The Japan Times - Pogba, potions and impotence: the secret world of witch doctors in France

EUR -
AED 4.312165
AFN 76.95154
ALL 96.753705
AMD 448.031316
ANG 2.102251
AOA 1076.720928
ARS 1703.460147
AUD 1.779327
AWG 2.116455
AZN 1.995163
BAM 1.960036
BBD 2.363397
BDT 143.39197
BGN 1.956168
BHD 0.442705
BIF 3482.611091
BMD 1.174178
BND 1.516406
BOB 8.108213
BRL 6.480992
BSD 1.173386
BTN 106.122841
BWP 15.497835
BYN 3.464941
BYR 23013.883134
BZD 2.360071
CAD 1.61868
CDF 2659.512187
CHF 0.933592
CLF 0.027474
CLP 1077.800801
CNY 8.270027
CNH 8.265119
COP 4538.783942
CRC 584.638664
CUC 1.174178
CUP 31.115709
CVE 110.478074
CZK 24.391217
DJF 208.675178
DKK 7.471348
DOP 73.6792
DZD 152.004409
EGP 55.887573
ERN 17.612666
ETB 182.236126
FJD 2.682115
FKP 0.874651
GBP 0.878003
GEL 3.164377
GGP 0.874651
GHS 13.532349
GIP 0.874651
GMD 86.298212
GNF 10200.667993
GTQ 8.987156
GYD 245.500137
HKD 9.135026
HNL 30.774994
HRK 7.534576
HTG 153.698912
HUF 388.990947
IDR 19581.057178
ILS 3.792471
IMP 0.874651
INR 106.165215
IQD 1538.172801
IRR 49444.623799
ISK 147.993796
JEP 0.874651
JMD 187.765812
JOD 0.832515
JPY 182.561068
KES 151.353157
KGS 102.682053
KHR 4702.581843
KMF 491.980851
KPW 1056.77334
KRW 1735.046597
KWD 0.360215
KYD 0.977872
KZT 603.548729
LAK 25426.817853
LBP 105147.61388
LKR 363.417705
LRD 208.269765
LSL 19.644041
LTL 3.467041
LVL 0.710248
LYD 6.364121
MAD 10.748129
MDL 19.800952
MGA 5313.154049
MKD 61.552783
MMK 2466.030822
MNT 4166.481166
MOP 9.40212
MRU 46.697494
MUR 54.070734
MVR 18.141501
MWK 2039.54696
MXN 21.150931
MYR 4.798867
MZN 75.060144
NAD 19.644118
NGN 1706.279887
NIO 43.127586
NOK 11.980734
NPR 169.792398
NZD 2.035971
OMR 0.451465
PAB 1.173421
PEN 3.950522
PGK 4.987887
PHP 68.965348
PKR 329.120527
PLN 4.21373
PYG 7881.732459
QAR 4.275192
RON 5.092055
RSD 117.388771
RUB 94.520111
RWF 1702.557681
SAR 4.404148
SBD 9.546318
SCR 16.990238
SDG 706.269551
SEK 10.921825
SGD 1.516122
SHP 0.880937
SLE 28.293287
SLL 24621.923812
SOS 671.045152
SRD 45.414844
STD 24303.107961
STN 24.863213
SVC 10.267623
SYP 12983.066516
SZL 19.643882
THB 36.974672
TJS 10.830593
TMT 4.109622
TND 3.409519
TOP 2.827139
TRY 50.179072
TTD 7.959864
TWD 37.153097
TZS 2898.98726
UAH 49.805522
UGX 4182.844311
USD 1.174178
UYU 45.716469
UZS 14178.196202
VES 324.344521
VND 30921.970017
VUV 142.46031
WST 3.277164
XAF 657.349716
XAG 0.017731
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.173274
XCG 2.114826
XDR 0.815437
XOF 656.961327
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.865043
ZAR 19.69423
ZMK 10569.016091
ZMW 26.900107
ZWL 378.084744
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.4100

