'They accused me of killing and eating my grandmother': Agony of Congo's 50,000 'child witches' who are brutally exorcised to 'beat the devil out of them'

  • There are around 50,000 children living on the streets of Kinshasa, all abandoned after being accused of witchcraft
  • The communities say they are capable of horrific crimes, drinking the blood and eating the flesh of their relatives 
  • But a lot of the time the children are rejected simply because their parents cannot afford the extra mouth to feed 
  • It means the children - some newborn - are left to fend for themselves, turning to crime and prostitution to survive
  • But there are people working to help these desperate children, and the UN's new 'global goals' hope that the drivers of this horrific tradition, poverty and a lack of education, will be completely eradicated in the next 15 years
  • MailOnline has visited Kinshasa to find out more about this horrific belief, and the impact it has on the children 

Squeezing a toddler’s eyeballs and shoving his thumb into her tiny nose a Catholic priest purges a child of the devil, one of many exorcisms he carries out every day.

Flicked with holy water, her face smeared with olive oil and poked violently in the stomach, two-and-a-half-year old Angel bursts into tears as she is rid of the evil spirits that lurk within her.

The child wriggles to free herself but her mother holds on firmly, insistent that she endures the exorcism to protect her from the sorcery that many in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) believe controls their lives.

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Distraught: Angel, two, cries with fear as she undergoes an exorcism to purge her from the evil that a Catholic priest believes lurks within

Distraught: Angel, two, cries with fear as she undergoes an exorcism to purge her from the evil that a Catholic priest believes lurks within

Evil spirits: A woman takes part in an exorcism ceremony in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where many have embraced Catholicism while holding on to traditional beliefs surrounding evil spirits - with some truly horrifying consequences

Evil spirits: A woman takes part in an exorcism ceremony in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where many have embraced Catholicism while holding on to traditional beliefs surrounding evil spirits - with some truly horrifying consequences

Confused: Eleven-month-old baby Grace endures an exorcism at a Catholic church in Kinshasa, DRC

Confused: Eleven-month-old baby Grace endures an exorcism at a Catholic church in Kinshasa, DRC

Cleansed: Anyone can be possessed by evil, people believe, including children - even newborns. These children are being blessed and purged of the spirits, but if it isn't successful, they will be thrown out of their homes, and exiled from their communities

Cleansed: Anyone can be possessed by evil, people believe, including children - even newborns. These children are being blessed and purged of the spirits, but if it isn't successful, they will be thrown out of their homes, and exiled from their communities

Possesed: It is thought there are 50,000 child 'witches' living on the streets of the capital Kinshasa as a result of these beliefs; children like Dorcas, eight, and Therese, 18. These youngsters are accused of horrific 'crimes', including eating the flesh of their own relatives

Possesed: It is thought there are 50,000 child 'witches' living on the streets of the capital Kinshasa as a result of these beliefs; children like Dorcas, eight, and Therese, 18. These youngsters are accused of horrific 'crimes', including eating the flesh of their own relatives

Angel and Grace, an 11-month-old baby exorcised the same day, have been ‘saved’ by the ceremony, the devil banished, and for now they remain safe in their homes.

But tens of thousands of other children in this troubled central African country have been branded ‘child’ witches and flung out onto the streets by their families into a life of destitution, violence and abuse.

MailOnline ventured into the frightening world of the occult in this African heartland, famously described as the ‘heart of darkness’, as part of series examining the challenges facing the United Nations trying to help these children. 

In the capital Kinshasa, at the Gallicane Catholic Church, Father Alexis Katziota Mungala talks almost matter of factly of his work releasing thousands of children from the devil.

Exorcism is a daily ritual he performs in his church.

‘These witches they eat human flesh, they drink human blood,’ Father Alexis told MailOnline.

‘It is the work of the devil. Witchcraft kills the love within the child. It fills them with hate, it makes them eat their father, fight with their brother.

‘Witchcraft is part of our tradition; it is part of Congolese culture.

