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Cancer Cure News: Self-Proclaimed Witch Claims She Can Heal Cancer

A woman who claims to be a witch has said in an interview that she can cure cancer with black magic.

Savannah, also known as Black Witch S, has claimed in an interview that she healed a Los Angeles police officer from acute stage 4 leukemia last year with the help of a demon guide named Astaroth. According to Savannah, with the use of the voodoo dolls and the help of her dark spiritual connections, she was able to heal am incognito 23-year-old cancer patient, whose case was supposedly brought to her by the mother of the police officer.

"The mother of the 23-year-old wrote to me and asked me what I could do to help because the prognosis was not good... man and I filled up his aura with healing energy," she said. "I also connected to my spirit guide Astaroth — a demon who uses the power of Lucifer — sometimes known as Satan," Savannah said in an interview.

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As there are no medical records that can prove Savannah's claims, the self-proclaimed witch admits that many people can't help but be skeptical about her claims. Nonetheless, she stresses that her claims are true and that demons are extremely powerful.

While she claims that black magic can cure cancer, Savanah warns that it comes with great danger as it may attract lower forms spirits that she considers parasites. Hence, she discourages people to practice black magic, especially if they have children at home, as they are more susceptible to the perils that come with it.

"Children are more open to connecting to the spiritual world through their sixth sense and imagination," Savannah said.

While many are skeptic about Savannah's cancer cure claims, the same thing cannot be said about Novartis' drug Kymriah, a CAR-T treatment (chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy), which is a one-time infusion that makes use of a patient's own engineered T cells to fight cancer. Although the treatment costs $475,000, many believe that it will open the doors to other cell-based therapies and more clinical trials for many other types of cancer.

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