    82.01

    +0.5%

  • CMSD

    -0.1000

    23.28

    -0.43%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    48.71

    -0.14%

  • NGG

    1.3900

    77.16

    +1.8%

  • BP

    0.7100

    34.47

    +2.06%

  • RIO

    1.2000

    77.19

    +1.55%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    23.26

    -0.34%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    23.15

    -0.78%

  • RELX

    -0.2600

    40.56

    -0.64%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    14.77

    -0.2%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    57.17

    -0.21%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.43

    -0.6%

  • AZN

    -1.4900

    89.86

    -1.66%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    76.29

    +0.59%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    12.81

    +0.86%

Pogba, potions and impotence: the secret world of witch doctors in France
Pogba, potions and impotence: the secret world of witch doctors in France / Photo: JOEL SAGET - AFP

Pogba, potions and impotence: the secret world of witch doctors in France

"There's a lot of jealousy in football," said Sheikh Issa, holding up a piece of bark and a bottle of a yellowish potion.

Text size:

Which is why many professional players beat a path to the African faith healer in the Paris suburbs looking for ways to ward off the "evil eye" and other afflictions.

Since World Cup winner Paul Pogba was sensationally accused of having spells cast on his French teammate Kylian Mbappe, the surprisingly influential role folk healers or "marabouts" play in the game has begun to come to light.

"This is what I use to treat a player who keeps getting injured in big games," said Sheikh Issa, whose name we have changed at his request.

He was really low and "I had to clean his star", said the Ivory Coast-born "traditional practitioner", who claims to be able to "see both the past and the future".

With so much money at stake, and careers that can end on a single tackle, elite sports people "regularly turn to witch doctors and to the paranormal", said Joel Thibault, an evangelical pastor who is a spiritual advisor to French striker Olivier Giroud and other top athletes.

All this had been discreetly going out of the public eye until Pogba -- whose parents come from Guinea -- fell victim to an alleged extortion attempt by some of his entourage last year.

His brother later claimed Pogba paid a witch doctor to hex Mbappe, but both the former Manchester United star and the healer told police they did nothing of the kind.

The marabout said the substantial payments Pogba made to him were for "good works in Africa".

With three out of 10 people in France prone to believe in some sort of sorcery, according to a 2020 survey, AFP has been investigating this closed world for the past year.

We discovered how faith healers are "half feared and half despised" -- as one anthropologist put it -- and why they hold such sway in some communities.

- 'A gift' -

Sheikh Issa wears jeans in the street, but when he welcomes his clients into his surgery he sports a long African boubou robe. "I don't believe in gris-gris or amulets, I believe in the Koran and in plants," said the 45-year-old, who also runs a cleaning business.

The tools of his trade are arranged around him in a couple of dozen bottles and plastic bags -- tree bark that protects you from the "evil eye", ground seeds that "keep you lucky", and potions to "add sheen" and charisma to "politicians, lawyers and business people" who Sheikh Issa said come to him looking to "be loved and admired".

And, of course, remedies to enhance "sexual power", he said pointing to another bottle. France is a "stressful country and some people are weak in bed", added the sheikh, a little sheepishly. Afterwards they call and say, "Thank you, Sheikh."

Sheikh Issa got "the gift" from his mother "who read shells" and his father, who is an imam. He trained with faith healers in West Africa -- where people often consult marabouts -- after studying at a koranic school.

He said his reputation took off when he "helped" a politician become a government minister. His three phones buzz constantly with messages.

Most of the sheikh's clients -- who he insists only pay the cost of importing his plants and his travel expenses -- are mostly African and South Asian, although some come from both the French Caribbean and France itself.

One summer's day when AFP visited his consulting room, a young Comorian woman "who lives with spirits and self harms" was waiting to see him along with "a Moroccan desperate" about his failing bakery.

"People don't talk when they come for the first time," he said. "I have to guess" what is wrong. Some are having trouble at home or at work, have health problems or are looking for "the love of their life", he said.