‘Children can become infected with sorcery but we carry out exorcisms to help children find their families again.’

Accepted: Exorcisms are a normal part of life in the DRC, explains Father Alexis Katziota Mungala of the Gallicane Catholic Church, Kinshasa, which invited MailOnline to witness just such a ceremony (pictured)

Accepted: Exorcisms are a normal part of life in the DRC, explains Father Alexis Katziota Mungala of the Gallicane Catholic Church, Kinshasa, which invited MailOnline to witness just such a ceremony (pictured)

Medieval: 'These witches they eat human flesh, they drink human blood,’ Father Alexis claimed, as he argued he provided a service

Medieval: 'These witches they eat human flesh, they drink human blood,’ Father Alexis claimed, as he argued he provided a service

Corrupted: 'Children can become infected with sorcery but we carry out exorcisms to help children find their families again,' he said

Corrupted: 'Children can become infected with sorcery but we carry out exorcisms to help children find their families again,' he said

Danger: But if the children aren't cured by priests, or traditional healers, the community will shun them - and they will end up on the streets

Danger: But if the children aren't cured by priests, or traditional healers, the community will shun them - and they will end up on the streets

Those who cannot be ‘saved’ scavenge an existence in the violent, filth-ridden city abandoned by their families and feared by their fellow outcasts.

It is estimated that up to 50,000 children have been accused of witchcraft and left to fend for themselves in the sprawling slums where 20million live.

Some are newly born or bewildered toddlers thrown into a nightmare world where survival is by crime, prostitution and violence.

Dorcas, aged eight, is typical of the ‘child witches’. Traumatised, she was found five days ago, her puny body riddled with lice, fleas and ticks.

Found by workers dedicated to helping the street children, she was taken to a care centre where half-starved she wolfed down a bowl of stale bread and a beaker of sweet tea in silence.

Although she has barely spoken since, she has said enough for the volunteers here to know her story is heart-wrenchingly common.

‘She was accused of being a witch,’ care centre director Claudine Nlandu told MailOnline.

‘I don’t know how long she had been living on the streets. She came here five days ago. She was covered in fleas, lice and ticks when we found her.

‘She did not tell us her name so the other girls called her Dorcas.’

Another is six-year-old Malengeli – stick-thin with sores all over his malnourished body - he has not been as ‘lucky’ as Dorcas and still roams the streets begging for handouts.

The litany of ‘crimes’ attributed to such children is beyond medieval in scale and almost impossible to comprehend in our society.

Alone: It is a fate children like Malengeli , who is just six, knows too well - he has made the streets his home since being named a 'witch'

Alone: It is a fate children like Malengeli , who is just six, knows too well - he has made the streets his home since being named a 'witch'

Vulnerable: These boys are among thousands who have made their way to the capital, seeking safety - but Kinshasa is anything but safe

Vulnerable: These boys are among thousands who have made their way to the capital, seeking safety - but Kinshasa is anything but safe

Prejudice: Some of the children are accused of being witches because of a physical disability, like Bienvenue. The nine-year-old has paralysis in his arms and legs following ceberal malaria, which led his aunt to throw him out. His mother is dead

Prejudice: Some of the children are accused of being witches because of a physical disability, like Bienvenue. The nine-year-old has paralysis in his arms and legs following ceberal malaria, which led his aunt to throw him out. His mother is dead

Starving: It's not known why Malengeli – who is stick-thin with sores all over his malnourished body - was thrown out, but these days he roams the streets, and is forced to beg for scraps to keep himself alive. Others turn to crime or prostitution in desperation

Starving: It's not known why Malengeli – who is stick-thin with sores all over his malnourished body - was thrown out, but these days he roams the streets, and is forced to beg for scraps to keep himself alive. Others turn to crime or prostitution in desperation

These youngsters are accused of killing relatives by eating their flesh and drinking their blood in the dead of night.

