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General Category => History, Archaeology, and Geography of Mecca & Islamic Faith => Topic started by: Peter on September 09, 2010, 08:23:26 AM

Title: Occultism in the Family of Mohammed
Post by: Peter on September 09, 2010, 08:23:26 AM
Link to article with footnotes
http://religionresearchinstitute.org/Mohammad/occultism.htm

Occultism in the family of Mohammed

By Dr. Rafat Amari

When exposing occultism in the family of Mohammed, we are not showing prejudice or unfairness to Muslims; rather, we are simply presenting the truth, as recorded in Islamic literature. Unfortunately, the Islamic historians, who recorded such occult phenomenon, failed to recognize that such occultism is directly contradictory to: the nature, the call, and the word of the true God.

     Will our Muslim friends today fail to continue to be able to discern the real spiritual forces, which under lied Mohammed and his family?  An honest study of the life of the members of the family of Mohammed will help us to clarify this problem. We will begin with the grandfather of Mohammed, Abu Mutaleb, who was known as the worshiper of Asaf and Naelah.


What was the True Religion of Abdul Mutaleb?

Asaf and Naelah were two Kuhhan, priests of the Jinn-devils. Tradition asserts that the gods transformed them into two stones, because they committed fornication inside the Kaa'bah of Mecca.

     The statues of Asaf and Naelah were also placed on the well of Zamzam. Ibn Hisham, who edited the oldest book on the life of Mohammed, says these statues were worshipped at the well of Zamzam. He tells us the worshippers sacrificed their animals to the statues there[1]. This suggests to us that the well of Zamzam was dedicated to the worship of the two priests of the Jinn, which the statues represented. It was Abdel Mutaleb, the grandfather of Mohammed, who dedicated the well of Zamzam to the two venerated Jinn priests and their statues. We draw this conclusion for many reasons. First, Abdel Mutaleb dug the well of Zamzam.[ii][2]  Second, Abdel Mutaleb was one of the worshippers of the statues of the two Jinn priests. He was so consumed by occult worship that he wanted to sacrifice one of his own sons at the feet of the two statues at Zamzam. That son was Abdullah, the father of Mohammed. When Abdel Mutaleb was at the point of killing Abdullah with his knife, Abdel Mutaleb's brother rescued the boy.[iii][3]

The idea of sacrificing one's son to the Jinn or their representatives, the venerated leaders and priests, is known, not only in Arabia, but also in other parts of the ancient world. Even to this day worshippers in the occult religions sacrifice children to devils. The fact that Abdul Mutaleb chose to sacrifice his son before these two statues reveals that the religion of the Jinn of Arabia was the religion to which he was most attached.

The third reason for concluding that Abdul Mutaleb dedicated the well of Zamzam to the statues of the Jinn priests who were venerated in Mecca is that Abdul Mutaleb showed he had a close relationship with the representatives of the Arabian Jinn religion. Those representatives, or priests, were called Kuhhan, the singular of which is Kahen. Abdul Mutaleb consulted the Kuhhan when he faced a problem. They were his counselors, and he used to travel great distances in order to meet and consult a famous Kahen. When a dispute between the tribe of Quraish and Abdel Mutaleb occurred because of the well of Zamzam, Abdel Mutaleb chose a famous Kahinah of Jinn to rule in the matter. This Kahinah was the one who appointed two dangerous Kuhhan of the Jinn, Satih and Shak', to be priests of the Jinn after her death.[iv][4] Al-Halabieh says about these two Kuhhan of the Jinn:

They were the chiefs of the Kuhhan and the ones with knowledge about occultism and the priesthood to the Jinn.[v][5]

Ibn Hisham mentions about this Kahinah, "She was the Kahinah of the clan of Saad Hutheim."[vi][6] When a dispute arose between Abdel Mutaleb and Beni Kilab, which means the clan of Kilab, Abdel Mutaleb went to a Kahen of the Jinn called Rabiah Bin H'thar al-Asadi to judge the matter.[vii][7] Consulting the Kuhhan of the Jinn was something that the grandfathers of Mohammed practiced. Hisham, the father of Abdel Mutaleb, was known to consult a main Kahen of the tribe of Khuzaa'h.[viii][8]  Many examples such as these shed light to the affiliation of the family and the ancestors of Mohammed to the religion of Jinn in Arabia.

