“There’s a lot of jealousy in football,” mentioned Sheikh Issa, holding up a bit of bark and a bottle of a yellowish potion.
Which is why {many professional} gamers beat a path to the African religion healer in the Paris suburbs in search of methods to beat back the “evil eye” and different afflictions.
Since World Cup winner Paul Pogba was sensationally accused of having spells forged on his French teammate Kylian Mbappe, the surprisingly influential function folks healers or “marabouts” play in the sport has begun to come back to gentle.
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“This is what I use to treat a player who keeps getting injured in big games,” mentioned Sheikh Issa, whose title we now have modified at his request.
He was actually low and “I had to clean his star”, mentioned the Ivory Coast-born “traditional practitioner”, who claims to have the ability to “see both the past and the future”.
With a lot cash at stake, and careers that may finish on a single deal with, elite sports activities folks “regularly turn to witch doctors and to the paranormal”, mentioned Joel Thibault, an evangelical pastor who’s a non secular advisor to French striker Olivier Giroud and different high athletes.
All this had been discreetly going out of the general public eye till Pogba — whose mother and father come from Guinea — fell sufferer to an alleged extortion try by some of his entourage final yr.
His brother later claimed Pogba paid a witch physician to hex Mbappe, however each the previous Manchester United star and the healer informed police they did nothing of the sort.
The marabout mentioned the substantial funds Pogba made to him had been for “good works in Africa”.
With three out of 10 folks in France susceptible to consider in some type of sorcery, in line with a 2020 survey, AFP has been investigating this closed world for the previous yr.
We found how religion healers are “half feared and half despised” — as one anthropologist put it — and why they maintain such sway in some communities.
‘A gift’
Sheikh Issa wears denims in the road, however when he welcomes his purchasers into his surgical procedure he sports activities an extended African boubou gown. “I don’t believe in gris-gris or amulets, I believe in the Koran and in plants,” mentioned the 45-yr-previous, who additionally runs a cleansing enterprise.
The instruments of his commerce are organized round him in a pair of dozen bottles and plastic luggage — tree bark that protects you from the “evil eye”, floor seeds that “keep you lucky”, and potions to “add sheen” and charisma to “politicians, lawyers and business people” who Sheikh Issa mentioned come to him seeking to “be loved and admired”.
And, of course, cures to reinforce “sexual power”, he mentioned pointing to a different bottle. France is a “stressful country and some people are weak in bed”, added the sheikh, a bit of sheepishly. Afterwards they name and say, “Thank you, Sheikh.”
Sheikh Issa received “the gift” from his mom “who read shells” and his father, who’s an imam. He skilled with religion healers in West Africa — the place folks usually seek the advice of marabouts — after learning at a koranic faculty.
He mentioned his repute took off when he “helped” a politician change into a authorities minister. His three telephones buzz continuously with messages.
Most of the sheikh’s purchasers — who he insists solely pay the associated fee of importing his crops and his journey bills — are largely African and South Asian, though some come from each the French Caribbean and France itself.
One summer season’s day when AFP visited his consulting room, a younger Comorian girl “who lives with spirits and self harms” was ready to see him together with “a Moroccan desperate” about his failing bakery.
“People don’t talk when they come for the first time,” he mentioned. “I have to guess” what’s improper. Some are having hassle at residence or at work, have well being issues or are in search of “the love of their life”, he mentioned.
‘Everyone has a star’
The largely West African witch medical doctors working in France — who see themselves as healers of the soul — have realized to adapt to malheurs of their French purchasers.
Many go to them as others would go to a psychologist or a clarevoyant, specialists say.
Anthropologist Liliane Kuczynski, writer of the definitive e-book, “African marabouts in Paris”, discovered purchasers come from a large social spectrum, from undocumented migrants to graduates and academics.
“Far from being obscure and marginal, belief in superstitions and the paranormal has become a constantly rising majority phenomenon,” French polling firm Ifop discovered in 2020.
“Marabouts are particularly gifted with emotional intelligence,” anthropologist Marie Miran-Guyon of the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences in Paris informed AFP.
“And for some it works. Placebo effect or not, from the moment people believe it can make a difference,” it may well, she added.
But Monsieur Fakoly, a Guinean healer working in Paris, who comes from a line of marabouts, had his personal view of the way it works.
