According to Placer's investigation, Cuban intelligence orchestrated the arrival of multiple babalawos (Santería priests) from the island with a carefully designed dual mission. Officially, these priests served as spiritual guides for Chávez and his growing movement. In practice, however, they acted as spies reporting directly back to Havana on all movements within the Venezuelan government and its key state enterprises.
Long before he became president, when he was just a young, plotting military officer, Chávez heavily relied on a personal seer named . el libro los brujos de chavez exclusive
Al entrelazar documentos reales con ficciones, Márquez logra dos cosas: Long before he became president, when he was
Through an source who retained a first-edition physical copy, we have reconstructed the book’s most explosive allegations. Here is what Los Brujos de Chávez claims. : It claims that the Presidential Palace of
: It claims that the Presidential Palace of Miraflores became a site for spiritism and occult ceremonies, a practice that reportedly continued beyond his presidency.
The full title, often translated as The Witches of Chavez: The Untold Story of Magic, Power, and Seduction in the Bolivarian Revolution , promises a shocking thesis: that Hugo Chávez’s charisma, his survival of the 2002 coup, and even his long battle with cancer were tied to ritualistic practices performed by a shadowy group known only as "La Corte de las Ánimas" (The Court of the Souls).
One of the most cited passages describes a crucifix kept in Chávez’s private bedroom—a dark wooden carving of Christ with emerald eyes. Los Brujos de Chávez claims this was a "resalvation" artifact, meaning it was a Catholic icon consecrated backward using black prayers. During the 2002 coup, when Chávez was held in captivity, his spiritual advisor—a warlock known as "El Brujo Mayor" —performed a "time reversion" spell using this crucifix, allegedly causing the counter-coup that returned Chávez to power in 48 hours.