Names Of Shaitan | 7

Crushed, Rayan felt his enthusiasm die. Da’si’s poison is: “Your reward is gone because they saw you. Just be normal. Stop trying.” But Rayan whispered back: “I seek sincerity for Allah alone. Let them crush my ego, not my faith.” A‘war means “blind in one eye.” This Shaitan distorts your vision of good and evil. He makes your sin look small and others’ sins look enormous.

One evening, Rayan caught a colleague stealing office supplies. A‘war whispered: “Report him. Ruin his career. You never stole. You are better.” Simultaneously, A‘war hid Rayan’s own sin of backbiting from his sight.

This is the story of a seeker named and the seven serpents he had to slay within himself. 1. Iblis – The Primary Despair Rayan was a young man of fervent prayer. One night, after a sin he deemed unforgivable, he sat in the darkness of his room, whispering, “I am ruined. There is no mercy for a wretch like me.” 7 names of shaitan

Rayan smiled. “I know. That is why I no longer fight you. I walk toward the Light of Allah, and you fall behind.”

Rayan was newly married. Al-Khanzab tried to turn his marital bed into a battlefield of shame and lust. But Rayan remembered the Sunnah: to say “Bismillah” before intimacy and to make ghusl without gossip. Al-Khanzab retreated, hissing, “You have no poetry in your passion.” But Rayan knew: sanctity is greater than savagery. Rayan did not defeat the seven names in a single battle. He learned that Iblis is the despair, Zalzul the distraction, Al-Waswas the doubt, Da’si the social crushing, A‘war the hypocritical judgment, Tana’ash the slippery boundary, and Al-Khanzab the profanation of the sacred. Crushed, Rayan felt his enthusiasm die

Da’si works through people . Rayan’s best friend mocked him: “Oh, look at the saint. Did you get a halo?” His mother said, “You’re becoming an extremist.” A stranger online called him a “show-off.”

Zalzul whispered: “You are being productive. Productivity is worship.” But Rayan noticed the trap: Zalzul shakes you out of stillness. He fears the silent dhikr (remembrance) more than he fears your tears of repentance. That night, Rayan tried to pray Tahajjud (night prayer). As he stood, a new voice entered—not loud, but creeping. Al-Waswas (The Whisperer of doubts). Stop trying

In the ancient, unwritten chronicles of the unseen, before the clay of Adam was wetted, there existed a being of immense knowledge and fire. His name was Iblis . When he refused to bow to the human, he was cast out. But he did not disappear. Instead, he fractured his will into seven veils, each a different name, each a different trap for the children of Adam.