Yezidism
From: http://members.ozemail.com.au/~zarathus/deen33f.html
Since some time,
certain individuals have been regaling the community in India and
abroad with colourful stories about "millions" of Zoroastrians
in Kurdistan or Tajlklstan.
In the Bombay Samachar of March 21, 1993, Dr. Pallan R. lchaporia
had stated, "Recent research has revealed that even among
those who called themselves 'Izedis/Yezedi', the faith is a mixture
of extremely corrupt form of Zoroastrianism (can hardly be recognized
as the Zoroastrian religion) and the other alien religious beliefs...
if some insist on believing that there are Zoroastrians in the
Kurdish nation, they are welcome to live in the dream world."
Supporting lchaporia's views, the Editor had stated, "All
in all, it is advisable for the Zoroastrians to concentrate upon
their own community in India, U.K. and U.S.A."
But who are the Yazidis (also spelt Yezidi, Azidi or lzdi)'?
'The Encyclopaedia Britannica 1986' explains : "The Yazidi
religion is a syncretic combination of Zoroastrian, Manichaean,
Jewish, Nestorian Christian and Islamic elements. The Yazidi themselves
are thought to be descended from supporters of the Umayyad Caliph
Yazid 1. They themselves believe that they are created quite separately
from the rest of mankind, not even being descended from Adam, and
they have kept themselves strictly segregated from the people among
whom they live. Although scattered and probably numbering fewer
than 1,00,000, they have a well-organized society, with a chief
shaykh as the supreme religious head and an amir, or prince, as
the secular head.
The chief divine figure of the Yazidi is Malak Taus ('Peacock
Angel'), worshipped in the form of a peacock. He rules the universe
with six other angels, but all seven are subordinate to the supreme
God, who has had no direct interest in the universe since he created
it. The seven angels are worshipped by the Yazidi in the form of
seven bronze or iron peacock figures called sanjaq, the largest
of which weighs nearly 700 pounds.
Yazidi are anti-dualists; they deny the existence of evil and
therefore also reject sin, the devil, and hell. The breaking of
divine laws is expiated by way of metempsychosis, or transmigration
of souls, which allows for progressive purification of the spirit.
The Yazidi relate that when the devil repented of his sin of pride
before God, he was pardoned and replaced in his previous position
as chief of the angels; this myth has earned the Yazidl an undeserved
reputation as devil worshippers. Shaykh Adi, the chief Yazidi saint,
was a 12th century Muslim mystic believed to have achieved divinity
through metempsychosis.
The Yazidi religious centre and object of the annual pilgrimage
is the tomb of Shaykh 'Adi, located at a former Christian monastery
in the town of Ash-Shaykh 'Adi, north of Mosul. Two short books
written in Arabic, Kitab al-jilwah ('Book of Revelation') and Mashaf
rash ('Black Writing'), form the sacred scriptures of the Yazidi,
and an Arabic hymn praise of Shaykh 'Adi is held in great esteem."
According to the 'Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics': "The
name of Yezldis has been given to a religious sect numbering about
50,000 persons, scattered from Mossul to the Caucasic region (districts
of Mossul, Van, Diarbekr, Bitlis). They call themselves Dasni and
speak a Kurdish dialect.
"At the head of the community is a khalifah, who is a descendant
of Shaikh Adi. Under him are shaikhs, kavvals, and faqirs. Priesthood
is hereditary. Morality is above the average in that part of the
world. They are brave and shrewd. Their temperament is cheerful
but calm. They have cleanly habits. Their women are not veiled
and may receive strangers. They feel great repulsion for the colour
blue. Being completely illiterate, they handed down their traditions
orally. Their greatest festival is on 10th Aug., when a procession
of flagellants takes place in the village of Ba'adri. There is
the grave of their great saint, Shaikh Adi ben Musafir, who died
in A.D. 1155. All around fires of naphtha and bitumen are kept
burning.
"The origin of the word Yezidi been much discussed. Most
probably it is related to Av. Yazata, 'deity,', Pers. Yazdan, 'God'.
It was given to them in contrast either to the Zoroastrians or
to the Muhammadans. Although their priesthood is of the Muhammadan
type and they recognize Muhammad and Abraham as prophets, they
are far from being a Mubammadan sect. Nor are they Nestorians,
although they have baptism and regard Christ as an angel in human
form. In fact, they perpetuate with various admixtures a doctrine
of the Magian type, combining Iranian and Assyrian elements. Their
cult of fire is Iranian. They profess that the devil is a creative
agent of the supreme God, inasmuch as he produced evil. Hence he
deserves our adoration.
"The Yezidis say that God made the world beautiful. Then
Malik-Taus appeared before him and said that there could be no
light without darkness, no day without night, and accordingly he
caused night to follow day."
Dr. R. C. Zaehner in 'The Hutchinson Encyclopaedia of Living Faiths,'
considers the Yezidi faith as an "aberrant form of the Sufi
movement".
