Pakistan: Sufi Moslem Sacrifices Five of His Own Children to Gain Magical Powers

Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
January 12, 2015

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The most famous Sufis are the Whirling Dervishes.

The Sufis are a less well known branch of Islam that many people see as being non-violent and more philosophical than the other Moslem sects.  Their mysticism has even been known to attract educated White men in some instances.  Conversely, mainstream sects of Islam accuse them of various forms of blasphemy.

Indeed, regardless of purported aesthetic or philosophical differences, their behavior can be just as barbaric as the other types of Islam, as we see here with this example of a Pakistani Sufi who sacrificed five of his children in a traditional black magic ritual by strangling them all to death.

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Sufi rituals in the Sudan.

Sky News:

Ali Nawaz Leghari, 40, killed the two girls and three boys – aged between three and 13 – in a village in the southern Sindh province, some 140 miles north of Karachi.

The man apparently believed the sacrifice would endow him with magical powers including alchemy – the ability to turn ordinary metals into silver or gold, or the possibility of eternal youth.

“The man’s financial condition was bad but he was also learning black magic and it seems that he made the sacrifice to excel in the craft,” a police officer said.

The local police chief said the killings had happened while Leghari was on a 40-day spiritual journey, known as a “chilla” suggested to him by a pir (living saint).

Black magic practices are a strong part of mystic Sufi lore and have traditionally been the domain of pirs and aamils (sorcerers).

The practice is particularly strong in rural parts of the country, including the impoverished province where the killings took place.

Black magic is a common theme that runs through all non-White spiritual beliefs, including Judaism and Islam.

Make no mistake, this really is a spiritual war that we are in between the sons of light and the creatures of darkness.

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Rene Guenon famously converted to Sufiism at the later end of his life.