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Jinn

Jinn (Arabic: جن, jinn) – also romanized as djinn or anglicized as genies – are invisible creatures in early pre-Islamic Arabian religious systems and later in Islamic culture and beliefs.[1] Like humans, they are accountable for their deeds, can be either believers (Muslim) or unbelievers (kafir); depending on whether they accept God's guidance. Since jinn are neither innately evil nor innately good, Islam acknowledged spirits from other religions and was able to adapt them during its expansion. Jinn are not a strictly Islamic concept; they may represent several pagan beliefs integrated into Islam.[2][a] To assert a strict monotheism and the Islamic concept of Tauhid, Islam denies all affinities between the jinn and God, thus placing the jinn parallel to humans, also subject to God's judgment and afterlife. The Quran condemns the pre-Islamic Arabian practise of worshipping the jinn, or seeking protection from them.[4]

Jinn
Jinn, recognisable by their characteristic hooves, gather to do battle with the hero Faramarz. Illustration in an illuminated manuscript of the Iranian epic Shahnameh
GroupingMythical creature
FolkloreArabian mythology, Islamic folklore

Although generally invisible, jinn are supposed to be composed of thin and subtle bodies (ad̲j̲sām), they can change at will. They favour snake form, but can also choose to appear as scorpions, lizards or as humans. They may even engage in sexual affairs with humans and produce offspring. If they are injured by someone, they usually seek revenge or possess the assailant's body, refusing to leave it until forced to do so by exorcism. Jinn do not usually meddle in human affairs, preferring to live with their own kind in tribes similar to those of pre-Islamic Arabia.

Individual jinn appear on charms and talismans. They are called upon for protection or magical aid, often under the leadership of a king. Many people who believe in jinn wear amulets to protect themselves against the assaults of jinn, sent out by sorcerers and witches. A commonly-held belief maintains that jinn cannot hurt someone who wears something with the name of God (Allah) written upon it. While some Muslim scholars in the past have had ambivalent attitudes towards sorcery, believing that good jinn do not require one to commit sin, most contemporary Muslim scholars associate dealing with jinn with idolatry.

Etymology and translation

Jinn is an Arabic collective noun deriving from the Semitic root JNN (Arabic: جَنّ / جُنّ, jann), whose primary meaning is 'to hide' or 'to adapt'. Some authors interpret the word to mean, literally, 'beings that are concealed from the senses'.[5] Cognates include the Arabic majnūn (مَجْنُون, 'possessed' or, generally, 'insane'), jannah (جَنَّة, 'garden', 'eden' or 'heaven'), and janīn (جَنِين, 'embryo').[6] Jinn is properly treated as a plural (however in Classical Arabic, may also appear as jānn, جَانّ), with the singular being jinnī (جِنِّيّ).[b]

The origin of the word jinn remains uncertain.[3](p22) Some scholars relate the Arabic term jinn to the Latin genius – a guardian spirit of people and places in Roman religion – as a result of syncretism during the reign of the Roman empire under Tiberius and Augustus;[7](p38) however, this derivation is also disputed.[3](p25) Another suggestion holds that jinn may be derived from Aramaic ginnaya (Classical Syriac: ܓܢܝܐ) with the meaning of 'tutelary deity'[3](p24) or 'guardian'. Others claim a Persian origin of the word, in the form of the Avestic Jaini, a wicked (female) spirit. Jaini were among various creatures in the possibly even pre-Zoroastrian mythology of peoples of Iran.[8][9]

The anglicized form genie is a borrowing of the French génie, also from the Latin genius. It first appeared[10] in 18th-century translations of the Thousand and One Nights from the French,[11] where it had been used owing to its rough similarity in sound and sense and further applies to benevolent intermediary spirits, in contrast to the malevolent spirits called 'demon' and 'heavenly angels', in literature.[12] In Assyrian art, creatures ontologically between humans and divinities are also called genie.[13]

Though not a precise fit, descriptive analogies that have been used for these beings in Western thought include demon, spirit and fairy, depending on sources[14][3](p22)

Pre-Islamic era

 
The winged genie in the bucket and cone motif, depicting a demi-divine entity,[15] probably a forerunner of the pre-Islamic tutelary deities, who became the jinn in Islam. Relief from the north wall of the Palace of king Sargon II at Dur Sharrukin, 713–716 BCE.

The exact origins of belief in jinn are not entirely clear.[16](pp 1–10) Belief in jinn in the pre-Islamic Arab religion is testified not only by the Quran, but also by pre-Islamic literature in the seventh century.[17]: 54  Some scholars of the Middle East hold that they originated as malevolent spirits residing in deserts and unclean places, who often took the forms of animals;[16](p 1–10) others hold that they were originally pagan nature deities who gradually became marginalized as other deities took greater importance.[16](pp 1–10) Since the term jinn seems to be not of Arabic, but of Aramaic origin, denoting demonized pagan deities, the jinn probably entered Arabian belief in the late pre-Islamic period.[17]: 54  Still, jinn had been worshipped by many Arabs during the Pre-Islamic period,[7](p 34) though, unlike gods, jinn were not regarded as immortal. Emilie Savage-Smith, who asserted that jinn are malevolent in contrast to benevolent gods, doesn't hold this distinction to be absolute, admitting jinn-worship in pre-Islamic Arabia.[18]: 39  In the regions north to the Hejaz, Palmyra and Baalbek, the terms jinni and ilah were often used interchangeably.[19] Julius Wellhausen likewise states that in pre-Islamic Arabia it was assumed there are friendly and helpful beings among the jinn. He asserts that the distinction between a god and a jinni is, the jinn are worshipped in private while the gods are worshipped in public.[18]: 39 

Although their mortality ranks them lower than gods, it seems that the veneration of jinn had played more importance in the everyday life of pre-Islamic Arabs than the gods themselves. According to common Arabian belief, soothsayers, pre-Islamic philosophers, and poets were inspired by the jinn.[7](p 34)[16](pp 1–10) Their culture and society were analogous to that pre-Islamic Arabian culture, having tribal leaders, protecting their allies and avenging murder for any member of their tribe or allies.[20](p 424) Although the powers of jinn exceed those of humans, it is conceivable a man could kill a jinni in single combat. Jinn were thought to shift into different shapes, but were feared especially in their invisible form, since then they could attack without being seen.[21] Jinn were also feared because they had been thought to be responsible for various diseases and mental illnesses.[7](p 122)[16](pp 1–10) Julius Wellhausen observed that such spirits were thought to inhabit desolate, dingy, and dark places and that they were feared.[22] One had to protect oneself from them, but they were not the objects of a true cult.[22] Al-Jahiz credits the pre-Islamic Arabs with believing that the society of jinn constitutes several tribes and groups and some natural events were attributed to them, such as storms. They also thought jinn could protect, marry, kidnap, possess, and kill people.[23] Despite that they were often feared or they inspired awe, the jinn were also pictured to have romantic feelings for humans. According to a famous pre-Islamic story, the jinni Manzur fell in love with a human woman called Habbah, teaching her the arts of healing.[24]

Some scholars argue that angels and devils were introduced by the Prophet Muhammad to Arabia and did not exist among the jinn. On the other hand, Amira el-Zein[7] argues that angels were known to the pagan Arabs, but the term jinn was used for all kinds of supernatural entities among various religions and cults; thus, Zoroastrian, Christian, and Jewish angels and devils were conflated with jinn.[7](p 34)

Islamic beliefs

In scripture

 
The 72nd chapter of the Qur'an entitled Al-Jinn (The Jinn), as well as the heading and introductory bismillah of the next chapter entitled al-Muzzammil (The Enshrouded One)

Jinn are mentioned approximately 29 times in the Quran.[16](p21) By that the Quran confirms their existence to Muslims, but doesn't elaborate them any further.[25] In Islamic tradition, Muhammad was sent as a prophet to both human and jinn communities, and that prophets and messengers were sent to both communities.[26][27][28] Traditionally, the 72nd surah, Al-Jinn, named after them, is held to tell about the revelation to jinn and several stories mention one of Muhammad's followers accompanied him, witnessing the revelation to the jinn.[7](p64)

The Quran condemns pre-Islamic practise of worshipping jinn for means of protection ( 72:6).[29] The Quran reduced the status of jinn from that of tutelary deities to that of minor spirits, usually paralleling humans.[15] They are, like humans, rational beings formed of nations ( 7:38).[29] Surah 51:56 resumes that both jinn and humans were created to worship God. Surah 6:130 states that God has sent messengers to both humans and jinn.[29] Individuals among both communities are held accountable for their deeds, and will be punished or rewarded in the afterlife, in accordance with their deeds ( 7:179, 55:56).[29] It is impossible for both jinn and humans to approach God both physically ( 55:33) and mentally ( 17:90).[29]

Unlike humans, jinn are not vicegerents of the earth. Al-Baqara only credits Adam as a successor (khalifa).[29] However, some exegetes, like Tabari, argue that jinn inherited the world before, and that when angels complain about God creating humans who "will shed blood", they link humans to the jinn who ruled the earth previously.[30]

In the story of Solomon, it is implied that the jinn live on the earth alongside humans. Solomon is granted dominion over humans, ants, birds and jinn. The jinn served him as soldiers and builders of the First Temple.[31] According to the Quran, when Solomon died, the jinn have not recognized that his soul left his body until he fell on the ground. This is understood to be proof that the jinn, despite being generally invisible, do not know the unseen (Al-Ghaib).[32]

The jinn are also mentioned in collections of canonical hadiths. According to the reports of the hadiths, the jinn eat like humans, but instead of fresh food, they prefer rotten flesh and bones.[7](p51)[33] Another hadith advises to close doors and keep children close at night for the jinn go around and snatch things away.[16] One hadith divides them into three groups, with one type of jinn flying through the air; another that are snakes and dogs; and a third that moves from place to place like human.[34] This account parallels the jinn to humans, similar to the Quran, as another hadith divides humans into three groups, with one kind which is like four-legged beast, who are said to remain ignorant of God's message; a second one which is under the protection of God; and a last one with the body of a human, but the soul of a devil (shaitan).[35]

Exegesis

Belief in jinn is not included among the six articles of Islamic faith, as belief in angels is, however many Muslim scholars believe it essential to the Islamic faith.[36][37] Many scholars regard their existence and ability to enter human bodies as part of the aqida (theological doctrines) in the tradition of Ashari.[38] In Quranic interpretation, the term jinn can be used in two different ways:

  1. as invisible beings, considered to be, along with humans, thaqalān (accountable for their deeds), created out of "fire and air" (Arabic: مَارِجٍ مِن نَّار, mārijin min nār).[39]
  2. as the opposite of al-Ins (something in shape) referring to any object that cannot be detected by human sensory organs, including angels, devils, and the interior of human beings.[39][40]

Tabari records from ibn Abbas yet another usage for the term jinn, as reference to a tribe of angels created from the fires of samūm (Arabic: سَمُوم, 'poisonous fire'). They got their name from jannah ("heaven" or "paradise"), instead. They would have waged war against the jinn before the creation of Adam.[41] According to Tabari, the angels were created on Wednesday, the jinn on Thursday, and humans on Friday, though not in succession, but rather, more than 1000 years later, respectively.[3](p 43) With the revelation of Islam, the jinn were given a new chance to access salvation.[34][42][43] However, because of their prior creation, the jinn would attribute themselves to a superiority over humans and envy them for their place and rank on earth.[3](p 43)

The different jinn known in Islamic folklore are disregarded among most mufassirs – authors of tafsir – Tabari being an exception (though he is not specific about them, probably due to lack of theological significance). Since Tabari is one of the earliest commentators, the several jinn have been known since the earliest stages of Islam.[44](p 132) The ulama (scholars of Islamic law) discuss permissiblity of jinn marriage. Since the Quran talks about marriage with human women only, many regard it as prohibited. Some argue that someone who marries a jinn will lose fear in God.[45]

Classic theology

 
The Singer Ibrahim and the jinn. Ibrahim has been imprisoned by his master Muhammad al-Amin and visited by a jinn in guise of an old man. The jinn offers him food and drink and is so impressed by Ibrahim's voice that he convinces Muhammad to free him.[46]

The notion that jinn could possess individuals is generally accepted by the majority of Muslim scholars, and considered part of the doctrines (aqidah) of the "people of the Sunnah" (ahl as-sunnah wal-jammah'a) in the tradition of Ash'ari.[38](p 68) A minority of Muslim scholars, associated with the Muʿtazila, denied that jinn could possess a human physically, asserting they could only influence humans by whispering to them, like the devils do.[38](p 73)[47] Some, like ibn Sina,[48](p 89) even denied their existence altogether. Sceptics refused to believe in a literal reading on jinn in Islamic sacred texts, preferring to view them as "unruly men" or metaphorical.[34]

Other critics, such as Jahiz and Mas'udi, explained jinn and demons as a merely psychological phenomena. Jahiz states in his Kitāb al-Hayawān that loneliness induces humans to mind-games and wishful thinking, causing waswās (Arabic: وَسْوَاس, 'demonic whisperings in the mind'), causing a fearful man to see things which are not real. These alleged appearances are told to other generations in bedtime stories and poems, and when they grow up, they remember these stories when they are alone or afraid, encouraging their imaginations and causing another alleged sighting of jinn.[3](p37)

