• Hi guest! As you can see, the new Wizard Forums has been revived, and we are glad to have you visiting our site! However, it would be really helpful, both to you and us, if you registered on our website! Registering allows you to see all posts, and make posts yourself, which would be great if you could share your knowledge and opinions with us! You could also make posts to ask questions!

Book Discussion Anyone read this book? JINN MAGICK: The Hidden Keys to Power, Wealth, and Desire with the Spirits of Fire and Shadow by Mosheh Ely

Talk about a book(s)

dzb10035

Neophyte
Joined
Dec 12, 2025
Messages
35
Reaction score
59
@hussainsirat577 I bought the e-book for this and I am very split on it. At first, it seemed very promising, but then I did some research based on comments on reddit and also from advice that people gave me on some occult FB groups. I am starting to wonder myself if it is actually AI generated or not, but even so, I still believe that it can be AI generated as long as the content is genuine. AI can be used to speed things up when writing your material, but if the it is used to generate the ideas behind the content, then this is where a red flag is seen. Unfortunately, I cannot tell if it is the material is genuine or AI generated. But I can offer some thoughts.

Some of the issues I noticed while going through the pages:

1. A distinct lack of divine names and hierarchical structure - Based on genuine materials from authors like Nineveh Shadrach and Corwin Hargrove, I noticed that Arabic / Islamic based Jinn magick relies on the usage of divine names and high ranking Jinn names to make it work. The conjurations for Jinn (e.g. Berhatiah, Sebaseb) all contain references to divine names and calls to high ranking Jinn (e.g. Elders, Kings) to ensure that the Jinn come when called. In Mosheh's book, many of the conjurations are simple english calls with the name of the specific Jinn and maybe 1 sentence in Arabic. There are no divine names or hierarchical Jinn names being used, which I find a bit worrying. However, based on this author's previous works, it is likely he is an LHP / Demonolatry guy who probably doesn't believe in the use of divine names anyway. Still, even in demonolatry, there is a sense of hierarchy that is obeyed starting from Satan and working down the chain, so it is curious why the Jinn Elders are not used here since they form an important part of the Jinn based hierarchy. Honestly, there is not even a mention of them in the book from what I remember. They mention the 7 Jinn Kings, but there are no references to them being kings and the names differ in some parts from what you might see in Corwin Hargrove's book. There is nothing wrong with the differing names per se, since these names can differ even among legitimate manuscripts. Overall, the most worrying aspect here is the lack of references to hierarchy and the Jinn elders which are probably well established elements to Jinn magick from what little I have seen.

2. So called "historical sources" do not seem to exist - At the start of every chapter or sub-chapter, there is a quote relating to the chapter's material and the source of the quote is mentioned. The only problem with this is that the source seems largely to be BS as they are either "some old lost desert scroll" or some source that I could not find a single reference to online. In the former case, this is the biggest red flag because many authors try to use the "old lost ancient secret" trick to convince people to buy their books. Even legitimate authors from GoM or Nineveh use this gimmick, but at least in many cases, their sources can (mostly) be verified. For example, I am aware that Nineveh either buys his sources off of ebay or translates stuff from manuscripts that are available from academic sources such as university websites. In the case of Mosheh's book, he neglects to mention a large number of sources for these quotes and an "old lost scroll in the desert tomb" is not a sufficient source. As for his actual named sources that are not from the Quran or well known Islamic scriptures, I could not find any references online to the named sources. This is less of a red flag because there are many old manuscripts that do not have translated names online, and so I can accept this as being a possibly legitimate source.

3. Gimmicky themes in methodology - There is a running theme in this book that seems to use stereotypical naming based on some stereotypes. Things like "desert vision", circles of ash, and so on. Nothing wrong by itself, but to me personally, this sounds a bit too Hollywood to me. Not every Jinn magick source comes from the desert and not every Arabic magician was a guy in a cave fasting for 30 nights straight. It just feels like some of this stuff repeats a variation of the edge lord stuff to a certain extent, but without the BALG style shit you find in the usual LHP edge lord stuff you find online. Read through some of the more established guys out there, and you will see some mention of these themes, but not nearly as much as it comes out here. In my eyes, stuff like "desert" vision is just the usual clairvoyance / psychic senses that allow you to see spirits in general. You will have all the fundamental stuff being repackaged into some sort of Jinn specific theme, which is a bit of a red flag to me. But then again, I am not exactly an expert on this, so you can take what you want from it.