They are accused of casting spells – delivering death, illness, unemployment, pregnancy, debt, or simply bad luck – to any or all around. But possibly worst of all they are accused of being evil – having the devil living within them.

There are conscious witches who know they are evil and unconscious witches who do not know but get up in the middle of the night and eat human flesh. 
Pastor Jean-Pierre Kwete 

These cruel and unfounded accusations cause misery for tens of thousands of children not only across the Democratic Republic of Congo but also in other parts of central and west Africa.

‘Children accused of witchcraft are subject to psychological violence, first by family members and their circle of friends, then by church pastors or traditional healers,‘ a UNICEF study by Aleksander Cimpric, entitled Children Accused of Witchcraft, found.

‘Once accused of witchcraft, children are stigmatized and discriminated against for life. Children accused of witchcraft may be killed, although more often they are abandoned by their parents and live on the streets.’

Deeply suspicious and steeped in mysticism the existence of child-witchcraft is deep-rooted in Congolese culture.

‘Child witchcraft is part of our tradition,’ Etienne Maleke, who has worked with Kinshasa’s street children for over 20 years, told MailOnline.

‘All of the boys here at the shelter have been accused of being witches.’

But the collapse of the economy in the 1990s following mass lootings by the unpaid army and the following chaos of two devastating wars turned this phenomenon into an epidemic.

Witchcraft was often used to simply rid a household of an unwanted mouth to feed.

Refuge: There are shelters for the children to use, affording them a little more protection. But those who run them find many come and go, unused to being cared for after spending so much time in such a hostile environment

Refuge: There are shelters for the children to use, affording them a little more protection. But those who run them find many come and go, unused to being cared for after spending so much time in such a hostile environment

Poverty: But while belief in witchcraft is widespread, there are other, underlying reasons why these children are kicked out onto the street. Poverty is a major driving force behind the trend, as many are thrown out because their carers can no longer afford to feed them

Poverty: But while belief in witchcraft is widespread, there are other, underlying reasons why these children are kicked out onto the street. Poverty is a major driving force behind the trend, as many are thrown out because their carers can no longer afford to feed them

Aim: Ending poverty is the number one goal of the UN's new sustainable development goals. Doing this one thing would go a huge way to ending the culture of 'witchcraft' in the DRC, and across central Africa. Pictured: A street in Kinshasa, where one of the shelters is located

Aim: Ending poverty is the number one goal of the UN's new sustainable development goals. Doing this one thing would go a huge way to ending the culture of 'witchcraft' in the DRC, and across central Africa. Pictured: A street in Kinshasa, where one of the shelters is located

Remy Mafu, of the street children charity REEJER, said: ‘Here in Central Africa every development within the family – a death, unemployment, bad school marks, and an unexpected pregnancy – demands an explanation.

In Central Africa every development within the family – a death, unemployment, bad school marks, and an unexpected pregnancy – demands an explanation. If there is no explanation then it is considered witchcraft. 
Remy Mafu, children charity REEJER

‘If there is no explanation then it is considered witchcraft.

‘Poverty is a real driver. People don’t want to take care of children so they accuse them of being witches.

‘When there’s a breakdown in the family unwanted children – often step-children, nieces and nephews - are accusations of child witchcraft.

‘Children who do not bring anything into the household are accused of being witches.’

One of the last parts of Africa to experience European ideas, the tribes of Congo embraced Catholic missionaries who brought modern medicine, education and their religion to the far reaches of this vast nation.

But just over a hundred years after Belgium claimed Congo as a colony the traditional ideas of sorcery remain.

However the rise of child-witchcraft is a recent phenomenon linked to the breakdown of the traditional extended family, according to the leading authority on ‘child witches’, Professor Filip de Boeck, of Belgium’s University of Leuven.

In his book, ‘The Devil’s Children', he wrote: ‘The phenomenon of ‘child witches’ is a thoroughly modern phenomenon that is shaped by global capitalism.

‘Contrary to older forms, the witchcraft ‘new style’ is experienced as being wild, random and unpredictable.’

