Just got my Jinn up to 11, struggling to find a good formation. My Clan is full of Seon/Aly/Davi/Chione so no help there as well. Could someone link a good formation I can start building towards (even an opponent you face, hopefully GoW)? Thanks in advance.

I am a massive fan of Battlefront 2005 and Qui-Gon Jinn is my all time favorite Jedi. I know there are mods out there, I just can't seem to find any. Please comment down below with a link to one of the downloads. Thank you so much in advance!


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Anyway, the Jinn are the fairies? I don't know but I tracked down someone who agrees with me, and it is a fascinating link in its own terms as well, "Folklore of the Holy Land", 1907, collected by a Christian divine of apparently broad views and gentle disposition:

Thank you for posting that link, froglover. I agree there could definitely be truth to this connection, but I have not come across anything in writing as of yet, to support that possibility. It makes sense to me that the jinn and fae could be the same race of beings.

From the descriptions I've read, the personalities of the Djinn and the Fae are very similar to each other....and to us for that matter, but the physical descriptions seem to be markedly diffrent. I find it curious that both are described as having the ability to be good, evil, or abivilent... just like humans. Does anyone have any theories on this in conjunction with them possibly being the same entities as the author of this post theorized?

I don't know if I'd call it a theory, but I noticed from my studies of Islam in my twenties, that it does seem to be widely accepted that an invisible race of beings exist- probably because of the mention in the Qu'ran-there is even a whole Surat assigned to jinn . The belief is that "God" created the jinn from smokeless fire and created man from earth.

There is probably varying thoughts on jinn, but I remember being especially preoccupied with this topic while studying islam. This race, is said to have free will and can choose their paths in life. Some jinn are muslim, some choose not to be. Apparently, they like places like ruins, forests, deserts, groves ...but also places where humans can be found alone..like the bathroom..lol! Some can be helpful, harmful, dangerous, or even just aloof and uninterested in us. During my time with islam, I wondered about them a lot-probably due to my experiences with the spirit world & wondering where they fit in. Once I was reading the Qu'ran out loud and felt different presences around me. When I said something-another person in the room told me that the islamic jinn love to have the Qu'ran read to them.

and, I'm glad I found it because it had slipped my mind about the pre-islamic info out there on jinn...which is also a reason I see the possibility existing of a connection between jinn and fae. The term Jinn predates Islam, if I can recall correctly...which is important in trying to find an answer to this question, in my opinion

Thanks heaps Anara, this thread has tended to confirm my impression. A very useful link appeared in that thread, useful enough for me to repeat here: _Bliss_Third_Fascicle/bliss3_31.htm ; an Islamic summary of beliefs about Jinn. According to this, amongst much else: It is possible for a human to marry and have sexual intercourse with a Jinn (Islamic scholars differ as to whether it is allowed!) although whether children may result is not made clear, the Persian word for Jinn is Peri (and the Peri/fairy connection is commonly made), one may immobilize Jinni by staring at them, incubi and succubi may be either demons or Jinn....Much folk magic seems by this account to be about rescuing people thought to be stolen by the Jinn or curing people of diseases especially epilepsy thought to be caused by Jinn. Official Islamic responses to deliberate commerce with Jinn range from the death penalty through lesser punishments to tolerance. Some Muslims believe every person is assigned a Jinn to protect them through life. According to this author a person who does not believe in the Jinn is an ubeliever and will go to Hell but he also records that some who regard themselves as Muslims do not in fact believe in them but regard them as metaphors (or something of the sort).

Now, I was just joking around earlier in this thread about wondering if faeries like to be read too..but I found this to be interesting..knowing about islamic jinn loving to hear the qu'ran being read too them-well it kinda makes sense in a weird way that perhaps some of the others like to be read too...maybe this Anne Bodenham knew that? Maybe not, but thought it was interesting enough at any rate...of course that is supposing that jinn and faeries are the same or similar beings...and that familiars can be jinn or fae..

Genies (or jinn, as they are better known in the Arabic world) are supernatural beings with roots in ancient Mesopotamian legends. Jinn, however, are not the lamp-dwelling, wish-granting benevolent servants that Westerners know from popular culture.

The image that most Americans probably have of genies comes from the 1960s sitcom "I Dream of Jeannie" or the animated big blue Robin Williams-voiced wiseacre in Disney's "Aladdin." More recently, in the television adaptation of Neil Gaiman's 2001 novel "American Gods," audiences have come to know a cab-driving jinn who switches identities with an Omani salesman named Salim. (Salim had recognized the jinn from a story told to him by his grandmother).

Gaiman's magical, shape-shifting jinn is fictional, but belief in genies is widespread. In "Legends of the Fire Spirits: Jinn and Genies from Arabia to Zanzibar" (Counterpoint Books, 2011), researcher Robert Lebling noted that "Jinn are taken seriously and regarded as real, tangible beings by a large segment of the world's population.... They often appear humanoid or even human but possess amazing powers we lack. They can change their shapes, can fly through the air, and even can render themselves invisible." (Lebling is also the creator of a Facebook page titled The Jinn Group, where members share jinn stories and lore.)

Considered wind and fire spirits by Muslims, jinn are invisible to humans in their pure form but can take any form they please to suit their needs. Jinn, just like people, can be good or evil; they are born, grow up, marry, have jobs, raise families, live in their own communities and die, just like us.

Jinn are sometimes blamed for unexplained minor health scares, accidents and misfortune. For example, in 2000, teachers at an all-girls school in the Saudi Arabian city of Jeddah began having mysterious fits and seizures. Though doctors attributed that incident to mass hysteria (a mild and harmless form of social contagion and psychological suggestion), many believed that jinn haunted the school and were to blame for the attack. In May 2015, nine elementary and middle school students at a girls' school in southern Madinah, Saudi Arabia, claimed that jinns had made them feel unwell, causing episodes of fainting and spasms. Nearly 200 of their classmates refused to attend the school for two days while medical authorities searched for an explanation.

Belief in the fire spirits is also common among elected officials in the Middle East. In 2011, nearly two dozen associates of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad were accused of summoning jinn to attack political enemies. One man, Abbas Ghaffari, was reportedly accused of summoning a genie who caused a heart attack in one of Ghaffari's rivals.

Jinn share many traits with angels, fairies, ghosts and other supernatural creatures. Many Muslims believe in the literal existence of jinn, just as many Christians believe in the literal existence of angels. Just as Christian theologians have long debated the nature of angels, Muslim theologians have long debated the nature of jinn: whether they have physical bodies, where they live, how they interact with us and so on.

Like spirits and demons, jinn are said to be able to possess humans (with similar symptoms, including seizures, violence and speaking unknown tongues) and can be exorcised from the human body through rituals. Just as in Catholic exorcism rituals where Bible passages are read to the possessed person to drive the spirit from the human body, Islamic rituals often involve having sections of the Quran recited to the afflicted person to rid him or her of jinn.

In some places jinn are so feared that merely calling them by their name risks retribution, so euphemisms are used instead. This also has parallels to fairy folklore, in which the capricious creatures are often called "the fine folk" or "wee folk" to avoid offense. Whether jinn exist or not is less important than the fact that many people believe that they do. Legends of these fire spirits, like those of angels, fairies and ghosts, will always be with us.

Although generally invisible, jinn are supposed to be composed of thin and subtle bodies (Arabic: , romanized: ajsm), and can change at will. They favour a 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. 2351a5e196

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