Imra (Kamkata-vari: Imro) was the chief creator deity of the Nuristani people before their conversion to Islam.[1] Imra was believed to be the creator of the earth. With his breath, it was believed, he created the three other main deities of the pantheon: Mon, Gish and Bagisht.[2]

Etymology

The name of the deity is considered a reflex of Indo-Iranian Yama. The name Imro or Yum in Kamkata-vari is thought to derive from a borrowing of Sanskrit Yama-rāja "King Yama" via a Middle Indo-Aryan form *Yam(a)rāy(a) with the characteristic northwestern sound change of j to y.[3][4][5][6] It is likely a cognate of the Bangani title Jim Raza 'god of the dead'.[7] He is also known as Mara "Killer, Death", a term derived from the Prasun language.[8][9]

Cognates of Kamkata-vari imro are found in other neighboring languages: Waigali yamrai,[10] Kalash (Urtsun) imbro,[11] Ashkun imra and Prasun yumr'a - all referring to a "creator god".[12][13]

Role in religion

This deity also acts as the guardian to the gates of hell (located in a subterranean realm), preventing the return to the world of the living - a motif that echoes the role of Yama as the king of the underworld.[14]

In John Updike's 1965 short story "God Speaks" (collected in "Museums and Women") Gish Imra is the name of one of the protagonists, the son of the assassinated leader of a Central Asian state called Nuristan.

See also

References

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