Halloween | Little scares in New Orleans

(New Orleans) New Orleans is said to be one of the most haunted cities in America. It doesn’t matter whether we believe in ghosts and other poltergeists or not, the Louisiana metropolis happily rides on its sinister reputation. Ghost hunting, cemetery visits, voodoo, there is certainly a way to scare yourself in “Nawlins”!




With his slim figure and pale complexion, our guide Soren Presley has the physique for the job. With disturbing detachment, he tells us, among other things, the story of Zack Bowen, a man who haunts the Omni Hotel. He cooked his girlfriend’s head and limbs in the days following her murder in 2006. He then threw himself from a balcony before landing on the sidewalk of rue Chartres. Exactly where we are standing, our guide informs us with disarming calm. It was too much for a Dutch colleague who had to move a good distance from the infamous piece of sidewalk.

Without expressing the slightest emotion, Soren continues by turning across the street to show us the Pharmacological Museum of New Orleans, a magnificent historic building in the Vieux Carré which housed the first certified apothecary in the United States. After 30 years of loyal service, the Dr Louis Dufilho fils sold his business to James Dupas, and this is where things get complicated, our guide tells us. The sinister apothecary is said to have carried out experiments on pregnant slaves or using poisons, drugs and other voodoo concoctions on patients. Several died from it. Their remains were found buried in the backyard. So much so that the building is now haunted by the specter of the evil Dr Dupas, but also by a woman who wanders in the courtyard and two children who were seen on the upper floors. Coincidence or not, a light came on for a few moments in a second story window just as Soren was telling his story. The room is now used for storage. It’s unclear if anyone was working there that evening, but the museum had been closed for a long time late Tuesday evening…


PHOTO PIERRE-MARC DURIVAGE, THE PRESS

Guide Soren Presley, from Haunted History Tours, with his girlfriend

The Haunted History Tour guide takes us to see other haunted houses, a bar inhabited by the tortured spirits of former pirates as well as some vampire lairs. It is also impossible to ignore the city’s voodoo heritage, highlighted among other things while passing in front of the home of Marie Laveau, the most famous priestess to have lived in New Orleans.

You can also go see the grave of Mme Laveau during a guided tour of the Saint-Louis cemetery no 1, place generally inaccessible to the public. The Voodoo Queen is indeed buried in the oldest cemetery in New Orleans, which hosted her first burials in 1789. When she died in 1881, Marie Laveau was a real star – our guide Rahsaan Parker even tells us that her death was reported in the pages of New York Times. Indeed, the free woman of Creole origin made her fortune thanks to her talents as a herbalist, but also by making and selling gris-gris of all kinds. Legend has it that she lived for more than 200 years. “In fact, her eldest daughter, also named Marie, was just like her mother and was also a high voodoo priestess,” says Parker. In all, nine descendants of Marie Laveau will practice voodoo. »


PHOTO PIERRE-MARC DURIVAGE, THE PRESS

The colorful decorations of Rosalie Aly, near the voodoo temple of Sallie Ann Glassman

Demystifying voodoo

The religion introduced into Louisiana by the Haitian Creoles in the 19th centurye century is still very present in New Orleans. It is also possible to attend ceremonies which help to demystify the (false) beliefs surrounding the practice. This is how we were taken to the Bywater neighborhood, to the very back of the very cheerful and colorful Rosalie Aly, where the temple of Sallie Ann Glassman is located, mambo asogwe (high priestess) of the house The Ancient Source.

During the short ceremony, she explains to us, among other things, the role of lwaspiritual intermediaries who represent the different aspects of God’s life force, whether natural manifestations or altars erected in honor of ancestors.

  • Sallie Ann Glassman is the asogwe mambo of La Source Ancienne.  She acquired her title after a six-day session in solitary confinement in Port-au-Prince in 1995.

    PHOTO PIERRE-MARC DURIVAGE, THE PRESS

    Sallie Ann Glassman is the mambo asogwe from the house The ancient source. She acquired her title after a six-day session in solitary confinement in Port-au-Prince in 1995.

  • There are four altars in the Sallie Ann Glassman Temple, each representing a distinct lwa.

    PHOTO PIERRE-MARC DURIVAGE, THE PRESS

    There are four altars in the Sallie Ann Glassman Temple, each representing a lwa distinct.

  • High Priestess Sallie Ann Glassman performs a short voodoo ceremony during tours for the general public.

    PHOTO PIERRE-MARC DURIVAGE, THE PRESS

    High Priestess Sallie Ann Glassman performs a short voodoo ceremony during tours for the general public.

1/3

Although these altars are lined with hundreds of gris-gris of different shapes, no trace of frightening dolls riddled with needles or the remains of sacrificed animals has been found. “These beliefs were instilled in people’s minds because voodoo was practiced by black immigrants from the West Indies and Africa,” says Sallie Ann Glassman. Then we put the final nail in the coffin by exploiting the sensationalism associated with voodoo. »

“However, everything was taken from the slaves,” continues the high priestess with her soft and captivating voice. They were torn from their homes, from their families. When we look at these altars, we see that these people found a way to keep the spirit of their gods alive by giving birth to this religion. And that is incredibly beautiful. »

The curse of Nicolas Cage


PHOTO PIERRE-MARC DURIVAGE, THE PRESS

On the mausoleum erected by Nicolas Cage, we can read Omnia ab unoa Latin phrase that can be translated as “Everything comes from a single source”.

Urban legend has it that American actor Nicolas Cage has been hit by a curse since he purchased two haunted mansions in the French Quarter with impunity in 2007. It was to ward off the bad luck that he had built an imposing pyramid-shaped mausoleum in the Saint-Louis cemetery no 1. “A clairvoyant revealed to the actor that he had to reserve a space in the oldest cemetery in the city, ideally near the grave of Marie Laveau, in the hope that the voodoo queen could grant him some form of mercy, tells us guide Rashaan Parker. To do this, he will have to contact practitioners living on both banks of the Mississippi and bring them here to carry out the exorcism. After which, he will be able to resell the houses. » The problem is that the residences purchased by Nicolas Cage were seized by the tax authorities in 2009. One of them was resold to a rich Texan family, which has no intention of getting rid of it, having not never been bothered by the ghost of Madame Delphine Lalaurie, known for having tortured and murdered dozens of slaves there…


source site-50