GENIE


'Genie' is the English term for the Arabic 'جني' (''jinnie''). The word “jinn” literally means anything which has the connotation of concealment, invisibility, seclusion, and remoteness. In pre-Islamic Arabian mythology and in Islamic Culture, a 'jinni' (also “'djinni'” or “'djini'”) is a member of the 'jinn' (or “'djinn'”), generally thought to be a race of supernatural creatures.

Contents
Etymology and definitions
Jinn in pre-Islamic era
Jinn in Islam
Genie as a Thief
Jinn in post-Islamic Arabic fiction
Genies in Western culture
Genies in popular culture
Books
Comics
Movies and television
Video games
Others
See also
Compare
References
External links

Etymology and definitions


'Arabic'
''Genie'' is the usual English translation of the Arabic term ''jinni'', but it is not directly an Anglicized form of the Arabic word, as is commonly thought. The English word comes from French ''génie'', which meant a spirit of any kind, which in turn came from Latin ''genius'', which meant a sort of tutelary or guardian spirit thought to be assigned to each person at birth. The Latin word predates the Arabic word ''jinni'' in this context, and may have been introduced in the Arabian civilization through the Nabataeans. The root however, and its concept of being "hidden" or "concealed" still comes from the Semitic root "GNN", which is originally from Paleo-Hebrew, and from which the Greek word Genesis and the Arabic Jannah (garden or paradise) is derived.
Arabic lexicons, such as Taj-il Uroos, and William Lane's lexicon provide the rendered meaning of Jinn not only for spirits, but also for anything concealed through time, status and even physical darkness. A classical Arabic use of the term Jinn is as follows:

وَلا 'جِنَّ' بِالْبَغْضَآءِ وَالنَّظَرِ الشَّزْرِ


And there is no 'concealment' with vehement hatered and the looking with aversion.

'English'
The first recorded use of the word ''Genie'' in English was in 1655 as ''geny,'' with the Latin meaning. The French translators of ''The Book of One Thousand and One Nights'' later used the word ''génie'' as a translation of ''jinni'' because it was similar to the Arabic word both in sound and in meaning; this meaning was also picked up in English and has since become dominant. The plural, according to Sir Richard Francis Burton, is Jan.

Jinn in pre-Islamic era


Amongst archaeologists dealing with ancient Middle Eastern cultures, any mythological spirit lesser than a god is often referred to as a “genie”, especially when describing stone reliefs or other forms of art. This practice draws on the original meaning of the term genie for simply a spirit of any sort.
'Epigraphic Evidence'
Inscriptions found in Northwestern Arabia seem to indicate worship of Djinn, or at least their tributory status. For instance, an inscription from Beth Fasi'el near Palmyra pays tribute to the "Ginnaye", the "good and rewarding gods" ( Hoyland: Arabia and the Arabs, 2001,) providing a sharp resemblance to the Latin Genius and Juno: The Guardian Spirits. This reveals the missing link between the Etymology of these two words.
'Folklore'
Types of jinn include the ''ghul'' (“night shade”, which can change shape), the ''sila'' (which cannot change shape), the ''Ifrit'' [], and “marid” []. From information in ''The Arabian Nights'', marid seem to be the strongest form of jinn, followed by Ifrit, and then the rest of the jinn.
Arabs believed that the jinn were spirits of fire, although sometimes they associated them with succubi (demons in the forms of beautiful women). The feminine form of jinn is “jinniyah” or “jinneyeh”.

