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Abu Fanous
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Light phenomenon in the Arabian desert
This article is about the mysterious phenomenon in the Arabian desert. For a similiar phenomenon in Australia, see Min Min light.
Abu Fanous<br>أبو فانوس (Arabic)Abu Fanous at dawn<br>Creature informationOther name(s)Abu Siraj, Abu NuwairaGroupingJinnSub groupingGhoulSimilar entitiesMin Min light, Marfa lightsFolkloreArabic and IslamicOriginFirst attestedPre-Islamic timesKnown forLuring travellers into the desert, then vanishing without a trace, leaving them lostCountrySaudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, UAE, Oman, Yemen, IranRegionArabian Peninsula, Persian GulfHabitatArabian desert<br>Abu Fanous (Arabic: أبو فانوس) is a mysterious light phenomenon observed by travellers in the Arabian desert, mainly the Eastern Province, Riyadh, Najd, Rub' al-Khali and the Gulf.[1] It appears at dawn or during the night as an orb or headlight that moves unpredictably and lures people into the desert, then vanishes without a trace.[2][3]
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Etymology<br>[edit]
The literal meaning of Abu Fanous is Father of the fanous , with fanous (فانوس) meaning lantern or light. Other names are also Abu Siraj (أبو سراج) or Abu Nuwaira (أبو نويرة).[4]
Folklore<br>[edit]
In local Arabic folklore, Abu Fanous is described as a jinn, an Islamic and Arabic supernatural being, that lures people into remote areas of the desert and then disappears, leaving the travellers to get lost and die. According to oral accounts, travellers are advised to not at all approach the light and instead recite Ayat ul-Kursi or the Adhan to get away from it, based on a hadith of the prophet Muhammad from Jabir ibn Abdullah about ghilan.[2][3]
Popular culture<br>[edit]
The phenomenon was depicted as a painting in 2023 by Saudi artist Aziz Jamal, conveying its effect by using eyes appearing in the darkness.[5] A Steam game directly called Abu Fanous.[6] also exists those name is derived from the phenomenon.
Reported sightings<br>[edit]
There have always been sightings of Abu Fanous and cases of travelers getting lost in the Arabic desert, such as one traveller being pursued by it in his car, until reaching the city of Qaisumah, after which the light disappeared.[4] No clear scientific explanation has yet been gathered for this phenomenon, while there are theories such as natural gases escaping from the Earth's crust and igniting upon contact with air, creating a glowing light.[7]
See also<br>[edit]
Saudi Arabia portal
Min Min light
Ghoul
Marfa lights
Folklore
Unidentified flying object
Ball lightning
References<br>[edit]
^ "Abu Fanous" the jinn of the Saudi desert". 2024-12-17.
^ a b Minshawi, Islam (17 December 2004). ""Abu Fanous" the jinn of the Saudi desert".
^ a b "الهول - قصة حقيقية". www.kabbos.com. Archived from the original on 2020-10-20. Retrieved 2025-06-27.
^ a b "قصة الجني أبو فانوس وماذا قال الرسول عنة". الراكون اونلاين (in Arabic). 2023-03-16. Retrieved 2025-06-27.
^ The whites of their eyes
^ "ابو فانوس - Abu Fanous on Steam". store.steampowered.com. Retrieved 2025-06-27.
^ المولى, سارة (2023-11-30). "مثير للقلق والرعب.. من هو أبو فانوس؟". قناة ومنصة المشهد (in Arabic). Retrieved 2025-06-27.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Abu_Fanous&oldid=1356985444"
Categories: Atmospheric ghost lights<br>Jinn
Hidden categories: CS1 Arabic-language sources (ar)<br>Articles with short description<br>Short description matches Wikidata<br>Articles containing Arabic-language text
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