According to the Asharites, the existence of jinn and demons cannot be proven or falsified, because arguments concerning the existence of such entities are beyond human comprehension. Adepts of Ashʿari theology explain that jinn are invisible to humans because humans lack the appropriate sensory organs to envision them.[7](p22) Hanbali scholar ibn Taymiyya and Zahiri scholar ibn Hazm regarded denial of jinn as "unbelief" (kufr), since they are mentioned in Islamic sacred texts. They further point towards demons and spirits in other religions, such as Christianity, Zorastrianism and Judaism, as evidence for their existence.[3](p33) Ibn Taymiyya believed the jinn to be generally "ignorant, untruthful, oppressive, and treacherous". He held that the jinn account for much of the "magic" that is perceived by humans, cooperating with magicians to lift items in the air, delivering hidden truths to fortune tellers, and mimicking the voices of deceased humans during seances.[49]

Al-Maturidi relates the jinn to their depiction as former minor deities, writing that humans seek refuge among the jinn, but the jinn are actually weaker than humans. Not the jinn but human's own mind and attitude towards them are the sources of fear. By submitting to the jinn, humans allow the jinn to have power over them, humiliate themselves, increase their dependence on them, and commit shirk.[50] Abu l-Lait as-Samarqandi, a disciple of the Maturidi school of theology, is attributed to the opinion that, unlike angels and devils, humans and jinn are created with fitra, neither born as believers nor as unbelievers; their attitude depends on whether they accept God's guidance.[1]

Still, jinn were not perceived as necessarily evil or hostile beings. In the story of Nasir Khusraw's (1004 – after 1070 CE) burial, his brother is assisted by two jinn. They cut a rock and shape it into a tombstone.[51]

Modern theology

Many modernists tried to reconcile the traditional perspective on jinn with modern sciences. Muhammad Abduh understood references to jinn in the Quran to denote anything invisible, be it an indefined force or a simple inclination towards good or evil.[52] He further asserted that jinn might be an ancient description of germs, since both are associated with diseases and cannot be perceived by the human eye alone,[53] an idea adapted by the Ahmadi sect.[54]

On the other hand, Salafism rejects a metaphorical reinterpretation of jinn or to identify them with microorganisms, advocating a literal belief in jinn. Furthermore, they reject protection and healing rituals common across Islamic culture used to ward off jinn or to prevent possession. It takes up the position that this is a form of idolatry (shirk),[55] associating the jinn with devils. Many modern preachers substituted (evil) jinn by devils.[56] For that reason, Saudi Arabia, following the Wahhabism tradition of Salafism, imposes a death penalty for dealing with jinn to prevent sorcery and witchcraft.[57][58] The importance of belief in jinn to Islamic belief in contemporary Muslim society was underscored by the judgment of apostasy by an Egyptian Sharia court in 1995 against liberal theologian Nasr Abu Zayd.[59] Zayd was declared an unbeliever of Islam for – among other things – arguing that the reason for the presence of jinn in the Quran was that they (jinn) were part of Arab culture at the time of the Quran's revelation, rather than that they were part of God's creation.[37] Death threats led to Zayd leaving Egypt several weeks later.[c]

In Turkey, Süleyman Ateş's Quran commentary describes the jinn as hostile beings to whom the pagans made sacrifices in order to please them. They would have erroneously assumed that the jinn (and angels) were independent deities and thus fell into širk. By that, humans would associate partners with God and humiliate themselves towards the jinn spiritually.[d]

Belief in jinn

 
The cave chamber Majlis al Jinn, believed to be a gathering place of the jinn in Omani lore

Folklore

The jinn are of pre-Islamic Arabian origin. Since the Quran affirms their existence, when Islam spread outside of Arabia jinn belief was adopted by later Islamic culture.[31] The Quran reduced the status of the jinn from that of tutelary deities to something parallel to humans, subject to the judgement of the supreme deity of Islam. By that, the jinn were considered a third class of invisible beings, not consequently equated with devils,[7](p52) and Islam was able to integrate local beliefs about spirits and deities from Iran, Africa, Turkey and India, into a monotheistic framework.[61]

The jinn are believed to live in societies resembling those of humans, practicing religion (including Islam, Christianity and Judaism), having emotions, needing to eat and drink, and can procreate and raise families. Muslim jinn are usually thought to be benign, Christian and Jewish jinn indifferent unless angered, and pagan jinn evil.[62] Other common characteristics include fear of iron and wolves,[63] generally appearing in desolate or abandoned places, and being stronger and faster than humans.[34] Night is considered a particularly dangerous time, because the jinn would then leave their hiding places.[18]: 15  Since the jinn share the earth with humans, Muslims are often cautious not to accidentally hurt an innocent jinn.

Jinn are often believed to be able to take control over a human's body. Although this is a strong belief among many Muslims, some authors argue that since the Quran doesn't explicitly attribute possession to the jinn, it derives from pre-Islamic beliefs.[64] Morocco, especially, has many possession traditions, including exorcism rituals,[65] However, jinn can not enter a person whenever the jinni wants; rather, the victim must be predisposed for possession in a state of dha'iyfah (Arabic: ضَعِيفَة, "weakness"). Feelings of insecurity, mental instability, unhappy love and depression (being "tired from the soul") are forms of dha'iyfah.[66]

Javanese Muslims hold similar beliefs about the jinn as inhabiting lonely and haunted places, and the ability to possess or scare people who trample their homes or accidentally kill a related jinni. In some cases, jinn might even take revenge by inflicting physical damage. Muslims avoid hurting jinn by uttering "destur" (permission), before sprinkling hot water, so the jinn might leave the place.[34][67][16](p149) Some jinn guard graves and cause illness to people, who intent to disturb the graves.[68] Benevolent jinn are called jinn Islam, and they are pious and faithful, the other are called jinn kafir. While good jinn might even help a Muslim to do hard work and produce magical acts,[69] evil jinn follow the influence of devils (shayatin).

In Artas (Bethlehem), benevolent jinn might support humans and teach them moral lessons. The evil jinn frequently ascend to the surface, causing sickness to children, snatching food, and taking revenge when humans mistreat them.[70] In later Albanian lore too, jinn (Xhindi) live either on earth or under the surface rather than in the air, and may possess people who have insulted them, for example if their children are trodden upon or hot water is thrown on them.[71] In Senegal jinn are believed provide magical aid if the powers of a spiritual healer are too weak. Like in the previous metioned regions, jinn can also be dangerous. They can scare or devour a human being, if they like to. Therefore, most people try to avoid contacting jinn or offer gifts when it is believed jinn are preying on a human.[72]

Among Turks, jinn (Turkish: Cin) often appear along with other demonic entities, such as the divs as within Azerbaijani mythology.[73] The divs are from Persian mythology. Some early Persian translations of the Quran translated jinn either as peris or divs,[34] causing confusion between those entities.[74] In other instances, the jinn are known as cor and chort, distinguished from iye. While the iye is bound to a specific place,[75] Turkish sources too, describe jinn as mobile creatures causing illnesses and mental disorders with a physical body, which only remains invisible until they die, and inhabiting desolated places.[75] The term in, used only in the form in-cin has the same meaning as jinn.[76] In-cin are used in Turkish phrases to refer to a place so deserted, such beings ho usually hide from sight would gather around this place, such as in "in cin top oynyor" (In play ball with the jinn).[77]

In folk literature

 
The black king of the djinns, Al-Malik al-Aswad, from the late 14th-century Book of Wonders

The jinn can be found in various stories of the One Thousand and One Nights, including in:

In some stories, the jinn are credited with the ability of instantaneous travel (from China to Morocco in a single instant); in others, they need to fly from one place to another, though quite fast (from Baghdad to Cairo in a few hours).

Modern and post-modern era

Prevalence of belief

Though discouraged by some teachings of modern Islam, cultural beliefs about jinn remain popular among Muslim societies and their understanding of cosmology and anthropology.[83] Affirmation on the existence of jinn as sapient creatures living along with humans is still widespread in the Middle Eastern world, and mental illnesses are still often attributed to jinn possession.[84]

According to a survey undertaken by the Pew Research Center in 2012, at least 86% of Muslims in Morocco, 84% in Bangladesh, 63% in Turkey, 55% in Iraq, 53% in Indonesia, 47% in Thailand and 15% elsewhere in Central Asia, affirm a belief in the existence of jinn. The low rate in Central Asia might be influenced by Soviet religious oppression.[85] 36% of Muslims in Bosnia and Herzegovina believe in jinn, which is higher than the European average (30%), although only 21% believe in sorcery and 13% would wear talisman for protection against jinn. 12% support offerings and appeal given to the jinn.[86]

Most of the Islamic-majority countries in West Africa have a long tradition of jinn stories and populations that mostly believe in their existence, although there are some Islamic movements in the area that reject their existence.[87]

Sleep paralysis is understood as a "jinn attack" by many sleep paralysis sufferers in Egypt, as discovered by a Cambridge neuroscience study Jalal, Simons-Rudolph, Jalal, & Hinton (2013).[88] The study found that as many as 48% of those who experience sleep paralysis in Egypt believe it to be an assault by the jinn.[88] Almost all of these sleep paralysis sufferers (95%) would recite verses from the Quran during sleep paralysis to prevent future "jinn attacks". In addition, some (9%) would increase their daily Islamic prayer (salah) to get rid of these assaults by jinn.[88] Sleep paralysis is generally associated with great fear in Egypt, especially if believed to be supernatural in origin.[89]

However, despite belief in jinn being prevalent in Iran's folklore, especially among more observant believers of Islam, some phenomena such as sleep paralysis were traditionally attributed to other supernatural beings; in the case of sleep paralysis, it was bakhtak (night hag). But at least in some areas of Iran, an epileptic seizure was thought to be a jinn attack or jinn possession, and people would try to exorcise the jinn by citing the name of God and using iron blades to draw protective circles around the victim.[90]

Telling jinn stories and recounting alleged encounters with them were a common pastime in parts of the Muslim world, similar to telling ghost stories in western cultures, until a couple of decades ago when these stories fell out of fashion, thanks to the increasing penetration of digital entertainments and modern recording equipment which undermined their credibility.

Post-modern literature and movies

Jinn feature in the magical realism genre, introduced into Turkish literature by Tekin (1983),[91] who uses magical elements known from pre-Islamic and Islamic Anatolian lore. Since the 1980s, this genre has become prominent in Turkish literature. A story by Tekin combines elements of folkloric and religious belief with a rationalized society. The protagonist is a girl who befriends inanimate objects and several spirits, such as jinn and peri (fairy). While the existence of jinn is generally accepted by the people within the novel, when her family moves from rural Anatolia into the city, the jinn do not appear anymore.

Jinn are still accepted as real by Muslims in the novel's urban setting, but play no part in modern life. The existence of jinn is accepted throughout the novel, but when the setting changes to the city, they cease to have any importance, symbolizing the replacement of tradition by modernization for Anatolian immigrants.[92]

Contrary to the neutral to positive depiction of jinn in Tekin's novels, jinn became a common trope in Middle Eastern horror movies. In Turkish horror, jinn have been popular since 2004.[93] Out of 89 films, 59 have direct references to jinn as the antagonist, 12 use other sorts of demons, while other types of horror, such as the impending apocalypse, hauntings, or ghosts, constitute only 14 films.[94] Unlike other Horror elements, such as ghosts and zombies, the existence of jinn is affirmed by the Quran, and thus accepted by a majority of Muslims.[95] The presentation of jinn usually combines Quranic with oral and cultural beliefs about jinn.[94] The jinn are presented as inactive inhabitants of the earth, only interfering with human affairs when summoned by a sorcerer or witch.[95] Although the jinn, often summoned by pagan rituals or sorcery, appear to pose a challenge to Islam, the films assure that Islamic law protects Muslims from their presence. It is the one who summoned them in the first place who gets punished or suffers from the presence of jinn.[95]

Similarly, jinn appear in Iranian horror movies despite a belittling of the popular understanding of jinn by an increasing number of Islamic fundamentalistic reformists.[96] In the post-Iranian revolution psychological horror movie Under the Shadow the protagonist is afraid the jinn, who are completely veiled and concealed and intrude into her life frequently. In the end, however, she is forced by the Iranian guards to take on a Chador, and thus becomes like the jinn she feared. The jinn symbolize the Islamic regime and their intrusion into private life, criticises the Islamic regime and patriarchal structures.[97]

Physicality and relationships with humans

 
A Sinai desert cobra. Snakes are the animals most frequently associated with jinn. Black snakes are commonly believed to be evil jinn, whereas white snakes are held to be benign (Muslim) jinn.[98]

Jinn are not supernatural in the sense of being purely spiritual and transcendent to nature; while they are believed to be invisible (or often invisible) they also eat, drink, sleep, breed with the opposite sex, and produce offspring that resemble their parents. Intercourse is not limited to other jinn alone, but is also possible between human and jinn.[99]

Despite being invisible, jinn are usually thought to have bodies (ad̲j̲sām). Zakariya al-Qazwini includes the jinn (angels, jinn, and devils all created from different parts of fire) among animals, along with humans, burdened beasts (like horses), cattles, wild beasts, birds, and finally insects and reptiles.[100](p135) The Qanoon-e-Islam, written 1832 by Sharif Ja'far, writing about jinn-belief in India, states that their bodies are constituted of 90% spirit and 10% flesh.[101] They resemble humans in many regards, their subtle matter being the only main difference. But it is this very nature that enables them to change their shape, move quickly, fly, and, entering human bodies, cause epilepsy and illness, hence the temptation for humans to make them allies by means of magical practices.[102]

Jinn are further known as gifted shapeshifters, often assuming the form of an animal. In Islamic culture, many narratives concern a serpent who is actually a jinni.[3](p116) Other chthonic animals regarded as forms of jinn include scorpions and lizards. Both scorpions and serpents have been venerated in the ancient Near East. Some sources even speak of killed jinn leaving behind a carcass similar to either a serpent or a scorpion.[7]: 91–93  When they shift into a human form, however they are said to stay partly animal and are not fully human. Individual jinn are thus often depicted as monstrous and anthropomorphized creatures with body parts from different animals or human with animal traits.[3](p164)[7](p164)

Certain hadith, though ones considered fabricated (maudhu) by some hadith scholars (muhaddith), support the belief in human-jinn relationships:[103]

“The Hour will come when the children of jinn will become many among you.”

