Here’s my take on so-called “Quimbanda.”
If you can’t find a trace of a specific Exu or Pomba Gira **in *any* verifiable source—oral, written, or liturgical—before 2009 or 2010**, then what you're looking at is a *modern invention*. Period.
Let’s call it what it is: something recently conjured up by a handful of houses and authors trying to force-feed European occultism into Afro-Brazilian spirit work.
Here’s how you spot the fake:
* The ponto looks more like a **Goetic sigil or chaos magick seal** than a proper **Bantu-Angolan or Kongo firma**.
* There’s no rooted oral history—just thin references pulled from the **Qliphoth** or **Goetia** with a touch of aesthetic branding.
* Nobody ever mounts that entity. Nobody gets possessed by it. No medium ever dances in trance. **DING DING.**
It’s not mysterious.
It’s not “deep gnosis.”
It’s just **not Exu. Not Pomba Gira. Not Kimbanda.**
It’s something *else* entirely—and folks need to stop dressing up imported spirits in red and black and calling it tradition.