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A witch-hunt is a search for suspected witches; it is a type of
moral panic. If a "witch" is found, then there might be a witchcraft trial. While actual witchhunts occasionally occur in the modern
era, there is a general scientific belief that witchcraft is mythological, and thus is not a crime which
can be committed.
The term is usually used more metaphorically to refer to a search for a
perceived enemy, with the implication of the hysteria, prejudice and injustice that was often seen in medieval
witchhunts.
Early modern Europe
For several centuries, dominantly Christian societies believed that Satan was acting
through human and animal servants. These beliefs can be seen as a reaction to emerging alternatives to the Christian hierarchial
order, such as the worldly knowledge and cultural practices brought into a relatively backward Europe from the Middle East by those returning from the Crusades. Also targeted were surviving rites of Europe's indigenous pagan faiths, many of which still persisted among folk
in the countryside, despite centuries of official Christianity. Over the centuries, there were extensive efforts to root out the
supposed influence of Satan by various measures aimed at the people that were accused of being servants of Satan. People
suspected of being "possessed" by Satan were put on trial.
Many of the suspects were women who lived in towns, villages or rural areas and who may have been practitioners of herbalism,
natural healing or midwifery; but often it was simply poor, uneducated women who did
not have influential friends. Early Modern Christian authorities in Europe (both Catholic and Protestant) regarded any such
expression of non-Christian, natural spirituality with intense paranoia and hatred. This was in accord with literal readings of
the Old Testament, which contains fierce attacks against the polytheism of non-Hebrew peoples.
This "Just so story" view of the history of European witch hunts has long dominated the popular imagination. It is also quite
likely to be false. Recent research on the matter calls into question the very existence of alleged "pagan survivals" and
"backlash against herbalists".
The most important form of evidence in many of the witch trials was attained by "ordeal". These efforts included torture of the most horrific nature including hot pincers, the thumbscrew, the iron maiden, and
many other such methods. Torture methods varied by region and the person carrying out the ordeal.
England at one point had a self-proclaimed "Witchfinder General", one Matthew Hopkins, who led searches, and who claimed to be able to identify a witch using techniques such as
witches' marks. Much of the public believed the victims were really
witches, but today it is not believed that most of them even regarded themselves as witches.
Research into the laws and records of the time show that the witchfinders often used peine forte et dure and other torture to extract
confessions and condemnations of friends, relatives and neighbors. Virtually everyone today looks on this period of history as a
very dark time.
And more research into the records of the time reveals events like this:
"At the height of the Great Hunt (1567-1640) one half of all witchcraft cases brought before church courts were dismissed for
lack of evidence. No torture was used, and the accused could clear himself by providing four to eight "compurgators", people who
were willing to swear that he wasn't a witch. Only 21% of the cases ended with convictions, and the Church did not impose any
kind of corporal or capital punishment." [1]
However, most witch trials were held before worldly courts, not church courts, and the worldly courts were decidedly less
scrupulous in their methods.
The measures employed against alleged witches were some of the worst ever practiced in the Western world. In A History of
Torture, George
Ryley Scott says:
- The peculiar beliefs and superstitions attached to or associated with witchcraft caused those who were suspected of
practising the craft to be extremely likely to be subjected to tortures of greater degree than any ordinary heretic or criminal.
More, certain specific torments were invented for use against them.
Part of a larger culture which was very religiously and socially intolerant, the witch-hunts resulted in the loss of much
traditional knowledge and folklore (or so it is alleged, without the least bit of solid evidence) among Europeans when the
practitioners were "lawfully" killed.
See also: Inquisition
Sociological explanation for witchhunts
Sociology has attributed the occurrence of witchhunts to the human necessity to blame problems on someone. For example, Europe
during the periods in which witchhunts prevail relied upon agriculture; if this failed one year, the consequences would very
likely be disastrous. Crop failures often correlated with the occurrence of witchhunts, leading sociologists to state that
communities often took out their anger of a lack of food on supposed 'witches'. This can be paralleled in more recent examples
such as the Nazi use of anti-semitism to apportion blame for economic problems. A perception of moral righteousness, by the
community, is a necessary psychological element that enables rationalization.
