Tradition / Region: Afghanistan (Kabul, Zabulistan)
Alternate Names: Siranis
Category: Forest dweller
The Myth
In the forests and undergrowth of Kabul and Zabulistan dwells the Sirānis, a strange carnivorous creature whose breath is music. Its snout is pierced by many openings, and when it exhales, a flute-like melody flows from them, sweet and irresistible.
Animals that hear this sound are drawn toward it, gathering peacefully as if enchanted. They stand transfixed, overwhelmed by the beauty of the music, until the Sirānis calmly chooses its prey and devours it. If none please it, the creature releases a terrible shriek that shatters the spell and sends all fleeing in terror.
It is said the Sirānis inspired the creation of musical instruments, for its sound was unlike anything else in the natural world. Thus it remains a being of deadly beauty—one whose song brings wonder, stillness, and sudden death to those who listen too closely.
Sources
abookofcreatures.com– Sirānis entry
Contadini, A. Musical Beasts: The Swan-Phoenix in the Ibn Bakhtishu’ Bestiaries. In O, Kane, B. (2005) The Iconography of Islamic Art. Edinburgh University Press.
Contadini, A. (2012) A World of Beasts: A Thirteenth-Century Illustrated Arabic Book on Animals (the Kitab Na’t al-Hayawan) in the Ibn Bakhtishu’ Tradition. Brill, Leiden.
Ettinghausen, R. (1950) The Unicorn. Studies in Muslim Iconography, Freer Gallery of Art Occasional Papers Vol. 1, No. 3, Washington.
al-Qazwini, Z. (1849) Zakariya ben Muhammed ben Mahmud el-Cazwini’s Kosmographie. Erster Theil: Die Wunder der Schöpfung. Ed. F. Wüstenfeld. Dieterichsche Buchhandlung, Göttingen.