Jinn in Islam


The jinn are said to be creatures with free will, made from 'smokeless fire' by God (the literal translation being “subtle fire”, i.e., a fire which does not give itself away through smoke), much in the same way humans were made of earth. According to the Recitation, jinn have free choice, and Iblis used this freedom in front of God by refusing to bow to Adam when God told Iblis to do so. By refusing to obey God’s order he was thrown out of the Paradise and called “Shaitan” (See Shaitan). In the Qur'an, jinn are frequently mentioned and Sura 72 of the Qur'an named Al-Jinn is entirely about them. Another Sura (Al-Naas) mentions the Jinn in the last verse. In fact, it is mentioned in the Qur'an that Muhammad was sent as a prophet to both “humanity and the jinn”.
The jinn have communities much like human societies: they eat, marry, die, etc. They live in tribes and have boundaries. They follow religions as humans do, and follow the same ranks in armies as humans do. Jinns can settle in a vast area to a tiny hole, as they are massless and can be fit into any space they find sufficient for them. They are invisible to humans, but they can see humans. Sometimes they accidentally or deliberately come into view or into contact with humans. Jinn are believed to live much longer than humans: some of whom are said to be still alive having seen Muhammad (who lived during the 7th century), which would affirm their long life. Much like humans, jinn have learned to assimilate into the human world when they desire to do so. In many cases they live unnoticed among people marked only by the rather unusual or somewhat secretive practises they keep. They cannot breed with humans. Jinn can transform themselves into humans and can be summoned by humans.
Humans attempting to perform black magic on humans call Jinn specializing in dirty deeds to perform the magic; such black magic on humans can only be undertaken by dark Jinn - “Ifrit” or “Marid”. In many countries there are people who perform or supposedly perform black magic (usually for cursing other people, or using jinns to influence a marriage to end in divorce, etc) in exchange for money. Thus, a person often pays a magician, who then calls upon a dark djinn, who then performs the magic, at least supposedly. These acts are considered haraam in Islam.

Genie as a Thief


In Muslim beliefs, the genie can also act as a supernatural thief. [1] By some traditions, Prophet Mohammed (PBUH&HF) warned against thieving jinn.

Jinn in post-Islamic Arabic fiction


Evil Ifrit in The Book of One Thousand and One Nights are called “the seed of Iblis”.
The Spirit of the Lamp in the story of Aladdin, a familiar djinn to the Western world (see next section), was such a jinni, bound to an oil lamp. Ways of summoning jinn were told in The Thousand and One Nights: by writing the name of God in Hebrew characters on a knife (whether the Hebrew name for God, Yahweh, or the Arabic Allah is used is not specified), and drawing a diagram, with strange symbols and incantations around it.
The jinn’s power of possession was also addressed in the fictional Nights. It is said that by taking seven hairs out of the tail of a cat that was all black except for a white spot on the end of its tail, and then burning the hairs in a small closed room with the possessed, filling their nose with the scent, this would release them from the spell of the jinn inside them.

Genies in Western culture


Western media has chosen many different ways of portraying genies, from the comical to the horrific.

The Western interpretation of the genie is based on the Aladdin tale in the Western version of ''The Book of One Thousand and One Nights'', which told of a genie that lived in an oil lamp and the tale of The Fisherman and the Jinni. Oddly, lore from these tales seem to get twisted and mixed into each other, thanks in no small part to Disney’s Aladdin. The number and frequency of wishes varies, but typically it is limited to three wishes. More mischievous genies may take advantage of poorly worded wishes (including the ''Fairly Odd Parents'' and in an episode of ''The Twilight Zone'').
Many stories about genies tend to follow the same vein as the famous short story ''The Monkey's Paw'' by W. W. Jacobs, with the overriding theme of “be careful what you wish for”; in these stories, wishes can have disastrous, horrific and sometimes fatal consequences. Often, the genie causes harm to the loved ones or innocent people surrounding the wisher, making others pay for its master’s greed or ignorance. While this may be because of the genie's evilness, in other cases the genie may simply misunderstand the wishes.
Exploiting loopholes or twisting interpretations of wishes is a classic trait amongst genies in Western fiction. For example, in “The Man in the Bottle” episode of ''The Twilight Zone'', a poor shopkeeper who finds a genie wishes to become a leader of a great nation - and is transformed into Adolf Hitler at the very end of World War II. Often, these stories end with the genie’s master wishing to have never found the genie, all his previous wishes never to have happened, or a similar wish to cancel all the fouled wishes that have come before.
Until 2005, the Djinn was one of many mythical creatures to be used as a Brownie patrol. When the Girl Guides of Canada updated the Brownie program in 2005, they decided that Djinns were an improper use of an Islamic cultural icon and made the decision to remove Djinni from the program.