— Suyuti, Laqt al-marjân, 38.[103]

“Among you are those who are expatriated (mugharrabûn);” and this, he explained, meant “crossed with jinn.”

— Suyuti, Laqt al-marjân, 28.[103]

Among those scholars that hold to these beliefs, marriage is considered permissible between a jinn and a human, it is undesirable (makruh) while others strongly forbid it.[103] Offspring of human-jinn relationships are often considered to be gifted and talented people with special abilities, and some historical persons were considered to have jinnic ancestry.[20] In a study of exorcism culture in the Yemeni province of Hadramawt, love was one of the most frequent cited causes of relationships between humans and jinn.[e]

Visual art

Although there are very few visual representations of jinn in Islamic art, when they do appear, it is usually related to a specific event or individual jinn.

Visual representations of jinn appear in manuscripts and their existence is often implied in works of architecture by the presence of apotropaic devices like serpents, which were intended to ward off evil spirits. Lastly, King Solomon is illustrated very often with jinn as the commander of an army that included them.

The seven jinn kings

 
The red king of the djinns, Al-Ahmar, from the late 14th-century Book of Wonders.

In the Kitab al-Bulhan (or the Book of Surprises) compiled in the 14th century by Abd al-Hasan Al-Isfahani, there are illustrations of 'The seven jinn kings'.[104](p27) In general, each 'King of the Jinn' was represented alongside his helpers and alongside the corresponding talismanic symbols.[104](p27) For instance, the 'Red King of Tuesday' was depicted in the Kitab al-Bulhan as a sinister form astride a lion. In the same illustration, he holds a severed head and a sword. This was because the 'Red King of Tuesday' was aligned with Mars, the god of war.[104](p27) Alongside that, there were illustrations of the 'Gold King' and the 'White King'.[104](p27)

Aside from the seven 'Kings of the Jinn', the Kitab al-Bulhan included an illustration of Huma, or the 'Fever'. Huma was depicted as three-headed and as embracing the room around him, in order to capture someone and bring on a fever in them.[104](p28)

 
Ornamentation of intertwined serpents above the door of the Citadel of Aleppo.

Architectural representation

In addition to these representations of jinn in vicinity to kingship, there were also architectural references to jinn throughout the Islamic world. In the Citadel of Aleppo, the entrance gate Bab al-Hayyat made reference to jinn in the stone relief carvings of serpents; likewise, the water gate at Ayyubid Harran housed two copper sculptures of jinn, serving as talismans to ward off both snakes and evil jinn in the form of snakes.[105](p408)

Alongside these depictions of the jinn found at the Aleppo Citadel, depictions of the jinn can be found in the Rūm Seljuk palace. There are a phenomenal range of creatures that can be found on the eight-pointed tiles of the Seal of Sulaymān device.[105](p390) Among these were the jinn, that belonged among Solomon's army and as Solomon claimed to have control over the jinn, so did the Rūm Seljuk sultan that claimed to be the Sulaymān of his time.[105](p393) In fact, one of the most common representations of jinn are alongside or in association with King Solomon. It was thought that King Solomon had very close ties to the jinn, and even had control over many of them.[105](p399) The concept that a great and just ruler has the ability to command jinn was one that extended far past only King Solomon– it was also thought that emperors, such as Alexander the Great, could control an army of jinn in a similar way.[105](p399) Given this association, Jinn were often seen with Solomon in a princely or kingly context, such as the small, animal-like jinn sitting beside King Solomon on his throne illustrated in an illuminated manuscript of The Wonders of Creation and the Oddities of Existence by Zakariyya al-Qazwini, written in the 13th century.[106]

Talismanic representation

The jinn had an indirect impact on Islamic art through the creation of talismans that were alleged to guard the bearer from the jinn and were enclosed in leather and included Qur'anic verses.[7](p80) It was not unusual for those talismans to be inscribed with separated Arabic letters, because the separation of those letters was thought to positively affect the potency of the talisman overall.[7](p82) An object that was inscribed with the word of Allah was thought to have the power to ward off evil from the person who obtained the object, though many of these objects also had astrological signs, depictions of prophets, or religious narratives.[107]

In witchcraft and magical literature

 
Zawba'a or Zoba'ah, the jinn-king of Friday

Witchcraft (Arabic: سِحْر, sihr, which is also used to mean 'magic, wizardry') is often associated with jinn and afarit[108] around the Middle East. Therefore, a sorcerer may summon a jinn and force him to perform orders. Summoned jinn may be sent to the chosen victim to cause demonic possession. Such summonings were done by invocation,[16](p153) by aid of talismans or by satisfying the jinn, thus to make a contract.[109]

Jinn are also regarded as assistants of soothsayers. Soothsayers reveal information from the past and present; the jinn can be a source of this information because their lifespans exceed those of humans.[110] Another way to subjugate them is by inserting a needle to their skin or dress. Since jinn are afraid of iron, they are unable to remove it with their own power.[111]

Ibn al-Nadim, Muslim scholar of his Kitāb al-Fihrist, describes a book that lists 70 jinn led by Fuqṭus (Arabic: فقْطس), including several jinn appointed over each day of the week.[112][16](p38) Bayard Dodge, who translated al-Fihrist into English, notes that most of these names appear in the Testament of Solomon.[112] A collection of late 14th- or early 15th-century magico-medical manuscripts from Ocaña, Spain describes a different set of 72 jinn (termed "Tayaliq") again under Fuqtus (here named "Fayqayțūš" or Fiqitush), blaming them for various ailments.[113][114] According to these manuscripts, each jinni was brought before King Solomon and ordered to divulge their "corruption" and "residence" while the Jinn King Fiqitush gave Solomon a recipe for curing the ailments associated with each jinni as they confessed their transgressions.[115]

A disseminated treatise on the occult, written by al-Ṭabasī, called Shāmil, deals with subjugating devils and jinn by incantations, charms and the combination of written and recited formulae and to obtain supernatural powers through their aid. Al-Ṭabasī distinguished between licit and illicit magic, the latter founded on disbelief, while the first on purity.[116] Allegedly, he was able to demonstrate to Mohammad Ghazali the jinn. He would have appeared to him as "a shadow on the wall."[117]

Seven kings of the Jinn are traditionally associated with days of the week.[16](p87) They are also attested in the Book of Wonders. Although many passages are damaged, they remain in Ottoman copies. These jinn-kings (sometimes afarit instead) are invoked to legitimate spells performed by amulets.[118]

Associations
Planet Day Angel that monitors the associated ‘Afārīt

(Arabic; Hebrew equivalent)

‘Afārīt Type of madness (جُنُون, junūn) and parts of the body attacked Remarks
Common name Known other names
Sun Sunday Ruqya'il (روقيائيل); Raphael (רפאל) Al-Mudhdhahab/ Al-Mudhhib/ Al-Mudhhab (المذهب; The Golden One) Abu 'Abdallah Sa'id the name "Al-Mudh·dhahab" refers to the jinn's skin tone.
Moon Monday Jibril (جبريل); Gabriel (גבריאל) Al-Abyaḍ (الابيض; The White One) Murrah al-Abyad Abu al-Harith; Abu an-Nur Whole body the name "Al-Abyaḍ" refers to the jinn's skin tone, however he is portrayed as a "dark black, charcoal" figure. The possible connection of this name is with another name "Abū an-Nūr" ("Father of Light"); his names are the same as whose applied to Iblīs.
Mars Tuesday Samsama'il (سمسمائيل); Samael (סמאל) Al-Aḥmar (الاحمر; The Red One) Abu Mihriz; Abu Ya'qub Head, uterus the name "Al-Aḥmar" refers to the jinn's skin tone.
Mercury Wednesday Mikail (ميكائيل); Michael (מיכאל) Būrqān/ Borqaan (بورقان; Two Thunders) Abu al-'Adja'yb; Al-Aswad Back
Jupiter Thursday Sarfya'il (صرفيائيل); Zadkiel (צדקיאל) Shamhuresh (شمهورش) Abu al-Walid; At-Tayyar Belly
Venus Friday 'Anya'il (عنيائيل); Anael (ענאל) Zawba'ah (زوبعة; Cyclone, Whirlwind) Abu Hassan It is said the "whirlwind" (zawba'ah), to be caused by an evil jinn which travels inside it.
Saturn Saturday Kasfa'il (كسفيائيل); Cassiel (קפציאל) Maymun (ميمون; Prosperous) Abu Nuh Feet His name means "monkey"[104]

During the Rwandan genocide, both Hutus and Tutsis avoided searching local Rwandan Muslim neighborhoods because they widely believed the myth that local Muslims and mosques were protected by the power of Islamic magic and the efficacious jinn.[citation needed] In the Rwandan city of Cyangugu, arsonists ran away instead of destroying the mosque because they feared the wrath of the jinn, whom they believed were guarding the mosque.[119]

Comparative mythology

Ancient Mesopotamian religion

Beliefs in entities similar to the jinn are found throughout pre-Islamic Middle Eastern cultures.[16]: 1–10  The ancient Sumerians believed in Pazuzu, a wind demon,[16]: 1–10 [120]: 147–148  who was shown with "a rather canine face with abnormally bulging eyes, a scaly body, a snake-headed penis, the talons of a bird and usually wings."[120](p147) The ancient Babylonians believed in utukku, a class of demons which were believed to haunt remote wildernesses, graveyards, mountains, and the sea, all locations where jinn were later thought to reside.[16]: 1–10  The Babylonians also believed in the Rabisu, a vampiric demon believed to leap out and attack travelers at unfrequented locations, similar to the post-Islamic ghūl,[16]: 1–10  a specific kind of jinn whose name is etymologically related to that of the Sumerian galla, a class of Underworld demon.[121][122]

Lamashtu, also known as Labartu, was a divine demoness said to devour human infants.[16]: 1–10 [120](p115) Lamassu, also known as Shedu, were guardian spirits, sometimes with evil propensities.[16]: 1–10 [120]: 115–116  The Assyrians believed in the Alû, sometimes described as a wind demon residing in desolate ruins who would sneak into people's houses at night and steal their sleep.[16]: 1–10  In the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra, entities similar to jinn were known as ginnayê,[16]: 1–10  an Aramaic name which may be etymologically derived from the name of the genii from Roman mythology.[16]: 1–10  Like jinn among modern-day Bedouin, ginnayê were thought to resemble humans.[16]: 1–10  They protected caravans, cattle, and villages in the desert[16]: 1–10  and tutelary shrines were kept in their honor.[16]: 1–10  They were frequently invoked in pairs.[16]: 1–10 

Judaism

The description of jinn is almost identical with that of the shedim from Jewish mythology. As with the jinn, some of whom follow the law brought by Muhammad, some of the shedim are believed to be followers of the law of Moses and consequently good.[123] Both are said to be invisible to human eyes but are nevertheless subject to bodily desires, like procreating and the need to eat. Some Jewish sources agree with the Islamic notion that jinn inhabited the world before humans.[124] Asmodeus appears both as an individual of the jinn or shedim, as an antagonist of Solomon.[16](p120)

Buddhism

As in Islam, the idea of spiritual entities converting to one's own religion can be found in Buddhism. According to lore, Buddha preached to Devas and Asura, spiritual entities who, like humans, are subject to the cycle of life, and who resemble the Islamic notion of jinn, who are also ontologically placed among humans in regard to eschatological destiny.[7](p165)[125]

Christianity

Van Dyck's Arabic translation of the Old Testament uses the alternative collective plural "jann" (Arab:الجان); translation:al-jānn) to render the Hebrew word usually translated into English as "familiar spirit" (אוב, Strong #0178) in several places (Leviticus 19:31, 20:6; 1 Samuel 28:3,7,9; 1 Chronicles 10:13).[126]

