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- Q3503028 subject Q6461252.
- Q3503028 subject Q6614215.
- Q3503028 subject Q6913338.
- Q3503028 subject Q6958114.
- Q3503028 subject Q6981007.
- Q3503028 subject Q6981100.
- Q3503028 subject Q8663899.
- Q3503028 abstract "Zār or Zaar (Arabic: زار) (Somali:Saar) (Amharic:Zar) is a religious custom apparently originating in Horn of Africa during the 18th century and later spreading throughout East and North Africa. Zār custom involves the possession of an individual (usually female) by a spirit. It is also observed in Egypt, Sudan, Somalia, southern Iran and elsewhere in the Middle East.A featured musical instrument in the Zār ritual is the tanbura, a six-string lyre (6-stringed "bowl-lyre"), which, like the Zār practice itself, exists in various forms in an area stretching from East Africa to the Arabian Peninsula. Other instruments include the mangour, a leather belt sewn with many goat hooves, and various percussion instruments.The Zār cult served as a refuge for women and effeminate men in conservative, Muslim-dominated Sudan.In Ethiopia, zār also refers to malevolent demons. Many Ethiopian Christians and Muslims believe in these spirits. Among both groups, mental illness is often attributed to zār possession. In Ethiopia, zār possession is more common among women, while among immigrants in the West, men are more commonly afflicted. At the same time, many Ethiopians believe in benevolent, protective spirits, or abdar. While this belief in abdar and zār fits the traditional dualism of good and evil, it is also deeply rooted in superstition.".
- Q3503028 wikiPageExternalLink possession.htm.
- Q3503028 wikiPageExternalLink Changing_Masters,_pt._I.htm.
- Q3503028 wikiPageExternalLink Changing_Masters,_pts._II-III.htm.
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- Q3503028 wikiPageWikiLink Q6461252.
- Q3503028 wikiPageWikiLink Q6614215.
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- Q3503028 wikiPageWikiLink Q6798208.
- Q3503028 wikiPageWikiLink Q6913338.
- Q3503028 wikiPageWikiLink Q6958114.
- Q3503028 wikiPageWikiLink Q6981007.
- Q3503028 wikiPageWikiLink Q6981100.
- Q3503028 wikiPageWikiLink Q7204.
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- Q3503028 wikiPageWikiLink Q794.
- Q3503028 wikiPageWikiLink Q8663899.
- Q3503028 wikiPageWikiLink Q9268.
- Q3503028 comment "Zār or Zaar (Arabic: زار) (Somali:Saar) (Amharic:Zar) is a religious custom apparently originating in Horn of Africa during the 18th century and later spreading throughout East and North Africa. Zār custom involves the possession of an individual (usually female) by a spirit.".
- Q3503028 label "Zār".