Genies in popular culture


Awareness about the origins of the genie myth, and the use of the original spelling ''jinn'' has become more common. Usually, the term ''djinn'' is used by authors who wish to convey a more serious interpretation of the mythical creature, rather than the comical genies the Western public has become used to, such as Robin Williams' character in Aladdin. However, all Arabian Nights scholars such as Richard Francis Burton prefer the term Jinn.
Examples include:
Books


Jinnicky the Red Jinn is one of Ruth Plumly Thompson's most popular original Oz characters. His most notable appearances are in ''Jack Pumpkinhead of Oz'', ''The Purple Prince of Oz'' and ''The Silver Princess in Oz''.

★ Mr. Beaver in ''The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe'' conjectures that the White Witch Jadis was not human (as was her claim), but was in fact half giantess and half Jinn, a descendant of Lilith, Adam’s “first wife”.

Christopher Moore’s Book “Practical Demonkeeping” describes the pre-human origin of the Djinn and God’s favor for humans.

★ The “Djinn in charge of All Deserts” gives the lazy camel his hump in the story How the Camel Got His Hump from Rudyard Kipling’s Just So Stories.

★ Several references to djinn occur in the final short story, entitled “Ramadan”, of Neil Gaiman’s sixth ''The Sandman'' collection, ''. In Gaiman’s novel, American Gods, an ifrit drives a taxicab in New York.

★ In the ''Bartimaeus Trilogy'' books by Jonathan Stroud, a djinni is a section of five major spirits, also including afrits (a form of Ifrit) as a creature of fire, marids, foliots, and imps. The trilogy focuses on a five-thousand year-old djinni named Bartimaeus and his unwilling alliance with a teenage boy.

★ In Rachel Caine’s series of books named Weather Warden, the Djinn appear frequently. The Wardens who control fire, weather and earth capture the Djinn in bottles. The two most powerful Djinn in the world are used in these series of books.

★ ''Dragon Rider'', a novel by Cornelia Funke features a djinn named Asif. She stated he was colored dark blue. She also stated he had a thousand eyes, he was so large his shadow could darken an entire ravine, his pointed ears were larger than the wings of a dragon, he had a fat belly, and blue hairs thicker than saplings grow inside his nostrils. He is an example of a serious interpretation of a djinn. He lives in a gray car, materializes from blue smoke, has a thousand eyes, and is omnipotent.If you ask him a question, he will show you it in one of his thousand eyes. A human must ask, it must be seven words, and if Asif has the same question but before him, the questioner must serve him for their entire life. Funke did not state if you could escape him and no character did get to be a slave, but Asif did say to the dragon Firedrake that he made his skin itch so much that a thousand servants had to scratch it for him. The servants were not shown, but mentioned.

★ In the popular book series Children of the Lamp, John and Phillipa Gaunt discover that they are members of the djinn tribe Marid.

★ In the young adult’s book Castle in the Air by Diana Wynne Jones, the sequel to Howl's Moving Castle, there is a genie in a bottle and a pair of Djinn.

★ In Jinn a book by Matthew B.J. Delaney, the creature which is being hunted is a Jinn. Has been called "Saving Private Ryan meets Alien in Delaney's tense and involving first novel, a hybrid that transcends its several genres."

★ There are several passing references to djinna in Salman Rushdie's "The Satanic Verses."
Comics


★ In the anime and manga series ''Dragon Ball Z'', the character Mr. Popo is a djinn that protects Kami’s Lookout and the final and most powerful villain faced by the heroes was a stylistically-Arabic demon called Majin Buu. “Majin” is the Japanese word for “Magical Being” or “Genie.” Befitting the genie that he is, Majin Buu is a spirit formed from smoke and clouds that utilizes horrific transmutation sorcery which transforms living beings into candy to sate his monstrous appetite, as well as possessing incredible power that quite literally rivalled that of the most powerful gods in the ''Dragon Ball'' universe.

★ In the Vertigo comic Fables, a Djinn is released. In this comic, they are considered armong the most powerful creatures in existence.

