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IN THE SUMMARY...
1. Why combine these two soils? |
When the truth has not been told, when a secret still weighs, or when an injustice has gone unanswered after a person’s death, it is possible to combine cemetery soil and justice soil in a focused ritual. This work does not seek to harm or impose a version, but to allow the truth to emerge, for responsibilities to be acknowledged, and for memory to be clarified. It is a serious, deliberate approach that connects the visible to the invisible.
1. Why combine these two soils?
Cemetery soil allows connection with the dead, with what has been silenced, forgotten, deliberately erased, or ignored. It gives access to what remains active in the shadows, what has not been closed.
Justice soil, on the other hand, acts in the realm of facts, truth, and consequences. It does not judge in terms of good or evil: it reveals what has been hidden, it demands that facts be seen and named.
By bringing them together, one acts both on memory and on structure. It links the world of the dead to the world of rules. It creates a bridge for truth to flow, even if it disturbs. This type of work is powerful. It should not be done lightly.
2. How to prepare the soils for this work?
Cemetery soil is taken from the grave of the person concerned, or from a place in the cemetery connected to collective memory. Three pinches are enough.
Justice soil is discreetly collected in front of a courthouse, police station, or administrative building related to a decision. It carries the energy of judgment and official speech.
Each soil is kept in a separate container. They are not mixed directly. They must remain distinct until the moment of the ritual. Their power comes from the tension between them.
A paper or object representing the situation is also prepared: name, date, symbol, photo, written phrase. This support will carry the energy of the work.
3. How to perform the post-mortem truth ritual?
The support is placed between the two soils. On the left, cemetery soil. On the right, justice soil. An invisible line is drawn between them. This line is the passage, the link, the call for clarity.
The request is made inwardly: that the truth be told, that responsibilities be acknowledged, that silence be broken. One does not ask for punishment, but for revelation. The goal is for things to be placed where they belong.
A white or gray candle can accompany the gesture. The fire stabilizes. It illuminates without burning. The ritual can be silent. It does not require a formula. Only full presence.
The paper is then burned or buried with a handful of each soil mixed together. If the gesture is done remotely, the soils can be scattered after use in two separate places.
4. What can happen after such work?
A change in perception may begin. Forgotten information may resurface. Words may be heard, dreams may carry a message, decisions may be made without immediately understanding why.
This is not a spectacular work. It is a realignment. It acts in its own way, in its own rhythm.
Combining cemetery soil and justice soil allows a frozen memory to move. It creates a passage between what is silenced and what must be acknowledged. And in this gesture, a real peace can begin to settle.
























































































































































































































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