“Every one of us has a star. If it is dirty, people fail and have bad luck. So you have to purify the soul,” he mentioned.
“Prayers and advice will help the person feel better. We listen, we give medicine, but not the kind you get in a pharmacy!” mentioned the healer, one of eight interviewed by AFP.
‘The spirits are working on me’
Raymond, 61, had simply arrived in Sheikh Issa’s consulting room. The sheikh slowly shook his hand, urgent his thumb to “test the energy… I feel it’s angry, that things are not good.”
Then Raymond picked up a pen and introduced it to his lips with out saying a phrase. In the silence, the sheikh wrote in his pocket book, then traced some traces between the letters to evoke the “16 spirits” utilizing a method referred to as geomancy.
“My ears are hot, I feel a bar in the middle of my forehead,” he informed his shopper. “The spirits are working on me.”
Raymond — who requested that we not use his actual title — was satisfied his ex-spouse had “cast a spell on him” after they divorced a decade in the past. He was drained and in ache and “I went to work like a zombie”.
Rather than go to a health care provider he sought succour at a prophetic African church, however to no avail. So he started to seek the advice of healers who learn shells. “All they did was take my money,” he mentioned.
A fellow building employee really useful Sheikh Issa. “It was if he had lived alongside me all those years,” Raymond recalled. “He recounted my life from A to Z. I couldn’t believe it.”
The sheikh ready him potions in West African jars referred to as canaris. “Take the canari home wash yourself with the potion,” Raymond remembered him telling him.
From that day on “I got my health back”, mentioned Raymond.
‘Taboo’
“Some (marabouts) are like psychotherapists… while others are swindlers,” mentioned anthropologist Jean-Pierre Olivier de Sardan of the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS).
Some come from a Sufi custom with a deep “religious culture and desire to help”, he mentioned, however others know little greater than “a few surahs of the Koran and extract the maximum for their victims,” he added.
Anyone who says they’ve the present and some information of Islam, divination and miracle working can name themselves a marabout.
Some cost not more than a dozen euros for an appointment, although the value can go as much as a number of hundred or 1000’s for a sacrifice, even tens of 1000’s in some circumstances.
Therapist Assa Djelou recurrently receives purchasers who’ve been let down by marabouts.
She mentioned some have a “dangerous” maintain on folks. Rather than “facing up to reality”, the healers persuade folks their issues “have been caused by spells cast on them, which can lead to anxiety and depression”.
The French police solely get entangled when there are complaints about fraud or practising medication illegally. But such circumstances are uncommon and there’s a “taboo” about speaking about it, mentioned Djelou.
‘Dependent’ on witch medical doctors
In sport, the place superstition is commonplace, issues may shortly get out of hand.
“Careers are short and the least injury” will be catastrophic, mentioned Thibault, the pastor who has supported a number of high athletes. Sometimes they need assistance as a result of they “do not have the inner strength to get over everything” thrown at them.
But “what these marabouts do is very dangerous”, he claimed.
Former footballer Cisse Baratte informed AFP how he fell underneath the affect of witch medical doctors as a rising younger participant plucked from the Ivory Coast to play in France. Soon he had change into “dependent” on the amulets, “protection belts” and sacrifices they made for him.
The legendary French soccer supervisor Claude Le Roy, who managed six African nationwide groups, is aware of the issue nicely.
He was even threatened and branded the “white sorcerer” for driving marabouts away from his workers and gamers.
“Some players have a need to talk with their marabouts, it can comfort them, and it is also a link with their homeland,” he added.
Even although he insists that “he doesn’t believe in the slightest” in their powers, Le Roy continues to be troubled by one incident.
In 1997, after a catastrophic away leg in the Champions League towards Steaua Bucarest which they misplaced 3-0, Paris Saint-Germain needed to win by 4 targets to undergo.
Desperate for something that may assist, the membership paid “a grand Malian marabout” 500 euros.
“He asked us for photos of the players and their numbers, and just before the home leg told us that number 18 would score the fourth goal in the 37th minute.”
PSG gained 5-0, with its quantity 18 scoring the fourth objective in the forty first minute…
(This story has not been edited by News18 workers and is revealed from a syndicated information company feed – AFP)