And it is through this mixture of religious beliefs that families try to ‘cure’ the children in their care of witchcraft.

Mystery: It is not just poverty which means children are rejected. Remy Mafu, of the street children charity REEJER, explains that   'every development within the family – a death, unemployment, bad school marks, and an unexpected pregnancy – demands an explanation'

Mystery: It is not just poverty which means children are rejected. Remy Mafu, of the street children charity REEJER, explains that 'every development within the family – a death, unemployment, bad school marks, and an unexpected pregnancy – demands an explanation'

Solution: But, of course, some things cannot be explained - and that leads families to turn away from reason, and look to the spirits

Solution: But, of course, some things cannot be explained - and that leads families to turn away from reason, and look to the spirits

Guardian: It means Father Alexis is kept busy. 'I have saved thousands of children,' he told MailOnline. 'Today I saved three.' Whether he has saved them from a spirit is debatable, but he has certainly saved them from a life alone, rejected and shunned by their community

Guardian: It means Father Alexis is kept busy. 'I have saved thousands of children,' he told MailOnline. 'Today I saved three.' Whether he has saved them from a spirit is debatable, but he has certainly saved them from a life alone, rejected and shunned by their community

Catholic and Evangelical churches and animist religious centres confirm accusations of sorcery as well as providing remedies for youngsters who may otherwise be thrown into the gutter.

Catholic priest Father Alexis said: ‘I have saved thousands of children. Today I saved three children from sorcery. Every day I must save a child.

‘I hold exorcisms twice a week on Tuesdays and Fridays.

He added: ‘We are Catholic missionaries so it is our duty to carry out exorcisms.

When my grandmother died they said it was my fault. They stuck their fingers in my mouth, down my throat. They wanted to take out pieces of my grandmother that they thought I had eaten.
Therese, 18 

‘We have a way to shoo away the sorcery, to chase away the demons.

‘We tell the family not to throw their children out onto the street. We tell them to pray for the child.’

Along with hours of prayer the ‘child witch’ must endure being purged with salt-water and oil.

Evangelical preachers promise their congregation immediate relief from the ‘child witches’ within their community.

Pastor Jean-Pierre Kwete, of the Laodice Church, Kinshasa, told MailOnline: ‘There are conscious witches who know they are evil and unconscious witches who do not know but get up in the middle of the night and eat human flesh.

‘I can tell if a child is a witch just by looking at them. I can see it in their eyes.’

And if parents are reluctant to call in Catholic or Evangelical ‘saviours’ then they can turn to more ancient rites.

Animist preachers offer a different way to rid children of the devil.

Inside a corrugated iron structure, deep inside a Kinshasa slum, children knee in front of a small charcoal fire.

The smoke from specially chosen herbs is wafted into their faces as a high priestess sprinkles them with holy water as part of rituals designed to rid the youngsters of evil and protect them from the devil.

All around the congregation chant and dance as African drums beat out a hypnotic rhythm.

Silent pain: No one knows why Dorcas was accused of being a witch - those who found her roaming the streets of Kinshasa, starving, five days before MailOnline arrived could not even find out her name. The other children gave the little girl her name, Dorcas

Silent pain: No one knows why Dorcas was accused of being a witch - those who found her roaming the streets of Kinshasa, starving, five days before MailOnline arrived could not even find out her name. The other children gave the little girl her name, Dorcas

Accused: Unlike Dorcas, Therese - who suffers from epilepsy and has a cyst on her forehead - knows exactly why she ended up on the street, and living in the same shelter as Dorcas. After her grandmother died, her family decided she had killed her

Accused: Unlike Dorcas, Therese - who suffers from epilepsy and has a cyst on her forehead - knows exactly why she ended up on the street, and living in the same shelter as Dorcas. After her grandmother died, her family decided she had killed her

Assaulted: Therese, pictured with other girls from the shelter where she lives, was taken to church where priests shoved their fingers into her mouth, checking for pieces of her grandmother's flesh. They didn't find any, but said the cyst on her head was filled with evil

Assaulted: Therese, pictured with other girls from the shelter where she lives, was taken to church where priests shoved their fingers into her mouth, checking for pieces of her grandmother's flesh. They didn't find any, but said the cyst on her head was filled with evil

Preacher Bangadi-Kikongo Nkakama, of the traditional Kaba Dia Bana Ba Mpeve spiritual centre, claims to have saved over 800 children this year from sorcery.

