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Black History Year

These 'Superstitions' May Just Be Ancestral Signs

Black History Year

PushBlack

History

4.62.2K Ratings

🗓️ 28 September 2023

⏱️ 2 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

If you ever had an itchy palm or a twitching eye and been told by an elder that it's a sign, that’s part of a centuries-old belief system many of us have been engaging in without knowing.













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2-Minute Black History is produced by PushBlack, the nation's largest non-profit Black media company. PushBlack exists to amplify the stories of Black history you didn't learn in school. You make PushBlack happen with your contributions at BlackHistoryYear.com — most people donate $10 a month, but every dollar makes a difference. If this episode moved you, share it with your people! Thanks for supporting the work.


The production team for this podcast includes Cydney Smith, Len Webb, and Lilly Workneh. Our editors are Lance John and Avery Phillips from Gifted Sounds Network. Julian Walker serves as executive producer.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

If you ever had itchy palm or twitching eye and been told by an elder that it's a sign,

0:09.3

that's part of a century's old belief system.

0:12.2

Many of us have been engaging in without knowing.

0:15.4

This is Two Minute Black History, what you didn't learn in school.

0:25.8

You've probably heard elders discuss common hudu signs about unusual occurrences that warn

0:31.9

of a coming event.

0:33.6

For generations, we've casually passed them on.

0:37.1

Anti-blackness reduced them to superstition, but they're a deep part of the culture and

0:42.4

a symbol of spiritual survival.

0:50.5

Itching palms are interpreted as a sign that money is on the way to you.

0:55.2

Some folks distinguishing between whether the left or right palm is itching.

1:01.0

When your eyelid twitches, it's considered a sign that trouble in some form is coming.

1:07.1

And if you've ever heard someone say, you better not sweep my feet with that broom.

1:11.9

It likely comes from the early hudu belief that swept feet are a severe sign of bad luck.

1:19.7

Some signs, like swept feet, could be immediately neutralized by gestures such as spitting on

1:26.2

the broom.

1:27.6

Our people's faith in the signs was deep and heavily informed folks' spiritual life.

1:33.5

They were considered a basic form of divination, accessible to everyone, so our people weamed

1:40.2

them into their everyday consciousness.

1:43.6

Many traditional black practices and beliefs are demonized by anti-blackness, but these

1:48.8

culturalisms, like hudu signs, are valid parts of our cultural resistance.

1:55.5

Knowing the truth about ancestral beliefs is a powerful way to honor our history and

...

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