South African Celebrities RitualsGundabaloyi Exposes Surge in Rituals Among South African Celebrities Seeking Power and Success [Image: Mzansi Trending]

Prominent South African celebrities are stampeding at an alarming rate to perform dark rituals to gain more power and success.

Lenn-Morton Khokhovula Gundabaloyi, a 52-year-old sangoma and spiritual adviser, expressed his worry to the Daily Sun in a wide-ranging interview.

 

Surge in Rituals Among South African Celebrities Seeking Power and Success

Gundabaloyi implicated celebrities, politicians, businesspeople, and soccer stars to have engaged in these rituals, often resulting in death. He identified Ukuthwala, a practice linked to dark cults for acquiring wealth or power quickly, as a significant issue.

“Many have fallen into the trap of selling their souls and joining cults, which ultimately cost them their lives. There was a need for the supply of blood, and people needed to be killed.”

 South African Celebrities Rituals
Gundabaloyi Exposes Surge in Rituals Among South African Celebrities Seeking Power and Success [Image: Gold Restaurant]

 

Examples of Ritual Sacrifices

Without mentioning names, he said some musicians and other public figures have died after joining these cults. Gundabaloyi also revealed that recent mass and tavern shootings are rituals.

On 26 June 2022, 21 underage patrons died mysteriously during celebrations at Enyobeni Tavern, a shebeen in East London, Eastern Cape. A toxicology report concluded that the patrons died from suffocation.

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Gundabaloyi explained that individuals joining cults are ordered to make sacrifices, sometimes involving their most loved family members. If they fail to deliver, they could die.

“People are often instructed to sacrifice their most loved family members, and failure to comply can lead to death. I’m against this, and despite getting threats, I’ll continue to speak out. It’s crucial that people understand the risks involved. Not everyone does it, but it’s sad as people do it out of desperation and poverty.”

Gundabaloyi called on other izangoma to guide people towards positive spiritual engagements with ancestors rather than harmful practices.

“Let’s help people connect with their ancestors and improve their lives through genuine means,” he insisted.

By Rumpel