4. Potential AI generated sigils - The sigils for the 7 "Jinn of Power" and a couple of other sigils look a bit fake to me. They have characteristics in them that would not necessarily fit the limited number of sigils in the current amount of Jinn resources that are available. The sigils tend to have things like hearts or lightning bolts that are coincidentally attached to the specific Jinn who would have powers / attributes resembling that symbol (e.g. a heart for a Jinn of seduction). This could either be modern day channeling of the sigils or using AI to generate the sigils. I cannot tell you what it is, but this is a risk for the book that you need to be careful. Of the sigils that I know for actual Jinn magick, the shapes that you would see most often are not these shapes. Things like the star of david (hexagram), pentagrams, Arabic letters, and magical square setups are far more common in the genuine Jinn literature. Most of the time, it seems like a specific Jinn won't even have a sigil and that it is quite common to call them by name alone. So make of this what you will, but the sigils are a clear red flag to me.


There are also some good sides to the book, however. I think its practices, its safety warnings / considerations, and a good chunk of its discussions are still based on solid magical principles. It sounds like it is written by someone who knows magical practice and is experienced in it, since it vibes quite well with writings I have read from other legitimate sources in the western mystery tradition. This can also be outright AI output, but you need more than one prompt to write a book and getting a certain level of consistency in concepts can be difficult if you are using AI to write it chapter by chapter. For me, the consistency is present, albeit borderline, so make of that what you will.

Some of the practices here are also quite interesting. There is specific initiatory ritual / process that is supposed to "introduce" you to the Jinn and make you appealing to work with. Everything in the book starts from that specific ritual (ie "The flame from below" or something like that) and continues from there. There are some practices that I find fascinating such as the "hidden Jinn", which seem to be quite powerful and can invoke a specific type of energy just from mere usage of its name. Again, I cannot tell you if these practices work, as I have not tried them, but I will be experimenting with bits and pieces of the system (e.g. the hidden jinn names) to see if they work. Ultimately, you will only be able to tell if this works for you based on personal practice. In my case, if the hidden jinn names do work when used in a more traditional conjuration (e.g. the Berhitiah), then I would call it legitimate.

In the end, the one thing you should note is the red flags I laid out. Even in the good sides of the book, there are some caveats I noticed and this is not a great sign. I personally will only be experimenting with bits and pieces of the book once I have my own knowledge of Jinn magick more fleshed out, especially on the protective side. If you do intend on getting it, only get the ebook and not the physical book. This way you only risk a limited amount of money buying it. I hope this helps you!
 

hussainsirat577

Neophyte
Joined
Feb 20, 2026
Messages
32
Reaction score
21
@hussainsirat577 I bought the e-book for this and I am very split on it. At first, it seemed very promising, but then I did some research based on comments on reddit and also from advice that people gave me on some occult FB groups. I am starting to wonder myself if it is actually AI generated or not, but even so, I still believe that it can be AI generated as long as the content is genuine. AI can be used to speed things up when writing your material, but if the it is used to generate the ideas behind the content, then this is where a red flag is seen. Unfortunately, I cannot tell if it is the material is genuine or AI generated. But I can offer some thoughts.

Some of the issues I noticed while going through the pages:

