—Do you remember that the work we did was so that you might obtain your political position and so that you might also be the empress that you are, right?
—Have the charge.
—Have the position, right? (…) That’s why we come to visit you. We come to collect, as ancestral witch masters.
Even before becoming a regional councilor for the Bío Bío, Javiera Vargas Muñoz (independent, Green Ecologist pact), was fully devoted to her small socio-ecological restoration company. She and she also attend magic rituals with connections ranging from Beelzebub and Ganesha to Jesus.
Her name reached notoriety this Friday, following Bosque Adentro, an organization dedicated to tarot, voodoo and moorings and unmoorings, accused her of not paying for a ceremony whose sole purpose was to lead her to obtain her position in the Regional Government.
However, what began as an at least exotic complaint might become a case with borders of corruption, following -according to the ancestral sorcerers- the counselor promised, in exchange for the ritual, to move her connections in the CORE to finance a foundation with public money. She, on the contrary, contracted and filed a complaint with the PDI for extortion. The case is handled by the Bicrim of Chiguayante.
The ritual
The ritual -explain the ancestral sorcerers- took place on the night of November 11, 2021. It happened in an apartment on Las Heras de Concepción street. A housing complex made up of four buildings interspersed with white and gray walls, inhabited mostly by middle-class families.
There, on the floor of the home, the magicians arranged 13 black candles, set fire to a cauldron and threw three other candles of the same color inside. The idea, they say, was to open an energy portal with the support of a pentagram, so that the spiritual world would help them achieve their goal: that Javiera be elected.
According to the testimony, in the pot, in addition to the candles, they threw the right sock of the then 33-year-old candidate, a photo of her spread in the campaign and coins as an offering to Ganesha. After regarding 40 minutes the ceremony concluded.
Ancestral magic and spirits aside, 10 days later Javiera was elected representing San Pedro de la Paz, Coronel, Lota, Hualqui and Santa Juana.
Eco-therapeutic feminist foundation with a holistic approach
However, what the letters of the occultists did not predict was that the episode would trigger a series of disagreements due to the non-payment of the commitments supposedly acquired by the current counselor.
Once in power, the sorcerers repeatedly tried to locate their client. The initial plan was still under way: Javiera, they say, had to pull the strings within the Regional Government in order to deliver resources for the creation of the Amada Foundation. An “eco-therapeutic feminist organization with a holistic approach”, which sought spiritual healing derived from “the social problems of social reintegration suffered by women, boys and girls, divergents and sexual dissidence belonging to the LGBTIQ+ community”.
To do this, the shamans had several ideas and objectives: connect their users with the earth, by planting a seed; personal empowerment, through numerology sessions; and heal childhood traumas, via regressions akashikas to past lives.
The problem was that little or no progress was made and his project never saw the light of day. Hence, the ancestral masters (at their request, please do not confuse with black magic, red, Buddhist, santeros or more) were to charge what – they assert – corresponds to them.
“We come to collect”
According to what they say, it was on May 12 of this year that they reached the second floor of the Regional Government. There, in a room of the modernist-style building at Avenida Prat 525, just steps from the Bío Bío River, a meeting would have taken place between two of the sorcerers and the counselor.
“I come here to get paid,” says one of the incense burners and medium What did he say to the counselor?
The appointment, according to the teachers, continued precisely with speeches that pointed to financial compensation for the service provided. If it wasn’t the creation of the foundation, $3 million pesos would placate the anger of those with the spiritual connection. The idea was to go to Europe.
According to their version, the dialogue included passages that pointed to the origin of the ritual.
-Sorcerer: Do you remember that the work we did was so that you might obtain your political position and so that you might also be the empress that you are, right?
-Javiera: Have the charge.
-Sorcerer: Have the charge right? (…) That’s why we come to visit you. We come to collect, as ancestral witch masters.
According to an audio broadcast by the sorcerers, the conversation would also have contemplated a commitment of the public servant.
-Javiera: How far does my glue go?
-Sorcerer: Until you take my foundation away.
-Javiera: The foundation.
-Sorcerer: The foundation, which includes that the deposits of the foundation’s funds reach me, that I have people in the foundation…
-Javiera: The first funds, because you’re not going to keep me there for five years working…
-Sorcerer: Not at all, just once.
Read also…
Apparently, everything ended on good terms. They would have agreed on a work plan to get the eco-therapeutic initiative afloat, which was later endorsed in an e-mail sent by the founder of Bosque Adentro on May 16, 2022, at 4:54 p.m.
The Gantt chart contemplated that on Friday, May 27, the teachers would receive a response. Between June and July they expected to receive “the competitive funds or budget that should vary between 3 to 5 million pesos (…) Thus culminating our work pact.”
“Received guys!”, Retorted the counselor in the same way, just a minute later.
Since none of that happened, the mediums They simply decided to funar the official through social networks. In an Instagram account that began to spread this Friday, they posted a photo of her with calls for her to pay.
Crime or moral reproach?
Regarding whether the actions of the counselor, in addition to a moral reproach, might constitute crimes, an expert source in corruption investigations explains that the acts of having been consummated might have configured a fraud to the treasury or obtaining undue benefits. This, as long as the public servant exercised her influence to favor a “paper” foundation, which in this case did not occur.
Complaint for extortion
Faced with the smear campaign and the insistent calls from the sorcerers, Javiera filed a complaint for extortion with the PDI.
As this medium might verify, the civil police quickly opened an investigation, so the investigations were left to the Chiguayante Criminal Investigation Brigade (Bicrim).
According to comments from the environment of the public official, what happened keeps her seriously affected. And although they recognize that “they did not know how to close the door on witches in time”, they point out that they are “dangerous people” who have threatened and extorted them in order to obtain economic benefits.
“At some point they told her that the gods on the other side were asking her for these $3 million and if they didn’t pay they were going to have to sacrifice her. It is there where they generate a threat to Javiera’s physical integrity, ”says a source close to the counselor.
When consulted, from the magical house Bosque Adentro they did not deny the threats, although with one caveat: “Any person who performs a ritual in this way is informed that if they do not pay or offer, we must deliver it to our altar and then our gods and teachers are going to look for her”, they explain.
Thus, they maintain that she, her friends, acquaintances or relatives, children or animals, might “be affected energetically, whoever is vibrating the lowest spiritually and energetically.”
“We do not sacrifice or kill any animal or person. We work with entities of high vibration”, they expose.
Disquisitions aside, it will be earthly justice that ultimately determines the fate of the Penquista shamans.
This medium repeatedly tried to obtain an official version of the counselor. Despite her commitment, she was not available for this article.
Our comments are a space for conversation and debate. We welcome constructive criticism, but reserve the right to remove comments o block users aggressive, offensive o abusive.