Spiritual illnesses are caused by unwholesome spiritual attachments. This type of illness may and directed by means of black magic. Chinese witcheraft features a procedure for creating spirits disease from poison and transferring them to an enemy for personal gain. Wugu is a type of black magic associated with the use of reptile and insect spirits. The Chinese term “wu” refers to an approximately 3,000-year-old practice of witchcraft in China. The term, “gu,” means “poison,” in particular a demonic spirit of poison. Gu, which is alternatively spelled “Ku,” is always pronounced like “goo.” The purpose of wugu is to cause a slow, painful death undetectably at a distance by means of witchcraft. The following method may be dangerous and, in some places, illegal. Therefore, it is described here for
informational purposes only. To create gu, a witch obtains numerous poisonous creatures of various kinds, typically very large tropical species of deadly poisonous centipedes, snakes, toads, and scorpions. These are contained in the same space and permitted to devour one another until only one is left. The remaining creature is called the gu. If the
the remaining creature is a snake, then it is a snake remaining creature is a centipede, then it is a centipede gu and so on. The gu must consume, at least, two other creatures. Afterward, the dung and other excretions 0! the gu is collected and applied by means sympathetic magic, transferred to an enemy on clothing or by means of an attractive and valuable gift. A safer form of the gu is the “gold silkworm, involves the collection of smaller, less potentially dangerous or deadly creatures. The procedure is described in a 17th-century book, called “Ch’ih ya,” as
follows:

Method of performing Chinese Black Magic to kill enemy by Poison:-

“On the fifth day of the fifth month collect all those insects and worms that are poisonous, and put them together in a vessel. Let them devour one another, and the one finally remaining is called Ku. There are snake Ku, lizard Ku, and dung-beetle Ku. The length of time required for the insects to devour one another will be proportionate to the time required for the poisoned victim to die.”4 The fifth day of the fifth month of the Chinese solar the calendar is, also, the date of the annual Duanwu Festival in China. The reckoning of this date on the Gregorian calendar varies widely every year. The procedure may take anywhere from 3 to 12 months. The time it takes to create the gu is proportional to the amount of time required for its poisonous spirit to work on an enemy. A person can become wealthy using the dung of the gu, which is collected and dried and ground to a powder. Only a very minute amount is required. It is collected with a needle. The gu is an evil spirit that desires to cause death. As it is served in this capacity by the witch and as the victims are poisoned and die, the gu removes the possessions of the deceased by means of magic and
transfers them to the witch. When the victim dies, his spirit becomes the witch’s slave. The gu must be served by collecting its dung and using it for malefic purposes. Eggs are sacrificed to the gu on the last night of the Chinese calendar year. The dung and other excretions of the creature are applied to a wooden doll, which is associated with the person by means of sympathetic magic, as previously described. It is then buried near the person’s home or in a
place where he or she must walk over it.

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