratives.
Then,
there is the media that uncritically reports stories of “money rituals” to a
credulous audience. I raised the issue of the role played by the media in
promoting these falsities years ago when I wrote on the discovery of the
ritualists’ den in Soka, Ibadan. While reporters regaled us with tales of the
horrors that uncovered in that location, there was no in-depth investigation
into what actually went down in that place. Various reports of Soka “house of
horror” took it for granted that actual money ritual activities happened, and
that the victims were being used to generate currencies. The reality could just
be organ harvesting by traffickers, but we do not know. And some other stories
we hear —such as women’s underwear being used for money rituals— are just urban
myths that got taken too seriously by perverts and the gullible who started
raiding everywhere for panties.
It
is hard for an average European to believe in money rituals in the same way as
Africans. That is not because they are above superstitions —no society in the
world is immune to them— but because they run a society where, over time, they
have established a logical connection between the factors of production, money,
and politics. Their social mechanisms are systematised, and because productivity
and money typically go together in their daily experience, the belief in money
conjuration will hardly find a landing place in their imagination. In African
societies where we are far more of consumers than producers, we attach
mysticism to money because wealth generation in our culture is mostly based on
an extractive economy —we disembowel the earth for resources we can sell— and
the corruption that naturally follows such exchange. The fantasy that some
spirits can somehow bring money is spun by those trying to find their way out
of the disorganisation that characterises life and the shrinkage of
opportunities for upward mobility.
Those
who claim they can generate money for people through rituals, and who demand
human lives for that purpose, do so for various reasons. One, they want to
build a powerful reputation in the minds of people. If they succeed, it pays
off in other ways. By asking for their clients to procure human body parts,
they seduce them into believing they have access to supernatural forces, and
that power is so potent that it requires human life to access. Rituals that
supposedly produce money or political power do not work based on any such
telepathic connections. Instead, its spectacular effect manipulates people’s
beliefs and obliges them to take certain courses of action. Two, some of those
who ask for a human to be sacrificed are, in reality, psychopaths who want to
carry out their sick fantasies on unsuspecting victims. They not only exploit
the gullibility and desperation of their clients, but they also use them to
bring friends and relatives to them. Three, they are abusing foundational
beliefs. The superstitions about money rituals and the sacrificial victims
required have traceable links to our African past. However, because they have
never clearly understood why our ancestors found those beliefs expedient for
their time, those histories become exploitable. In different parts of Africa,
hunchbacks, albinos, and even bald men regularly fall victim to the enterprise
of money rituals.
We
should challenge these myths of money rituals and save our lives from the
machinations of evil imaginations. From Nigeria to Tanzania to Malawi to
Mozambique, poor people are being hunted down. These predators who want to do
money rituals need to be educated out of their wits that have been addled by
poverty and ignorance. Those who want to enjoy the nicer things of life but
find themselves forever incommoded by crushing poverty need to learn that their
poverty is political and therefore, cannot be magically resolved. We are the
poorest continent in the world because of politics, and our redemption will not
come through either magic or miracles but in reformative policies. We should
raise our voices and shout this loud enough so that more people do not become
unfortunate victims.
Abimbola
Adelakun (aadelakun@punchng.com)
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