7 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «DYBBUKKIM»
Discover the use of
dybbukkim in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
dybbukkim and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Faeries & Elementals for Beginners: Learn About & ...
Duergaars tamper with human trail markers to confuse and disorient travelers.
Dybbukkim, Lobs—Air Dybbukkim are Jewish spirits that are demonic in nature.
They are invisible, but can possess people to take the form of human bodies.
2
Jewish Views of the Afterlife
The terms used in this context were dybbukkim, spirits of malevolent pose
session, and ibburrim, souls of benevolent possession. . The kabbalists
reaffirmed the rabbinic belief in resurrection of the dead. However, they added a
spiritual context ...
Simcha Paull Raphael, 2009
3
Spirit Possession in Judaism: Cases and Contexts from the ...
9; success of, 193,358 dybbuk/dybbukkim (malevolent spirits), 13, 198, 240, 350-
52; age of victims, 47^1-8; as articulation of sexual urges, 45-54; cases of
possession, 41, 43—44; communal conformity and, 59-64; cultural
distinctiveness and, ...
4
World Dictionary of Foreign Expressions: A Resource for ...
D.V. abbr. for Deo volente (q.v.). dybbuk n., pl. dybbukkim or dybbuks [Heb.
dibbüq ghost.] Judaism. The restless soul of a dead person which wanders
around and takes possession of a living person. dynamis n. [Gk. dunamis ability,
power.] ...
Gabriel Adeleye, Kofi Acquah-Dadzie, Thomas J. Sienkewicz, 1999
Possession by dybbukkim is found in Biblical records when Saul's servants told
him that the wicked spirit troubling him could be mitigated by the music of the
harp. In Samuel I, 16: 14—23, we read, 'And it came to pass, when the (evil) spirit
...
... bumbledom dribbling drubbings dibbukkim dybbukkim bundobust bebeerine
humblebee berberine briberies plebbiest rebbetzin robberies yobberies
rubberise rubberize bluebells slobberer blueberry BBEEOPPRS BBEFILRRS
BBEFILRST ...
Justin Crozier, Cormac McKeown, 2006
7
Anthropology Newsletter
In the paper awarded the prize, Dr Bilu analyzes an ancient Jewish form of
possession by dybbukkim, spirits of the dead, as “an idiom for articulating and
stnrcturing certain inchoate experiences" such as forbidden impulses, and the
control of ...