Asararun almajirai abunda ya kamata ku sani
A method of Islamic education known as "Almajirai" is used in northern Nigeria the term refers to the male gender pursuing knowledge of Islam (Almajiri), the female gender (Almajira), and the plural (Almajirai).
The system pushes parents to abdicate their parental duties to the Islamic school that is connected.
The Arabic term Almuhajir, which describes a person who leaves their home country in quest of Islamic knowledge, is the source of the Hausa word Almajiri.
A magical formula used to cast a spell,Asararu, enchantment, or Asararun almajirai on a person or object is called an incantation. It is possible to chant, sing, or speak the formula.
It is also possible to execute an incantation during prayers or ceremonial rites. In folklore and culture, wizards, witches, and fairies are frequently depicted as incantators.
Enchantments are asararu or Asararun almajirai found in mediaeval literature, folklore, fairy tales, and contemporary fantasy literature. This gave rise to the phrases "enchantress" and "enchanter" to describe people who employ enchantments.
Believing and practices of asararu in Islam is "extensive and all-encompassing" and a vital element of everyday life and practice, both historically and current time in Islamic culture.
While scholars generally agree that the Quranic term siḥr, (usually defined as magic) is forbidden in Islam, there is less agreement on how siḥr is defined.
Magic encompasses a wide-range of non-physical beliefs; including sorcery, divination whic is attempt to predict what is going to happen in the future precognition via dreams, or occultism.
Asararu also includes defence against other types of magic, like demons, black magic, bad jinn, and the evil eye, which are believed to cause "illness, poverty, and everyday misfortunes"; on the other hand, it also seeks to deliver "good fortune, health, increased status, honour, and power."
Methods include casting lots, creating amulets and other magical items, and evoking.
Origin Of Asararun Almajirai
Religious historians have connected a number of Islamic magical rituals to pre-Islamic East African and Turkish traditions.
The Zar is the most famous of the Aftrican rituals.
The Jewish people of Harran, the Sabians, the Aramaic speaking people, the practices of the evil eye and how to avoid it, astrology, and the "special occult properties of plant, animal, and mineral substances" of late antiquity were among the other pre-Islamic cultures and practices that influenced early Islamic belief.