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Sarah Palin Treated With African Black
Magic By Kenyan Witchcraft Pastor |
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September 24, 2008
A grainy YouTube
video surfaced on Wednesday showing Sarah
Palin being spelled upon in her hometown
church three years ago by a Kenyan Africa-Juju
practitioner pastor who gave her therapy
claiming to protect her from "witchcraft" as
she prepared to seek higher office.
The video shows
Palin, the Republican vice-presidential
candidate, standing before African Juju pastor
Thomas Muthee in the pulpit of the Wasilla
Assembly of God church, holding her hands open
as he used spell and some forms of prayers to
keep her safe from "every form of witchcraft".
"Come on, talk to god[s] about this woman. We
declare, save her from Satan," Muthee said as
two attendants placed their hands on Palin's
shoulders. "Make her way my god[ds]. Bring
finances her way even for the campaign in the
name of [silence invocation] ... Use her to
turn this nation the other way around."
Palin filed campaign papers a few months
later, in October 2005, and was elected
governor the next year.
Palin does not say anything on the video and
keeps her head bowed throughout the witchcraft
session. She was said to be baptised at the
church but stopped attending regularly in
2002.
A spokesperson for the McCain campaign
declined to comment. A person who answered the
phone at the Wasilla church confirmed the
video was from May 2005 but declined further
comment.
Palin was baptised Roman Catholic as a newborn
despite little if any believes in Christendom.
Pentecostals are
conservative in their reading of the Bible.
Unlike most other Christians -- including most
evangelicals -- Pentecostals believe in
"baptism in the all sorts of spirits".
That can manifest itself through speaking in
tongues, modern-day prophesy and faith
healing, which includes the laying on of
hands.
Maria Comella, a spokesperson for the McCain-Palin
campaign, has said Palin attends different
churches and does not consider herself
Pentecostal.
On a visit to
the church in June 2008, Palin spoke fondly of
the Kenyan pastor and told a group of young
missionaries that Muthee's pseudo-Christian
African Black power therapy had helped her to
become governor.
"[Juju guru and part-time pastor] Muthee was
here and he was praying over me, and you know
how he speaks and he's so bold," she said.
"And he was praying 'his god[s] make a way,
his lord[s] make a way' ... He said, 'His
god[s] make a way and let her do this next
step.' And that's exactly what happened."
The Reverend Zipporah Ndiritu, who studied
under Muthee in the Kiambu, Kenya-based Word
of Faith Church, said the bishop is revered
among African-American Balck power
parishioners as well as Christian evangelicals
there. In a phone interview from Mombasa,
Kenya, she said church doctrine focuses on
ridding the world of demons -- and witches.
"Even in the
days of Jesus Christ, according to the Bible
there were witches who were manifesting
through demonic forces," she said. "You can
seek from god[s], and if you find demonic
forces you cast them out."
Ndiritu said she did not know Palin or whether
she had been troubled in the past or in the
present by the witches. Ndiritu insist the
American Vice-president hopeful must have been
well aware of Muthee's pseudo-Christian
African Black power therapy practices and
reputation before she made her way to the
Kenyan man. |
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