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Bayazid Bastami

Abū Yazīd Ṭayfūr bin ʿĪsā bin Surūshān al-Bisṭāmī (al-Basṭāmī) (d. 261/874–5 or 234/848–9),[3] commonly known in the Iranian world as Bāyazīd Bisṭāmī (Persian: بایزید بسطامی), was a Persian[4][5][6][7] Sufi from north-central Iran.[5][8] Known to future Sufis as Sultān-ul-Ārifīn ("King of the Gnostics"), Bisṭāmī is considered to be one of the expositors of the state of fanā, the notion of dying in mystical union with Allah.[9] Bastami was famous for "the boldness of his expression of the mystic’s complete absorption into the mysticism."[10] Many "ecstatic utterances" (شطحات shatˤħāt) have been attributed to Bisṭāmī, which lead to him being known as the "drunken" or "ecstatic" (Arabic: سُكْر, sukr) school of Islamic mysticism. Such utterance may be argued as, Bisṭāmī died with mystical union and the deity is speaking through his tongue.[9] Bisṭāmī also claimed to have ascended through the seven heavens in his dream. His journey, known as the Mi'raj of Bisṭāmī, is clearly patterned on the Mi'raj of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.[9] Bisṭāmī is characterized in three different ways: a free thinking radical, a pious Sufi who is deeply concerned with following the sha'ria and engaging in "devotions beyond the obligatory," and a pious individual who is presented as having a dream similar to the Mi'raj of Muhammed.[11] The Mi'raj of Bisṭāmī seems as if Bisṭāmī is going through a self journey; as he ascends through each heaven, Bisṭāmī is gaining knowledge in how he communicates with the angels (e.g. languages and gestures) and the number of angels he encounters increases.

Bayazid Bastami
Cover from a lacquer mirror case with multiple scenes, attributed to Mohammad Esmail Esfahani; the top scene depicts Bayazid Bastami and disciples. Created in Qajar Iran in the second half of the 19th century
Born804 CE
Bistam, Qumis region, Abbasid Caliphate (modern Bastam, Semnan Province, Iran)
Died874 CE[2]
EraAbbasid Era, (Islamic Golden Age)
RegionWestern Asia
SchoolSunni[1]
Main interests
Mysticism, Philosophy
Notable ideas
Sukr

His grandfather Surūshān was born a Zoroastrian,[12] an indication that Bastami had Persian heritage, despite the fact that his transmitted sayings are in Arabic. Very little is known about the life of Bastami, whose importance lies in his biographical tradition, since he left no written works. The early biographical reports portray him as a wanderer[13] but also as the leader of teaching circles.[14] The early biographers describe him as a mystic who dismissed excessive asceticism;[15] but who was also scrupulous about ritual purity, to the point of washing his tongue before chanting God's names.[16] He also appreciated the work of the great jurists.[17] A measure that shows how influential his image remains in posterity is the fact that he is named in the lineage (silsila) of one of the largest Sufi brotherhoods today, the Naqshbandi order.[18]

Background edit

The name Bastami means "from Bastam". Bayazid's grandfather, Sorūshān, was a Zoroastrian who converted to Islam.[19] His grandfather had three sons, who were named: Adam, İsa and Ali. All of them were ascetics. Bayazid was the son of İsa.[20] Not much is known of Bayazid's childhood, but he spent most of his time isolated in his house, and the mosque. Although he remained in isolation from the material world, he did not isolate himself from the Sufi realm. He welcomed people into his house to discuss Islam. Like his father and uncles, Bayazid led a life of asceticism and renounced all worldly pleasures in order to be one with Allah The Exalted. Ultimately, this led Bayazid to a state of "self union" which, according to many Sufi orders, is the only state a person could be in order to attain unity with God.

Influence edit

Bastami's predecessor Dhul-Nun al-Misri (d. CE 859) was a murid "initiate" as well.[21] Al-Misri had formulated the doctrine of ma'rifa (gnosis), presenting a system which helped the murid and the sheikh (guide) to communicate. Bayazid Bastami took this a step further and emphasized the importance of religious ecstasy in Islam, referred to in his words as drunkenness (Sukr or wajd), a means of self-annihilation in the Divine Presence of the Creator. Before him, the Sufi path was mainly based on piety and obedience and he played a major role in placing the concept of divine love at the core of Sufism.

