Special stomach stones grant Maye warlocks of this ethnicity the ability to eat [emphasize] your soul, causing you to wither and die. For 10 points each:
[10h] Magnuzaci, or Bori, is practiced by what non-Namibian ethnic group whose etiological tale of death’s origin blamed the hare for altering the Moon’s message of perpetual reincarnation. Various praise songs sung by this ethnicity relate the tale of the warrior queen, Amina.
ANSWER: Hausa [or Bahaushe or Bahaushiya; accept Hausawa; accept Hausa-Fulani]
[10e] In a tale likely adapted from Hausan hare folklore, Bre’er Rabbit claws dark streaks into the moon after it strikes him in one of the many stories compiled by this fictional narrator invented by Joel Chandler Harris.
ANSWER: Uncle Remus
[10m] In the lore of the Chitimacha Indians of Louisiana, the message of death that hare perverts is sent by this entity, rather than the moon. Vodou practitioners often equate the largely absent Bondye with this entity.
ANSWER: God [or YHWH; accept the Judeo-Christian God or the God of Abraham]
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