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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MākutuMākutu - Wikipedia

    Mākutu in the Māori language of New Zealand means "witchcraft", "sorcery", "to bewitch"; and also a "spell or incantation ". [1] [2] It may also be described as a belief in malignant occult powers possessed by certain people. [citation needed]

  3. Feb 7, 2020 · Mākutu has been described as Māori witchcraft and even black magic, but Dr Nepia Mahuika, the chair of the National Māori Historians Collective Aotearoa, says such descriptions have been written from a western perspective. Mahuika says in actual fact, it means different things to different people.

  4. The atua-hohatu (stone gods), makutu-kohatu (bewitched stones), tohaka-pakoko (carved figures), kohatu-iuhokairo (carved stones), rakau ivhakairo (carved wood-work), were all made tapu, as atuas. The spirit of the person who operates the witchcraft is seen as in a dream by those in their proper senses, and in the night will disclose it, just as

  5. Feb 4, 2017 · Makutu is the Māori word for witchcraft. A person practising makutu is able to inflict illnesses, death, spirit possession to the person bewitched (Best 1982). The effectiveness of mākutu is heightened by the secrecy of the bewitchment, a common factor across many indigenous cultures.

    • Ingo Lambrecht
    • 2017
  6. Chinese mythology encompasses a diverse array of myths derived from regional and cultural traditions. Populated with engaging narratives featuring extraordinary individuals and beings endowed with magical powers, these stories often unfold in fantastical mythological realms or historical epochs.

  7. The first version states that in the beginning heaven and earth were one in a chaotic egg form known as the Hundun. Pangu, meaning “coiled-up antiquity”, was born inside this egg and after 8,000 years split it in two, creating the separation of heaven and earth that we humans are now familiar with.

  8. Makutu is the Maori word for witchcraft. A person practising makutu is able to inflict illnesses, death, spirit possession to the person bewitched (Best 1982). The effectiveness of makutu is heightened by the secrecy of the bewitchment, a common factor across many indigenous cultures.

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