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QUEERKEIT▽COVEN

@queerkeitcoven / queerkeitcoven.tumblr.com

queer/trans-centered study & practice of Jewish magic, mysticism & folklore about FAQ links & resources
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Esotericism, Eurocentrism, and Erasure

If you do not suffer the toil of study, you will suffer the toil of ignorance.
- Moshe ben Ezra, source unknown

“Western” esotericism” in its myriad forms - Hermetism, Wicca, traditional and modern witchcraft, “Cabala,” planetary magic and astrology, and so on - would not exist without centuries of intellectual labor from Jewish, Muslim, African, Indian, and Chinese scholars (4). This comes as a shock to an unfortunate number of people, including magic-users who should frankly know better. Worse, although academic scholars of Western esotericism are highly interested in the topic’s “non-Western” roots, there are many actual practitioners of esotericism who are frankly racist, anti-Semitic, anti-Muslim, and more. This attitude ranges from simple erasure of the origins of their practices (i.e., claiming that Wiccan rituals are direct continuations of indigenous British faith instead of the eclectic, ceremonial magic-based religion it is) to outright hostility against the cultures that contributed to them (i.e., “Kabbalists” who claim to have “recovered” magical secrets from spiritually greedy Jews).

As a Jew, I encounter the attitude wearily often that someone like me has no place practicing magic, either because Judaism prohibits it or because “Abrahamic religions” just aren’t countercultural or edgy enough or something. I cannot speak for the experiences of other marginalized groups, but I do know that the phenomena of simultaneous appropriation and exclusion is not limited to Jews. This post is meant to remedy at least some of that ignorance.

  • Although not all intellectual contributions were directly related to esotericism, they did lay the groundwork for esoteric concepts to develop. Mathematics from Jewish, Muslim, Egyptian, Indian, Babylonian, and Chinese sources were indispensable in the development of the basis of what would eventually be known as “Western” astrology (4). 
  • In fact, the very concept that the planets have influence over certain parts of nature, as expressed by authors such as Agrippa, is derived from (among other works) al-Kindi’s De radiis, which argues that planets and certain magical words exert control over the world (3) (8).
  • The Liber vaccae (Book of the Cow), originally written in Arabic, is a book of magical experiments whose Latin translations can be found across Europe, including in the occult library of St. Augustine’s Abbey in England (5). (A Hebrew manuscript also exists [10].)
  • The Picatrix, that famous astrological and magical treatise, was originally written in Arabic and translated (probably by a Jew) for a Christian audience sometime in the 13th century CE (2).
  • Though many of the human promulgators of Hermetism are anonymous (or pseudonymous), the philosophy combined Neoplatonic thought with ancient Egyptian magical practices. It was preserved by a Baghdadi school at least as late as the 11th century CE (Merkur).
  • During the Renaissance, European Christian authors began appropriating the Jewish Kabbalah for their own theological ends, “rescuing it” (or so they believed) from the stubborn heresy of the Jews. Virtually all subsequent “Kabbalistic” or “Jewish” (including many “Solomonic”) texts produced by non-Jews since have directly originated from or been inspired by this theft (9).
  • Russia - admittedly a country on the outliers of “Western” esotericism in some respects - produced many occult philosophers (such as Helena Blavatsky) who drew upon various Asian religions, including Hinduism, Buddhism, and indigenous faiths (7).
  • Not all of this knowledge was limited to the “educated classes,” either - it could be found in the repertoires of ordinary people as well. The Grimoire of Arthur Gauntlet, for instance, contains material straight out of Agrippa’s writings, mentioned above (6).

Countless examples exist demonstrating how “Western” occultism borrowed, bargained, and burgled its way through history. This process continues today with the rampant appropriation of closed practices and erasure of its own decidedly “non-Western” roots, except, perhaps, to add to the “exoticism” of magic as a marketing ploy. With all these currents, does it truly make sense to call “Western” esotericism “Western?”

This post is not meant to contribute to the discussion of whether “Western civilization” is a meaningful or useful term - though I should state that I agree with those scholars who argue that the concept is a modern invention and cannot be retroactively applied to the ideas that supposedly originated from there (1). The broader point, however, is that there is a powerful trend toward Eurocentrism in many occult communities that lead to exclusion and alienation. Many people come to magic because they feel marginalized by society. Let’s not recreate that dynamic in our spaces.

Not to be ignored, of course, are the indigenous peoples worldwide who have had their spiritualities plundered by the colonizers who sought to eliminate them, as well as by their supposedly rootless descendants. Also necessary to mention are the people of the African diaspora who, wrenched from their homelands, maintained their traditions against the most inhumane of odds. This list is not intended to be exhaustive, though I do plan to update it with more information. I strongly encourage and invite others to contribute their own examples which I have overlooked.