1. A distinct lack of divine names and hierarchical structure - Based on genuine materials from authors like Nineveh Shadrach and Corwin Hargrove, I noticed that Arabic / Islamic based Jinn magick relies on the usage of divine names and high ranking Jinn names to make it work. The conjurations for Jinn (e.g. Berhatiah, Sebaseb) all contain references to divine names and calls to high ranking Jinn (e.g. Elders, Kings) to ensure that the Jinn come when called. In Mosheh's book, many of the conjurations are simple english calls with the name of the specific Jinn and maybe 1 sentence in Arabic. There are no divine names or hierarchical Jinn names being used, which I find a bit worrying. However, based on this author's previous works, it is likely he is an LHP / Demonolatry guy who probably doesn't believe in the use of divine names anyway. Still, even in demonolatry, there is a sense of hierarchy that is obeyed starting from Satan and working down the chain, so it is curious why the Jinn Elders are not used here since they form an important part of the Jinn based hierarchy. Honestly, there is not even a mention of them in the book from what I remember. They mention the 7 Jinn Kings, but there are no references to them being kings and the names differ in some parts from what you might see in Corwin Hargrove's book. There is nothing wrong with the differing names per se, since these names can differ even among legitimate manuscripts. Overall, the most worrying aspect here is the lack of references to hierarchy and the Jinn elders which are probably well established elements to Jinn magick from what little I have seen.

2. So called "historical sources" do not seem to exist - At the start of every chapter or sub-chapter, there is a quote relating to the chapter's material and the source of the quote is mentioned. The only problem with this is that the source seems largely to be BS as they are either "some old lost desert scroll" or some source that I could not find a single reference to online. In the former case, this is the biggest red flag because many authors try to use the "old lost ancient secret" trick to convince people to buy their books. Even legitimate authors from GoM or Nineveh use this gimmick, but at least in many cases, their sources can (mostly) be verified. For example, I am aware that Nineveh either buys his sources off of ebay or translates stuff from manuscripts that are available from academic sources such as university websites. In the case of Mosheh's book, he neglects to mention a large number of sources for these quotes and an "old lost scroll in the desert tomb" is not a sufficient source. As for his actual named sources that are not from the Quran or well known Islamic scriptures, I could not find any references online to the named sources. This is less of a red flag because there are many old manuscripts that do not have translated names online, and so I can accept this as being a possibly legitimate source.

3. Gimmicky themes in methodology - There is a running theme in this book that seems to use stereotypical naming based on some stereotypes. Things like "desert vision", circles of ash, and so on. Nothing wrong by itself, but to me personally, this sounds a bit too Hollywood to me. Not every Jinn magick source comes from the desert and not every Arabic magician was a guy in a cave fasting for 30 nights straight. It just feels like some of this stuff repeats a variation of the edge lord stuff to a certain extent, but without the BALG style shit you find in the usual LHP edge lord stuff you find online. Read through some of the more established guys out there, and you will see some mention of these themes, but not nearly as much as it comes out here. In my eyes, stuff like "desert" vision is just the usual clairvoyance / psychic senses that allow you to see spirits in general. You will have all the fundamental stuff being repackaged into some sort of Jinn specific theme, which is a bit of a red flag to me. But then again, I am not exactly an expert on this, so you can take what you want from it.

4. Potential AI generated sigils - The sigils for the 7 "Jinn of Power" and a couple of other sigils look a bit fake to me. They have characteristics in them that would not necessarily fit the limited number of sigils in the current amount of Jinn resources that are available. The sigils tend to have things like hearts or lightning bolts that are coincidentally attached to the specific Jinn who would have powers / attributes resembling that symbol (e.g. a heart for a Jinn of seduction). This could either be modern day channeling of the sigils or using AI to generate the sigils. I cannot tell you what it is, but this is a risk for the book that you need to be careful. Of the sigils that I know for actual Jinn magick, the shapes that you would see most often are not these shapes. Things like the star of david (hexagram), pentagrams, Arabic letters, and magical square setups are far more common in the genuine Jinn literature. Most of the time, it seems like a specific Jinn won't even have a sigil and that it is quite common to call them by name alone. So make of this what you will, but the sigils are a clear red flag to me.


There are also some good sides to the book, however. I think its practices, its safety warnings / considerations, and a good chunk of its discussions are still based on solid magical principles. It sounds like it is written by someone who knows magical practice and is experienced in it, since it vibes quite well with writings I have read from other legitimate sources in the western mystery tradition. This can also be outright AI output, but you need more than one prompt to write a book and getting a certain level of consistency in concepts can be difficult if you are using AI to write it chapter by chapter. For me, the consistency is present, albeit borderline, so make of that what you will.

