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If reason can’t save the world, no wonder magic and superstition are on the rise

Exorcisms are booming, witchcraft is having a moment, Tucker Carlson says he was attacked by a demon. It makes as much sense as anything at a time of climate crisis, war and Trump

How good must it feel to gather up physical manifestations of your anxieties, shove them in a giant papier-mache demon and set fire to them? Wonderful, surely. The citizens of Santa Fe, New Mexico, think so: it was recently described in the New York Times as their “secret to happiness”. Every year, they stuff the Zozobra with “glooms” – representations of their fears – before burning them. These days, anything clogging your psyche can go in there: “wedding albums; medical bills; report cards; loved ones’ ashes; parking tickets”.

My fascination with folklore was nourished by a decade in Belgium, where I was initially baffled by, then sought out, the country’s best bits. I watched my sons’ primary school headteacher gleefully set fire to a Zozobra-adjacent humanoid – bonhomme hiver – to banish winter; dodged carnival figures in straw-stuffed tunics, blank white masks and vast ostrich-plume headdresses hurling oranges into crowds; and heard children cry in real terror at the prospect of being stuffed in a sack and dragged to Spain by Saint Nick’s nasty sidekick.

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