Witchcraft, Prayers Face Off During 'Mass Spell' Against Trump
The centuries-long battle between Christians and black magic has reached the modern political spectrum as a small group of witches gathered outside Trump Tower in New York on Friday night to put a curse on President Donald Trump. But one Christian was also there to fight back with a counter-prayer.
Buzz Feed reported that about 15 to 20 spell casters went into action at the stroke of midnight to cast a binding spell on Trump. Self-styled magician Michael Hughes, who organized the ritual, said the mass spell was not intended to cause harm but to restrain the president's power.
The lone person who stood for Trump is a woman named Donna, who held out a mirror at the witches to bounce the spell back at them. She described the binding spell cast by the witches at Trump as "a slavery spell" as it was meant to "overpower someone else's will." "These people have just been very hateful and nasty, and I wanted to reflect it back at them," she said. "I hope to protect Donald Trump and I hope they will repent," she added.
Donna even faced off with Karen Irwin, a self-described Christian who tried to cast a spell for the first time. She lamented how people are "bastardizing" Christianity as a tool for hate. Donna and Karen argued at one point but ended up singing the song "They Will Know We Are Christians" together.
According to Rolling Stone, this is not the first time sorcerers tried to put a curse on Trump. On September 2015, a group of Brooklyn witches held a "mass hexing" to block his early campaign efforts. On October last year, feminists from Vermont held a "witch in" to "destroy the Great Orange One." Still another group of witches cast a spell to break an artery in Trump's heart.