Abstract
Shortly before the turn of the nineteenth Century, an amateur collector of Negro Spirituals and folklore recounted a conversation that she had had with an unidentified African American clergyman. According to the collector, the clergyman, “one of the most scholarly and noted ministers of the colored race,” admitted that, even as a professed Christian, he found himself “under the influences ofvoodooism” and other African occult practices. He explained that, as a young pastor, he had grown “completely discouraged” after numerous unsuccessful attempts to attract new worshipers into his congregation until one day an unexpected visitor happened his way:I was in my study praying when the door opened and a little Conjure man came in and said softly: “You don't understand de people. You must get you ahandas a friend to draw 'em. Ef you will let me fix you a luck charm, you'll git 'em.”
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Religious studies,Cultural Studies
Reference87 articles.
1. Fern Seed—For Peace;Bass;Folk-Say: A Regional Miscellany,1930
Cited by
1 articles.
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