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The Gods #77382 What about Jinn

This question pertains to the Gods
Hi, what do you know about the islamic Demons called Jinn? Can you give me full information about them?

Greetings.

 
From my work on X:

"
The being labeled as Iblis is truly actually the Supreme God of the gentiles, which Judaism and Christianity have slandered by associating the "sat" root, which mean truth, with evil. His "rebellion" and "fall" is a purposeful misinterpretation of the "fall" from the Divine plane into the material, the essence of creation, also seen in the "reversed" pentagram and the lightning bolt.The Jinn are the original Pagan Gods. Iblis specifically comes from the same ancient root as Diabolos, a title that relates to Zeus' ability for division.
While christianity was able to get away with saying all the pagan Gods are pure evil spirits, the Middle East had a deep culture of communication with spirits, so the lie had to be tweaked into saying the Jinn are beings with free will, with many of them "under the laws of Allah". The Surah that talks about the Jinn "happens to be" Surah 72. This connects them to the 72 Goetic demons, which we've proved before to be slanderous titles of the pagan Gods.
Solomon, even in Islamic theology, "binds and controls" these demons in the name of "Allah". This is where the mythology of a "djinn in the lamp" comes from. They don't deny that these Jinn offer wealth, power and growth, but they farcically claim you can control these beings, and that they are evil. Islam directly mentions three "Jinn" females, who are pre-Islamic Goddesses.
Al-Uzza's name points to the "Z" root, which was used in middle eastern Paganism to symbolize light and power, similar to the name of Azazel. That, and her title as the Goddess of Venus, shows this is Astarte, whom the Greeks knew under many names, and whom the Norse knew as Freya.
Al-Manat is a Goddess of fate, judgement and decrees, with the same "m-n-y" root that the Egyptian Maat has.
Al-Lat is the feminine Divine archetype, a feminine variation of "Al-Ilah".
"

Additionally, some beings that would fall under the definition of "jinn" are nature spirits and other spiritual beings like Gargoyles.
 

Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Shaitan

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