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  1. The Jinn, also called the Ifrit, is an ifrit from the Middle East, working as a taxi driver in New-York City. After encountering Salim, he took his identity and life, offering him his own in exchange.

  2. 21 de jun. de 2019 · In American God s he introduces us to an 'ifrit' or 'jinn' from the Middle East who has fallen on hard times and now drives a yellow cab in New York City, enduring 30-hour shifts and passengers...

  3. The taxi driver assures Salim that he will not kill him, and explaining that jinn in America do not grant wishes. The driver drops Salim at his hotel and picks up his next fare. Salim goes to get dinner and is then surprised to find the driver in the lobby when he returns.

  4. 5 de jun. de 2017 · When he wakes, the Jinn is gone and he has been given a new life in America as a taxi driver himself. Salim’s passage is relatively short in comparison to the rest of the book’s contents, and...

  5. Plenty of people seemed to be talking about Salim and the Ifrit, and how the Ifrit gave Salim a cruel fate, and resigned him to a life of a taxi driver. Is this the general opinion on what happened?

  6. 15 de may. de 2017 · For tonight, viewers got to witness the eventually super-erotic meet-up between the once-optimistic Muslim immigrant Salim and the exhausted taxi driver soon revealed to be a Jinn.

  7. 15 de may. de 2017 · The Jinn appears as part of the “Somewhere in America” interludes as a taxi driver in New York. We saw him for a moment in the second episode; he met Mr. Wednesday at the diner. Like the other...