Via Balko, Rationalist International has an amusing report of a challenge that took place on television in India. A politician accused her enemies of using "Tantrik black magic" to damage her and a practitioner of such magic went on a TV show along with a skeptic to debate the subject. Much hilarity ensued. Long excerpt below the fold:
India TV, one of India's major Hindi channels with national outreach, invited Sanal Edamaruku for a discussion on "Tantrik power versus Science". Pandit Surinder Sharma, who claims to be the tantrik of top politicians and is well known from his TV shows, represented the other side. During the discussion, the tantrik showed a small human shape of wheat flour dough, laid a thread around it like a noose and tightened it. He claimed that he was able to kill any person he wanted within three minutes by using black magic. Sanal challenged him to try and kill him.The tantrik tried. He chanted his mantras (magic words): "Om lingalingalinalinga, kilikili...." But his efforts did not show any impact on Sanal - not after three minutes, and not after five. The time was extended and extended again. The original discussion program should have ended here, but the "breaking news" of the ongoing great tantra challenge was overrunning all program schedules.
Now the tantrik changed his technique. He started sprinkling water on Sanal and brandishing a knife in front of him. Sometimes he moved the blade all over his body. Sanal did not flinch. Then he touched Sanal's head with his hand, rubbing and rumpling up his hair, pressing his forehead, laying his hand over his eyes, pressing his fingers against his temples. When he pressed harder and harder, Sanal reminded him that he was supposed to use black magic only, not forceful attacks to bring him down. The tantrik took a new run: water, knife, fingers, mantras. But Sanal kept looking very healthy and even amused.
After nearly two hours, the anchor declared the tantrik's failure. The tantrik, unwilling to admit defeat, tried the excuse that a very strong god whom Sanal might be worshipping obviously protected him. "No, I am an atheist," said Sanal Edamaruku. Finally, the disgraced tantrik tried to save his face by claiming that there was a never-failing special black magic for ultimate destruction, which could, however, only been done at night. Bad luck again, he did not get away with this, but was challenged to prove his claim this very night in another "breaking news" live program.
During the next three hours, India TV ran announcements for The Great Tantra Challenge that called several hundred million people to their TV sets.
The encounter took place under the open night sky. The tantrik and his two assistants were kindling a fire and staring into the flames. Sanal was in good humour. Once the ultimate magic was invoked, there wouldn't be any way back, the tantrik warned. Within two minutes, Sanal would get crazy, and one minute later he would scream in pain and die. Didn't he want to save his life before it was too late? Sanal laughed, and the countdown begun. The tantriks chanted their "Om lingalingalingalinga, kilikilikili...." followed by ever changing cascades of strange words and sounds. The speed increased hysterically. They threw all kinds of magic ingredients into the flames that produced changing colours, crackling and fizzling sounds and white smoke. While chanting, the tantrik came close to Sanal, moved his hands in front of him and touched him, but was called back by the anchor. After the earlier covert attempts of the tantrik to use force against Sanal, he was warned to keep distance and avoid touching Sanal. But the tantrik "forgot" this rule again and again.
Now the tantrik wrote Sanal's name on a sheet of paper, tore it into small pieces, dipped them into a pot with boiling butter oil and threw them dramatically into the flames. Nothing happened. Singing and singing, he sprinkled water on Sanal, mopped a bunch of peacock feathers over his head, threw mustard seed into the fire and other outlandish things more. Sanal smiled, nothing happened, and time was running out. Only seven more minutes before midnight, the tantrik decided to use his ultimate weapon: the clod of wheat flour dough. He kneaded it and powdered it with mysterious ingredients, then asked Sanal to touch it. Sanal did so, and the grand magic finale begun. The tantrik pierced blunt nails on the dough, then cut it wildly with a knife and threw them into the fire. That moment, Sanal should have broken down. But he did not. He laughed. Forty more seconds, counted the anchor, twenty, ten, five... it's over!
Gee, I'm shocked. Aren't you?

Ed Brayton is a journalist, commentator and speaker. He is the co-founder and president of 



Comments
If I were Sanal I would have feigned dying right near the end and at midnight got up and laughed at the tantrik.