Some of the practices here are also quite interesting. There is specific initiatory ritual / process that is supposed to "introduce" you to the Jinn and make you appealing to work with. Everything in the book starts from that specific ritual (ie "The flame from below" or something like that) and continues from there. There are some practices that I find fascinating such as the "hidden Jinn", which seem to be quite powerful and can invoke a specific type of energy just from mere usage of its name. Again, I cannot tell you if these practices work, as I have not tried them, but I will be experimenting with bits and pieces of the system (e.g. the hidden jinn names) to see if they work. Ultimately, you will only be able to tell if this works for you based on personal practice. In my case, if the hidden jinn names do work when used in a more traditional conjuration (e.g. the Berhitiah), then I would call it legitimate.

In the end, the one thing you should note is the red flags I laid out. Even in the good sides of the book, there are some caveats I noticed and this is not a great sign. I personally will only be experimenting with bits and pieces of the book once I have my own knowledge of Jinn magick more fleshed out, especially on the protective side. If you do intend on getting it, only get the ebook and not the physical book. This way you only risk a limited amount of money buying it. I hope this helps you!

Thank you so much for your valuable opinion. I really appreciate it!

You mentioned "Sebaseb", I was wondering if you have it and could share it with me. I have the Berhatiah conjuration by Nineveh Shadrach, but I don't have the "Sebaseb conjuration" by him.

By the way, what's your opinion on Berhatiah conjuration by Nineveh Shadrach and his other material (if you have read them)?

I asked this because I was thinking of reading the Berhatiah conjuration. By the way, I am a newbie in Jinn Magick and magick in general. The only book about jinn magick I have read is "Practical Jinn Magick" by CORWIN. HARGROVE. I am really interested in Jinn magick, but don't know where to start. If you have any recommendations, please let me know.
 

dzb10035

Neophyte
Joined
Dec 12, 2025
Messages
35
Reaction score
59
Hi @hussainsirat577,

See in the message I gave to you regarding the Sebaseb conjuration. As for my opinion on Nineveh's material, I have a bit of a love-hate relationship with how he does things. On one hand, his material on Jinn is quite unique and he is one of the few sources of English translated Jinn material that is readily accessible. From what I have, there is a lot of genuine stuff there and it seems solid from a magical basis. I have tried a ritual or 2 from his other materials and they are pretty potent. I personally feel that even though he is quite expensive, some of this stuff is actually quite well worth the money. That being said, you have to cherry-pick the courses since not all of it is amazing. For example, his courses on the Sebaseb conjuration and Kon Fayakoon (his most recent course) are actual very good and fairly complete. His course on the 8 secrets of Jinn is a bit lacking in explanation and some of the instructions he gives are missing full details that I would like. So you need to cherry-pick to ensure you use your money only on courses that contain the information you want.

On the other hand, I am a bit frustrated with his lack of explanation in some areas across all of his courses that I have bought. I expected more explanation and theory in certain areas, but was left lacking on that. For example, his Sebaseb course gives you all the minimum explanation needed to work the system in a (hopefully) safe way. The pieces of the puzzle are present, but I had to look through the course materials several times over in order to fully understand where everything was. However, he gives little to no explanation of what the Jinn of the Sebaseb are, except in the archived Webinar which is included in the course. There he only mentions a few Jinn that he describes as being potentially dangerous to work with for most people. On the whole, you are basically left by yourself to figure out the nature of each Jinn and this can be fun if you are interested in figuring this out for yourself. But if you want full understanding and safety before going into the system, I personally believe he should have included his own experience working with at least a selection of the Jinn in the Sebaseb set. This would give practitioners a valuable way to pick the Jinn that they want to work with and that could be safe. He mentions that the Sebaseb Jinn can be quite dangerous and I think a better guardrail would have been to actually talk about each Jinn, either from his students experiences or from his own. Personally, I used Gemini on a couple of names to understand some of the context behind those names and I was able to form a few opinions on a couple of the Jinn listed. This might be your best bet to understand the system. Like I said, I would highly recommend buying the course if you can, since it will give you the full version of the materials. Be forewarned that he can take a little while to create the account you need in order to access the courses.

