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ByJack Shamash , Jack Shamash

Opinion

Beware of the evil eye, kein ayin hara, puh, puh, puh

'It was unthinkable that anyone in my family could have a baby without getting protection from the evil eye.'

July 3, 2020 13:28
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2 min read

When my sister got pregnant, she rang me up and asked for the small charm which my grandmother had brought from Baghdad. The charm, held together with soft bands of gold, contains two gallnuts, some turquoise discs, a tiny fish made of gold and a cowrie shell. It was unthinkable that anyone in my family could have a baby without getting protection from the evil eye.

For many Jewish people, the evil eye is not just a silly superstition, but a genuine concern. They often wear red bands, make spitting noises and mutter the words “kein ayin hara” — “no evil eye”. One ancient rabbi declared: “Ninety nine people died from the evil eye and only one from the hand of heaven”.

Fear of the evil eye has been around for at least 3,000 years and is certainly not just a Jewish concept. It spreads from China to India and Africa and through the Mediterranean up to the Arctic Circle. The evil eye is no respecter of rank. Numerous popes were thought to have the evil eye and, in the years before the Second World War, Mussolini refused to meet King Alfonso of Spain because he was reputed to have the evil eye. Whenever King Alfonso walked into a cinema, people would start jingling keys to protect themselves.

A wide variety of charms are used against the eye. The singer Madonna wears a red string. Meghan Markle has a pendant with an eye on it, Greek women carry blue beads and Italians often have key-rings with images of a hunchback. Many of the charms are frankly sexual, such as the large phalluses carved into the walls of Pompeii. In India and many Arab countries, children were intentionally not washed, so they would become less attractive to the evil eye.