With rattles and smoke, Peru shamans predict election outcome
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[May 27, 2021]
By Carlos Valdez
LIMA (Reuters) - Peruvian shamans, with
rattles, smoke and pictures of the Andean country's two presidential
candidates, are trying to read the tea leaves ahead of a polarized
run-off election on June 6 with polls showing what could be a tight
contest.
On a stony hillside in Lima, shamans burned incense and played musical
instruments in colorful, traditional outfits to predict the winner from
between socialist front-runner Pedro Castillo and conservative Keiko
Fujimori.
The vote could tip copper-rich Peru sharply to the left, with Castillo
pledging to rewrite the constitution and levy larger portions of mining
wealth. Or it could herald the return of the controversial Fujimori
family, which once dominated Peruvian politics but have been mired in
corruption scandals.
"Two candidates will run in the Sunday vote and it has been seen that
the next president will be a male, a man because we have looked at
both," said Walter Alarcón, an indigenous shaman.

The shamans had photos of the candidates over which they blew smoke
while shaking rattles and blowing a traditional wind instrument known as
a pututo or caracola. Others threw flower petals or poked at the photos
with metal swords.
Not all are agreed who would win. Recent polls have shown Castillo
starting to widen his lead again after it had narrowed substantially
over the last month.
"I have seen that Keiko (Fujimori) is the person who is going to reach
the government and if she is going to arrive we have to make her do
things in the best way and that is why we are here making offerings,"
said Ana María Simeón.
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Peruvian shamans burn campaign posters for presidential candidate
Keiko Fujimori during a traditional ritual that predicted Fujimori's
loss to Pedro Castillo in a run-off vote for the Peruvian presidency
on June 6, in Lima, Peru, May 26, 2021. REUTERS/Angela Ponce

Juan de Dios, a shaman from Peru's north, a
stronghold for Castillo, said he was fully supporting the socialist
candidate, whose sudden rise has spooked markets and some miners,
concerned about a sharp shift in the country's politics.
"We have come with incense with the four elements. ... We have come
to raise up Mr. Pedro Castillo since many people do not want to see
him or do not want him to govern Peru," said de Dios. "We have come
to strengthen him with good winds."
The shaman said they had held a ritual using the Wachuma plant,
which he said was often called the San Pedro cactus and is used in
traditional Andean medicine.
"It is a sacred plant and through our visualization we have been
able to see that a gentleman is going to be the president of Peru on
June 6," he said.
(Reporting by Carlos Valdez; Writing by Adam Jourdan; Editing by
Richard Chang)
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