So begins this true story of witchcraft and friendship set against the turbulent backdrop of contemporary Soweto.
Adam Ashforth, an Australian who has spent many years in the black township, finds his longtime friend Madumo in
dire circumstances: his family has accused him of using witchcraft to kill his mother and has thrown him out on
the street. Convinced that his life is cursed, Madumo seeks help among Soweto's bewildering array of healers and
prophets. An inyanga, or traditional healer, confirms that he has indeed been bewitched. With Ashforth by his side,
skeptical yet supportive, Madumo embarks upon a physically grueling treatment regimen that he follows religiously-almost
to the point of death-despite his suspicion that it may be better to "Westernize my mind and not think about
witchcraft."
Ashforth's beautifully written, at times poignant account of Madumo's struggle shows that the problem of witchcraft
is not simply superstition, but a complex response to spiritual insecurity in a troubling time of political and
economic upheaval. Post-apartheid Soweto, he discovers, is suffering from a deluge of witchcraft. Through Madumo's
story, Ashforth opens up a world that few have seen, a deeply unsettling place where the question "Do you
believe in witchcraft?" is not a simple one at all. The insights that emerge as Ashforth accompanies his friend
on an odyssey through Soweto's supernatural perils have profound implicationseven for those of us who live in worlds
without witches.
Table of Contents
A Note to the Reader
1. Where's Madumo?
2. Madumo's Curse
3. In the City
4. Breakfast Stories
5. Diagnosis
6. Talking of Witches
7. The Healer and His Craft
8. A Deluge of Witchcraft
9. The Healing Begins
10. Of Witches and Their Craft
11. A Witch's Brew?
12. Church
13. Madumo's Advice to the Lovelorn
14. Isidliso Nights
15. Diagnoses, Doubts, and Despair
16. Back to Square One
17. Interview with the Ancestors
18. The Homecoming
19. A Feast for the Ancestors?
20. Departures and Beginnings