★ In the comic Jesi The Genie, a former milk goddess is cursed with becoming a genie, and then released during the time of the Arabian Nights by a young man. Jesi also appears in the webcomic Gaijin Hi.

★ ClanDestine, a comic book series by Alan Davis and Mark Farmer and published by Marvel Comics, is about a family of British superheroes in the Marvel Universe, children of a human and a female djinn.

★ Comic fiction author Tom Holt titled one of his novels “Djinn Rummy” combining the word Djinn with the popular card game Gin Rummy. The novel is in fact about a number of djinns in the human world, many of which who have corporate sponsoring. Djinns appear frequently in a number of Tom Holt’s books, though it is normally taken for granted that the reader knows some of the fictional background of these characters. (I.e. the books are somewhat chronological).

★ The DC Comic’s characters Johnny Thunder and Jakeem Thunder are masters of the djinn from the 5th dimension named 'Thunderbolt'. Genies in the DCU are summoned by their masters by saying their name backwards. Thunderbolt's true name is 'Yz', which when said backwards sounds like "Say you". Disgraced superhero Triumph was later manipulated by the evil djinn named 'Lkz'; which when said backwards sounds like "So cool". After a conflict involving both the Justice League of America and the Justice Society of America the two genies were merged together changing the Thunderbolt's summoning word to "So cool". The 5th dimension is also home to Superman's enemy, Mister Mxyzptlk. In the pages of JSA it was revealed that imps, like Mxyzptlk and Bat-Mite, are seen as something akin to children. Thunderbolt's son, 'Shocko' and Shocko's wife 'Peachy Pet' are also djinn.
Movies and television

A man carefully words his wish for power, only to find he is Adolf Hitler at the conclusion of the Second World War.


★ The original ''Twilight Zone'' features two episodes with genies in them: "The Man in the Bottle" and "I Dream of Genie".

★ The sitcom "I Dream of Jeannie", which began in 1964 and ran for five seasons, featured Barbara Eden as a 2,000 year-old beautiful blonde Persian genie completely infatuated with the American astronaut master that had found her bottle and set her free in "Modern" America. The series debuted two years after the ''Twilight Zone'' episode of the same name.

★ The horror film Wishmaster features a hateful and evil Djinn as its villain. The film has spawned three sequels.

★ In the 1996 film Kazaam, Shaquille O'Neal played a rapping genie who lived in a boombox.

★ In the animated series Martin Mystery, episodes called “Curse of the Djini” and “Return of the Djini” featured an evil djinn trapped in a skull that could read peoples' mind’s and make them say their wishes. If the djinn died then the wishes would be undone.

★ In the episode "The Wish" of the UPN horror/comedy series “Special Unit 2”, Special Unit 2 encountered an evil genie-like link who needed to grant 3,000 wishes in order to gain free will. Unlike traditional djinn, this genie did not have supernatural powers other than the ability to transform between gas and solid states. As a result, the genie had to carry out wishes physically. So for example if someone wished for a million dollars the genie had to break into a bank and steal a million dollars for them. If someone wished for a relationship with a beautiful model the genie would have to kidnap the model. These wishes almost always ended in disaster for the genie's masters. After 3,000 wishes had been granted the genie would no longer have to live in bottles or grant wishes.

★ In the TV series “Charmed”, the Charmed Ones run across a trickster Genie that is trying to gain its freedom by granting three wishes.

★ An episode of the CW paranormal drama ''Supernatural'' called “What Is And What Should Never Be” has Sam and Dean Winchester hunting a Djinn which did not actually grant wishes. Instead, it would cause the victim to enter a dream state where their greatest wish was granted while the Djinn fed off their life.

Desiree from the animated series Danny Phantom is a genie-like ghost who grants any wishes she hears.

★ In the film Long Time Dead the characters do a ouija board, which brings out a vengful spirit named Djinn.

★ In Fairly Oddparents there's a genie named Norm voiced by Norm MacDonald
Video games


★ In the online MMORPG City of Heroes , the npc vendor Serafina is a free Genie who asks for the player's help to recover her magic bottle. After helping her, Magical Origin characters can use her as a Magic Store.