Some scholars evaluated whether the jinn might be compared to fallen angels in Christian traditions. Comparable to Augustine's descriptions of fallen angels as ethereal, jinn seem to be considered as the same substance. Although the concept of fallen angels is not absent in the Quran,[127] the jinn nevertheless differ in their major characteristics from that of fallen angels: While fallen angels fell from heaven, the jinn did not, but try to climb up to it in order to receive the news of the angels. Jinn are closer to daemons.[128]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ From T. Nünlist (2015) Dämonenglaube im Islam[3]: 2 
    TRANSLATION: (in English)
    "M. Dols points out that jinn-belief is not a strictly Islamic concept. It rather includes countless elements of idol-worship, as Muhammad's enemies practised in Mecca during jahilliya. According to F. Meier early Islam integrated many pagan deities into its system by degrading them to spirits. 1. In Islam, the existence of spirits that are neither angels nor necessarily devils is acknowledged. 2. Thereby Islam is able to incorporate non-biblical[,] non-Quranic ideas about mythic images, that means: a. degrading deities to spirits and therefore taking into the spiritual world. b. taking daemons, not mentioned in the sacred traditions of Islam, of uncertain origin. c. consideration of spirits to tolerate or advising to regulate them."[3](p2)
    ORIGINAL: (in German)
    "M. Dols macht darauf aufmerksam, dass der Ginn-Glaube kein strikt islamisches Konzept ist. Er beinhaltet vielmehr zahllose Elemente einer Götzenverehrung, wie sie Muhammads Gegner zur Zeit der gahiliyya in Mekka praktizierten. Gemäß F. Meier integrierte der junge Islam bei seiner raschen Expansion viele heidnische Gottheiten in sein System, indem er sie zu Dämonen degradierte. 1. Im Islam wird die Existenz von Geistern, die weder Engel noch unbedingt Teufel sein müssen, anerkannt. 2. Damit besitzt der Islam die Möglichkeit, nicht-biblische[,] nicht koranische Vorstellungen von mythischen Vorstellungen sich einzuverleiben, d.h.: a. Götter zu Geistern zu erniedrigen und so ins islamische Geisterreich aufzunehmen. b. in der heiligen Überlieferung des Islams nicht eigens genannte Dämonen beliebiger Herkunft zu übernehmen. c. eine Berücksichtigung der Geister zu dulden oder gar zu empfehlen und sie zu regeln."[3](p2)[2]
  2. ^ sometimes Arabs use Jānn (Arabic: جان) term for singular, jānn also referred to jinn world – another plural, snakes / serpents and another type of jinn
  3. ^ Hostility against Nasr Abu Zayd was sufficiently strong that even a police guard guarding his residence in Cairo referred to him as an unbeliever, telling Zayd's neighbors that [the guard] was there "because of the kafir".[60]
  4. ^ Takım, Abdullah: Koranexegese im 20. Jahrhundert: islamische Tradition und neue Ansätze in Süleyman Ateş's „Zeitgenössischem Korankommentar“, Istanbul 2007 p. 104[3]: 2 
    TRANSLATION: (in English)
    "It was believed that these deities were detached from God and were gods in their own right, independent on Allah, the High God. They also imagined a genealogy between God and spirits (jinn). So the Arabs had gods and goddesses. This shows that they were also influenced, for example, by the Greek cult of gods, in which a genealogical relationship between the gods also played a role and gods and goddesses existed. According to Süleyman Ates, this attitude is clearly polytheism. (...) But he also points out that this degrades man spiritually."
    ORIGINAL: (in German)
    "Man glaubte, dass sich diese Gottheiten von Gott losgelöst haben und selbstständige Götter seien, die nicht von Allah, dem Hochgott, abhängig sind. Dabei stellte man sich auch eine Genealogie zwischen Gott und Geistwesen (ginn) vor. Bei den Arabern gab es also Götter und Göttinnen. Dies Dies zeigt, dass sie z.B. auch vom griechischen Götterkult beeinflusst worden sind, in der ja auch eine genealologische Beziehung zwischen den Göttern eine Rolle spielen und Götter und Göttinnen vorhanden sind. Diese Haltung ist laut Süleyman Ates eindeutig Vielgötterei. (...) Doch er weist auch darauf hin, dass der Mensc sich dadurch geistig erniedrigt."
  5. ^ Love seems to be the most frequent occasion of contact between men and jinn. A jinni meets a woman and falls in love with her, or vice versa... This possession is manifest notably when the jinni has sexual intercourse with the person he/she possesses. In that case, the individual behaves with gestures and words as if they were having sexual intercourse, although he/she is apparently alone in the room. Besides, this person seems to suddenly lose all interest for his/her environment."[103]

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Further reading

  • Asad, Muhammad (1980). "Appendix III: On the term and concept of jinn". The Message of the Qu'rán. Gibraltar, Spain: Dar al-Andalus Limited. ISBN 1-904510-00-0.
  • Crapanzano, V. (1973). The Hamadsha: A study in Moroccan ethnopsychiatry. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
  • Dibi, Tofik (2021). Djinn. Queer Politics and Cultures. Translated by Barr, Nicolaas P. Albany, NY: SUNY Press. ISBN 9781438481302.
  • Drijvers, H.J.W. (1976). The Religion of Palmyra. Leiden, NL: Brill.
  • el-Zein, Amira (2009). Islam, Arabs, and the intelligent world of the Jinn. Contemporary Issues in the Middle East. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press. ISBN 978-0-8156-3200-9.
  • El-Zein, Amira (2006). "Jinn". In Meri, J.F. (ed.). Medieval Islamic Civilization – an Encyclopedia. New York, NY & Abingdon, UK: Routledge. pp. 420–421.
  • Goodman, L.E. (1978). The case of the animals versus man before the king of the jinn: A tenth-century ecological fable of the pure brethren of Basra. Library of Classical Arabic Literature. Vol. 3. Boston, MA: Twayne.
  • Maarouf, M. (2007). Jinn Eviction as a Discourse of Power: A multidisciplinary approach to Moroccan magical beliefs and practices. Leiden: Brill.
  • Peterson, Mark Allen (2007). "From Jinn to Genies: Intertextuality, media, and the making of global folklore". In Sherman, Sharon R.; Koven, Mikel J. (eds.). Folklore/Cinema: Popular film as vernacular culture. Logan, UT: Utah State University Press – via Utah State U. digital commons.
  • Taneja, Anand V. (2017). Jinnealogy: Time, Islam, and ecological thought in the medieval ruins of Delhi. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-1-5036-0393-6.
  • Zbinden, E. (1953). Die Djinn des Islam und der altorientalische Geisterglaube [The Djinn of Islam and Ancient Eastern Spiritual Belief] (in German). Bern, CH: Haupt.

