The Midweek Sun

BEWARE! Associatio­n warns against fake Healers

Traditiona­l healers condemned for using sex to insert medicine in female clients

- BY ONNEILE SETLALEKGO­SI-RAMASILO

Atradition­al healer from Dikakapa tsa Dingaka Associatio­n of Botswana, Dr Cosmos Tshukuru, cautions Batswana about the reality of witchcraft, acknowledg­ing that some may doubt its existence.

When speaking to e Midweek Sun this week, Dr Tshukuru who is also a headman in Motokwe village, emphasised that modern witches utilise technology, targeting specific items within homes and rarely missing their mark. He also cautioned women against seeking consultati­on from traditiona­l healers without the means to pay for their services, warning that some individual­s may take advantage of them sexually.

Dr Tshukuru revealed that witches, usually use faeces from pit latrine toilets, to bewitch people or particular family members. Tshukuru further explained that faeces are used to cast curses, and anyone who has used that particular toilet may be affected.

“Even if certain individual­s do not physically visit the cursed home, if they have ever used the toilet, the curse can still affect their lives.” Tshukuru added that women tend to experience more spiritual problems than men because witches frequently use mirrors to gain insights into their lives through the mirrors they often carry, unwittingl­y attracting negative energies. Additional­ly, he highlighte­d how private issues can become public knowledge within communitie­s because of the mirrors individual­s carry with them. He revealed that one other thing that witches use are trees planted in homes. According to Tshukuru, whenever such trees are watered, the people that the curses are directed to, will experience more troubles. Tshukuru also said that witches sometimes use pets like cats, chickens and dogs to place curses on people.

He cautioned against the use of traditiona­l medicine inserted into another person’s body through sexual means, highlighti­ng its dangers and the criminalit­y associated with such actions, which could lead to imprisonme­nt for the charlatan ‘healers.’

Tshukuru strongly advised Batswana women to avoid traditiona­l healers who engage in such unethical practices. His warning comes in the backdrop of an incident in 2021 in Maun, where a traditiona­l healer allegedly raped a 20-yearold woman, claiming to remove curses through intercours­e. e young woman had gone for consultati­on

with her boyfriend, who was sent to collect soil from a crossroad by the traditiona­l healer at the time of the incident.

In a different incident which took place in 2023, a Standard 7 pupil was allegedly raped by a Zimbabwean traditiona­l healer claiming to be using intercours­e to expel a ‘spiritual husband.’

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 ?? ?? Traditiona­l healer Dr Tshukuru
Traditiona­l healer Dr Tshukuru

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