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Man ordered to pay for traditional healing ceremony
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A California man who injured three Hmong men in a fight must pay their medical bills including more than $6,000 for animals and herbal medicines used in traditional healing ceremonies, a court has ruled.
Chad Wilson Keichler pleaded no contest to civil rights violations for uttering racial slurs against the Asian men during the brawl in Butte, California, and was ordered by a trial court to reimburse them for their medical expenses.
In addition to submitting hospital and doctor bills, the men turned in receipts for herbal medicines and cows, pigs and chickens slaughtered in Hmong “spirit-calling ceremonies.”
Keichler opposed making restitution for the nonmedical expenses, but a California appeals court on Wednesday ruled that he should pay because the ceremony is the equivalent of Western psychotherapy.
The Hmong are an ancient people with roots in China. They migrated into Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos in the 19th century. Many came to the United States as refugees after the Vietnam War.
In a letter to the court, victim Xiong Xeng Moua explained: “In my culture, one way of helping a person who has been traumatized … is to hold a traditional spirit calling to call my spirit back to me.”
An expert testified that the Hmong people believe that a person who is attacked may lose one of his many souls and become ill.
The expert said the souls of animals killed during the spirit-calling ceremony are called on to replace the victim’s lost soul. The animals are then eaten by attendees as part of the ceremony.
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