- 'Everyone has a star' -

The mostly West African witch doctors operating in France -- who see themselves as healers of the soul -- have learned to adapt to malheurs of their French clients.

Many go to them as others would go to a psychologist or a clarevoyant, experts say.

Anthropologist Liliane Kuczynski, author of the definitive book, "African marabouts in Paris", found clients come from a wide social spectrum, from undocumented migrants to graduates and teachers.

"Far from being obscure and marginal, belief in superstitions and the paranormal has become a constantly rising majority phenomenon," French polling company Ifop found 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 told AFP.

"And for some it works. Placebo effect or not, from the moment people believe it can make a difference," it can, she added.

But Monsieur Fakoly, a Guinean healer working in Paris, who comes from a line of marabouts, had his own view of how 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 said.

"Prayers and advice will help the person feel better. We listen, we give medicine, but not the kind you get in a pharmacy!" said the healer, one of eight interviewed by AFP.

- 'The spirits are working on me' -

Raymond, 61, had just arrived in Sheikh Issa's consulting room. The sheikh slowly shook his hand, pressing his thumb to "test the energy... I feel it's angry, that things are not good."

Then Raymond picked up a pen and brought it to his lips without saying a word. In the silence, the sheikh wrote in his notebook, then traced some lines between the letters to evoke the "16 spirits" using a technique called geomancy.

"My ears are hot, I feel a bar in the middle of my forehead," he told his client. "The spirits are working on me."

Raymond -- who asked that we not use his real name -- was convinced his ex-wife had "cast a spell on him" after they divorced a decade ago. He was tired and in pain and "I went to work like a zombie".

Rather than go to a doctor he sought succour at a prophetic African church, but to no avail. So he began to consult healers who read shells. "All they did was take my money," he said.

A fellow construction worker recommended 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 prepared him potions in West African jars called canaris. "Take the canari home wash yourself with the potion," Raymond remembered him telling him.

From that day on "I got my health back", said Raymond.

- 'Taboo' -

"Some (marabouts) are like psychotherapists... while others are swindlers," said anthropologist Jean-Pierre Olivier de Sardan of the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS).

Some come from a Sufi tradition with a deep "religious culture and desire to help", he said, but others know little more than "a few surahs of the Koran and extract the maximum for their victims," he added.

Anyone who says they have the gift and some knowledge of Islam, divination and miracle working can call themselves a marabout.

Some charge no more than a dozen euros for an appointment, though the price can go up to several hundred or thousands for a sacrifice, even tens of thousands in some cases.

Therapist Assa Djelou regularly receives clients who have been let down by marabouts.

She said some have a "dangerous" hold on people. Rather than "facing up to reality", the healers convince people their problems "have been caused by spells cast on them, which can lead to anxiety and depression".

The French police only get involved when there are complaints about fraud or practising medicine illegally. But such cases are rare and there's a "taboo" about talking about it, said Djelou.

- 'Dependent' on witch doctors -

In sport, where superstition is commonplace, things can also quickly get out of hand.

"Careers are short and the least injury" can be catastrophic, said Thibault, the pastor who has supported several top athletes. Sometimes they need help because 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 told AFP how he fell under the influence of witch doctors as a rising young player plucked from the Ivory Coast to play in France. Soon he had become "dependent" on the amulets, "protection belts" and sacrifices they made for him.

The legendary French football manager Claude Le Roy, who managed six African national teams, knows the problem well.

He was even threatened and branded the "white sorcerer" for driving marabouts away from his staff and players.

"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 though he insists that "he doesn't believe in the slightest" in their powers, Le Roy is still troubled by one incident.

In 1997, after a catastrophic away leg in the Champions League against Steaua Bucarest which they lost 3-0, Paris Saint-Germain had to win by four goals to go through.

Desperate for anything that might help, the club 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 won 5-0, with its number 18 scoring the fourth goal in the 41st minute...

T.Maeda--JT