Live from the Lilith Blog by Maggie Anton
(Wait, doesn’t the Torah say something about not allowing a sorceress to live?)
It
does indeed. “You shall not tolerate (let live) a sorceress,” is the
way the Jewish Publication Society translates Exodus 22:18. Or you may
have seen the King James Version’s “Thou shalt not suffer a witch to
live.” Even knowing these lines, the most astonishing thing I learned
while researching ENCHANTRESS: A Novel of Rav Hisda’s Daughter was how
prevalent—even ubiquitous—sorcery was among the same people who gave us
Talmud and Midrash.
Early on, I came across information about
Babylonian “magic bowls.” Unearthed under homes in what is now Iraq, the
land where the Talmud was created, these were common items of household
pottery inscribed with spells to protect the inhabitants from demons
and the Evil Eye, believed to cause illness, unsuccessful pregnancy and
other misfortune.
Undoubtedly of Jewish origin, the incantations
are written with Hebrew letters, quote Torah, and call upon Jewish
angels and divine names. Some quote Mishna and the rabbinic divorce
formula. And that’s not all. Archaeologists have found, wherever our
people lived during the first six centuries of the Common Era, Jewish
amulets, curse tablets, and magic manuals.
Continue reading.
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