People of certain backgrounds, religious or otherwise, often feel strongly discouraged - not just by their own communities, but by occult communities themselves - from pursuing magic. Erasure of the roots of the “Western” esoteric tradition is partially why. People who would rather invent fanciful origin stories as if they “legitimized” their practice are doing themselves, the craft, and current and aspiring magic-users (of all kinds) a disservice by promulgating pseudo-mystical marketing instead of useful, concrete history. I assure you that the latter is far more interesting.

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A Spell to Catch a Thief (1550-1551 CE)

This spell comes from a book written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and German (but with an Italian cover) whose contents were (if my attempts at German-English translation are correct) written between 1550 and 1551 CE. From what I can tell, the book was originally of Italian origin (1). Trachtenberg translates (2):

To root a thief in his spot: gather some dust from the house in which the theft occurred … bind it in a linen cloth and bury it in a grave, whether of a Jew or a non-Jew, and say: ”Just as this cloth, which contains the dust, cannot leave this spot without my consent and aid, so shall the thief be unable to stir from the spot where he now stands or sits without my leave.”

Bibliography

(1) Grunwald, Max. “Kleine Beiträge zur jüdischen Kulturgeschichte. (Fortsetzung): 10. Aus Hausapotheke und Hexenküche. II.” Mitteilungen zur jüdischen Volkskunde 2, vol. 3 (1906): 96-120.

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Two Spells to Detect Evil Spirits (3rd century CE)

This procedure appears in Talmud Berakhot, which was compiled with the rest of the Mishnah sometime in the 3rd century CE (1). The section Berakhot 6a, concerning detecting the presence of evil spirits, reads (2):

Who wishes to perceive [the demons’] footprints should take sifted ashes and sprinkle them around his bed. In the morning he will see something resembling the footprints of a rooster. Who wishes to see them should take the after-birth of a black she-cat, the offspring of a black she-cat, the first-born of a first-born, roast it in the fire, pulverize it, then fill his eyes with it, and he will see them. He must pour the powder into an iron tube and seal it with an iron signet, lest the evil spirits steal it. He must also seal its mouth, lest he come to harm.

However, the text goes on to note that one rabbi who managed to see the spirits with this method was also injured (implied to be by the spirits themselves), though he recovered (Siff’s translation reads ”was cured,” suggesting illness) after the others prayed for him.

Bibliography

(2) * Siff, David. “Is Halloween Halachic?” Sefaria. https://www.sefaria.org/sheets/84295 (accessed Dec. 25, 2017).

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quillflight

As I was doing my demon research, I stumbled across Sefer Ha-Rezim (trans. Michael A. Morgan, 1983), a (probably) 3rd-4th century Jewish mystical text passed down from the angel Raziel by way of Noah. It outlines in great detail the arrangement and forms of the angels of the heavens and the specific ways to call upon them for magical purposes, including, apparently, gay love spells. Many magical instructions are maddeningly vague, missing key words, pronunciations, or materials, but here it’s all laid out simply, as long as you have a white cock to spare.

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quillflight

Now for possibly my favorite demon story….

So Rav Yoseph and Rav Papa had a demon friend named Yoseph (I don’t know if Rav Yoseph named it after himself or if they just happened to share a name) who would hang out with them and give them helpful tips on (bad) demon avoidance. It’s so cool. They’re so cool. My friend calls Yoseph “Rav Papa’s pet demon” (although I’m sure Yoseph would object). I want a pet demon

Anyway, “אמר רב יוסף אמר לי יוסף שידא אשמדאי מלכא דשידי ממונה הוא אכולהו זוגי ומלכא לא איקרי מזיק.”

“R. Joseph said: The demon Joseph told me [that] Ashmedai the king of the demons is appointed over all ‘pairs,’ and a king is not designated a harmful spirit.”

So by nature of its position, Ashmedai becomes a Good Demon?

