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Professor Mamba and other magicians

October 18, 2009 By: Phillip Category: Culture spotting

Updated; first published 09 April 2009

The omnipotent Professor Mamba (& Associates) is a spectacular and heavily marketed urban version of the sangomas – also known, in less politically correct parlance, as witch doctors – that dot the South African landscape.

A flyer for the services of Professor Mamba & Associates, distributed in Johannesburg.

Part of a flyer, describing in considerable detail the services offered by Professor Mamba & Associates, distributed in Johannesburg.

Magic medicine and curse-work is a profitable and vibrant subculture in South Africa. As a tourist you’d have to go looking for it, in township markets or in rural villages, but it is pervasive if not obvious. We sometimes refer to it as the magic market, which is similar to the black market only more underground.

Professor Mamba is also, apparently, more benign than some. Like just about every magic tradition the South African version also has a dark side, and some practitioners play on both sides of the fence. There is muti (medicine) that requires ingredients found only deep inside the human body, and some rituals require sacrifices; no prizes for guessing what kind of sacrifice is most powerful.

Almost all African magic relies on the intervention of the ancestors, who are both powerful and very helpful as long as you give them the respect they require. But in more modern blends of magic there is a greater emphasis on herbal potions and fringe science. Instead of throwing the bones to see into the future you may find a sangoma throwing crystal fragments and reading the pattern in those.

A word to the unwary: if you require the services of somebody like the eminent Professor Mamba, tread carefully. Stick to practitioners that work from public places where you feel comfortable, and avoid ingesting anything you can’t readily identify. Some of the strongest muti contains battery acid, for starters.

Here is an extract from the long list of services Professor Mamba has on offer:

His specialities include, but are not limited to:

5. Remove the black spot in your hand that keeps taking your money away.

7. Introducing (Mulondox) blend for enlarging the penis in both length and girth of the tissues and muscle thus increasing size. It naturally releases suspensory ligaments from the base of the testicles making it big and strong on a permanent basis with 100% erection capability.

11. Ensure excellent school grades even for children with mental disabilities.
18. Bring supernatural luck into your life to win chance games like lotto, Casino dice, black jack, machines etc.
19. Bring you to see your enemies and make demands on them using a mirror.

UPDATE: Enter Professor J.J. Ssali
07 September, 2009

It could be pure coincidence, or perhaps they are using the same advertising agency. Far be it from us to suggest that anything less than proper or medical is happening here. But we couldn’t help notice the extraordinarily close resemblance between the abilities ascribed to Professor Mamba five months ago and those now within the grasp of Professor J.J. Ssali.

Hey, if it works for the Masai...

Hey, if it works for the Masai...

Ssali, it seems, can also identify your problems before you tell them, although it is not entirely clear whether this is a psychic ability with which he was born or whether this power derives from the ancient wizardly methodologies he has mastered.

According to his marketing material Prof Ssali is regarded by many as one of the greatest healers on the planet today. Like Prof Mamba he seemingly believes that increasing the size of the male member is the most important use to which his art can be put.

Here is a sampling of Ssali’s claims:

The speciality includes:

Remove the bad spell from your life which keeps taking away.

Make you see your enemies in the mirror and make demands on them.

Bring super natural luck into your life

UPDATE 2: It’s raining magicians! Please welcome: Prof. Lumumba & Ali, Prof LS Lutta & Mama Muna, Dr. Shedwa, Professor Wakho and Prof MB Mobutu
18 October, 2009

Dr Shedwa

Dr Shedwa

Either Professor Mamba started a wildly successful franchise, or his magic extends to cloning himself, or he is being shamelessly ripped off. Besides Mamba and Ssali we have managed, over the last couple of weeks, to collect no less than five different fliers from different magicians headquartered in different parts of Johannesburg and surrounds.

But it is not their differences that make them interesting. Quite the opposite.

Professor Wakho

Professor Wakho

Three of these five newcomers claim to have single-handedly developed the breakthrough Masai Gel that is so powerful a penis-enlargement agent. It took each of them thirteen years of research, and they had to go to “amazing lengths” to find the ingredients, so expect to pay a premium. The other two are somewhat more original; one retails “Sokoto mixture” (“special for weak men in bed”) and the other peddles “Ntego Improved Cream” (“suitable for all ages”).

Prof LS Lutta & Mama Muna

Prof LS Lutta & Mama Muna

Three make a point of pointing out that “all whites, blacks, coloured, Indians, etc” are welcome, and we’d assume that also includes foreign visitors. Those same three will also charge only R100 for a consultation,

Prof MB Mobutu

Prof MB Mobutu

Now to the typical (slightly superior and somewhat ill-informed) offshore observer this may not seem like a big deal. Darkest Africa is a place of mystery and magic, after all, and South Africa is pretty mature commercial environment; combine the two and you get a heavily marketed magic franchise, right?

