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Because she want to keih lot with John proct.
what is tituba's problem
To draw attention away from themselves (and what they were doing in the woods) and make scapegoats out of others.
Hale believes Abigail over Tituba because 1.) Tituba was one of the first people accused of being a witch in Salem. 2.) Tituba is black and there is a large racial discrimination.
Tituba is Reverend Parris's black slave from Barbados. She agrees to perform voodoo at Abigail's request.
Because she want to keih lot with John proct.
what is tituba's problem
To draw attention away from themselves (and what they were doing in the woods) and make scapegoats out of others.
Hale believes Abigail over Tituba because 1.) Tituba was one of the first people accused of being a witch in Salem. 2.) Tituba is black and there is a large racial discrimination.
Tituba is Reverend Parris's black slave from Barbados. She agrees to perform voodoo at Abigail's request.
Rev. Parris is Betty's father and Abigail William's uncle. In addition, Tituba is Rev. Parris's slave.
The "proof" Abigail offers Reverend Hale is actually verbal claims. She claims that Tituba sings Barbados songs to her on a regular basis, and that Tituba forces her and the other girls to go into the forest and drink magic charms.
turning to Abigail for protection
When Abigail is accused of witchcraft, she is quick to blame Tituba. She says that Tituba influences her spirit to make her laugh in church.
Abigail Williams is a character in The Crucible. She does confess to her uncle that she had been dancing in the forest with Tituba.
The first to accuse Tituba was Betty Parris. The other three girls who were afflicted in the beginning, Abigail Williams, Ann Putnam and Elizabeth Hubbard, also accused Tituba.
Tituba confesses because Abigail basically puts her in a corner and blames her for the entire evil practice performed in the woods. She confesses more in depth to her association with the Devil once she is threatened by her master, Reverend Parris, with being whipped to death, and by Putnam, who said that she should be hanged.