Certain 'Masters of Illumination' (Shaykh al 'Ishraq) have known these things in the past, but they never expose them except but to their most trusted inner circle students.
Some of this is going to be very disturbing to traditional religious people... Especially to Sunni Muslims, in which tradition these things are not just mildly haram, but very HARAM!
It's possible that people with little knowledge of the real affair, assume it's about casting harmful spells against people. The same way that in the West, there is an assumption that Witchcraft is also about this kind of malevolent 'cursing,' I suppose.
There are few people in the West today, who have the faintest clue about actual traditional European, especially British Isles' 'Wicce.' On the best of authority - Patricia Crowther - the word itself was always 'Wicce,' and not 'Wicca' as they all use today.
...You know I probably ought to say, at this point, that the famous/infamous Gerald Gardner himself, was at one time, a teacher under the prior Director of Teacher Training, just prior to my own father's appointment to that position - and Gardner lived a few houses away, and was in the same institution at which my dad taught. He knew Gardner. Gerald Gardner had nothing but the most respected reputation throughout South East Asia as an historian and sociologist - as well as a mainstream education system teacher in his day.
The funny thing is, when it comes to modern day Sunni Islam, very few adherents are aware of the number of times ancient Babylonian magical incantations occur within the text of the Quran itself: 'by the hill at,' 'by the tree of,' 'by the mountain of...' These are the standard Chaldean/Babylonian incantation formats for magical enchantments. There is a reason for this manner of wording, but I will not go into that here and now.
'Kismet' - means 'destiny' in Arabic... It's also the yacht owned by billionaire owner of the Jacksonville Jaguars - Shahid Khan. |
Because we all live both in a world of science today, as well as a world of socially-pressured 'standard mainstream/orthodoxies' of religious belief or culture, at least, it is widely supposed that there is no such thing as a genie appearing for real before your eyes, or any way that 'fairy' beings or other supernatural figures can actually be seen - because of course, you would then be able to photograph them on your iPhone.
But this goes to my point that there are few and rare genuine authentic practitioners of any of this kind of thing - it's all Hollywood or pop/pulp fiction that most people are aware of. And it is very misleading and virtually completely incorrect.
Certainly, we have modern instances of terrible and tragic things having occurred, where claims had been made by various parties of some demonic or evil spirits and forces that were released, as it were. One can but think of the Charles Manson situation as at minimum something to consider with a degree of caution that it was not of the kind of thing that involved 'black' practices. And drugs too, but that's not inconsistent with the matter itself.
If I talk in detail about genuine magic - of the kind that gives rise to the kinds of powers ascribed in folklore to figures such as King Solomon, for instance - it will render to you, occult (hidden) processes that are able to give you material wealth, gain for you material things, certainly these powers can create difficulties for others; but such capability doesn't relieve anyone of moral responsibility.
Mysterious caravan... |
Despite the fact that so much material does exist in various literary sources today, in various libraries and so on, if you imagine that you have heard everything - you will soon discover otherwise!
But I shall not go into any of this unless people say they would like to see it/read it.
Because once you have learned of it, at the same time you will have learned it. And so it's not reasonable to presume people all have the will to keep such things pristine unused as it were - that is, to never employ the knowledge at all. That would be a kind of a 'Tao philosophy' idealistic thing - to 'have the weapon but never to use it.'
I don't expect that.
So you have to say whether you want to hear this. Or not.
This is a long music video clip - all of ten minutes!
Wow! I honestly cannot begin to fathom this lady’s talent and skill.
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