Discussion with Professor Nicky Falkof (Wits) about her new book The Devil Made Me Do it: Understanding Occult Crime in South Africa

Date 30 October 2025
Time 5 - 6:30pm
Location On campus

South Africa can sometimes appear to be awash with occult crime. From satanist conspiracies and witchcraft accusations to muti murders and demonic possession, a trawl through our national news suggests a society at war with the forces of evil. Why does the occult have such a grasp on our collective imagination? In this vastly unequal country, with its crises of gender-based violence, child abuse, poverty and unemployment, there are more than enough obvious dangers to our social stability. Why, then, are South Africans so quick to blame the supernatural for violence and misfortune? How do beliefs in occult crime intersect with problems of gender, race and class? And is there any truth to these supernatural tales?

Westminster Students sat around table talking

The Devil Made Me Do It examines these and other thorny questions by probing the stories, beliefs and rumours behind the so-called occult crimes that have entranced South Africa’s fractured psyche. They include the murder of a child mistaken for a tokoloshe in the 1920s, the satanic panic that gripped the nation in the 1980s and 1990s, the Krugersdorp cult killings of 2012–16, and the muti murder of a six-year-old girl in 2022. What can these crimes, and the way they are represented by media, police and other institutions, tell us about South Africa today?'

Nicky Falkof is professor of Media Studies at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg and is director of the Wits Centre for Diversity Studies. Her research is primarily concerned with race and anxiety in South Africa, with a specific interest in the forms, mythologies and consequences of white fear. Falkof has also published on gender, popular media and culture, moral panic and the social geography of global south cities.

The discussion will be moderated by Dr Daniel Conway, Reader in Politics and International Relations and is supported by the Centre for the Study of Social Justice Research.

Location

This event will take place in room WS417, Wells Street