Maarif Kitabi | Semsul
Whether one views it as a priceless relic of medieval esotericism, a heretical manual of black magic, or a genuine path to supernatural power, the Semsul Maarif remains what it has always been: the most dangerous book in the Islamic world—a forbidden sun that some still dare to chase.
In Turkey, the Semsul Maarif is both a pop-culture horror trope (appearing in movies about cursed objects) and a genuine item of occult practice. There are persistent urban legends of students who attempted the "Blue Moon" ritual from the book and were found catatonic, their eyes burned as if by light from within. semsul maarif kitabi
The Shams al-Ma'arif was revolutionary because it systematized earlier, fragmented traditions of letter magic ( simiya ) into a coherent cosmology. Al-Buni argued that the 28 letters of the Arabic alphabet were not merely linguistic tools but the primordial building blocks of reality—divine energies that, when combined correctly, could alter the fabric of existence. The book is said to have been completed with the help of rijal al-ghayb (the unseen men), spiritual saints who exist in a parallel dimension. The Semsul Maarif Kitabi is traditionally divided into two main parts (often published as two volumes), though many manuscripts combine them. Its contents are a labyrinth of tables, circles, divine names, and incantations. Whether one views it as a priceless relic