РИТУАЛ ЛЮБОВЬ ПАДИШАХА

RITUAL OF LOVE OF THE PADISHAH

HISTORY OF THE RITUAL LOVE OF THE PADISHAH


The original texts of the ritual date back to 1560 AD.

The ritual was especially popular among the women of the harem of Abu al-Fath Jalaluddin Muhammad Akbar, better known as Akbar the Great, a statesman, the third padishah of the Mughal Empire, and the grandson of the founder of the Mughal dynasty in India, Babur.

The ritual was one of the favorites and frequently used by Mariam uz-Zamani Begum Sahiba, a Hindu-Rajput princess and the Sultan's chief wife. She performed it before meeting the Sultan so that "his eyes would look only at her beauty."

Akbar married many Rajput princesses, as the Rajas could gain many benefits from their association with the Sultan's family. Akbar did not convert any of his Hindu wives to Islam and allowed them to perform their rituals in the palace, and sometimes even took part in them. Although Mariam remained a Hindu, she was later given the Muslim title of Mariam-uz-Zamani after becoming the mother of the first of three sons predicted for the Sultan by a famous holy man living in Sikri, in recognition of the Sultan's belief in the efficacy of the holy man's prayer.

MATERIALS

Red thread about 15 cm long

Matches or a lighter to burn the red thread

USAGE

To appear charming to other people (“to cast a spell”)

To increase beauty (stop the skin aging process)

Destroy all occult spells aimed at changing physical appearance

To return love from others, if their attitude towards you has changed due to the loss of former beauty

LEAD TIME

Recommended

In the morning

During the daytime

Not recommended

In the evening

At night

FREQUENCY OF USE

For use by persons aged 18 years and over 

Once every 2 weeks

As needed

ACTION

Depends on the execution time and the beliefs of the performer

Beginning of action

From 1 month

Maximum effect

From 2-3 months

Decreased action

From 4 months

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