Disorder in the Court

Published Jun 18, 2024, 9:00 AM

Two curious residents brining change to their households are part of your tour through the Cabinet today.

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Welcome to Aaron Manke's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of iHeartRadio and Grimm and Mild.

Our world is full of the unexplainable, and if history is an open book, all of these amazing tales are right there on display, just waiting for us to explore. Welcome to the Cabinet of Curiosities.

What makes ghost stories so frightening is how powerless we feel in the face of something that we can't explain. We know how to deal with human conflict, but the supernatural is a whole different story. After all, you can't exactly arrest a ghost or sue a demon, at least you can't in movies. In real life, it seems that things are different, And in two thousand and nine, one family didn't just try to their demons. They took them to court. That year, a family living near the Holy City of Medina in Saudi Arabia came to the head of their local tribunal with a strange claim they wanted the courts helped to settle a dispute with a genie. Now, for Westerners, the word genie conjures up images of little men living in oil lamps, granting wishes with magical powers. The role these chaotic figures play in literature, religion, and popular imagination is much more diverse than that. Though genies were originally spirits worshiped by pre Islamic Arab people called Gin, they appeared in folk tales, poems, and traditions from Eastern Asia to North Africa. When Islams spread across the region and the six hundreds, it adopted genies into its belief system. They're even mentioned several times in the Quran. According to tradition, gin or genies are spirits made of air that can shape shift into shapes like dogs, snakes, or even human beings. They're not good or evil, but ei genie is as morally complex as a person, free to make their own decisions, live a noble life, or cause mischief. Interestingly, many early Arab poets credited their verses to genies, who they said inspired them, much like ancient Greek muses. Some even claimed to fall in love with them. For the most part, though genies are seen as dangerous spirits. They might grant you knowledge or talent, but they may just dis easily bring you misfortune. In some especially dire cases, a genie might stalk you, haunt you, or even possess your body, which brings us back to our family living near Medina. As strange things kept happening to them, the stories they heard of malicious genies began to ring true. The family, which wished to remain anonymous, had lived in the same house for around fifteen years. Beginning in two thousand and seven, they started to notice strange things happening inside their home. At first, it was just odd, unexpected noises in the night, noises made when there was nobody there, or sounds that no human could have made. The family ignored it. It was the house shifting, they said, or their imaginations, nothing to worry about. Displeased that being ignored, whatever was making the noise decided to escalate. One night, the family awoke to hard thumps against the wall, which scared the children. Whatever was attacking them had started throwing rocks at the side of the house. Although frightened by the inexplicable attacks, the family refused to leave their home of fifteen years, so the genie decided to send them a message that they couldn't ignore. Months into this strange activity, members of the family began getting calls from strange numbers on their cell phones. Someone or something was leaving threatening voicemails, and the rock throwing picked up too, so that stones came flying at the family members themselves whenever they wanted to leave the house at night. The being that was attacking the house didn't just want to disturb them, It wanted to hurt them. Every member of the family had some kind of experience with this unseen dangerous entity. As they put the incident side by side, though, they came to the same conclusion, a malicious genie must be the one targeting the family. In many schools of thought in Islam, genies are considered real intelligent beings beholden to these same divine laws as humans. Looking for a solution, the family figured that if genies must follow the same heavenly rules, maybe they would follow the same earthly ones as well. The family moved out of their house, went to their local courts and petitioned to open a case. They were going to sue the genie. Now it's not clear whether or not the case made it through the Saudi court system, but what we do know is that court officers opened an investigation, and since every member of the family filed the case instead of it just being a complaint by one person. The court swore to fully examine the matter. They'd find out what was going on inside the house and whether the court could even make rulings on the behavior of a genie. Hopefully, threatening legal action got the family what it wanted. If not, then they most likely went to trial, and for some lucky lawyer, all those years of playing devil's advocate finally paid off. Deep down, everyone wonders if they have what it takes to be a hero. You can't really know for sure until your metal is tested by fire. But when that moment of crisis arrives, there is no hiding from it. You either run freeze up, or you seize your destiny and act. During World War II, for example, British civilians got more than their share of opportunities to prove their heroism. In the early years of the war, Germany tested the nation with the Blitz, a mass aerial bombing campaign targeting London and major industrial centers around the United Kingdom. Their main objective was to interrupt the production of tanks, planes, and other weapons, but it also led to the destruction of some two million homes and forty three thousand, five hundred civilian deaths. Despite the constant threat of attack, people went about their lives as normally as possible, while contributing to the war efforts in whatever ways they could. They literally kept calm and carried on by walking to work past the leveled houses of their neighborhoods, thus proving the stiff upper lip that they were famous for. But underneath, everyone waited in anticipation for the next attack, not knowing if their home would be next. When the bombs fell, many everyday citizens flew into action, putting out fires and dragging their neighbors to safety. Still, one British civilian stands out for saving her family not once, but twice during the war. The first instance came in April of nineteen forty one, during an attack on London. An incendiary bomb came crashing through the roof of a London house. Rather than being designed to explode, these bombs contained highly flammable materials that would ignite upon impact, producing fires hot enough to melt steel. But rather than fleeing, a young civilian named Juliana, who lived in the house, raced straight for the bomb. She didn't have any training with explosives or materials on hand to help fight the fire that was starting to ignite. But despite the obvious danger, she didn't run away. She simply squatted over the bomb and urinated on it. And I'm realizing right now that it might help you to picture this scene more accurately to note that Juliana was a dog, a great Dane to be precise, and by peeing on that Nazi incendiary bomb, she saved her owners from almost certain death that night. Soon after, she was honored for her bravery with a Blue Cross medal. This award has been used in the UK since World War One to recognize animals for their bravery and selflessness. Initially, it was most often given to horses who carried their officers into battle compared to those warriors, though Juliana was just a civilian, but she proved herself to be a hero all the same. A few years later, she did it again. In November of nineteen forty four, a fire broke out in her owner's shoe shop. This time, Juliana barked to wake her owners up, giving them time to put out the flames. For this incident, she received her second Blue Cross medal, but Sadly, Juliana died soon after the war under nefarious circumstances. We don't know who was responsible or what motivated them, but someone slipped poison through her master's mail slot one night. Juliana ingested it and passed away soon after. It's a tragic end for our hero, but her story lives on. It came to lights in twenty thirteen when one of the medals was sold at an auction in Bristol, along with a watercolor portrait of Juliana herself. They went for eleven hundred pounds, many times above the asking price, and the impressed auctioneer concluded the sale by praising Juliana's accomplishments, commenting that she was a great Dane with a great bladder. But she's more than just a dog who peed on a bomb. In a way, she represents all the British citizens who rode out the blitz. They may not have been soldiers, but they stepped up when their country needed them. They fought the war with every tool at their disposal, by collecting scrap metal, working in factories and forming bucket brigades when their neighborhoods caught fire, and in the same way Juliana fought the Nazis with everything she had loyalty, courage, and one powerful stream. I hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn more about the show by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. The show was created by me Aaron Mankey in partnership with how Stuff Works. I make another award winning show called Lore, which is a podcast, book series, and television show, and you can learn all about it over at the Worldolore dot com. And until next time, stay curious.

Aaron Mahnke's Cabinet of Curiosities

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