External links

  • Etymology of genie

jinn, several, terms, redirect, here, other, uses, disambiguation, disambiguation, djinn, disambiguation, genie, disambiguation, arabic, جن, jinn, also, romanized, djinn, anglicized, genies, invisible, creatures, early, islamic, arabian, religious, systems, la. Several terms redirect here For other uses see Jinni disambiguation Jinn disambiguation Djinn disambiguation and Genie disambiguation Jinn Arabic جن jinn also romanized as djinn or anglicized as genies are invisible creatures in early pre Islamic Arabian religious systems and later in Islamic culture and beliefs 1 Like humans they are accountable for their deeds can be either believers Muslim or unbelievers kafir depending on whether they accept God s guidance Since jinn are neither innately evil nor innately good Islam acknowledged spirits from other religions and was able to adapt them during its expansion Jinn are not a strictly Islamic concept they may represent several pagan beliefs integrated into Islam 2 a To assert a strict monotheism and the Islamic concept of Tauhid Islam denies all affinities between the jinn and God thus placing the jinn parallel to humans also subject to God s judgment and afterlife The Quran condemns the pre Islamic Arabian practise of worshipping the jinn or seeking protection from them 4 JinnJinn recognisable by their characteristic hooves gather to do battle with the hero Faramarz Illustration in an illuminated manuscript of the Iranian epic ShahnamehGroupingMythical creatureFolkloreArabian mythology Islamic folkloreAlthough generally invisible jinn are supposed to be composed of thin and subtle bodies ad j sam they can change at will They favour snake form but can also choose to appear as scorpions lizards or as humans They may even engage in sexual affairs with humans and produce offspring If they are injured by someone they usually seek revenge or possess the assailant s body refusing to leave it until forced to do so by exorcism Jinn do not usually meddle in human affairs preferring to live with their own kind in tribes similar to those of pre Islamic Arabia Individual jinn appear on charms and talismans They are called upon for protection or magical aid often under the leadership of a king Many people who believe in jinn wear amulets to protect themselves against the assaults of jinn sent out by sorcerers and witches A commonly held belief maintains that jinn cannot hurt someone who wears something with the name of God Allah written upon it While some Muslim scholars in the past have had ambivalent attitudes towards sorcery believing that good jinn do not require one to commit sin most contemporary Muslim scholars associate dealing with jinn with idolatry Contents 1 Etymology and translation 2 Pre Islamic era 3 Islamic beliefs 3 1 In scripture 3 2 Exegesis 3 3 Classic theology 3 4 Modern theology 4 Belief in jinn 4 1 Folklore 4 1 1 In folk literature 4 2 Modern and post modern era 4 2 1 Prevalence of belief 4 2 2 Post modern literature and movies 5 Physicality and relationships with humans 6 Visual art 6 1 The seven jinn kings 6 2 Architectural representation 6 3 Talismanic representation 7 In witchcraft and magical literature 8 Comparative mythology 8 1 Ancient Mesopotamian religion 8 2 Judaism 8 3 Buddhism 8 4 Christianity 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Citations 10 3 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology and translation EditJinn is an Arabic collective noun deriving from the Semitic root JNN Arabic ج ن ج ن jann whose primary meaning is to hide or to adapt Some authors interpret the word to mean literally beings that are concealed from the senses 5 Cognates include the Arabic majnun م ج ن ون possessed or generally insane jannah ج ن ة garden eden or heaven and janin ج ن ين embryo 6 Jinn is properly treated as a plural however in Classical Arabic may also appear as jann ج ان with the singular being jinni ج ن ي b The origin of the word jinn remains uncertain 3 p22 Some scholars relate the Arabic term jinn to the Latin genius a guardian spirit of people and places in Roman religion as a result of syncretism during the reign of the Roman empire under Tiberius and Augustus 7 p38 however this derivation is also disputed 3 p25 Another suggestion holds that jinn may be derived from Aramaic ginnaya Classical Syriac ܓܢܝܐ with the meaning of tutelary deity 3 p24 or guardian Others claim a Persian origin of the word in the form of the Avestic Jaini a wicked female spirit Jaini were among various creatures in the possibly even pre Zoroastrian mythology of peoples of Iran 8 9 The anglicized form genie is a borrowing of the French genie also from the Latin genius It first appeared 10 in 18th century translations of the Thousand and One Nights from the French 11 where it had been used owing to its rough similarity in sound and sense and further applies to benevolent intermediary spirits in contrast to the malevolent spirits called demon and heavenly angels in literature 12 In Assyrian art creatures ontologically between humans and divinities are also called genie 13 Though not a precise fit descriptive analogies that have been used for these beings in Western thought include demon spirit and fairy depending on sources 14 3 p22 Pre Islamic era Edit The winged genie in the bucket and cone motif depicting a demi divine entity 15 probably a forerunner of the pre Islamic tutelary deities who became the jinn in Islam Relief from the north wall of the Palace of king Sargon II at Dur Sharrukin 713 716 BCE The exact origins of belief in jinn are not entirely clear 16 pp 1 10 Belief in jinn in the pre Islamic Arab religion is testified not only by the Quran but also by pre Islamic literature in the seventh century 17 54 Some scholars of the Middle East hold that they originated as malevolent spirits residing in deserts and unclean places who often took the forms of animals 16 p 1 10 others hold that they were originally pagan nature deities who gradually became marginalized as other deities took greater importance 16 pp 1 10 Since the term jinn seems to be not of Arabic but of Aramaic origin denoting demonized pagan deities the jinn probably entered Arabian belief in the late pre Islamic period 17 54 Still jinn had been worshipped by many Arabs during the Pre Islamic period 7 p 34 though unlike gods jinn were not regarded as immortal Emilie Savage Smith who asserted that jinn are malevolent in contrast to benevolent gods doesn t hold this distinction to be absolute admitting jinn worship in pre Islamic Arabia 18 39 In the regions north to the Hejaz Palmyra and Baalbek the terms jinni and ilah were often used interchangeably 19 Julius Wellhausen likewise states that in pre Islamic Arabia it was assumed there are friendly and helpful beings among the jinn He asserts that the distinction between a god and a jinni is the jinn are worshipped in private while the gods are worshipped in public 18 39 Although their mortality ranks them lower than gods it seems that the veneration of jinn had played more importance in the everyday life of pre Islamic Arabs than the gods themselves According to common Arabian belief soothsayers pre Islamic philosophers and poets were inspired by the jinn 7 p 34 16 pp 1 10 Their culture and society were analogous to that pre Islamic Arabian culture having tribal leaders protecting their allies and avenging murder for any member of their tribe or allies 20 p 424 Although the powers of jinn exceed those of humans it is conceivable a man could kill a jinni in single combat Jinn were thought to shift into different shapes but were feared especially in their invisible form since then they could attack without being seen 21 Jinn were also feared because they had been thought to be responsible for various diseases and mental illnesses 7 p 122 16 pp 1 10 Julius Wellhausen observed that such spirits were thought to inhabit desolate dingy and dark places and that they were feared 22 One had to protect oneself from them but they were not the objects of a true cult 22 Al Jahiz credits the pre Islamic Arabs with believing that the society of jinn constitutes several tribes and groups and some natural events were attributed to them such as storms They also thought jinn could protect marry kidnap possess and kill people 23 Despite that they were often feared or they inspired awe the jinn were also pictured to have romantic feelings for humans According to a famous pre Islamic story the jinni Manzur fell in love with a human woman called Habbah teaching her the arts of healing 24 Some scholars argue that angels and devils were introduced by the Prophet Muhammad to Arabia and did not exist among the jinn On the other hand Amira el Zein 7 argues that angels were known to the pagan Arabs but the term jinn was used for all kinds of supernatural entities among various religions and cults thus Zoroastrian Christian and Jewish angels and devils were conflated with jinn 7 p 34 Islamic beliefs EditIn scripture Edit The 72nd chapter of the Qur an entitled Al Jinn The Jinn as well as the heading and introductory bismillah of the next chapter entitled al Muzzammil The Enshrouded One See also Islamic mythology Jinn are mentioned approximately 29 times in the Quran 16 p21 By that the Quran confirms their existence to Muslims but doesn t elaborate them any further 25 In Islamic tradition Muhammad was sent as a prophet to both human and jinn communities and that prophets and messengers were sent to both communities 26 27 28 Traditionally the 72nd surah Al Jinn named after them is held to tell about the revelation to jinn and several stories mention one of Muhammad s followers accompanied him witnessing the revelation to the jinn 7 p64 The Quran condemns pre Islamic practise of worshipping jinn for means of protection 72 6 29 The Quran reduced the status of jinn from that of tutelary deities to that of minor spirits usually paralleling humans 15 They are like humans rational beings formed of nations 7 38 29 Surah 51 56 resumes that both jinn and humans were created to worship God Surah 6 130 states that God has sent messengers to both humans and jinn 29 Individuals among both communities are held accountable for their deeds and will be punished or rewarded in the afterlife in accordance with their deeds 7 179 55 56 29 It is impossible for both jinn and humans to approach God both physically 55 33 and mentally 17 90 29 Unlike humans jinn are not vicegerents of the earth Al Baqara only credits Adam as a successor khalifa 29 However some exegetes like Tabari argue that jinn inherited the world before and that when angels complain about God creating humans who will shed blood they link humans to the jinn who ruled the earth previously 30 In the story of Solomon it is implied that the jinn live on the earth alongside humans Solomon is granted dominion over humans ants birds and jinn The jinn served him as soldiers and builders of the First Temple 31 According to the Quran when Solomon died the jinn have not recognized that his soul left his body until he fell on the ground This is understood to be proof that the jinn despite being generally invisible do not know the unseen Al Ghaib 32 The jinn are also mentioned in collections of canonical hadiths According to the reports of the hadiths the jinn eat like humans but instead of fresh food they prefer rotten flesh and bones 7 p51 33 Another hadith advises to close doors and keep children close at night for the jinn go around and snatch things away 16 One hadith divides them into three groups with one type of jinn flying through the air another that are snakes and dogs and a third that moves from place to place like human 34 This account parallels the jinn to humans similar to the Quran as another hadith divides humans into three groups with one kind which is like four legged beast who are said to remain ignorant of God s message a second one which is under the protection of God and a last one with the body of a human but the soul of a devil shaitan 35 Exegesis Edit Belief in jinn is not included among the six articles of Islamic faith as belief in angels is however many Muslim scholars believe it essential to the Islamic faith 36 37 Many scholars regard their existence and ability to enter human bodies as part of the aqida theological doctrines in the tradition of Ashari 38 In Quranic interpretation the term jinn can be used in two different ways as invisible beings considered to be along with humans thaqalan accountable for their deeds created out of fire and air Arabic م ار ج م ن ن ار marijin min nar 39 as the opposite of al Ins something in shape referring to any object that cannot be detected by human sensory organs including angels devils and the interior of human beings 39 40 Tabari records from ibn Abbas yet another usage for the term jinn as reference to a tribe of angels created from the fires of samum Arabic س م وم poisonous fire They got their name from jannah heaven or paradise instead They would have waged war against the jinn before the creation of Adam 41 According to Tabari the angels were created on Wednesday the jinn on Thursday and humans on Friday though not in succession but rather more than 1000 years later respectively 3 p 43 With the revelation of Islam the jinn were given a new chance to access salvation 34 42 43 However because of their prior creation the jinn would attribute themselves to a superiority over humans and envy them for their place and rank on earth 3 p 43 The different jinn known in Islamic folklore are disregarded among most mufassirs authors of tafsir Tabari being an exception though he is not specific about them probably due to lack of theological significance Since Tabari is one of the earliest commentators the several jinn have been known since the earliest stages of Islam 44 p 132 The ulama scholars of Islamic law discuss permissiblity of jinn marriage Since the Quran talks about marriage with human women only many regard it as prohibited Some argue that someone who marries a jinn will lose fear in God 45 Classic theology Edit The Singer Ibrahim and the jinn Ibrahim has been imprisoned by his master Muhammad al Amin and visited by a jinn in guise of an old man The jinn offers him food and drink and is so impressed by Ibrahim s voice that he convinces Muhammad to free him 46 The notion that jinn could possess individuals is generally accepted by the majority of Muslim scholars and considered part of the doctrines aqidah of the people of the Sunnah ahl as sunnah wal jammah a in the tradition of Ash ari 38 p 68 A minority of Muslim scholars associated with the Muʿtazila denied that jinn could possess a human physically asserting they could only influence humans by whispering to them like the devils do 38 p 73 47 Some like ibn Sina 48 p 89 even denied their existence altogether Sceptics refused to believe in a literal reading on jinn in Islamic sacred texts preferring to view them as unruly men or metaphorical 34 Other critics such as Jahiz and Mas udi explained jinn and demons as a merely psychological phenomena Jahiz states in his Kitab al Hayawan that loneliness induces humans to mind games and wishful thinking causing waswas Arabic و س و اس demonic whisperings in the mind causing a fearful man to see things which are not real These alleged appearances are told to other generations in bedtime stories and poems and when they grow up they remember these stories when they are alone or afraid encouraging their imaginations and causing another alleged sighting of jinn 3 p37 According to the Asharites the existence of jinn and demons cannot be proven or falsified because arguments concerning the existence of such entities are beyond human comprehension Adepts of Ashʿari theology explain that jinn are invisible to humans because humans lack the appropriate sensory organs to envision them 7 p22 Hanbali scholar ibn Taymiyya and Zahiri scholar ibn Hazm regarded denial of jinn as unbelief kufr since they are mentioned in Islamic sacred texts They further point towards demons and spirits in other religions such as Christianity Zorastrianism and Judaism as evidence for their existence 3 p33 Ibn Taymiyya believed the jinn to be generally ignorant untruthful oppressive and treacherous He held that the jinn account for much of the magic that is perceived by humans cooperating with magicians to lift items in the air delivering hidden truths to fortune tellers and mimicking the voices of deceased humans during seances 49 Al Maturidi relates the jinn to their depiction as former minor deities writing that humans seek refuge among the jinn but the jinn are actually weaker than humans Not the jinn but human s own mind and attitude towards them are the sources of fear By submitting to the jinn humans allow the jinn to have power over them humiliate themselves increase their dependence on them and commit shirk 50 Abu l Lait as Samarqandi a disciple of the Maturidi school of theology is attributed to the opinion that unlike angels and devils humans and jinn are created with fitra neither born as believers nor as unbelievers their attitude depends