As if this were not convincing enough, two more considerations prove that Abdul Mutaleb was a leader in the Arabian Jinn religion. When Abdel Mutaleb dedicated his son Abdullah, who became the father of Mohammed, he did it through a Kahinah, a female Kahen, under the instruction of the Jinn to whom she was connected. The biographers of Mohammed, including Ibn Hisham, Mohammed's most authoritative biographer, tell us that Abdel Mutaleb took Abdullah to a Jinn priestess named Khutbah. She lived in the city of Khaybar located in north central Arabia.[ix][9]  When he visited Khutbah, Abdul Mutaleb expressed his readiness to kill his son if the priestess of Jinn ordered him to do so. It is clear that children born to the followers of occult sects were to be sacrificed to the malignant spirit connected with the medium or priest of the occult community. The spirit may ask that the child be killed as a sacrifice to the devil, or the priests may ask the child's parents to present dogs or other animals to the malignant spirit as sacrifices. It is clear that, in the case of Abdul Mutaleb, we encounter the same occult phenomenon which is practiced among various occult sects. The spirits of Jinn-devils rule over the destiny of children who are born within the occult community. This was the reason many children were sacrificed to the devil.

We see the dedication of Abdel Mutaleb to the religious system which Khutbah represented. Abdel Mutaleb was ready to obey the decision of the Jinn-devil to whom Khutbah was a medium and a priest, in whatever the Jinn decided for his son. Ibn Hisham reports the answer the Jinn priestess gave to Abdel Mutaleb's request: "Return to me after one day until the one to whom I am connected comes to me."
Title: Re: Occultism in the Family of Mohammed
Post by: Peter on September 09, 2010, 08:24:20 AM
[1] Ibn Hisham, I, page 69

[ii][2] Ibn Hisham, I, pages 117 and 118

[iii][3] Ibn Hisham, I, page 126; Halabieh, I, page 58

[iv][4] Halabieh, I, page 121

[v][5] Halabieh, I, page122

[vi][6] Ibn Hisham, I, page 119

[vii][7] Al-Nuwayri, Nihayat al-arab fi funun al-adab, 3, page 133

[viii][8] Al-Nuwayri, Nihayat al-arab fi funun al-adab, 3, page 123

[ix][9] Ibn Hisham I, pages 126 and 127

[10] Ibn Hisham, I, page 126; Halabieh, I, page 58

[xi][11] Halabieh, 1,63

[xii][12] Ibn Hisham, I, page 128

[xiii][13] Halabieh, I, pages 73 and 74

[xiv][14] Al-Lisan, 13, page 213 ;  quoted by Jiwad Ali, al-Mufassal, vi, page 720

[xv][15] Halabieh, I, pages 73 and 74

[xvi][16] Halabieh, 1, page 75

[xvii][17] Halabieh, 1, page 98

[xviii][18] Sahih al-Bukhari, 1, page 96

[xix][19] Halabieh, 1, pages 406-407

[xx][20] Demonolgia , a discourse on Witchcraft, pages 32-33

[xxi][21]  Ibn Hisham, 1 page 147, see also the foot note in the same page.

[xxii][22] Halabieh 1, pages 101 and 432

[xxiii][23] Taj al-Arus, 5, page 381

[xxiv][24] Halabieh 1, pages 407

[xxv][25] Ibn Hisham, 1 pages 189 and 218

[xxvi][26] Ibn Hisham, 1 page 225

[xxvii][27] Ibn Hisham 1, page 128

[xxviii][28]   Hyppolytus, The Refutation of all heresies, book VIII , Chapter XIII

[xxix][29] Ibn Darid, Al-Ishtiqaq, pages 88 and 89

[xxx][30] Hyppolytus, The Refutation of All Heresies, book VI , Chapter xiv

[xxxi][31] Ibn Hisham 1, page 242: quoted by Jawad Ali, vi, page 476

[xxxii][32] Ibn Hisham, first part ; pages 63 and 76

[xxxiii][33] Al-Munjed, Arabic dictionary, page 158

[xxxiv][34] Jawad Ali, al-Mufassal, vi, page 451

[xxxv][35] Jawad Ali , al-Mufassal, vi, page 454

[xxxvi][36] Al Asbahani, Al-Agani 3, page 118

[xxxvii][37] Sahih al-Bukhari, 1, page 4

[xxxviii][38] Halabieh, I, page 421

[xxxix][39] Jawad Ali, al-Muffassal Fi Tarikh al-Arab Khabl al-Islam, 6, page 461

[xl][40] Al-Dumeiri, Al-Hawan, 2, page 195; quoted by Jawad Ali, al-Muffassal Fi Tarikh al-Arab Khabl al-Islam, 6, page 484; al- Aghani, 4,  page 122

[xli][41] Ibn Kathir, Al-Bidaya wa al-Nihaya 2, page 227; quoted by Jawad Ali, al-Muffassal Fi Tarikh al-Arab Khabl al-Islam, 6, page 481
Title: Re: Occultism in the Family of Mohammed
Post by: PeteWaldo on August 26, 2016, 08:14:21 AM
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