Prof Lumumba & Ali

Prof Lumumba & Ali

Not so. For many decades witch doctors were about as easy to find as drug dealers; there was one around every corner, but they kept a low enough profile to avoid the authorities. They attracted customers almost entirely by word of mouth or, to keep an open mind, through some magical attractive force that they emenated. After 1994, even with sort-of kind-of partial recognition of traditional healers by medial authorities, a couple of these practitioners set up storefronts and hired receptionists, but they could hardly be said to have gone mainstream.

Now we suddenly have websites, outlets that claim to be open 24 hours a day and a strong indications of commoditisation. Something fundamental has shifted in the magic market, we’re just not entirely sure what.

To see the full fliers, check out the Howzzzt photo stream on Flickr. All our original images are available under Creative Commons license there.

  • Bmacgold
    prof wahko helped me so i don"t know about the others but all i wanted was my wife back and she is with me now and am happy
  • S Perret
    I just got swindled out of R50,000. Long story. Similar to all the others. I went to the police who told me that these people move all over the country and have robbed people of millions of Rands. If you believe their crap, then they have power over you, but it is YOU giving them the power. I did, too. And I am a skeptical, 55-year old white business woman ... Part of how they do this is by telling you to not talk about it, because you will bring bad luck or somehow make their work go wrong. So, you keep quiet and the craziness of what is happening gets deeper and deeper and deeper, as you step one little step at a time further out of your comfort zone.
    Just stop going and interacting with them. Cut your losses. Tell all you know. Go to the police. Write to the newspapers. Get yourself interviewed on radio and tv. They have NO power over you. You are master of your own life and mind. They have incredible tricks to play, just like magicians ... don't be fooled.
  • paddy02
    Ladies and Gentlemen these are crooks from East africa they have robbed people here am telling you southafricans stop going there,they have invested money they steal from you to set up schools e.g Sandton college in pretoria church street and Prinsloo opp SARB and Brooklyn College on pretorious Street.They also engage in illegal arbortions.Pliz those are schools from your money RoBBED!!
  • Terrance
    Hi There

    We finally draw ed the last straw with Professor Lumumba operating from Melville

    1st) I must say that if you are going of a drug without the aid of rehab this Proffesor has what it takes to get rid of the 1100head zaps per day.

    2nd) We lost 20,000 in all
    - the 1st 7 thou -to get rid of so called bad curse of muti from the pot.
    - the other 13 was for protection and to see our enemies in a mirror we supplied the professor from our home and that my wife will fall pregnant.

    We again were invited to talk to the an-sisters in the dark room. These spirits transported a bag of 1,6 mil that we had to check and take R100 from that I still have. I must add that the professor told me not to scratch in the bag so I can conclude that there was only a top layer of what I estimate R100,000.

    Now I was promised this money but had to collect R200,000 and keep it in my house in 7 days. with this I must say . We were afraid and had mixed feelings that he could tele-transport the funds from our home t his office.

    3days later I asked professor Lumumba about the benefits we were supposed to receive for the R13,000 we payed. He replied it is all in the suit case as a combo wit the the 1,6mill and he will talk to the an-sisters to extend the 7 days to 3 months for us to gather the R200,000.

    It is now 3 months now.

    Professor Lumumba returned from his 6 week holiday where he took his whole family on across Africa. Possibly with our R20,000 and funds he received from others like us.

    We had no holiday in Dec. instead we overspent R22,000 in credit just to pay our bills.

    31 Jan2010
    We needed more time (8 weeks) to gather this amount of funds so we asked for a further extension.
    Professor spoke to the an-sisters and informed us to follow the program by paying another R11,000 for a traditional hook knife in 7 days.
    Can't I make the knife myself , No he said it has a special kind of wood handle.

    Tomorrow I will tell you what happened next.

  • Terrance
    I am still confused about this as the bad fortune that apeared in the pot is very real.

    The professor claims he transported this from my garden and my girlfriends previous home the following:

    2 coffins , a monkeys head, a small goat head , sneak head, a bad mutti bag ( looked like animals bladder that burnt like lava when he pricked it.

    Never the less we revered a Mr_A to Lumumba for impotence problem.

    Lumumba immediately painted Mr_A's future saying ; "his wife will leave him for another man and his daughter will die and his got muti buried by his house from a jealous person.