He told MailOnline: ‘Ours is the religion of the Congo before colonisation. We worship nature and the spirits around us. We understand about mysticism.

‘The spirit has given us the strength to treat case of witchcraft, the spirits inspire us to cure the ill.’

Other priests are more brutal – shoving their fingers into a ‘child witch’s’ mouth in search of the flesh of recently deceased relatives.

One victim told MailOnline how she was beaten and starved after she was accused of being a witch, aged just eight.

Therese, now 18, who is epileptic and has a large cyst on her forehead, said: ‘I was quietly living with my parents but a relative said I was a witch.

‘When my grandmother died they said it was my fault.

‘They took me to a church where they pray for children. I was made to drink salt-water, lots of it. They stuck their fingers in my mouth, down my throat.

‘They wanted to take out pieces of my grandmother that they thought I had eaten. They couldn’t find anything so they kept me and beat me.

‘This bump on my head is a cyst but in the church they told me it was where the witchcraft lived.

‘There was nothing to eat. I escaped and went out onto the street and begged. I picked up anything from the ground I could find – old food, anything.

‘I have been in five different orphanages. I came here and told the mother I had nowhere else to go.

‘I still suffer epileptic fits.’

The old religion: It isn't just the Catholic priests who carry out exorcisms. Traditional healers also rid children like these of evil spirts

The old religion: It isn't just the Catholic priests who carry out exorcisms. Traditional healers also rid children like these of evil spirts

Blessing: The ceremony is slightly different, with the smoke from specially chosen herbs - which can be seen burning on the ground here - wafted into the children's faces as a high priestess sprinkles them with holy water as part of rituals

Blessing: The ceremony is slightly different, with the smoke from specially chosen herbs - which can be seen burning on the ground here - wafted into the children's faces as a high priestess sprinkles them with holy water as part of rituals

Epidemic: There is one area where they are the same as their Catholic colleagues - in the vast numbers of children they claim to have healed. Preacher Bangadi-Kikongo Nkakama claims to have saved more than 800 children this year alone from sorcery

Epidemic: There is one area where they are the same as their Catholic colleagues - in the vast numbers of children they claim to have healed. Preacher Bangadi-Kikongo Nkakama claims to have saved more than 800 children this year alone from sorcery

Therese’ heart-breaking story is one of many to be heard at the centre for girls living on the streets where Dorcas has found sanctuary.

Others tell how they were thrown out of their home by relatives – uncles, aunts, step-mothers, remarried fathers – who accused them of witchcraft.

Most say they begged to be allowed back but were beaten so badly they could not return.

When they come here the boys are feral. We have to teach them how to eat an egg, how to eat a fish. They only want the clothes on their backs. If you give them two shirts it becomes a burden. 
'Papa Etienne' Maleke, director of a shelter for the boys on the street

Many have been raped. Some work as prostitutes to survive. Few remain children.

Care Centre director Claudine Nlandu told MailOnline: ‘Some of the children accept life here others refuse. Some prefer to stay on the streets. They can come and go as they please. We are just a point of help, a sanctuary.

‘Some of the girls prostitute themselves. We try to help them protect themselves from disease. We urge them to use condoms.

‘Two or three times a week we go out on to the streets seeking young girls in difficulty.

‘Market traders and hawkers tell us about new girls who have come on to the street.

‘The girls hang around the big markets, the stadiums, the major junctions of the city. Often they have been raped.

‘They tell me they have been accused of being witches.

‘We hope to give them a good life. We teach them to read and write. We teach them trades – hair dressing, restaurant skills and dressmaking.

