In the labyrinthine alleyways of Fez, Morocco, during the scorching summer of 1840, a young scholar named Idris stumbled upon a locked cedar chest in his late grandfather’s library. The old man, a respected talib (student of religious sciences), had whispered a warning on his deathbed: “Open the chest only if you are willing to carry a weight darker than lead.”
Al-Buni had ventured into ‘ilm al-huroof (the science of letters) and ‘ilm al-awfaq (the science of magical squares). He detailed how to summon spiritual entities—not angels, but mardat al-jinn (rebellious jinn) — by combining divine names in incorrect, forceful orders. One recipe read: “Write the isolated letters ‘Tā, Hā, Shīn’ on a shard of unbaked clay. Bury it at a crossroads under a waning moon. Recite the 72nd Name 41 times. A servant of the wind will appear. Do not blink.” This was not theology. It was theurgy—attempting to compel the unseen world. Mainstream Islam condemns this as shirk (associating partners with God), because it treats divine names as mere tools of power rather than objects of worship. the sun of knowledge (shams al-ma'arif) pdf
Idris knew the name. Even among the quiet shelves of the Qarawiyyin Mosque’s library, the Shams was spoken of in half-sentences. Some called it the pinnacle of esoteric Islam. Others called it the most dangerous book ever written in Arabic. In the labyrinthine alleyways of Fez, Morocco, during
Yet the book’s power as a cultural artifact is undeniable. For every scholar who burned a copy, three magicians secretly copied it by hand. In Ottoman Istanbul, sultans kept annotated Shams manuscripts under lock in their private libraries. In South Asia, syncretic Sufi orders adapted its tables into their own rituals. Even today, in parts of North Africa, a worn copy of Shams al-Ma‘arif is considered more valuable than gold—and more dangerous than poison. One recipe read: “Write the isolated letters ‘Tā,
Al-Buni’s great innovation—and what would later be called his transgression—was to map these divine names onto numbers, letters, celestial bodies, and even sounds. He argued that if you understood the hidden mathematical structure of God’s speech (the Qur’an), you could align yourself with the universe’s secret rhythms.