When Bayazid died, he was over seventy years old. Before he died, someone asked him his age. He said: "I am four years old. For seventy years, I was veiled. I got rid of my veils only four years ago."

Bayazid died in 874 CE and is likely buried in Bistam. There is also a shrine in Kirikhan, Turkey in the name of Bayazid Bastami.[22] His corpus of writings is minimal when compared to his influence. His ascetic approach to religious studies emphasizes his sole devotion to the almighty.

Shrine in Chittagong, Bangladesh edit

 
Tomb of Bayazid Bastami in Bastam near Shahroud.

There is a Sufi shrine in Chittagong, Bangladesh, dating back to 850 AD, that is said to be Bastami's tomb. Although this may be unlikely, given the fact that Bastami was never known to have visited Bangladesh. However, Sufism spread throughout the Middle East, parts of Asia and Northern Africa, and many Sufi teachers where influenced in the spread of Islam in Bengal. Also, one local legend says that Bastami did visit Chattagong, which might explain the belief of the locals in Chittagong. Nevertheless, Islamic scholars usually attribute the tomb to Bayazid.[23] While there is no recorded evidence of his visit to the region, Chittagong was a major port on the southern silk route connecting India, China and the Middle East, and the first Muslims to travel to China may have used the Chittagong-Burma-Sichuan trade route. Chittagong was a religious city and also a center of Sufism and Muslim merchants in the subcontinent since the 9th century, and it is possible that either Bayazid or his followers visited the port city around the middle of the 9th century.[2]

Gallery edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ 'by the certified Mr. T'
  2. ^ a b Karim, Abdul (2012). "Bayejid Bostami". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  3. ^ The Darvishes: Or Oriental Spiritualism By John Pair Brown, p. 141
  4. ^ Irwin, Robert, ed. (2010). The new Cambridge history of Islam, Volume 4 (1. publ. ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-521-83824-5.
  5. ^ a b Walbridge, John. "Suhrawardi and Illumination" in "The Cambridge Companion to Arabic Philosophy" edited by Peter Adamson, Richard C. Taylor, Cambridge University Press, 2005. pg 206.
  6. ^ Shaked, Shaul (August 20, 1999). "Quests and Visionary Journeys in Sasanian Iran". In Assmann, Jan; Stroumsa, Guy (eds.). Transformations of the Inner Self in Ancient Religions. BRILL. p. 71. ISBN 978-90-04-11356-5. Still earlier, in the short sayings of another great Muslim mystic of Persian origin, Abū Yazīd al-Bistāmī, written down from oral transmission, we have several examples of a similar schematic movement of life.
  7. ^ Yazaki, Saeko (December 8, 2014). "Morality in Early Sufi Literature". In Ridgeon, Lloyd (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Sufism. Cambridge University Press. p. 77. ISBN 978-1107679504. Rejection of this world is also manifest in a saying by the famous Persian Sufi Abū Yazīd al-Bistāmī (d. c. 261/875): "This world is nothing; how can one renounce it?"
  8. ^ Mojaddedi, Jawid, “al-Bisṭāmī, Abū Yazīd (Bāyazīd)”, in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE, Edited by: Kate Fleet, Gudrun Krämer, Denis Matringe, John Nawas, Everett Rowson.
  9. ^ a b c Hermansen, Marcia K. "Early Islamic Mysticism: Sufi, Quran, Miraj, Poetic, and Theological Writings by Sells Michael.(The Classics of Western Spirituality Series) 398 pages, appendix, notes, bibliography, index. Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1996. $24.95 (Paper) ISBN 0-8091-3619-8." Review of Middle East Studies 31.2 (1997): 172-173. (p.212)
  10. ^ Muslim Saints and Mystics: Episodes from the Tadhkirat al-Auliya’ (Memorial of the Saints) (Ames: Omphaloskepsis, 2000), p. 119
  11. ^ Hermansen, Marcia K. "Early Islamic Mysticism: Sufi, Quran, Miraj, Poetic, and Theological Writings by Sells Michael.(The Classics of Western Spirituality Series) 398 pages, appendix, notes, bibliography, index. Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1996. $24.95 (Paper) ISBN 0-8091-3619-8." Review of Middle East Studies 31.2 (1997): 172-173. (p.213)
  12. ^ Böwering, Gerhard. "BESṬĀMĪ, BĀYAZĪD". iranicaonline.org. Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2 April 2017.
  13. ^ Abū Nuʿaym ʿAlī b. Sahl Iṣfahānī, Ḥilyat al-awliyāʾ, 10 vols., Cairo 1932–8, 10:33
  14. ^ Al-Iṣfahānī, 10:34
  15. ^ Al-Iṣfahānī, 10: 36–7
  16. ^ Al-Iṣfahānī, 10:35
  17. ^ Al-Iṣfahānī, 10: 36
  18. ^ Mojaddedi, “al-Bisṭāmī, Abū Yazīd (Bāyazīd)”, Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE
  19. ^ al-Qushayri, Abu 'l-Qasim (2007). Alexander D. Knysh; Muhammad Eissa (eds.). Al-Qushayri's Epistle on Sufism : Al-Risala al-qushayriyya fi 'ilm al-tasawwuf. Alexander D. Knysh (trans.) (1st ed.). Reading, UK: Garnet Pub. p. 32. ISBN 978-1859641866.
  20. ^ Öngüt, Ömer (2018). Sadat-ı Kiram. İstanbul: Hakikat. p. 125.
  21. ^ al-Qifti, Tarikh al-Hukama' [Leipzig, 1903], 185; al-Shibi, op. cit., 360
  22. ^ Adamec, Ludwig W. (2017). Historical Dictionary of Islam. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 80. ISBN 9781442277243.
  23. ^ . New Age. Dhaka. Archived from the original on 26 December 2013.