    Lumumba offered to remove this bad luck from Mr_A

    Mr_A said he was not interested in a future story of his life but the famous Massai gel for his impotency problem. Lumumba told him to return with R1500 for this gel.

    I must say that most f these scenario involves funds being delivered in the shortest possible time.

    Lumumba introduced us to talk to his Ancestors in a dark room where they told us to accumulate and keep 12 stones with R200,000 within 7 days. This was then extended to 3months.

    It seems that Lumumba can tele-transport sums of money out of your very home to his private headquarters.
  • mermaidlover23
    I just have to share my experience with you. I was driving down malibongwe drive yesterday afternoon and was handed a flier at the robots. This flier was advertising for Prof Lumumba. Then... one robot down... I get handed another flier in the same format and colour as the last, advertising almost exactly the same thing, but for a Prince Lewis ( practicing number: 0484200). Then to my my surprise.... at the third stop I was handed a third flier with the same ad and everything but another doctor. Two of these fliers had the same "headquaters" : Cnr Malibongwe and Oxford Road ( which I passed on my way and it looked rather run down and dodgy!). I just find it quite disturbing that someone can go around doing this without anyone doing anything about it.
  • injoburg
    I doubt that any of my ancestors would want to be disturbed with my petty earthbound problems. If going to heaven means constantly being pestered by offspring about their love problems, I don't want it.
    I'd suggest that anyone pretending to be an intermediate is a fraud.
  • Terrance
    I am paticular with Prof. Lumbada to safeguard my relationship. he then intruduced all sorts of prosper. In the end he did some things that are very real eg. muti apeating in a pot from nowhere he claims that comes from my garden.I was told to keep all this a secret.

    I wish I can talk to his customers and find out if they got the same muti as me from the pot. The other thing, he lets you talk to his ancestors in a room withe straw in the ceiling so I don't know if he got speakers hidden in there.

    He gave me 2 weeks to collect R200,000-00 that is impossible task as if I should sell my house and my car.

    I just need to know ,Is there any one out there that can share there experience from the 5 proffesors. ( there's a DR Kiwa as well)




  • Terrance
    I need to know more about this buisness as I already spent R20,000 and where asked to gather R200,000-00 can any one advice me of similar experience please.
  • There are two ways of looking at this. One view (and this is what the legal system will probably tell you) is that you paid your money for services rendered. It's just that results were never guaranteed. Another view is that you are a sucker who has been conned out of a large amount of cash; think of it as a stupidity tax. Now you are being conned out of some more.

    There may be some group or organisation that can help you, but we wouldn't know where to start looking. Sorry. Maybe somebody else can point you in the right direction.

    Meanwhile, it may help if you provide some details. Who did you spend this money with, what is it that you were supposed to receive in return, and why would you give anybody a lot of money now?
  • injoburg
    And as if by magic, look what the LA Times wrote about the involvement of African churches with witchery... it's medieval:
    http://www.latimes.com/news/na...

    "The nine-year-old boy lay on a bloodstained hospital sheet crawling with ants, staring blindly at the wall. His family pastor had accused him of being a witch, and his father then tried to force acid down his throat as an exorcism. It spilled as he struggled, burning away his face and eyes. The emaciated boy barely had strength left to whisper the name of the church that had denounced him — Mount Zion Lighthouse. A month later, he died."
  • There are plenty of horror stories out there, yes, but there is also
    plenty of good being done by genuine healers. That, quite naturally,
    doesn't get the same level of attention because it is too everyday.
    The good guys can help people both physically (even though much of its
    placebo-effect stuff) and psychologically. Unfortunately that isn't
    the way to quick profit.
  • @injoburg
    My local witch doctor seems to have converted to eastern religions, and calls himself and his team "Sheik Omar & Hajati Marriam". He studied at the well-known Havard University of Witchcraft in the USA and has solutions for everything.

    Seriously, I was recently quite amazed to hear a colleague of my GF had taken time off work to combat a curse he thought was effecting him.

    These doctors are the same people who convince other Africans to eat albinos right?

    (By the way - the twitter login is shit, doesn't work. Must be a an evil spell.)
  • This is the problem with making fun of the magic men. First the comment login doesn't work right, then things start falling off the shelves. The next thing you know you're gibbering about spooks while some nice burly men lock the room of the padded cell behind you.

    Seriously, though, people have driven themselves to distraction (and, in rare cases, death) because of supposed curses. Belief can be a powerful thing, and while there may be rare few genuine herbalists among them, there sure are a lot of charlatan "traditional healers" who will happily abuse the belief of others for money.
  • Yes, I love it! We have one in Stellenbosch too. Goes by the name of Dr Nabanji. Girth, hah!
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