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Friday, 26 June 2015

The Distinction From the Dark Arts

As opposed to what you might be thinking right now, black magic doesn't necessarily mean malevolent magic. If you look at the origins of the term, it all started with a color association to the fertile soil that's being deposited in the Egyptian Nile. If you did a comparison of the soil from the delta to the sand in the deserts, there's a great difference in color where the delta soil is black and the sands are colored red. For all the good that fertile soil brings to Egypt, red was seen as a color that represented evil then.

For the most part, practitioners of black magic come from the black countries like Africa, Australia, the Caribbean, India and so on. You can't typecast these practitioners as practicing magic that harms people. Black magic is called so because of the dark skinned people who practice the magic. Basically, this is just a color association. If you look further into the color black, you'll find that it doesn't really have negative properties. In magic, it symbolizes protection.

With all these laid out, the term black magic simply evolved in our time to represent magic that harms. The distinction between black magic and the dark arts has to be established. If you look at the dark arts, magic is used here for working against the will and the best interests of others. It's used for inflicting harm, it's used for controlling others and it's used for oppressing others. Keeping in mind that magic can neither be solely for the good and solely for the bad, magicians, witches and other magic practitioners live by using magic for good.



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