Regarding the starting point for the Jinn magick, I think the Berhatiah is a good place to start, but you can take Corwin Hargrove's opening ritual as an adequate replacement. Doing a forum search will show that using the full Berhatiah is pretty exhausting with the number of repetitions one that needs to do in order to use it effectively. I have used Corwin's opening ritual several times for his practical Jinn magick ritual and it works nicely for me. Given that it is based on the Berhatiah, I think you can use it as an opening for many other Jinn rituals in general, especially operations involving the kings. But I do think you should consider looking for his Impregnable defense report if you can. From the looks of it, it might contain some how helpful rituals that you can use for additional protection. It should be about $40-$50 and you can find it on his facebook page if you go far back enough for the posts on his profile. I personally think having a few tradition specific defenses will help a lot just to be safe. I know Corwin says he has safeties built in to the practical Jinn magick system, but based on other peoples experiences with the book, it does not always seem to be 100% safe. My own experiences are generally safe, but I always advise caution when trying new types of magick and having some Jinn specific protection measures is always going to be helpful. In my opinion, the protections in Corwin's Jinn book are less well put together than something like the Shem Angel usage in "Demons of Magick" for the Goetia. So as I said, you can feel free to invest in that from the defense materials I recommended or at least research the protections offered by the Quran / other Jinn specific protection measures. Like with demons, I do not believe there is a need to be adversarial, but these spirits are quite a bit more mercurial than the Goetic demons from what I hear. So you want a way to defend yourself against them if necessary, but respect will always go a long way.

As for other materials outside of Nineveh, I am not 100% sure there is a lot of very good Jinn magick materials specifically. I would avoid Baal Kadmon's and Ben Qayin's books because they seem sparse with information or rely too much on personal gnosis. If you have money you could take a look at Reda Ruhani; he is a practitioner that offers Jinn spells and private tuition. He seems to know what he is doing, but he has not read any books. Another recommendation is to buy a few books on the lore of Jinn in order to understand them culturally from the Arabic + Islamic perspective. Lore is always something that can help inform practice and the book I would recommend (and want to read fully) is "Legends of the Fire Spirits: Jinn and Genies from Arabia to Zanzibar" by Robert Lebling. From what I read so far, it seems like a good introduction into the Jinn from a mythological standpoint in different parts of Africa and the middle east and it looks really promising. Other than that, I would recommend keeping to Corwin Hargrove's framework for now and try to experiment with different Jinn names within that framework before jumping into the more involved stuff.

So far, this is all I have experienced from the Jinn side and I hope this helps!
 

hussainsirat577

Neophyte
Joined
Feb 20, 2026
Messages
32
Reaction score
21
Hi @hussainsirat577,

See in the message I gave to you regarding the Sebaseb conjuration. As for my opinion on Nineveh's material, I have a bit of a love-hate relationship with how he does things. On one hand, his material on Jinn is quite unique and he is one of the few sources of English translated Jinn material that is readily accessible. From what I have, there is a lot of genuine stuff there and it seems solid from a magical basis. I have tried a ritual or 2 from his other materials and they are pretty potent. I personally feel that even though he is quite expensive, some of this stuff is actually quite well worth the money. That being said, you have to cherry-pick the courses since not all of it is amazing. For example, his courses on the Sebaseb conjuration and Kon Fayakoon (his most recent course) are actual very good and fairly complete. His course on the 8 secrets of Jinn is a bit lacking in explanation and some of the instructions he gives are missing full details that I would like. So you need to cherry-pick to ensure you use your money only on courses that contain the information you want.

