Superstition

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Doug
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Superstition

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Africa's albinos seek their place in the sun
Lack of pigmentation causes many to be killed to make potions for the superstitious.

BOSTON — Up two flights of stairs in a musty apartment in central Madrid is where an African man with a face as white as chalk has placed his hope for the future.

In early April, 18-year-old Moszy came ashore in the Spanish Canary Islands, along with 59 other African refugees. He stood out among a sea of black faces waiting in line that day to be processed by immigration officials. He is an albino, a person with a congenital lack of the melanin pigment that protects the skin, eyes and hair from the sun’s ultraviolet rays.

Albinism is a condition that makes life in much of Africa miserable for many reasons, said Javier Ramirez, a human rights lawyer with the Spanish Commission for Refugees or CEAR, which is representing Moszy.

“Albinos suffer violence and also they face huge discrimination in their countries of origin,” said Ramirez.

“That’s 'cause there’s still a lot of ignorance,” said Thabo Leshilo, editor of the South African newspaper, The Sowetan, which has reported on human rights abuses against albinos in southern Africa. “People still believe, for example, that people with albinism don’t die. That they actually disappear and don’t get buried.”

The unlikely home of Africa's OscarsLeshilo said it is the de-humanization of people with albinism that makes it possible for some to kill them without remorse. Over the past 19 months, 62 ritualistic murders have occurred in Tanzania, Burundi and Kenya in which albinos were killed to sell their body parts. Four albinos, including a 4-year old, were murdered in July. The buyers are traditional healers who say they can concoct powerful potions with so-called albino magic that businessmen and others believe will bolster their fortunes.

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"We could have done something important Max. We could have fought child abuse or Republicans!" --Oona Hart (played by Victoria Foyt), in the 1995 movie "Last Summer in the Hamptons."
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Doug
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Re: Superstition

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(June 11) -- Mary Shammas was on her way home from a doctor's appointment last month when her palm started itching, and the self-described "semisuperstitious" Brooklyn great-grandmother figured it was time to play the lottery. Her hunch paid off big-time: The 73-year-old purchased the winning Mega Millions ticket worth $64 million.

"I scratched and I scratched, and I said, 'This must mean something,'" Shammas told the New York Post, recalling her bus ride back from the doctor's office May 25. She got off the bus and went to the Lucky Lotto store about a block from her home, where she played numbers connected to the birthdays of family members, according to the Post.

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"We could have done something important Max. We could have fought child abuse or Republicans!" --Oona Hart (played by Victoria Foyt), in the 1995 movie "Last Summer in the Hamptons."
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