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- Pomba Gira - Wikipedia
Pomba Gira is venerated with great respect and care because of her reputation for possessing great wrath She is often invoked by those who seek aid in matters of the heart and love
- Working with the Enchantress Pomba Gira – Creole Moon
Pomba Gira (pronounced pohm-ba shira), is a Brazilian female spirit found in the traditions of Umbanda, Quimbanda, and Candomblé She is revered by initiates and noninitiates alike as she is quite easy to relate to
- Pomba Gira : The Spirit of Desire - Mythlok
Pomba Gira is one of the most fascinating and controversial spirits in Afro-Brazilian religions, particularly in Umbanda and Quimbanda She is not an Orixá like those venerated in Candomblé, but rather a powerful spirit who occupies a central place in rituals of love, desire, and empowerment
- Who is Pomba Gira Maria Mulambo? - exurei. com
Most people think they know what a Pomba Gira represents: seduction, temptation, maybe even something to fear But what if everything you've been told about one of Afro-Brazilian spirituality's most powerful feminine forces is only scratching the surface?
- Pomba Gira | Folk Magic Beliefs | Stronghold Nation
Developed among various Afro-Brazilian Cultures (former African and Caribbean Slaves), ''Pomba Gira'' was a Deity (Loa) believed in many Folk Magic circles A ''Messenger of The Gods'', She ''protects'' those who invoke Magic, practice Witchcraft and from ''harmful'' Demonic Possessions
- Quimbanda: Embrace the Path of Exu and Pomba Gira | Mario dos Ventos
You will meet the twelve masks of Exu and Pomba Gira, explore the role of beauty and rage, dream with spirits, and learn how real devotion grows when no one is watching
- Pomba-gira by Light Through the Crystal | Medium
Pomba-gira comes from Pambu Njila, a Bantu entity from the south cone of Africa — the region between Angola and Mozambique
- Who are Exu Pomba Gira? — Cabula Mavile Kitula kia Njila
The Exus and Pomba Giras of Quimbanda are spirits of agency and power, each a proverbial Devil at the Crossroads Intrinsically bound to the world of the Dead, these messengers and emissaries of ancestry and place are alternatively known as catiços, seres, and even diabos and demônios
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