Sunflower 09/08/2023 (Fri) 09:11 Id: f205b5 No.4225 del
>>4223
Alright, so I just sat down and did some research on this 'harawita' term. It rang no bells for me at first, so I proceeded to extract the root of the word, which is h-r-t. However, due to the limitations of the English language, there was no way to be sure that the root isn't, in fact, H-r-t, where H here is a gutteral H. So, I searched Google for 'جذر حرت' and 'جذر هرت', which mean 'The root of H-r-t' and 'the root of h-r-t' respectively. The former was useless but the latter was a hit: D9%87%D8%B1%D8%AA">https://www.maajim.com/dictionaryD9%87%D8%B1%D8%AA
From this link, it says in one of the meanings for h-r-t, which is translated to 'Marot's companion, two kings who landed in Babylon, taught the people magic.'. Replace kings with angels, which is more appropriate given the context, and you get the name of one of the angels in Muslim lore that descended to Earth to teach people magic, whose name is Harut (هاروت), the H here not being gutteral. The other angel that came with Haroot was Marut (ماروت). The Wikipedia article for these two angels is: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harut_and_Marut
To get to the point here, then, what does 'harawita' mean? My best guess is an occultist that practices magic under Harut's tradition. This also implies the existence of the word 'Marawita'; same meaning except that it would be under Marut's tradition.
What does BO and the djinn with him say about this analysis?