Yekha'Brazakh, Djinn of Division
by imnotactuallyafurrybutwhatever
King of Cognitive Dissonance
Posted 7 months ago
Metaphysical embodiment of the second negative preternatural concept bestowed upon mankind by the Fruit of Knowledge of Good and Evil.
Whereas the Archons represent the necessary building blocks of the natural causal world created by God, the Djinn represent the unnecessary elements of confusion introduced by man, which too exist within the causal system, and are bound by its rules, but only degrade the experience. It would be better had they never come into being, and nothing is lost upon their demise.
Yekha'Brazakh's name is a bastardization mashup of an Arabic phrase meaning "may God destroy your house", and a Hebrew phrase/word meaning in some contexts "hardness of heart". Essentially, "May God destroy your house due to the hardness of your heart". Again, even the collective unconscious embodiments of evil are subservient to the Providence of the causal world. The Djinn don't particularly like existing and would rather not be fueled by mankind's failures — they aren't willing rebels against creation, as one would typically conceive a demon to be.
The Djinn are all deceased in the period of New Creation, i.e. of the Marrowans (animal people), as they never ate of the Fruit. Natural divisions happen by natural courses, but not pointless schisms and subdivisions that only come into being via fear and egotistical obsessions, nor by any associated prides or hatreds.
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Drawn by "RendezvousExtraordinaire".
Whereas the Archons represent the necessary building blocks of the natural causal world created by God, the Djinn represent the unnecessary elements of confusion introduced by man, which too exist within the causal system, and are bound by its rules, but only degrade the experience. It would be better had they never come into being, and nothing is lost upon their demise.
Yekha'Brazakh's name is a bastardization mashup of an Arabic phrase meaning "may God destroy your house", and a Hebrew phrase/word meaning in some contexts "hardness of heart". Essentially, "May God destroy your house due to the hardness of your heart". Again, even the collective unconscious embodiments of evil are subservient to the Providence of the causal world. The Djinn don't particularly like existing and would rather not be fueled by mankind's failures — they aren't willing rebels against creation, as one would typically conceive a demon to be.
The Djinn are all deceased in the period of New Creation, i.e. of the Marrowans (animal people), as they never ate of the Fruit. Natural divisions happen by natural courses, but not pointless schisms and subdivisions that only come into being via fear and egotistical obsessions, nor by any associated prides or hatreds.
—
Drawn by "RendezvousExtraordinaire".
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