on whether they accept God s guidance 1 Still jinn were not perceived as necessarily evil or hostile beings In the story of Nasir Khusraw s 1004 after 1070 CE burial his brother is assisted by two jinn They cut a rock and shape it into a tombstone 51 Modern theology Edit Many modernists tried to reconcile the traditional perspective on jinn with modern sciences Muhammad Abduh understood references to jinn in the Quran to denote anything invisible be it an indefined force or a simple inclination towards good or evil 52 He further asserted that jinn might be an ancient description of germs since both are associated with diseases and cannot be perceived by the human eye alone 53 an idea adapted by the Ahmadi sect 54 On the other hand Salafism rejects a metaphorical reinterpretation of jinn or to identify them with microorganisms advocating a literal belief in jinn Furthermore they reject protection and healing rituals common across Islamic culture used to ward off jinn or to prevent possession It takes up the position that this is a form of idolatry shirk 55 associating the jinn with devils Many modern preachers substituted evil jinn by devils 56 For that reason Saudi Arabia following the Wahhabism tradition of Salafism imposes a death penalty for dealing with jinn to prevent sorcery and witchcraft 57 58 The importance of belief in jinn to Islamic belief in contemporary Muslim society was underscored by the judgment of apostasy by an Egyptian Sharia court in 1995 against liberal theologian Nasr Abu Zayd 59 Zayd was declared an unbeliever of Islam for among other things arguing that the reason for the presence of jinn in the Quran was that they jinn were part of Arab culture at the time of the Quran s revelation rather than that they were part of God s creation 37 Death threats led to Zayd leaving Egypt several weeks later c In Turkey Suleyman Ates s Quran commentary describes the jinn as hostile beings to whom the pagans made sacrifices in order to please them They would have erroneously assumed that the jinn and angels were independent deities and thus fell into sirk By that humans would associate partners with God and humiliate themselves towards the jinn spiritually d Belief in jinn Edit The cave chamber Majlis al Jinn believed to be a gathering place of the jinn in Omani lore Folklore Edit The jinn are of pre Islamic Arabian origin Since the Quran affirms their existence when Islam spread outside of Arabia jinn belief was adopted by later Islamic culture 31 The Quran reduced the status of the jinn from that of tutelary deities to something parallel to humans subject to the judgement of the supreme deity of Islam By that the jinn were considered a third class of invisible beings not consequently equated with devils 7 p52 and Islam was able to integrate local beliefs about spirits and deities from Iran Africa Turkey and India into a monotheistic framework 61 The jinn are believed to live in societies resembling those of humans practicing religion including Islam Christianity and Judaism having emotions needing to eat and drink and can procreate and raise families Muslim jinn are usually thought to be benign Christian and Jewish jinn indifferent unless angered and pagan jinn evil 62 Other common characteristics include fear of iron and wolves 63 generally appearing in desolate or abandoned places and being stronger and faster than humans 34 Night is considered a particularly dangerous time because the jinn would then leave their hiding places 18 15 Since the jinn share the earth with humans Muslims are often cautious not to accidentally hurt an innocent jinn Jinn are often believed to be able to take control over a human s body Although this is a strong belief among many Muslims some authors argue that since the Quran doesn t explicitly attribute possession to the jinn it derives from pre Islamic beliefs 64 Morocco especially has many possession traditions including exorcism rituals 65 However jinn can not enter a person whenever the jinni wants rather the victim must be predisposed for possession in a state of dha iyfah Arabic ض ع يف ة weakness Feelings of insecurity mental instability unhappy love and depression being tired from the soul are forms of dha iyfah 66 Javanese Muslims hold similar beliefs about the jinn as inhabiting lonely and haunted places and the ability to possess or scare people who trample their homes or accidentally kill a related jinni In some cases jinn might even take revenge by inflicting physical damage Muslims avoid hurting jinn by uttering destur permission before sprinkling hot water so the jinn might leave the place 34 67 16 p149 Some jinn guard graves and cause illness to people who intent to disturb the graves 68 Benevolent jinn are called jinn Islam and they are pious and faithful the other are called jinn kafir While good jinn might even help a Muslim to do hard work and produce magical acts 69 evil jinn follow the influence of devils shayatin In Artas Bethlehem benevolent jinn might support humans and teach them moral lessons The evil jinn frequently ascend to the surface causing sickness to children snatching food and taking revenge when humans mistreat them 70 In later Albanian lore too jinn Xhindi live either on earth or under the surface rather than in the air and may possess people who have insulted them for example if their children are trodden upon or hot water is thrown on them 71 In Senegal jinn are believed provide magical aid if the powers of a spiritual healer are too weak Like in the previous metioned regions jinn can also be dangerous They can scare or devour a human being if they like to Therefore most people try to avoid contacting jinn or offer gifts when it is believed jinn are preying on a human 72 Among Turks jinn Turkish Cin often appear along with other demonic entities such as the divs as within Azerbaijani mythology 73 The divs are from Persian mythology Some early Persian translations of the Quran translated jinn either as peris or divs 34 causing confusion between those entities 74 In other instances the jinn are known as cor and chort distinguished from iye While the iye is bound to a specific place 75 Turkish sources too describe jinn as mobile creatures causing illnesses and mental disorders with a physical body which only remains invisible until they die and inhabiting desolated places 75 The term in used only in the form in cin has the same meaning as jinn 76 In cin are used in Turkish phrases to refer to a place so deserted such beings ho usually hide from sight would gather around this place such as in in cin top oynyor In play ball with the jinn 77 In folk literature Edit The black king of the djinns Al Malik al Aswad from the late 14th century Book of Wonders The jinn can be found in various stories of the One Thousand and One Nights including in The Fisherman and the Jinni 78 Ma ruf the Cobbler more than three different types of jinn are described 79 80 Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp two jinn help young Aladdin 81 and Tale of Nur al Din Ali and his Son Badr ad Din Ḥasan Ḥasan Badr al Din weeps over the grave of his father until sleep overcomes him and he is awoken by a large group of sympathetic jinn 82 In some stories the jinn are credited with the ability of instantaneous travel from China to Morocco in a single instant in others they need to fly from one place to another though quite fast from Baghdad to Cairo in a few hours Modern and post modern era Edit Prevalence of belief Edit Though discouraged by some teachings of modern Islam cultural beliefs about jinn remain popular among Muslim societies and their understanding of cosmology and anthropology 83 Affirmation on the existence of jinn as sapient creatures living along with humans is still widespread in the Middle Eastern world and mental illnesses are still often attributed to jinn possession 84 According to a survey undertaken by the Pew Research Center in 2012 at least 86 of Muslims in Morocco 84 in Bangladesh 63 in Turkey 55 in Iraq 53 in Indonesia 47 in Thailand and 15 elsewhere in Central Asia affirm a belief in the existence of jinn The low rate in Central Asia might be influenced by Soviet religious oppression 85 36 of Muslims in Bosnia and Herzegovina believe in jinn which is higher than the European average 30 although only 21 believe in sorcery and 13 would wear talisman for protection against jinn 12 support offerings and appeal given to the jinn 86 Most of the Islamic majority countries in West Africa have a long tradition of jinn stories and populations that mostly believe in their existence although there are some Islamic movements in the area that reject their existence 87 Sleep paralysis is understood as a jinn attack by many sleep paralysis sufferers in Egypt as discovered by a Cambridge neuroscience study Jalal Simons Rudolph Jalal amp Hinton 2013 88 The study found that as many as 48 of those who experience sleep paralysis in Egypt believe it to be an assault by the jinn 88 Almost all of these sleep paralysis sufferers 95 would recite verses from the Quran during sleep paralysis to prevent future jinn attacks In addition some 9 would increase their daily Islamic prayer salah to get rid of these assaults by jinn 88 Sleep paralysis is generally associated with great fear in Egypt especially if believed to be supernatural in origin 89 However despite belief in jinn being prevalent in Iran s folklore especially among more observant believers of Islam some phenomena such as sleep paralysis were traditionally attributed to other supernatural beings in the case of sleep paralysis it was bakhtak night hag But at least in some areas of Iran an epileptic seizure was thought to be a jinn attack or jinn possession and people would try to exorcise the jinn by citing the name of God and using iron blades to draw protective circles around the victim 90 Telling jinn stories and recounting alleged encounters with them were a common pastime in parts of the Muslim world similar to telling ghost stories in western cultures until a couple of decades ago when these stories fell out of fashion thanks to the increasing penetration of digital entertainments and modern recording equipment which undermined their credibility Post modern literature and movies Edit Main article Genies in popular culture Jinn feature in the magical realism genre introduced into Turkish literature by Tekin 1983 91 who uses magical elements known from pre Islamic and Islamic Anatolian lore Since the 1980s this genre has become prominent in Turkish literature A story by Tekin combines elements of folkloric and religious belief with a rationalized society The protagonist is a girl who befriends inanimate objects and several spirits such as jinn and peri fairy While the existence of jinn is generally accepted by the people within the novel when her family moves from rural Anatolia into the city the jinn do not appear anymore Jinn are still accepted as real by Muslims in the novel s urban setting but play no part in modern life The existence of jinn is accepted throughout the novel but when the setting changes to the city they cease to have any importance symbolizing the replacement of tradition by modernization for Anatolian immigrants 92 Contrary to the neutral to positive depiction of jinn in Tekin s novels jinn became a common trope in Middle Eastern horror movies In Turkish horror jinn have been popular since 2004 93 Out of 89 films 59 have direct references to jinn as the antagonist 12 use other sorts of demons while other types of horror such as the impending apocalypse hauntings or ghosts constitute only 14 films 94 Unlike other Horror elements such as ghosts and zombies the existence of jinn is affirmed by the Quran and thus accepted by a majority of Muslims 95 The presentation of jinn usually combines Quranic with oral and cultural beliefs about jinn 94 The jinn are presented as inactive inhabitants of the earth only interfering with human affairs when summoned by a sorcerer or witch 95 Although the jinn often summoned by pagan rituals or sorcery appear to pose a challenge to Islam the films assure that Islamic law protects Muslims from their presence It is the one who summoned them in the first place who gets punished or suffers from the presence of jinn 95 Similarly jinn appear in Iranian horror movies despite a belittling of the popular understanding of jinn by an increasing number of Islamic fundamentalistic reformists 96 In the post Iranian revolution psychological horror movie Under the Shadow the protagonist is afraid the jinn who are completely veiled and concealed and intrude into her life frequently In the end however she is forced by the Iranian guards to take on a Chador and thus becomes like the jinn she feared The jinn symbolize the Islamic regime and their intrusion into private life criticises the Islamic regime and patriarchal structures 97 Physicality and relationships with humans Edit A Sinai desert cobra Snakes are the animals most frequently associated with jinn Black snakes are commonly believed to be evil jinn whereas white snakes are held to be benign Muslim jinn 98 Jinn are not supernatural in the sense of being purely spiritual and transcendent to nature while they are believed to be invisible or often invisible they also eat drink sleep breed with the opposite sex and produce offspring that resemble their parents Intercourse is not limited to other jinn alone but is also possible between human and jinn 99 Despite being invisible jinn are usually thought to have bodies ad j sam Zakariya al Qazwini includes the jinn angels jinn and devils all created from different parts of fire among animals along with humans burdened beasts like horses cattles wild beasts birds and finally insects and reptiles 100 p135 The Qanoon e Islam written 1832 by Sharif Ja far writing about jinn belief in India states that their bodies are constituted of 90 spirit and 10 flesh 101 They resemble humans in many regards their subtle matter being the only main difference But it is this very nature that enables them to change their shape move quickly fly and entering human bodies cause epilepsy and illness hence the temptation for humans to make them allies by means of magical practices 102 Jinn are further known as gifted shapeshifters often assuming the form of an animal In Islamic culture many narratives concern a serpent who is actually a jinni 3 p116 Other chthonic animals regarded as forms of jinn include scorpions and lizards Both scorpions and serpents have been venerated in the ancient Near East Some sources even speak of killed jinn leaving behind a carcass similar to either a serpent or a scorpion 7 91 93 When they shift into a human form however they are said to stay partly animal and are not fully human Individual jinn are thus often depicted as monstrous and anthropomorphized creatures with body parts from different animals or human with animal traits 3 p164 7 p164 Certain hadith though ones considered fabricated maudhu by some hadith scholars muhaddith support the belief in human jinn relationships 103 The Hour will come when the children of jinn will become many among you Suyuti Laqt al marjan 38 103 Among you are those who are expatriated mugharrabun and this he explained meant crossed with jinn Suyuti Laqt al marjan 28 103 Among those scholars that hold to these beliefs marriage is considered permissible between a jinn and a human it is undesirable makruh while others strongly forbid it 103 Offspring of human jinn relationships are often considered to be gifted and talented people with special abilities and some historical persons were considered to have jinnic ancestry 20 In a study of exorcism culture in the Yemeni province of Hadramawt love was one of the most frequent cited causes of relationships between humans and jinn e Visual art EditAlthough there are very few visual representations of jinn in Islamic art when they do appear it is usually related to a specific event or individual jinn Visual representations of jinn appear in manuscripts and their existence is often implied in works of architecture by the presence of apotropaic devices like serpents which were intended to ward off evil spirits Lastly King Solomon is illustrated very often with jinn as the commander of an army that included them The seven jinn kings Edit The red king of the djinns Al Ahmar from the late 14th century Book of Wonders In the Kitab al Bulhan or the Book of Surprises compiled in the 14th century by Abd al Hasan Al Isfahani there are illustrations of The seven jinn kings 104 p27 In general each King of the Jinn was represented alongside his helpers and alongside the corresponding talismanic symbols 104 p27 For instance the Red King of Tuesday was depicted in the Kitab al Bulhan as a sinister form astride a lion In the same illustration he holds a severed head and a sword This was because the Red King of Tuesday was aligned with Mars the god of war 104 p27 Alongside that there were illustrations of the Gold King and the White King 104 p27 Aside from the seven Kings of the Jinn the Kitab al Bulhan included an illustration of