‘Often when we get in touch with their family they say they don’t want the child anymore and that we can have them as a ‘gift’.’

Tragically newborn babies are also condemned as witches – if they are born to so-called child-witches.

Remy Mafu said: ‘Two babies are born on the streets of Kinshasa every day to girls who have been condemned as child witches. Their children are considered witches by inheritance.

‘We know girls aged 12 who become pregnant. Once they are on the street they are no longer children.’

Devil: Back at Gallicane, Father Alexis - performing during the ceremony - explains what happens a little more. ‘It is the work of the devil. Witchcraft kills the love within the child,' he says. 'It fills them with hate, it makes them eat their father, fight with their brother'

Devil: Back at Gallicane, Father Alexis - performing during the ceremony - explains what happens a little more. ‘It is the work of the devil. Witchcraft kills the love within the child,' he says. 'It fills them with hate, it makes them eat their father, fight with their brother'

Learning: But it's not enough says Etienne Maleke, director of a street children shelter for boys, who argues 'the government needs to educate people that there are no such thing as child witches'. Education for everyone is another of the 17 sustainable development goals

Learning: But it's not enough says Etienne Maleke, director of a street children shelter for boys, who argues 'the government needs to educate people that there are no such thing as child witches'. Education for everyone is another of the 17 sustainable development goals

Others are considered in league with the devil due to the disabilities they suffer – like Jeremy, 10, who is deaf and Bienvenue, 9, who has paralysis in his arms and legs following an attack of cerebral malaria.

Etienne Maleke, director of a street children shelter for boys, told MailOnline: ‘Jeremy is deaf. He was chased out of his home by his family. We don’t know how badly he was mistreated.

‘Bienvenue suffered paralysis as a complication from meningitis and malaria. His mother died when he was still a baby.

‘His aunt was looking after him but she threw him out.

‘We tracked down his father and we took him back to his family.

‘But within a month he was back on the streets.’

Papa Etienne, as he is known by the thousands of children he has helped added: ‘When they come here the boys are feral. We have to teach them how to eat an egg, how to eat a fish.

‘They only want the clothes on their backs. If you give them two shirts it becomes a burden.

‘We help them in every way we can. We feed them, teach them, help them sort out pay disputes with people they work for.

‘I know many boys who have become successful.

‘There was one boy who was very bright. We encouraged him to stay at school, to go to university, he wasn’t convinced to start with.

‘Now he is a doctor. I asked him to come to talk to the boys. He still calls me “papa”.

‘The government needs to educate the people that there are no such things as child witches.’

Changing the culture: Ettienne - known as 'Papa' to the boys he helps - hopes in the future he will no longer need to run his shelter, but for now he is focused on making them successful members of society. One, he tells MailOnline proudly, has even gone to university

Changing the culture: Ettienne - known as 'Papa' to the boys he helps - hopes in the future he will no longer need to run his shelter, but for now he is focused on making them successful members of society. One, he tells MailOnline proudly, has even gone to university

Ensuring these children lead healthy lives; are able to go to school; are allowed to participate fully in society and can be treated fairly, are among the 17 sustainable development goals adopted by the United Nations last month.

The ambitious new set of aims hopes to end poverty, hunger, advance equality and protect the environment over the next 15 years.

UNICEF works with local charities that support street children and other vulnerable youngsters accused of witchcraft.

‘UNICEF is particularly concerned about the issues of the most vulnerable children including children who suffer violence, abuse and exploitation,’ spokesman Yves Willemot told MailOnline.

‘A change in attitudes about sorcery should be promoted by educating families, community leaders and working with accusers, church leaders and traditional religious practitioners.

‘The African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child apply to all children without exception.’

Tragically such laudable aims will come too late to save the likes of Dorcas, Malangeli, Jeremy, and Bienvenue.

But it is at least a recognition of an evil being visited on DRC’s children which has nothing in truth to do with witchcraft. 

 

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