On the other hand, I am a bit frustrated with his lack of explanation in some areas across all of his courses that I have bought. I expected more explanation and theory in certain areas, but was left lacking on that. For example, his Sebaseb course gives you all the minimum explanation needed to work the system in a (hopefully) safe way. The pieces of the puzzle are present, but I had to look through the course materials several times over in order to fully understand where everything was. However, he gives little to no explanation of what the Jinn of the Sebaseb are, except in the archived Webinar which is included in the course. There he only mentions a few Jinn that he describes as being potentially dangerous to work with for most people. On the whole, you are basically left by yourself to figure out the nature of each Jinn and this can be fun if you are interested in figuring this out for yourself. But if you want full understanding and safety before going into the system, I personally believe he should have included his own experience working with at least a selection of the Jinn in the Sebaseb set. This would give practitioners a valuable way to pick the Jinn that they want to work with and that could be safe. He mentions that the Sebaseb Jinn can be quite dangerous and I think a better guardrail would have been to actually talk about each Jinn, either from his students experiences or from his own. Personally, I used Gemini on a couple of names to understand some of the context behind those names and I was able to form a few opinions on a couple of the Jinn listed. This might be your best bet to understand the system. Like I said, I would highly recommend buying the course if you can, since it will give you the full version of the materials. Be forewarned that he can take a little while to create the account you need in order to access the courses.

Regarding the starting point for the Jinn magick, I think the Berhatiah is a good place to start, but you can take Corwin Hargrove's opening ritual as an adequate replacement. Doing a forum search will show that using the full Berhatiah is pretty exhausting with the number of repetitions one that needs to do in order to use it effectively. I have used Corwin's opening ritual several times for his practical Jinn magick ritual and it works nicely for me. Given that it is based on the Berhatiah, I think you can use it as an opening for many other Jinn rituals in general, especially operations involving the kings. But I do think you should consider looking for his Impregnable defense report if you can. From the looks of it, it might contain some how helpful rituals that you can use for additional protection. It should be about $40-$50 and you can find it on his facebook page if you go far back enough for the posts on his profile. I personally think having a few tradition specific defenses will help a lot just to be safe. I know Corwin says he has safeties built in to the practical Jinn magick system, but based on other peoples experiences with the book, it does not always seem to be 100% safe. My own experiences are generally safe, but I always advise caution when trying new types of magick and having some Jinn specific protection measures is always going to be helpful. In my opinion, the protections in Corwin's Jinn book are less well put together than something like the Shem Angel usage in "Demons of Magick" for the Goetia. So as I said, you can feel free to invest in that from the defense materials I recommended or at least research the protections offered by the Quran / other Jinn specific protection measures. Like with demons, I do not believe there is a need to be adversarial, but these spirits are quite a bit more mercurial than the Goetic demons from what I hear. So you want a way to defend yourself against them if necessary, but respect will always go a long way.

As for other materials outside of Nineveh, I am not 100% sure there is a lot of very good Jinn magick materials specifically. I would avoid Baal Kadmon's and Ben Qayin's books because they seem sparse with information or rely too much on personal gnosis. If you have money you could take a look at Reda Ruhani; he is a practitioner that offers Jinn spells and private tuition. He seems to know what he is doing, but he has not read any books. Another recommendation is to buy a few books on the lore of Jinn in order to understand them culturally from the Arabic + Islamic perspective. Lore is always something that can help inform practice and the book I would recommend (and want to read fully) is "Legends of the Fire Spirits: Jinn and Genies from Arabia to Zanzibar" by Robert Lebling. From what I read so far, it seems like a good introduction into the Jinn from a mythological standpoint in different parts of Africa and the middle east and it looks really promising. Other than that, I would recommend keeping to Corwin Hargrove's framework for now and try to experiment with different Jinn names within that framework before jumping into the more involved stuff.

So far, this is all I have experienced from the Jinn side and I hope this helps!
Thank you so much for the Sebaseb conjuration!

I have visited his website, and there, he is promising a lot of stuff - I don't know how good a Jinn practitioner he is, but he is definitely a good salesman!
 

dzb10035

Neophyte
Joined
Dec 12, 2025
Messages
35
Reaction score
59
Thank you so much for the Sebaseb conjuration!

