Hi loves! My name is Sacred Noire, my pronouns are they/she and I’m a hoodoo, and a conjure woman. Tarot, astrology, candles, and cemetery work are my specialties amongst others. I’ve been practicing for nine years now, but have been openly divining for the public for almost five years now.
Anyone interested in booking a reading with me can find me here. For those who would like to tip me, my cash app is $sacrednoire. If you’d like to follow me on my IG and Twitter to look at my past content, my handle is sacrednoire on everything!
Below the belt you can also find my masterlist for my posts :’)
This is an interesting article on some of the cultural influences that have affected African American folk magic. However, it is important to note that a lot of hoodoo practices were utilized by African Americans as a way to assert some control over their situation. While Hoodoo may have been influenced by various cultures, it developed out of necessity and the desire for a better life. Throughout history, magical practices increase during times of hardship. "No matter how you choose to look at it, hoodoo is not a one- culture phenomenon. Here’s a look at the countries that have influenced hoodoo and how they have proceeded to do so."
“Without an African ancestral link, the practice becomes something other than Hoodoo,” says Madame Omi Kongo, a rootworker who comes from a long line of female practitioners. I found Kongo through her Tumblr, Kalunga Avenue, where she blogs about Hoodoo and the importance of its tradition and ancestry. Where black imagery is rare on the typical “witchy” blog that curates pastel photos of crystals and moon cycles, on Kongo’s blog it abounds.“