★ In the videogame Golden Sun and , players encounter Djinn as small benevolent creatures who use their powers to aid the protagonists in battle.

★ The strategy game series, Heroes of Might and Magic, features Genies as playable characters and units. A Genie named Solmyr is also a major protagonist in the series.

★ In the 1980s videogame Archon, the Djinn is the champion of the light side, opposite the Dragon who is champion of the dark side.

★ In the video game Primal, the world of Volca is inhabited by evil creatures called Djinns, led by King Iblis and Queen Malikel. Those Djinn live dormant in a volcano, awakening only when the volcano is about to erupt.

★ In the video game “Sonic and the Secret Rings”, there are two djinn. Shahra the Ring Genie, a Genie of the Ring, who assists Sonic through the game and Erazor Djinn, the game’s main villain who is a Genie of the Lamp.

★ In the SNES game , a powerful Djinn enemy named Fausto appears inside a treasure chest enemy late in the game. He is characterized by high attack, defense, and a weakness to Mario's air attacks, classifying him as a dao, or earth djinn.

★ Djinn are creatures in the game Titan Quest

★ Djinn are also creatures in the game Guild Wars. [2]

★ In the video game series Final Fantasy, one of the summoned creatures is named Ifrit and offers fire elemental magic.

★ In the video game Vagrant Story, Ifrit is one of the stronger elemental enemies with the affinity of fire.

★ The Pokémon Jirachi is said to grant any wish once it is written on a tag and attached to its three star points on its head.

★ Genies are a major plot element in King's Quest VI as part of the Green Isles folklore.

Iblis, while not being the main villain of the story, is featured as a summoned entity by the game's antagonist in second of the Quest for Glory games. The protagonist (Hero) also has the opportunity to summon a lesser djinn who grants him three wishes near the game's end.

★ The real time strategy game engine used in the computer games Age of Empires, Age of Empires II, and , was called the Genie engine.

★ In AdventureQuest, theres a monster called Djinni which is a fire monster and is said to only obey people with a fire orb.
Others


★ In the Dungeons & Dragons series of roleplaying games, genies are powerful elemental spirits from the Inner Planes, each of the four classical elements having its own subspecies of genie: Djinn for air, Dao for earth, Efreet for fire, Marids for water, and a fifth type known as the Jann, who draw their existence from all four elements. A six type, the Qorrash, has been added later and is linked to the pseudo-element of cold [3].

★ In the collectible card game '' there are more than two dozen djinn-related cards, mostly larger-than-usual creatures with a drawback, and a dozen ifrit/efreet cards.

★ In Malaysia, all issues of the Economist dated December 19 2006 had the pages containing the article “Born of Fire” ripped out. The government's explanation was that “Muslims cannot believe in Jinns as this goes against Islam”. [4] (Note: The Qu'ran, which is one of the documents that Islam is based upon, takes the existence of jinn as a fact; see one example here.)

See also



Ghost

Magic carpet

Aladdin

Dantalion

Exorcism in Islam

Ifrit

Marid

Mr. Popo
Compare


Wight

Sprite

Tutelary deity

References



★ al-Ashqar, Dr. Umar Sulaiman (1998). ''The World of the Jinn and Devils''. Boulder, CO: Al-Basheer Company for Publications and Translations.

★ Barnhart, Robert K. ''The Barnhart Concise Dictionary of Etymology''. 1995.

★ “Genie”. ''The Oxford English Dictionary''. Second edition, 1989.

External links



Etymology of “genie”

Visions of the Jinn – a Muslim scholar’s experience with Jinn

Satan is a jinn

Sura Al-Jinn from the Qur'an

Jinn Possession: Between Facts and Illusions online Fatwa from islamonline.net

The World of Jinn and Its Secrets online Fatwa from islamonline.net

A Jinn Paralyses Me At Night – though such symptoms are now compatible with a recently discovered condition known as Sleep Paralysis.

All about possession and exorcisms

What are Jinns and Spirits ?

Jinn and Forms of Jinn

Macula’s illustration of (Jinn)

Purrsia Press: the publisher of Purrsia and Jesi The Genie

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