Huma or the Fever Huma was depicted as three headed and as embracing the room around him in order to capture someone and bring on a fever in them 104 p28 Ornamentation of intertwined serpents above the door of the Citadel of Aleppo Architectural representation Edit In addition to these representations of jinn in vicinity to kingship there were also architectural references to jinn throughout the Islamic world In the Citadel of Aleppo the entrance gate Bab al Hayyat made reference to jinn in the stone relief carvings of serpents likewise the water gate at Ayyubid Harran housed two copper sculptures of jinn serving as talismans to ward off both snakes and evil jinn in the form of snakes 105 p408 Alongside these depictions of the jinn found at the Aleppo Citadel depictions of the jinn can be found in the Rum Seljuk palace There are a phenomenal range of creatures that can be found on the eight pointed tiles of the Seal of Sulayman device 105 p390 Among these were the jinn that belonged among Solomon s army and as Solomon claimed to have control over the jinn so did the Rum Seljuk sultan that claimed to be the Sulayman of his time 105 p393 In fact one of the most common representations of jinn are alongside or in association with King Solomon It was thought that King Solomon had very close ties to the jinn and even had control over many of them 105 p399 The concept that a great and just ruler has the ability to command jinn was one that extended far past only King Solomon it was also thought that emperors such as Alexander the Great could control an army of jinn in a similar way 105 p399 Given this association Jinn were often seen with Solomon in a princely or kingly context such as the small animal like jinn sitting beside King Solomon on his throne illustrated in an illuminated manuscript of The Wonders of Creation and the Oddities of Existence by Zakariyya al Qazwini written in the 13th century 106 Talismanic representation Edit The jinn had an indirect impact on Islamic art through the creation of talismans that were alleged to guard the bearer from the jinn and were enclosed in leather and included Qur anic verses 7 p80 It was not unusual for those talismans to be inscribed with separated Arabic letters because the separation of those letters was thought to positively affect the potency of the talisman overall 7 p82 An object that was inscribed with the word of Allah was thought to have the power to ward off evil from the person who obtained the object though many of these objects also had astrological signs depictions of prophets or religious narratives 107 In witchcraft and magical literature Edit Zawba a or Zoba ah the jinn king of Friday Witchcraft Arabic س ح ر sihr which is also used to mean magic wizardry is often associated with jinn and afarit 108 around the Middle East Therefore a sorcerer may summon a jinn and force him to perform orders Summoned jinn may be sent to the chosen victim to cause demonic possession Such summonings were done by invocation 16 p153 by aid of talismans or by satisfying the jinn thus to make a contract 109 Jinn are also regarded as assistants of soothsayers Soothsayers reveal information from the past and present the jinn can be a source of this information because their lifespans exceed those of humans 110 Another way to subjugate them is by inserting a needle to their skin or dress Since jinn are afraid of iron they are unable to remove it with their own power 111 Ibn al Nadim Muslim scholar of his Kitab al Fihrist describes a book that lists 70 jinn led by Fuqṭus Arabic فق طس including several jinn appointed over each day of the week 112 16 p38 Bayard Dodge who translated al Fihrist into English notes that most of these names appear in the Testament of Solomon 112 A collection of late 14th or early 15th century magico medical manuscripts from Ocana Spain describes a different set of 72 jinn termed Tayaliq again under Fuqtus here named Fayqayțus or Fiqitush blaming them for various ailments 113 114 According to these manuscripts each jinni was brought before King Solomon and ordered to divulge their corruption and residence while the Jinn King Fiqitush gave Solomon a recipe for curing the ailments associated with each jinni as they confessed their transgressions 115 A disseminated treatise on the occult written by al Ṭabasi called Shamil deals with subjugating devils and jinn by incantations charms and the combination of written and recited formulae and to obtain supernatural powers through their aid Al Ṭabasi distinguished between licit and illicit magic the latter founded on disbelief while the first on purity 116 Allegedly he was able to demonstrate to Mohammad Ghazali the jinn He would have appeared to him as a shadow on the wall 117 Seven kings of the Jinn are traditionally associated with days of the week 16 p87 They are also attested in the Book of Wonders Although many passages are damaged they remain in Ottoman copies These jinn kings sometimes afarit instead are invoked to legitimate spells performed by amulets 118 Associations Planet Day Angel that monitors the associated Afarit Arabic Hebrew equivalent Afarit Type of madness ج ن ون junun and parts of the body attacked RemarksCommon name Known other namesSun Sunday Ruqya il روقيائيل Raphael רפאל Al Mudhdhahab Al Mudhhib Al Mudhhab المذهب The Golden One Abu Abdallah Sa id the name Al Mudh dhahab refers to the jinn s skin tone Moon Monday Jibril جبريل Gabriel גבריאל Al Abyaḍ الابيض The White One Murrah al Abyad Abu al Harith Abu an Nur Whole body the name Al Abyaḍ refers to the jinn s skin tone however he is portrayed as a dark black charcoal figure The possible connection of this name is with another name Abu an Nur Father of Light his names are the same as whose applied to Iblis Mars Tuesday Samsama il سمسمائيل Samael סמאל Al Aḥmar الاحمر The Red One Abu Mihriz Abu Ya qub Head uterus the name Al Aḥmar refers to the jinn s skin tone Mercury Wednesday Mikail ميكائيل Michael מיכאל Burqan Borqaan بورقان Two Thunders Abu al Adja yb Al Aswad BackJupiter Thursday Sarfya il صرفيائيل Zadkiel צדקיאל Shamhuresh شمهورش Abu al Walid At Tayyar BellyVenus Friday Anya il عنيائيل Anael ענאל Zawba ah زوبعة Cyclone Whirlwind Abu Hassan It is said the whirlwind zawba ah to be caused by an evil jinn which travels inside it Saturn Saturday Kasfa il كسفيائيل Cassiel קפציאל Maymun ميمون Prosperous Abu Nuh Feet His name means monkey 104 During the Rwandan genocide both Hutus and Tutsis avoided searching local Rwandan Muslim neighborhoods because they widely believed the myth that local Muslims and mosques were protected by the power of Islamic magic and the efficacious jinn citation needed In the Rwandan city of Cyangugu arsonists ran away instead of destroying the mosque because they feared the wrath of the jinn whom they believed were guarding the mosque 119 Comparative mythology EditAncient Mesopotamian religion Edit Beliefs in entities similar to the jinn are found throughout pre Islamic Middle Eastern cultures 16 1 10 The ancient Sumerians believed in Pazuzu a wind demon 16 1 10 120 147 148 who was shown with a rather canine face with abnormally bulging eyes a scaly body a snake headed penis the talons of a bird and usually wings 120 p147 The ancient Babylonians believed in utukku a class of demons which were believed to haunt remote wildernesses graveyards mountains and the sea all locations where jinn were later thought to reside 16 1 10 The Babylonians also believed in the Rabisu a vampiric demon believed to leap out and attack travelers at unfrequented locations similar to the post Islamic ghul 16 1 10 a specific kind of jinn whose name is etymologically related to that of the Sumerian galla a class of Underworld demon 121 122 Lamashtu also known as Labartu was a divine demoness said to devour human infants 16 1 10 120 p115 Lamassu also known as Shedu were guardian spirits sometimes with evil propensities 16 1 10 120 115 116 The Assyrians believed in the Alu sometimes described as a wind demon residing in desolate ruins who would sneak into people s houses at night and steal their sleep 16 1 10 In the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra entities similar to jinn were known as ginnaye 16 1 10 an Aramaic name which may be etymologically derived from the name of the genii from Roman mythology 16 1 10 Like jinn among modern day Bedouin ginnaye were thought to resemble humans 16 1 10 They protected caravans cattle and villages in the desert 16 1 10 and tutelary shrines were kept in their honor 16 1 10 They were frequently invoked in pairs 16 1 10 Judaism Edit The description of jinn is almost identical with that of the shedim from Jewish mythology As with the jinn some of whom follow the law brought by Muhammad some of the shedim are believed to be followers of the law of Moses and consequently good 123 Both are said to be invisible to human eyes but are nevertheless subject to bodily desires like procreating and the need to eat Some Jewish sources agree with the Islamic notion that jinn inhabited the world before humans 124 Asmodeus appears both as an individual of the jinn or shedim as an antagonist of Solomon 16 p120 Buddhism Edit As in Islam the idea of spiritual entities converting to one s own religion can be found in Buddhism According to lore Buddha preached to Devas and Asura spiritual entities who like humans are subject to the cycle of life and who resemble the Islamic notion of jinn who are also ontologically placed among humans in regard to eschatological destiny 7 p165 125 Christianity Edit Van Dyck s Arabic translation of the Old Testament uses the alternative collective plural jann Arab الجان translation al jann to render the Hebrew word usually translated into English as familiar spirit אוב Strong 0178 in several places Leviticus 19 31 20 6 1 Samuel 28 3 7 9 1 Chronicles 10 13 126 Some scholars evaluated whether the jinn might be compared to fallen angels in Christian traditions Comparable to Augustine s descriptions of fallen angels as ethereal jinn seem to be considered as the same substance Although the concept of fallen angels is not absent in the Quran 127 the jinn nevertheless differ in their major characteristics from that of fallen angels While fallen angels fell from heaven the jinn did not but try to climb up to it in order to receive the news of the angels Jinn are closer to daemons 128 See also EditAl Baqara 255 The Case of the Animals versus Man Daeva Daemon classical mythology Demonology Fairy Genius loci Genius mythology Ifrit Abu Jann and Jann ibn Jann Marid Mimi folklore Nasnas Qareen Qutrub Rig e Jenn Shadow People Superstitions in Muslim societies Theriocephaly Three Thousand Years of Longing a 2022 film starring Idris Elba as a djinn Uthra Will of the wisp Wish Yazata YōkaiReferences EditNotes Edit From T Nunlist 2015 Damonenglaube im Islam 3 2 TRANSLATION in English M Dols points out that jinn belief is not a strictly Islamic concept It rather includes countless elements of idol worship as Muhammad s enemies practised in Mecca during jahilliya According to F Meier early Islam integrated many pagan deities into its system by degrading them to spirits 1 In Islam the existence of spirits that are neither angels nor necessarily devils is acknowledged 2 Thereby Islam is able to incorporate non biblical non Quranic ideas about mythic images that means a degrading deities to spirits and therefore taking into the spiritual world b taking daemons not mentioned in the sacred traditions of Islam of uncertain origin c consideration of spirits to tolerate or advising to regulate them 3 p2 ORIGINAL in German M Dols macht darauf aufmerksam dass der Ginn Glaube kein strikt islamisches Konzept ist Er beinhaltet vielmehr zahllose Elemente einer Gotzenverehrung wie sie Muhammads Gegner zur Zeit der gahiliyya in Mekka praktizierten Gemass F Meier integrierte der junge Islam bei seiner raschen Expansion viele heidnische Gottheiten in sein System indem er sie zu Damonen degradierte 1 Im Islam wird die Existenz von Geistern die weder Engel noch unbedingt Teufel sein mussen anerkannt 2 Damit besitzt der Islam die Moglichkeit nicht biblische nicht koranische Vorstellungen von mythischen Vorstellungen sich einzuverleiben d h a Gotter zu Geistern zu erniedrigen und so ins islamische Geisterreich aufzunehmen b in der heiligen Uberlieferung des Islams nicht eigens genannte Damonen beliebiger Herkunft zu ubernehmen c eine Berucksichtigung der Geister zu dulden oder gar zu empfehlen und sie zu regeln 3 p2 2 sometimes Arabs use Jann Arabic جان term for singular jann also referred to jinn world another plural snakes serpents and another type of jinn Hostility against Nasr Abu Zayd was sufficiently strong that even a police guard guarding his residence in Cairo referred to him as an unbeliever telling Zayd s neighbors that the guard was there because of the kafir 60 Takim Abdullah Koranexegese im 20 Jahrhundert islamische Tradition und neue Ansatze in Suleyman Ates s Zeitgenossischem Korankommentar Istanbul 2007 p 104 3 2 TRANSLATION in English It was believed that these deities were detached from God and were gods in their own right independent on Allah the High God They also imagined a genealogy between God and spirits jinn So the Arabs had gods and goddesses This shows that they were also influenced for example by the Greek cult of gods in which a genealogical relationship between the gods also played a role and gods and goddesses existed According to Suleyman Ates this attitude is clearly polytheism But he also points out that this degrades man spiritually ORIGINAL in German Man glaubte dass sich diese Gottheiten von Gott losgelost haben und selbststandige Gotter seien die nicht von Allah dem Hochgott abhangig sind Dabei stellte man sich auch eine Genealogie zwischen Gott und Geistwesen ginn vor Bei den Arabern gab es also Gotter und Gottinnen Dies Dies zeigt dass sie z B auch vom griechischen Gotterkult beeinflusst worden sind in der ja auch eine genealologische Beziehung zwischen den Gottern eine Rolle spielen und Gotter und Gottinnen vorhanden sind Diese Haltung ist laut Suleyman Ates eindeutig Vielgotterei Doch er weist auch darauf hin dass der Mensc sich dadurch geistig erniedrigt Love seems to be the most frequent occasion of contact between men and jinn A jinni meets a woman and falls in love with her or vice versa This possession is manifest notably when the jinni has sexual intercourse with the person he she possesses In that case the individual behaves with gestures and words as if they were having sexual intercourse although he she is apparently alone in the room Besides this person seems to suddenly lose all interest for his her environment 103 Citations Edit a b as Samarqandi lt Abu l Lait Abu l Lait as Samarqandi s commentary on Abu Hanifa al Fiqh al absat Introduction text and commentary In Hans Daiber ed Islamic Concept of Belief in the 4th 10th Century Studia Culturae Islamicae p 243 ISSN 1340 5306 a b McAuliffe Jane Dammen 2005 Encyclopaedia of the Qurʼan Vol 3 Brill p 45 ISBN 978 90 04 12356 4 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Nunlist Tobias 2015 Damonenglaube im Islam Demonic Belief in Islam in German Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG ISBN 978 3 110 33168 4 South Asian Folklore An Encyclopedia 2020 Vereinigtes Konigreich Taylor amp Francis p Lane Edward William An Arabic English Lexicon Archived from the original on 8 April 2015 p 462 Wehr Hans 1994 Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic 4 ed Urbana Illinois Spoken Language Services p 164 ISBN 978 0 87950 003 0 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o el Zein Amira 2009 Islam Arabs and Intelligent World of the Jinn Syracuse NY Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 5070 6 Tisdall W St Clair The Original Sources of the Qur an Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge London 1905 The Religion of the Crescent or Islam Its Strength Its Weakness Its Origin Its Influence William St Clair Tisdall 1895 genie n Oxford English Dictionary 3rd ed Oxford UK Oxford University Press 2014 Arabian Nights entertainments Vol I 1706 p 14 John L Mckenzie 1995 The Dictionary Of The Bible Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 81913 6 p 192 Mehmet Ali Atac 2010 The Mythology of Kingship in Neo Assyrian Art Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 51790 4 p 36 jinn definition of jinn in English Oxford Dictionaries a b Fee C R Webb Jeffrey B 29 August 2016 American Myths Legends and Tall Tales An encyclopedia of American folklore ABC CLIO p 527 ISBN 978 1 610 69568 8 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Lebling Robert 2010 Legends of the Fire Spirits Jinn and genies from Arabia to Zanzibar New York NY amp London UK I B Tauris ISBN 978 0 85773 063 3 a b Zeitlin I M 2007 The Historical Muhammad United Kingdom Wiley ISBN 978 0 745 63998 7 a b c Magic and Divination in Early Islam 2021 Vereinigtes Konigreich Taylor amp Francis ʻAẓmah ʻ 2014 The Emergence of Islam in Late Antiquity Allah and His People Vereinigtes Konigreich Cambridge University Press p 293 a b Aloiane Z