Joseph T. Parfit writes in his book, 'Marvellous Mesopotamia', "The
Yezidees or 'Devil-worshippers' inhabit a number of unkempt villages
near Mosul and in the Sinjar Mountains. They seem to belong to
a Kurdish stock, and speak Kurdish as well as Arabic. There are
probably some forty thousand Yezidees in Mesopotamia and six thousand
in the Caucasus. Their headquarters are at Sheikh Adi, a weird
place North-East of ancient Nineveh. They have many excellent characteristics,
though they are profoundly ignorant and superstitious... It is
hardly correct to call the Yezidees 'Devil worshippers', for they
all believe in a great God who created the universe; but they pay
deference to the 'Prince of this world', lest they should suffer
his vengeance. They avoid the use of words that begin with the
same letter as Satan's name, and instead of using the common Arabic
words for the devil, they speak of him as the 'Prince of Darkness',
'Lord of the Evening' or the 'Exalted Chief'. Many of the Yezidees
practise baptisms; they make the sign of the cross, and kiss the
threshold of Christian Churches."
The Kurds today are an oppressed people, but there was a time
when they were the oppressors. Rev. W. A. Wigram and Sir Edgar
Wigram in 'The Cradle of Mankind - Life in Eastern Kurdistan' (1922')
write, -The Arabs though equally keen robbers, were not found such
practised butchers as the Kurds".
Joseph Parfit in 'Marvellous Mesopotamia - The World Wonderland'
adds, "Kurds are generally vicious, heartless, cruel and cowardly
to the last degree... they are robbers and murderers pure and simple...
The Kurds for the most part are destitute of religious belief,,,,
but as nominal Mohammedans, they were permitted to be armed by
the Turks, who finding it impossible to subdue them, caused them
to be enrolled as irregular cavalry and practically confided to
them the duty of robbing and enslaving their Christian neighbours."
Coming back to the Yezidis, Wigram and Wigram write, "The
Yezidis or 'Devil Worshippers' congregate principally in the vilayet
of Mosul. 'Devil worshippers' they are indeed, for they themselves
do not scruple to admit that the being whom they seek to propitiate
is actually identical with the 'Sheitan' of the Christians and
Moslems and Jews. But, fortunately for the morals of the neighbourhood,
their homage stops short of imitation. Theirs is a religion of
faith, and not of works. They are under no obligation to make evil
their good according to the boast of Milton's Satan, but only to
'respect the great place' of their divinity, and see to it that
he is sometime honoured for his burning throne.... The Yezidis
form one of the recognized 'millets' or subject religious sects,
existing in the Turkish empire. But recognition in their case by
no means implies toleration. They are universally abhorred as outcasts
- almost as untouchables... the Yezidis possess no systematized
religion woven by some great teacher into one harmonious whole.
They make shift instead with a bewildering agglomeration of superstitions
pieced together into an amazing patchwork.... The Yezidis believe
in a Supreme Being - Yazdan, the most high. But to him, they pay
no worship. He is the Lord of Heaven and takes no account of earth.
From his name in all probability, they derive their own appellation
of Yezidis; though the Moslems (or at least, the Shiites) declare
that they inherit it from Yezid ibn Mo'auriya, the murderer of
Hosein, and see in it an additional argument for persecuting them."
According to Yezidi belief, from Yazdan emanated 7 great spirits,
of whom Malek Taus was the first and most powerful. To him was
committed the creation of the world, and the governance of it for
10,000 years of which 4,000 still remain to run. Malek Taus is
an evil and a fallen spirit; but not fallen beyond redemption.
He is a sort of celestial Absalom - vicious, tyrannical, rebellious,
but secure of ultimate pardon and rehabilitation. Shall there not
at length come a time when the Chief of the Archangels shall be
restored to his first pre-eminence? And will he not then be mindful
of the poor Yezidis, who alone of all mankind never cursed him
in his disgrace?, is every devout Yezidi's belief.
There is something distinctly quaint in this picture of a reclaimed
Satan, still cherishing a faint grudge against those who denounced
him in his unregenerate days.
The Yezidis have a regular hierarchy of seven orders of Priesthood.
They hold a great annual feast at Sheikh Adi in October; which
is continued for eight days, and is attended by all the faithful
who can come. Pilgrimage to Sheikh Adi is incumbent on every Yezidi,
but he is not commanded to pray, and he leaves that duty to his
priests. Fasting can also be performed by deputy, and a group of
Yezidis will select one of their number to do all their fasting
for them, confessing to him the acts which need expiation and paying
him a capitation fee for carrying out the corresponding penances.
E. S. Stevens in his book, 'By Tigris and Euphrates', describes
the shrine of 'Sheikh Adi' (the holiest place of worship for the
Yezidis) as follows, "The courtyard before the entrance contains
various small buildings and mulberry trees through which the sun
casts chequered patterns on the facade. The door is to the extreme
left of the wall, which is interesting on account of its curious
magical signs cut in low relief on the stones, the principal being
the great vertical snake, carefully black-leaded. to the right
of the doorway. Pilgrims kiss this emblem of Satan. Within the
temple is dark, dirty and shabby... the floor is greasy, with drippings
from the oil lamps. On the north side of the temple a chapel, which
they call Sheikh Hassan, contains an arkshaped chest or tomb, entirely
covered with draperies and from this, again, a low door communicates
with a second chapel in which is the tomb of Sheikh Adi himself."
Noshir H. Dadrawala,
Deen Parast magazine.
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