What is the Peacock Angel? |
wikipedia | The Yazidi consider Tawûsê Melek an emanation of God and a benevolent angel who has redeemed himself from his fall and has become a demiurge who created the cosmos from the Cosmic egg. After he repented, he wept for 7,000 years, his tears filling seven jars, which then quenched the fires of hell.
Tawûsê Melek is sometimes transliterated Malak Ta'us, Malak Tawus, Malak Tawwus or Malik Taws. Melek was borrowed from the Arabic term "king" or "angel". Tawûs is uncontroversially translated "peacock"; in art and sculpture, Tawûsê Melek is depicted as peacock. However, peacocks are not native to the lands where Tawûsê Melek is worshipped. Among early Christians, the peacock represented immortality on account of the folk belief that its flesh does not decay after death, and this symbolism has passed into Yazidi beliefs.[6] Consequently, peacock imagery adorns Yazidi shrines, gateways, graves, and houses of worship.
The Kitêba Cilwe
"Book of Illumination", which claims to be the words of Tawûsê Melek,
and which presumably represents Yazidi belief, states that he allocates
responsibilities, blessings and misfortunes as he sees fit and that it
is not for the race of Adam
to question him. Sheikh Adî believed that the spirit of Tawûsê Melek is
the same as his own, perhaps as a reincarnation. He is believed to have
said:
I was present when Adam was living in Paradise, and also when Nemrud threw Abraham in fire. I was present when God said to me: 'You are the ruler and Lord on the Earth'. God, the compassionate, gave me seven earths and throne of the heaven.
Yazidi accounts of creation differ from that of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. They believe that God first created Tawûsê Melek from his own illumination (Ronahî)
and the other six archangels were created later. God ordered Tawûsê
Melek not to bow to other beings. Then God created the other archangels
and ordered them to bring him dust (Ax) from the Earth (Erd)
and build the body of Adam. Then God gave life to Adam from his own
breath and instructed all archangels to bow to Adam. The archangels
obeyed except for Tawûsê Melek. In answer to God, Tawûsê Melek replied,
"How can I submit to another being! I am from your illumination while
Adam is made of dust." Then God praised him and made him the leader of
all angels and his deputy on the Earth. (This likely furthers what some
see as a connection to the Islamic Shaytan, as according to the Quran
he too refused to bow to Adam at God's command, though in this case it
is seen as being a sign of Shaytan's sinful pride.) Hence the Yazidis
believe that Tawûsê Melek is the representative of God on the face of
the Earth, and comes down to the Earth on the first Wednesday of Nisan
(April). Yazidis hold that God created Tawûsê Melek on this day, and
celebrate it as New Year's Day. Yazidis argue that the order to bow to
Adam was only a test for Tawûsê Melek, since if God commands anything
then it must happen. (Bibe, dibe). In other words, God could have
made him submit to Adam, but gave Tawûsê Melek the choice as a test.
They believe that their respect and praise for Tawûsê Melek is a way to
acknowledge his majestic and sublime nature. This idea is called
"Knowledge of the Sublime"
(Zanista Ciwaniyê). Sheikh Adî has observed the story of Tawûsê Melek and believed in him.[7]
Yazidis believe that good and evil both exist in the mind and spirit
of human beings. It depends on the humans, themselves, as to which they
choose. In this process, their devotion to Tawûsê Melek is essential,
since it was he who was given the same choice between good and evil by
God, and chose the good.
The Yazidi believe that the founder of their religion, Sheikh Adi Ibn Musafir, was an incarnation of Tawûsê Melek.
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