I have visited his website, and there, he is promising a lot of stuff - I don't know how good a Jinn practitioner he is, but he is definitely a good salesman!
Yes he does promise a lot and I cannot guarantee that those promises can be lived up to 10 / 10 times. It is magick after all and there is nothing that will ever work 100% of the time. His sales man language turns me off a lot, but I can assure you that he has some veritable magick in his products. I am still treading into it lightly because of life limitations and because of Jinn magick's reputation, but it is still good stuff by-and-large.
One thing I would warn is that this is not the modern magick stuff that you see with GoM or Corwin Hargrove. This is closer to the older ceremonial style that the Arabic magi did a long time ago. It is basically the Arabian version of full grimoire magick, but with an occasional innovation. That is to say that Nineveh's stuff is demanding and probably more demanding than what most people have time for in a day. So you will need to cut corners most likely to create a functional version of it that works. The other part of this is that there will be less safeguards built into his magick since it is closer to the old stuff. Modern magick usually has a lot of the safety already built in for you and you use the safety guard rails as long as you follow the instructions. In Nineveh's stuff, this is not the case. For example, in his Sebaseb Jinn list, even he mentions that there are certain Jinn that he considers dangerous and he is someone who has decades of experience in this field. He provides a method that he "thinks" should be safe, but there is no guarantees there. Unlike the Goetic demons, there are no exact Shem angel safeguards to use here and the safety mechanisms mostly rely on hierarchical command via angels, elder jinn, and divine names. This means that the methods are no safer than what you get in traditional grimoire conjurations. So make sure to understand the protective magick available for the Jinn before jumping into Nineveh's stuff.

Regarding his reputation, I am not very worried about his skills or experience. I believe that he is an experienced guy in Jinn magick and I think his stuff has a good shot at working. He is gimmicky in his sales approach, but you need to really do your research to understand what YOU need from his materials and not go flying into buying everything. There is a lot of stuff and the minimum price is usually $50 for his cheaper stuff. The Sebaseb stuff is $150, so you can tell it is not cheap. Going for a Jinn conjuration system is a good general purpose investment in my eyes, since it can cover all the practical magick stuff like Love, Money, etc. If you want more specific, I think he has other offerings.
 

hussainsirat577

Neophyte
Joined
Feb 20, 2026
Messages
32
Reaction score
21
By the way, someone recommended this book by him, "Nineveh Shadrach - Magic That Works: Practical Training for the Children of Light" for protection. Did you read this book, and did this book have the Protection part for Jinn magick (I have this book by the way, that's why I asked)?
 

dzb10035

Neophyte
Joined
Dec 12, 2025
Messages
35
Reaction score
59
By the way, someone recommended this book by him, "Nineveh Shadrach - Magic That Works: Practical Training for the Children of Light" for protection. Did you read this book, and did this book have the Protection part for Jinn magick (I have this book by the way, that's why I asked)?
I know this is one of his earliest works. I have heard decent reviews about it, but I do not have it. I recommend to look for his impregnable defense book on his FB profile. It is the most direct defense related product he has. But for some reason, it is not listed on his website.
 

hussainsirat577

Neophyte
Joined
Feb 20, 2026
Messages
32
Reaction score
21
I know this is one of his earliest works. I have heard decent reviews about it, but I do not have it. I recommend to look for his impregnable defense book on his FB profile. It is the most direct defense related product he has. But for some reason, it is not listed on his website.

Nineveh Shadrach - Magic That Works: Practical Training for the Children of Light​


Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Post automatically merged:

@dzb10035 By the way, here is my whole collection of Nineveh Shadrach's books that I have. Can you check the Berhatiah book I have and whether reading this will do or not? [Sorry for troubling you again]

 
Last edited:

Otaba

Neophyte
Warned
Joined
Sep 9, 2021
Messages
5
Reaction score
1
This will be my take...thanks a lot for your contributions and insight.Here in East Africa,especially along the coast jinn Magick has the Arabic influence in summoning , conjuring and binding.The results are usually direct and apparent as in some of those ancient Arabic grimoires.what I mean is if you need money or gold they bring direct.Some of jinns that are powerful and useful are found in those books.However some conjurations are not in Arabic or based on it or using divine names and words of power.In short there are other ways to summon and bind them.Some conjurations are done by words and names of lost languages not known completely today and some revealed by other jinn or spirits.THOUGH i haven't accessed the book it good to those having to try and follow instructions and judge by the results.Remember the Arabic world on the surface to be the source of jinn knowledge but the truth these spirits are found outside the Arabian world. Including Africa and have been summoned by local traditions and methods.
To conclude, the western method of evocation is also effective provided the name is known or a sigil is created from the Names.
 
Top