Concept

Sijjin

Sijjin (سِجِّين lit. Netherworld, Underworld, Chthonian World) is in Islamic belief either a prison, vehement torment or straitened circumstances at the bottom of Jahannam or hell, below the earth (compare Greek Tartarus), or, according to a different interpretation, a register for the damned or record of the wicked, which is mentioned in Quran 83:7. Sijjin is also considered to be a place for the souls of unbelievers until resurrection. The idea that there is a hell underneath earth's surface roots in the Quran, which speaks about "seven earths" (65:12), while describing hell as a subterranean pit, divided into seven compartments. Thus, many Muslim authors coincided hell with layers of the earth with sijjin at the bottom. For the lowest layer of hell, the term al-asfal is used too. The antithesis of Sijjin is Illiyin. The word as an adjective means "vehement" or "intense" and is derived from the root S-J-N (س ج ن) related to gaoling or imprisonment. The Arabic word for prison (سِجْن), along with verbs from the root, appears several times in Surah Yūsuf in relation to the account of Joseph in prison. A similar-sounding word (but of unrelated etymology from Byzantine Greek σιγίλλιον via Classical Syriac), (سِّجِلّ) appears in a verse () and is translated as "scroll". Some exegetes who interpret the word as a register for the damned or a book listing the names of the sinful draw a connection between the two words. Tabari reports essentially two different opinions regarding the meaning of Sijjin in his Tafsir: It is a book containing the evil deeds of the sinners: "their works are in a book in the lowest earth." A prison for the damned: "it is the seventh lowest earth, in which Satan (Iblis) is chained, and in it are the souls (arwah) of the infidels (kufar). According to some Shia traditions, the enemies of Ahl al-Bayt are created from the earth of Sijjin. According to Annemarie Schimmel, traditional Sufi leaders linked the seven gates of hell each to a specific sin. This image of an ethical hell often associates each sin with a specific body part.

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