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Malay Magic / Being an introduction to the folklore and popular religion of the Malay Peninsula cover

Malay Magic / Being an introduction to the folklore and popular religion of the Malay Peninsula

Chapter 170: [cii] Doʿa Sapuloh—The Ten Prayers [p. 240.
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About This Book

A compilation of Malay Peninsula folklore, popular religion, and magical practices drawn from manuscripts, published sources, and the author's field notes, presenting creation myths, supernatural beings, charms, incantations, ritual practices, and folk explanations for illness and misfortune. The text emphasizes literal translations of spells and formulæ with originals in an appendix, confines attention to Malay communities of the peninsula, and compares recurring motifs while avoiding non-Malay populations. Methodological notes explain evidence and limits. The volume serves as an introductory survey that organizes material thematically—cosmology, spirit lore, protective and harmful magic, divination, and ritual observances—without claiming exhaustive treatment.

[cii] Doʿa Sapuloh—The Ten Prayers [p. 240.

Ka-sa, Allah,

Ka-dua, Muhammad,

Ka-tiga, Ayer Sembahyang lima waktu sa-hari sa-malam,

Ka-ampat, Pancha Indra,

Ka-lima, Pintu rezki-ku terbuka,

Ka-anam, Pangkat Mahaligei tujoh pangkat,

Ka-tujoh, Pintu Rengkiang terbuka,

Ka-lapan, Pintu Shurga terbuka,

Ka-sambilan, anak di-kandong bunda-nya,

Ka-sapuloh, anak di-jadikan Allah;

Jadi, karna jadi, jadi karna Tuhanku juga.

ʿIsa, karun!

Musa, karun!

Yusuf, karun!

Daud, karun!

Karun sakalian pintu rezki-ku, di Bumi, di Langit, deripada Allah.

Dengan berkat la-ilaha-illa-’llah, etc.