A 1996 Anthropomorphic representation of evil in Islam and some other traditions a cross cultural approach Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae Akademiai Kiado 49 3 423 434 JSTOR 43391301 Abd Allah Umar F 2002 The Perceptible and the unseen The Qur anic conception of man s relationship to God and realities beyond human perception In Palmer Spencer J ed Mormons and Muslims Spiritual foundations and modern manifestations Religious Studies Center Provo UT Brigham Young University pp 209 264 a b Zeitlin Irving M 19 March 2007 The Historical Muhammad Polity pp 59 60 ISBN 978 0 7456 3999 4 cin TDV Islam Ansiklopedisi Amira El Zein The Evolution of the Concept of Jinn from Pre Islam to Islam pp 108 109 Rothenberg Celia E Spirits of Palestine Gender society and stories of the jinn Rowman amp Littlefield 2004 p 245 Quran 51 56 56 Muḥammad ibn Ayyub al Ṭabari Tuḥfat al ghara ib I p 68 Abu al Futuḥ Razi Tafsir e rawḥ al jenan va ruḥ al janan pp 193 341 a b c d e f Meri Josef 2016 Routledge Revivals Medieval Islamic Civilization 2006 An Encyclopedia Volume I United Kingdom Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 351 66822 4 Mahmoud Ayoub The Qur an and Its Interpreters p 39 a b The Routledge Companion to the Qur an 2021 Vereinigtes Konigreich Taylor amp Francis Teuma Edmund The Solomon legend in Muslim tradition 1987 Sahih al Bukhari 3860 a b c d e f Hughes Thomas Patrick 1885 Genii Dictionary of Islam Being a Cyclopaedia of the Doctrines Rites Ceremonies London UK W H Allen pp 134 136 Retrieved 4 October 2019 Sharpe Elizabeth Marie 1953 Into the realm of smokeless fire Qur an 55 14 A critical translation of al Damiri s article on the jinn from Hayat al Hayawan al Kubra The University of Arizona download date 21 04 2021 full citation needed Ashqar ʻUmar Sulayman 1998 The World of the Jinn and Devils Islamic Books p 8 Retrieved 13 March 2019 a b Cook Michael 2000 The Koran A very short introduction Oxford University Press pp 46 47 ISBN 0 19 285344 9 a b c Islam Migration and Jinn Spiritual Medicine in Muslim Health Management 2021 Deutschland Springer International Publishing a b Teuma E 1984 More on Qur anic jinn Melita Theologica 35 1 2 37 45 Noegel Scott B amp Wheeler Brannon M 2010 The A to Z of Prophets in Islam and Judaism Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 1 461 71895 6 page 170 Reynolds Gabriel Said Angels in Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Edited by Kate Fleet Gudrun Kramer Denis Matringe John Nawas Everett Rowson Consulted online on 06 October 2019 lt http dx doi org 10 1163 1573 3912 ei3 COM 23204 gt Reynolds Gabriel Said 2010 The Qur an and its Biblical Subtext Routledge p 41 ISBN 978 1 135 15020 4 Ozkan Tubanur Yesilhark 2016 A Muslim Response to Evil Said Nursi on the theodicy Routledge p 141 ISBN 978 1 317 18754 7 Racius Egdunas Islamic Exegesis on the Jinn Their origin kinds and substance and their relation to other beings full citation needed Kose S Ci nlerle Evli li k Konusunda Hanefi Faki hi Hami d El Imadi ni n 1103 1171 1692 1758 Teka ku u s Senn Fi Ni kahi l Ci nn Adli Ri salesi Journal of Islamic Law Studies 2010 15 453 464 Accessed January 25 2022 Komaroff Linda and Stefano Carboni eds The legacy of Genghis Khan courtly art and culture in Western Asia 1256 1353 Metropolitan Museum of Art 2002 Dein Simon and Abdool Samad Illaiee Jinn and mental health looking at jinn possession in modern psychiatric practice The Psychiatrist 37 9 2013 290 293 Rosen L 2008 Varieties of Muslim Experience Encounters with Arab Political and Cultural Life Ukraine University of Chicago Press Ibn Taymiyyah al Furqan bayna awliya al Raḥman wa awliya al Shayṭan Essay on the Jinn translated by Abu Ameenah Bilal Phillips DUZGUN Saban Ali DINSEL ve MITOLOJIK YONLERIYLE CIN ve SEYTAN ALGIMIZ Orality and Textuality in the Iranian World Patterns of Interaction Across the Centuries 2015 Niederlande Brill p 150 Teuma Edmund Fr 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2010 Retrieved 10 December 2015 Abou El Magd Nadia 15 June 2000 When the professor can t teach Al Ahram Weekly Retrieved 14 March 2019 via arabworldbooks com Juan Eduardo Campo 2009 Encyclopedia of Islam Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 438 12696 8 page 402 Gregg G S 2005 The Middle East A Cultural Psychology Vereinigtes Konigreich Oxford University Press USA p 127 Gods Spirits and Worship in the Greco Roman World and Early Christianity 2022 Vereinigtes Konigreich Bloomsbury Publishing p 227 Islam F Campbell R A Satan Has Afflicted Me Jinn Possession and Mental Illness in the Qur an J Relig Health 53 229 243 2014 https doi org 10 1007 s10943 012 9626 5 Joseph P Laycock Spirit Possession around the World Possession Communion and Demon Expulsion across Cultures Possession Communion and Demon Expulsion across Cultures ABC CLIO 2015 ISBN 978 1 610 69590 9 page 243 Gingrich Andre 1995 Spirits of the border Some remarks on the connotation of jinn in north western Yemen Quaderni di Studi Arabi 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USA Taylor amp Francis Heuer B Boykova E V Kellner Heinkele B 2020 Man and Nature in the Altaic World Proceedings of the 49th Permanent International Altaistic Conference Berlin July 30 August 4 2006 Deutschland De Gruyter p 300 301 1 Vol VII Fasc 4 pp 428 431 a b Turk Soylence Sozlugu Deniz Karakurt Turkiye 2011 MacDonald D B Masse H Boratav P N Nizami K A and Voorhoeve P Ḏj inn in Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Edited by P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs Consulted online on 08 February 2023 lt http dx doi org 10 1163 1573 3912 islam COM 0191 gt First published online 2012 First print edition ISBN 9789004161214 1960 2007 https www mynet com in cin ne demek in cin tdk sozluk anlami nedir 170100023318 The fisherman and the Jinni at About com Classic Literature Tales of the Dervishes Idries Shah Foundation Ma aruf the cobbler and his wife wollamshram ca 1001 Nights tale 169 Aladdin or the wonderful lamp Classic Literature About com The Arabian Nights Archived from the original on 15 February 2017 The tale of Nur al Din Ali and his son Badr al Din Hasan Classic Literature About com The Arabian Nights Archived from the original on 24 November 2016 a b Partovi Pedram 3 December 2009 Girls dormitory Women s Islam and Iranian horror Visual Anthropology Review 25 2 186 207 doi 10 1111 j 1548 7458 2009 01041 x ISSN 1548 7458 Rassool G Hussein 16 July 2015 Islamic Counselling An Introduction to theory and practice Routledge p 58 ISBN 978 1 31744 125 0 Rassool G Hussein 16 August 2018 Evil Eye Jinn Possession and Mental Health Issues An Islamic perspective Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 22698 7 Vetrovec Lukas Curse Possession and Other Worlds Magic and Witchcraft among the Bosniaks p 74 Olupona Jacob K 2014 African Religions A Very Short Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press p 36 ISBN 978 0 19 979058 6 OCLC 839396781 a b c Jalal Baland Simons Rudolph Joseph Jalal Bamo Hinton Devon E 1 October 2013 Explanations of sleep paralysis among Egyptian college students and the general population in Egypt and Denmark Transcultural Psychiatry 51 2 158 175 doi 10 1177 1363461513503378 PMID 24084761 S2CID 22226921 Jalal Baland Hinton Devon E 1 September 2013 Rates and Characteristics of Sleep Paralysis in the General Population of Denmark and Egypt Culture Medicine and Psychiatry 37 3 534 548 doi 10 1007 s11013 013 9327 x ISSN 0165 005X PMID 23884906 S2CID 28563727 Omidsalar Mahmoud محمود امیدسالار 15 December 2000 Genie Iranica Online iranicaonline org دانشنامه ایرانیکا Archived from the original on 29 April 2011 Retrieved 15 April 2012 Tekin L 1983 Sevgili Arsiz Olum Dear shameless Death Degirmenci Asli 9 August 2013 Mapping Geographies in Transition Magical realism in the fiction of Salman Rushdie Latife Tekin and Ben Okri Department of English Ph D thesis Buffalo NY State University of New York Sakrak Bilgehan Ece 4 January 2019 Religious evils in Turkish horror films This Thing of Darkness Shedding light on evil ISBN 978 1 84888 366 6 a b Kocer Zeynep 13 March 2019 2007 The monstrous feminine and masculinityas abjection in Turkish horror cinema An analysis of Haunted Musallat by Alper Mestci In Holland Samantha Shail Robert Gerrard Steven eds Gender and Contemporary Horror in Film Emerald Studies in Popular Culture and Gender Bingley UK Emerald pp 151 165 doi 10 1108 9781787698970 ISBN 978 1 78769 898 7 S2CID 214474411 a b c Sengul Ali Cinema Horror and the Wrath of God Turkish Islam s Claims in the Kurdish East Nubihar Akademi 4 14 11 28 c f Partovi 2009 83 for representation of women s Islam Khosroshahi Zahra Vampires Jinn and the Magical in Iranian Horror Films Frames 16 2019 2 Amira El Zein The Evolution of the Concept of Jinn from Pre Islam to Islam p 260 Laughlin Vivian A A Brief Overview of al Jinn within Islamic Cosmology and Religiosity Journal of Adventist Mission Studies 11 1 2015 067 078 Nasr S H 2013 Islamic Life and Thought Vereinigtes Konigreich Taylor amp Francis Lale Behzadi Patrick Franke Geoffrey Haig Christoph Herzog Birgitt Hoffmann Lorenz Korn Susanne Talabardon Bamberger Orientstudien University of Bamberg Press 26 Feb 2015 ISBN 978 3 863 09286 3 p 127 Hanegraaff Wouter J amp Kripal Jeffrey 16 Oct 2008 Hidden Intercourse Eros and Sexuality in the History of Western Esotericism BRILL ISBN 978 90 474 4358 2 pp 50 55 a b c d e Hanegraaff Wouter J Kripal Jeffrey 2008 Hidden intercourse eros and sexuality in the history of Western esotericism PDF Leiden Brill pp 53 56 58 ISBN 978 90 474 4358 2 Retrieved 1 December 2020 a b c d e f Carboni Stefano 2013 The Book of Surprises Kitab al Buhlan of the Bodleian Library The La Trobe Journal 91 27 28 a b c d e Duggan Terrance 2018 The just ruler of the age PHASELIS Journal of Interdisciplinary Mediterranean Studies 4 4 389 421 doi 10 18367 Pha 18024 Berlekamp Persis 2011 Wonder Image amp Cosmos in Medieval Islam New Haven Yale University Press p 71 Al Saleh Yasmine 2010 Amulets and Talismans from the Islamic World The Metropolitan Museum of Art Ian Richard Netton Encyclopaedia of Islam Routledge 2013 ISBN 978 1 135 17960 1 page 377 Gerda Sengers Women and Demons Cultic Healing in Islamic Egypt BRILL 2003 ISBN 978 9 004 12771 5 page 31 Morrow John Andrew 27 November 2013 Islamic Images and Ideas Essays on sacred symbolism McFarland ISBN 978 1 476 61288 1 page 73 Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica a b Bayard Dodge ed and trans The Fihrist of al Nadim A Tenth Century Survey of Muslim Culture New York Columbia University Press 1970 pp 727 8 Celia del Moral Magia y Superstition en los Manuscritos de Ocana Toledo Siglos XIV XV Proceedings of the 20th Congress of the Union Europeenne des Arabisants et Islamisants Part Two A Fodor ed Budapest 10 17 September 2000 pp 109 121 Joaquina Albarracin Navarro amp Juan Martinez Ruiz Medicina Farmacopea y Magia en el Miscelaneo de Salomon Universidad de Granada 1987 p 38 et passim Shadrach Nineveh 2007 The Book of Deadly Names Ishtar Publishing ISBN 978 0 9783883 0 0 Travis Zadeh Commanding Demons and Jinn The Sorcerer in Early Islamic Thought Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Verlag 2014 p 143 145 Travis Zadeh Commanding Demons and Jinn The Sorcerer in Early Islamic Thought p 145 Mommersteeg Geert He Has Smitten Her to the Heart with Love The Fabrication of an Islamic Love Amulet in West Africa Anthropos vol 83 no 4 6 1988 pp 501 510 JSTOR http www jstor org stable 40463380 Accessed 27 Mar 2020 Kubai Anne April 2007 Walking a Tightrope Christians and Muslims in Post Genocide Rwanda Islam and Christian Muslim Relations 18 2 219 235 doi 10 1080 09596410701214076 S2CID 143229200 a b c d Black Jeremy Green Anthony 1992 Gods Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia An Illustrated Dictionary The British Museum Press ISBN 978 0 7141 1705 8 Cramer Marc 1979 The Devil Within W H Allen ISBN 978 0 491 02366 5 Al Rawi Ahmed 2009 The Mythical Ghoul in Arabic Culture Cultural Analysis Socrates berkeley edu Retrieved 23 March 2011 J W Moore Savary M Claude Etienne The Koran Commonly Called the Alcoran of Mohammed 1853 J W Moore p 20 Carol K Mack Dinah Mack A Field Guide to Demons Vampires Fallen Angels and Other Subversive Spirits Skyhorse Publishing 2013 ISBN 978 1 628 72150 8 Musaeus Higgins Marie 1925 Poya Days Asian Educational Services p 14 ISBN 978 8 120 61321 8 Arabic Bible arabicbible com Arabic Bible Outreach Ministry Hanegraaff Wouter J Kripal Jeffrey 16 October 2008 Hidden Intercourse Eros and sexuality in the history of western esotericism BRILL p 53 ISBN 978 90 474 4358 2 Azaiez Mehdi Reynolds Gabriel Said Tesei Tommaso Zafer Hamza M eds 7 November 2016 Le Qur an Seminar Commentaire collaboratif de 50 passages coraniques The Qur an Seminar Commentary A collaborative study of 50 Qur anic passages in French and English bilingual ed Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG Q 72 ISBN 978 3110444797 ISBN 3110444798 full citation needed Sources Edit Al Ashqar Umar Sulaiman Dr 1998 The World of the Jinn and Devils Boulder CO Al Basheer Company for Publications and Translations Barnhart Robert K 1995 The Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology Genie The Oxford English Dictionary Second ed 1989 Razi Abu al Futuḥ 1988 Tafsir e rawḥ al jenan va ruḥ al janan Vol IX XVII Tehran IR pub so far Ṭabari Moḥammad Ayyub 1971 Matini J ed Tuḥfat al ghara ib Tehran IR Aarne A Thompson S 1973 The Types of the Folktale 2nd rev ed Helsinki FI Folklore Fellows Communications 184 Balkhi Abu l Moayyad 1993 Smynova L P ed Aja eb al donya Moscow RU Christensen A 1941 Essai sur la Demonologie iranienne Essay on the Demons of Iran Historisk filologiske Meddelelser in French Denmark Det Kgl Danske Videnskabernes Selskab Dozy R 1967 Supplement aux Dictionnaires arabes in French 3rd ed Leyden el Shamy H 1995 Folk Traditions of the Arab World A guide to motif classification Vol 1 2 Bloomington IL Yazdi Abu Bakr Moṭahhar Jamali 1967 Afshar i ed Farrokh nama Tehran IR Kolayni Abu Jaʿfar Moḥammad 1988 Ghaffari A ed Ketab al kafi Vol 1 8 Tehran IR Lane E W 1968 An Arabic English Lexicon PDF Beirut LB Archived PDF from the original on 16 February 2008 Loeffler L 1988 Islam in Practice Religious beliefs in a Persian village New York NY Marzolph U 1984 Typologie des persischen Volksmarchens Typology of Persian Folktales in German Beirut LB Masse Croyances Mihandust M 1976 Padidaha ye wahmi e dirsal dar janub e Khorasan Honar o mordom pp 44 51 Noldeke T 1913 Arabs Ancient In Hastings J ed Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics Vol I Edinburgh UK pp 659 673 Thompson S 1955 Motif Index of Folk Literature Vol 1 6 rev ed Bloomington IL Thompson S Roberts W 1960 Types of Indic Oral Tales Helsinki FI Folklore Fellows Communications 180 Esterabadi Solṭan Moḥammad ibn Taj al Din Ḥasan n d Toḥfat al majales Tehran IR full citation needed Nunlist Tobias 2015 Damonenglaube im Islam Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG ISBN 978 3 110 33168 4 Ṭusi Moḥammad b Maḥmud 1966 Sotuda M ed Ajayeb al makhluqat va ghara eb al mawjudat Tehran IR Further reading EditAsad Muhammad 1980 Appendix III On the term and concept of jinn The Message of the Qu ran Gibraltar Spain Dar al Andalus Limited ISBN 1 904510 00 0 Crapanzano V 1973 The Hamadsha A study in Moroccan ethnopsychiatry Berkeley CA University of California Press Dibi Tofik 2021 Djinn Queer Politics and Cultures Translated by Barr Nicolaas P Albany NY SUNY Press ISBN 9781438481302 Drijvers H J W 1976 The Religion of Palmyra Leiden NL Brill el Zein Amira 2009 Islam Arabs and the intelligent world of the Jinn Contemporary Issues in the Middle East Syracuse NY Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 3200 9 El Zein Amira 2006 Jinn In Meri J F ed Medieval Islamic Civilization an Encyclopedia New York NY amp Abingdon UK Routledge pp 420 421 Goodman L E 1978 The case of the animals versus man before the king of the jinn A tenth century ecological fable of the pure brethren of Basra Library of Classical Arabic Literature Vol 3 Boston MA Twayne Maarouf M 2007 Jinn Eviction as a Discourse of Power A multidisciplinary approach to Moroccan magical beliefs and practices Leiden Brill Peterson Mark Allen 2007 From Jinn to Genies Intertextuality media and the making of global folklore In Sherman Sharon R Koven Mikel J eds Folklore Cinema Popular film as vernacular culture Logan UT Utah State University Press via Utah State U digital commons Taneja Anand V 2017 Jinnealogy Time Islam and ecological thought in the medieval ruins of Delhi Stanford CA Stanford University Press ISBN 978 1 5036 0393 6 Zbinden E 1953 Die Djinn des Islam und der altorientalische Geisterglaube The Djinn of Islam and Ancient Eastern Spiritual Belief in German Bern CH Haupt External links EditJinn at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Etymology of genie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jinn amp oldid 1141045486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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