While the modern notion of a "witchhunt" has little to do with gender, the historical
notion often did. In general, supposed "witches" were female. Noted Judge Nicholas Rémy (c.1595), "[It is] not unreasonable that this scum of humanity, [witches], should be drawn chiefly
from the feminine sex." Concurred another judge, "The Devil uses them so, because he knows that women love carnal pleasures, and he means to bind them to his allegiance by
such agreeable provocations." (Joseph Klaits)
Witch hunters in African societies
In many African societies the fear of witches drives periodic witchhunts during
which specialist witch finders identify suspects. Audrey I. Richards, in the journal Africa relates an instance when a new wave of
witchfinders, the Bamucapi, appeared in the villages of the Bemba people. They
dressed in European clothing, and would summon the headman to prepare a ritual meal for the village. When the villagers arrived
they would view them all in a mirror, and claimed they could identify witches with this
method. These witches would then have to "yield up his horns", i.e. give over the horn-containers for curses and evil potions to the witch-finders. The bamucapi then made all drink a potion called kucapa which would cause a
witch to die and swell up if he ever tried such things again. The villagers related that the witchfinders were always right
because the witches they found were always the people whom the village had feared all along. The bamucapi utilised a mixture of
Christian and native religious traditions to account for their powers and said that God (not specifying which God) helped them
prepare their medicine. In addition, all witches who did not attend the meal to be identified would be called to account later on
by their master, who had risen from the dead, and who would force the witches by means of drums to go to the graveyard, where
they would die. Richards noted that the bamucapi created the sense of danger in the villages by rounding up all the
horns in the village, whether they were used for anti-witchcraft charms, potions, snuff or were indeed receptacles of black
magic.
The Bemba people believed misfortunes such as hauntings and famines to be just actions sanctioned by the High-God
Lesa. The only agency which caused unjust harm
was a witch, who had enormous powers and was hard to detect. After white rule of Africa beliefs in sorcery and witchcraft grew,
possibly because of the social strain caused by new ideas, customs and laws, and also because the courts no longer allowed
witches to be tried.
Reference: A Modern Movement of Witch Finders Audrey I Richards (Africa: Journal of the International Institute of
African Languages and Cultures, Ed. Diedrich Westermann.) Vol VIII, 1935, published by Oxford University Press, London.
Metaphorical uses of the term in the modern West
A witchhunt in modern terminology refers to the act of seeking and persecuting any perceived enemy, particularly when the
search is conducted using extreme measures and with little regard to actual guilt or innocence.
The term originated with Arthur Miller's play, The Crucible which was ostensibly about the Salem witch trials but were intended to criticize the hearings of United States Senator Joseph McCarthy as
well as the general atmosphere of paranoia and persecution that accompanied them. Other anti-communist hearings in the 1950s were under the aegis of the
House Un-American
Activities Committee, or HUAC. Although revelations of the Soviet archives in the 1990s showed that some of those who were pursued were indeed communists (HUAC uncovered some genuine Communist
infiltrators), the practice of McCarthyism left many innocent victims in its
wake. Thus the "witch hunts" of the time were compromised by wild accusations and disregard for civil liberties and civil discourse.
Some have described the practice of involuntary
commitment, or involuntary commitment as practiced and the standards for involuntary commitment, the search for people to
involuntarily commit, the judicial procedures that may result in their commitment, as a witchhunt, although, given a complete
lack of hysteria among the general populace over an imagined "need" to commit people to mental health facilities, this
"description" is quite a stretch. There is, after all, a difference between a witchhunt, which is a mass cultural phenomenon, and
a potentially unjust individual hearing.
Deprogramming as witchhunt
Hundreds of members of the Unification Church who were
caught and harangued by so-called deprogrammers complained of interrogation
technique similar to that reported during the European witchhunts.
Deprogrammers would tell the detainee that he had been "brainwashed" by the "cult" and threaten to hold him indefinitely
unless he "realized" he had been brainwashed. Opponents of deprogramming claim that this parallels the tactic of accusing a
prisoner of witchcraft and torturing them until they "confess" to witchcraft. Jeremiah Gutman, a lawyer with the
ACLU, chronicled several hundred such cases in the U.S. before deprogramming as "therapy"
was delegitimized there.
See also
References
- Klaits, Joseph --
Servants of Satan: The Age of the Witch Hunts (1985) p.68
External links
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