Posted by: llDayo | March 26, 2008 9:51 AM
Ed, you should have editted out the actual chanting. Don't you realize how dangerous it is teach others how to kill with words? Sure, it didn't work this time, but you can't prove that it will never work! People will be chanting this all the time now!!
First JK Rowling taught kids how to kill with Avada Kedavra! in her Harry Potter books, and now you teach us this... why do you hate baby Jesus, Ed?
Posted by: doctorgoo | March 26, 2008 9:57 AM
"Om lingalingalingalinga, kilikilikili...."
Damn, I just killed my coworker across from me.
Time for some CPR, then back to scienceblogs...
Posted by: Jason Failes | March 26, 2008 10:09 AM
this is the funniest thing i will read all day. guaranteed.
Posted by: John | March 26, 2008 11:04 AM
He should have used the ultimate spell:
Anáil nathrach orth bhais betha do cheol déanta!
(Bonus geek points to the first person to identify it without looking it up.)
Posted by: Abby Normal | March 26, 2008 11:25 AM
Excalibur, Abby. Good call. I was just going to make a Dune "killing word" joke.
Posted by: PMMJ | March 26, 2008 11:33 AM
Given the number of people who must have watched it does anyone know of the subsequent debate on Indian TV / 'net / watercoolers?
Posted by: David Durant | March 26, 2008 11:48 AM
> I was just going to make a Dune "killing word" joke.
Jacurutu!
...
I'll get my coat... :-)
Posted by: David Durant | March 26, 2008 11:57 AM
Wow, I knew that might be an easy one. But 8 minutes between posting and correct answer, impresive. +100 geek ponts for you! Keep it up.
Posted by: Abby Normal | March 26, 2008 12:06 PM
Klaatu, Verada, Ni*cough-cough*
There. Now we're all safe from the evil curse of Om lingalinga.
Posted by: Wes | March 26, 2008 12:26 PM
Funny, I just assumed "Power Word: Kill" would be a single (perhaps polysyllabic) word.
There, I just one-upped the Dune geeks.
Posted by: xebecs | March 26, 2008 12:31 PM
Or even Power Word Blind.
Posted by: Kenneth Fair | March 26, 2008 2:25 PM
Since no one else will say it:
"Ia, Ia, Cthulu phtagn! IAAAA!!"
Posted by: Coyote | March 26, 2008 3:47 PM
This just in:
Tantrik Scientists Announce Tantrik Powers Cannot be Tested Through Science.
Took them long enough.
/parody/sarcasm
Posted by: Sastra | March 26, 2008 4:28 PM
The depressing thing is that this probably won't hurt the tantrik's career at all.
Posted by: Brandon | March 26, 2008 4:58 PM
The depressing thing is that this probably won't hurt the tantrik's career at all.
Posted by: Brandon | March 26, 2008 4:58 PM
The way to really nail this down is to lay charges of attempted murder against Surinder Sharma. He can either admit guilt or admit as his defense that he is a fraud.
Posted by: Bill Poser | March 26, 2008 4:58 PM
Yep. That's why James Randi calls them "unsinkable rubber ducks". When they're debunked, they'll sink below the surface for a little while, but inevitably they'll pop back up a little later doing exactly the same routine. And people fall for it all over again.
Posted by: Wes | March 26, 2008 5:40 PM
That was fun, its nice to see that there are parts of the world where the woo meisters are still willing to subject themselves to tests, though I guess that will stop now.
Posted by: James K | March 26, 2008 6:02 PM
I don't know what it is about this story, but it just cracks me up! I almost laughed myself silly when I first read about it on Pharyngula, and I laughed just as hard when I read it again now.
But I do have to admit that those magic words actually can be dangerous. During a serious discussion on a completely unrelated subject, I just about killed my best friend by suddenly standing up, waving my hands at him, and going 'Om lingalingalinga kilikilikili!'! Though I suspect that laughing oneself to death wasn't the intended result...
Posted by: Kaerion | March 26, 2008 9:05 PM
Bill, I like the way you think!
Posted by: Monado, FCD | March 26, 2008 11:12 PM