“לעשות לו דרך ואין מוחין בידו אמר רב פפא אמר לי יוסף שידא בתרי קטלינן בארבעה לא קטלינן בארבעה מזקינן בתרי בין בשוגג בין במזיד בארבעה במזיד אין בשוגג לא ואי אישתלי ואיקרי ונפק מאי תקנתיה לינקוט זקפא דידיה דימיניה בידא דשמאליה וזקפא דשמאליה בידא דימיניה ונימא הכי אתון ואנא הא תלתא ואי שמיע ליה דאמר אתון ואנא הא ארבעה נימא ליה אתון ואנא הא חמשה ואי שמיע ליה דאמר אתון ואנא הא שיתא נימא ליה אתון ואנא הא שבעה הוה עובדא עד מאה וחד ופקע שידא”

“R. Papa said, Joseph the demon told me: for two [[if one drinks two cups]] we kill; for four [[because demons like even numbers, which is why Ashmedai is “appointed over all ‘pairs’”]] we do not kill, but for four we harm [the drinker]. For two [we hurt] whether [they are drunk] wittingly or deliberately; for four, only if it is deliberate, but not if it is unwitting. And if a man forgot himself and happened to go out, what is his remedy? Let him take his right-hand thumb in his left hand and his left-hand thumb in his right hand and say thus: ‘Ye [two thumbs] and I, surely that is three!’ But if he hears one saying, ‘Ye and I, surely that is four!’ let him retort to him, ‘Ye and I are surely five!’ And if he hears one saying, ‘Ye and I are six,’ let him retort to him, ‘Ye and I are seven.’ This once happened until a hundred and one, and the demon burst [with mortification].”

.פסחים קי

Pesakhim 110a

The English is, again, from the Soncino Talmud, except for my [[additions]]. I don’t know where they get the “[with mortification],” but I trust them (sort of), and also I really want the demon to have burst with shame at having been tricked into counting up to 101, or possibly at not knowing what number comes next.

How do you get rid of Jewish demons? Math.

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quillflight

Jewish demons are not inherently evil. Instead, to some extent, they seem to have free will. With free will apparently comes fallibility to palm tree violence, the potential to be ridiculously incapable of doing any damage, and the impulse to mock others.

 בי פרחי רוחי דבי זרדתא שידא דבי איגרי רישפי למאי נפקא מינה לקמיעא דבי פרחי בריה שאין לה עינים למאי נפקא מינה לגזוזי לה זימנא חדא הוה אזיל צורבא מרבנן לאפנויי לבי פרחי שמע דקא אתא עילויה וגזי לה כי אזלא חבקיה לדיקלא צווח דיקלא ופקעה היא פרחא דבי זרדתא שידי הא זרדתא דסמיכה למתא לא פחתא משיתין שידי למאי נפקא מינה למיכתב לה קמיעא ההוא בר קשא דמתא דאזיל וקאי גבי זרדתא דהוה סמיך למתא עלו ביה שיתין שידי ואיסתכן אתא לההוא מרבנן דלא ידע דזרדתא דשיתין שידי היא כתב לה קמיע לחדא שידא שמע דתלו חינגא בגוויה וקא משרו הכי סודריה דמר כי צורבא מרבנן בדיקנא ביה במר דלא ידע ברוך אתא ההוא מרבנן דידע דזרדתא שיתין שידי הוה כתב לה קמיעא דשיתין שידישמע דקא אמרו פנו מנייכו מהכא 

“[The demons] of caper-trees are [called] Ru[k]he [“spirits”]; those of sorb-bushes are [called] Shide [“demons”]; those which haunt roofs are [called] Risphe [“fiery-bolts”]. In respect of what does it matter? In respect of amulets. [The demon] of caper-trees is a creature without eyes. What does it matter? In respect of fleeing from it.1  A scholar was once about to ease himself among the caper-trees, when he heard it advancing upon him, so he fled from it. When he had gone, it embraced a palm tree,2 whereupon the palm tree cried out3 and it [the demon] burst. 

“[The demons] of sorb-bushes are [called] Shide. A sorb-bush which is near a town has not less than sixty Shide [“demons”] [haunting it]. How does this matter? In respect of writing an amulet. A certain town-officer went and stood by a sorb-bush near a town, whereupon he was set upon by sixty demons and his life was in danger. He then went to a scholar who did not know that it was a sorb-bush haunted by sixty demons, and so he wrote a one-demon amulet for it. Then he heard how they suspended a [k]hinga on it [the tree] and sing thus: ‘The man’s turban is like a scholar’s, [yet] we have examined the man [and find] that he does not know “Blessed art Thou.”’4 Then a certain scholar came who knew that it was a sorb-bush of sixty demons and wrote a sixty-demon amulet for it. Then he heard them saying, ‘Clear away your vessels from here.’”

1. As it is sightless it cannot follow.

2. In error. Rashi and Rashbam read נפקא אדקלא, it tripped over a palm tree.

3. …Or, withered….

4. He does not know which benediction to recite when he puts it on—they ridiculed his pretensions to scholarship. [[………….#relatable]]

:פסחים קיא

Pesakhim 111b

Translations from the Soncino Talmud.

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