References edit

  • Arthur John Arberry, Bistamiana, BSOAS 25/1 (1962) 28–37
  • ʿAbd al-Raḥmān al-Badawī, Shaṭaḥāt al-Ṣūfiyya, Cairo 1949
  • Carl W. Ernst, Words of ecstasy in Sufism, Albany 1985
  • Carl W. Ernst, The man without attributes. Ibn ʿArabī's interpretation of al-Bisṭāmī, Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn ʿArabi Society, 13 (1993), 1–18
  • ʿAbd al-Rafīʿ Ḥaqīqat, Sulṭān al-ʿĀrifīn Bāyazīd Basṭāmī, Tehran 1361sh/1982
  • Max Horten, Indische Strömungen in der islamischen Mystik, 2 vols., Heidelberg 1927–8
  • ʿAlī al-Hujwīrī, Kashf al-maḥjūb, ed. V. A. Zhukovskiĭ, Leningrad 1926 repr. Tehran 1957
  • Abū Nuʿaym ʿAlī b. Sahl Iṣfahānī, Ḥilyat al-awliyāʾ, 10 vols., Cairo 1932–8
  • ʿAbd al-Raḥmān Jāmī, Nafaḥāt al-uns, ed. Maḥmūd ʿĀbidī, Tehran 1370sh/1991
  • Mahmud Khatami, Zaehner-Arberry controversy on Abu Yazid the Sufi. A historical review, Transcendent Philosophy 7 (2006), 203–26
  • Abdelwahab Meddeb (trans.), Les dits de Bistami, Paris 1989
  • Jawid Ahmad Mojaddedi, The biographical tradition in Sufism. The Ṭabaqāt genre from al-Sulamī to Jāmī, Richmond, Surrey 2001
  • Jawid Ahmad Mojaddedi, Getting drunk with Abū Yazīd or staying sober with Junayd. The creation of a popular typology of Sufism, BSOAS 66/1 (2003), 1–13
  • Reynold A. Nicholson, An early Arabic version of the Miʿrāj of Abū Yazīd al-Bisṭāmī, Islamica 2 (1926), 402–15
  • Javād Nūrbakhsh, Bāyazīd, Tehran 1373sh/1994
  • Hellmut Ritter, Die Aussprüche des Bāyezīd Bisṭāmī, in Fritz Meier (ed.), Westöstliche Abhandlungen (Wiesbaden 1954), 231–43
  • Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī, Fīhi mā fīhi, ed. Badīʿ al-Zamān Furūzānfar, Tehran 1957
  • Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī, Mathnawī, ed. Reynold A. Nicholson, 8 vols., London 1925–40
  • Rūzbihān Baqlī, Sharḥ-i shaṭḥiyyāt, ed. