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You can envision chikwambo as a terrestrial goblin (sometimes called a tokoloshe, tokolotshe, tikoloshe, or hili) that is given to a person usually by a fetish priest (or a witch doctor) which has spiritual powers to grant the wishes of the person who wants it.

Queen

grand master
You can envision chikwambo as a terrestrial goblin (sometimes called a tokoloshe, tokolotshe, tikoloshe, or hili) that is given to a person usually by a fetish priest (or a witch doctor) which has spiritual powers to grant the wishes of the person who wants it.
 
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Queen

grand master
If the owner of a chikwambo dies or is killed by his own tokoloshe, where does that chikwambo go to?

Chikwambo is something which exists in the spirit world that can't be seen by the average naked eye.

So if chikwambo kills its owner, normally the owner will have to serve that chikwambo in the spirit world since when you get one, you are bound by a spiritual pact.

Just like it applies to those people who acquire spiritual powers through demons and elemental beings.
 

Queen

grand master
Don't people invoke spirits which later on become their own chikwambo?

What you are talking about that's another subject matter altogether. People don't invoke spirits so that they can have chikwambo.

They simply buy it from witch doctors and fetish priests usually for the purpose of making more money in whatever business they are into.
 

Queen

grand master
Then why is it some people who get accused of possessing zvikwambo will be church-going people.

I don't understand why that should be news at all.

Don't you know many of these so-called prophets of today have partnerships with fetish priests who give them zvikwambo to heal people and perform miracles in front of a huge congregation?
 

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