kamals,
1. You will find that there are very few hard and fast rules in Hoodoo, that there are variations across regions and practitioners; however, you will find common themes among them all that indicate the cultural practice. Why so many variations? Well, that's simple, if I ask 100 people how to make pasta sauce, I will get a large variety of recipes, but at the end, they are all very much what everyone would call pasta sauce. Almost all of them would have tomato, oil, garlic, etc. Hoodoo is a unique practice in America and is primarily made up of African, European, Asian, Native, Jewish, Christian, and Penn Dutch traditions. Those practices heavily influence the practice of collecting dirt.
2. Who to collect from: Again, this varies; many believe it is important to ask for the dirt and pay for it, which is considered respectful. Does this mean all promote that? No. The spirit of the Grave empowers graveyard dirt; it is not just dirt. The dirt you collect would be based mainly on the type of spell. Love magic: It is best to collect dirt from someone who loves you, as they do and want you to be happy. Dirt from a murderer is good for revenge magic, dirt from a police officer is good for protection or catching a criminal. I would be cautious to learn about graveyard work from someone on TikTok.
3. It is important not to desecrate a grave out of respect for the spirit and also not to go to jail. If you were a spirit and a person came to you, broke your tomb, trampled the flowers, and left you nothing as a gift, how likely would you be to help that person?
20th century folklore texts of Graveyard Dirt:
Newbell Niles Puckett, Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro: pp. 101-103, graveyard and burial traditions, burying at the grave. P. 194 using a graveyard from a murderer. P.196 bury in a cemetery to make an enemy die.
Harry Middleton Hyatt, Folk-Lore from Adams County: Funeral-Cemetery and Graves 10289-10369-traditions on funerals and graves. 4120-using graveyard dirt to remove a wart. 9562- Graveyard dirt used to Hoodoo people. 10356- Graveyard dirt to be lucky. 4145- using dirt from a horse's footprint to cure a wort. 5932- to dream true.
Harry Middleton Hyatt, Hoodoo - Conjure - Witchcraft - Rootwork, Vol 4: Death and Burial And Graveyard:
Entry 1286 Payment: 1 penny Details: Take dirt from the breast of a sinner’s grave; “pay dat daid a penny.”
Entry 1287 / 1288 Payment: 1 penny Details: Dirt taken from the heart-side; penny left as payment.
Entry 1291 Payment: 2 cents Details: “Pay de graveyard-man who dead two cents”; dirt used in a hot-foot-type mixture.
Entry 1297 Payment: 1–2 cents Details: For keeping “the law off you”; pay wicked spirit “one cent or two cents” when removing dirt.
Entry 1312 Payment: 2 pennies Details: Dig a little, take dirt, put two pennies back in the hole, close it, then use dirt for enemy work.
Entry 1314 Payment: 3 pennies Details: Dig down to elbow-depth; carry three pennies; tell the dead you’ll “come back an’ pay” if not paying immediately.
Entry 1316 Payment: 3 pennies Details: Drop three pennies into the hole while praying; then remove dirt from that same hole.
Entry 1320 Payment: 3 pennies + lord’s prayer Details: Used for “letter-to-the-dead” workings; pennies given so the dead “handle it.”
Entry 1334 Payment: 4 pennies Details: Write initials or names, go to graveyard, “pay the dead fo’ pennies,” and remove dirt.
Entry 1342 Payment: 5–8 pennies Details: Drop 5 to 8 pennies into the hole at the heart-side, thank the dead, and walk away without looking back.
Entry 1347 Payment: 8 pennie Details: Bring eight pennies, dig slightly at the head, drop all eight pennies in the hole, ask the dead, and take dirt.
Entry 1351 Payment: 3 pennies Details: Put three pennies at the foot-side or head-side (varies by informant) and remove dirt while stating purpose.
Entry 1392 Payment: 3 pennies Details: Similar formula — pennies placed first, then dirt taken.
Entry 1398 Payment: A specific number of pennies (“a certain ‘mount”). Details: Informant says the dead must be paid, amount varies, but is always pennies.
21st century folklore texts of Graveyard Dirt:
Catherine Yronwode, Hoodoo Herb and Root Magic: uses of graveyard dirt in Hoodoo, p. 109, includes examples for death, cursing, protection, and love spells.
Catherine Yronwode, Astrology for Rootworkers: Dark of the moon graveyard dirt collecting to make an enemy sick with a disease and bad luck, p. 62. Also found in
Sneaky Tricks p. 89.
Catherine Yronwode, Hoodoo Dolls and Effigies: p. 67 graveyard dirt in doll magic.
Catherine Yronwode, The Art of Making Mojos: using graveyard dirt in mojo bags p.52.
Miss Aida, Destroying Relationships: Using graveyard dirt to break people up p. 67-68.
Miss Aida, Cursing and Crossing: graveyard dirt in crossing spells p. 77-78.
Sources:
https://www.luckymojo.com/hoodooherbmagic.html
https://luckymojo.com/astrologyforrootworkers.html
https://www.luckymojo.com/theartofmakingmojos.html
https://www.luckymojo.com/cursingandcrossing.html
https://www.luckymojo.com/destroyingrelationships.html
https://www.luckymojo.com/sneakytricks.html
https://www.luckymojo.com/hoodoodollsandeffigies.html
Graveyard Dirt:
https://www.luckymojo.com/graveyarddirt.html
Love Me or Die spell using Graveyard dirt/ using Graveyard dirt for love magic:
https://www.luckymojo.com/lovespells.ht ... iejackball
Folk-Lore From Adams County, Illinois Harry Hyatt.
Hoodoo–Conjuration–Witchcraft–Rootwork, Vol. 4
Folk Beliefs Of The Southern Negro, Newbell Niles Puckett, Ph.D.
JayDee
HRCC Graduate #2156G, Forum Moderator, Reader and Root Worker.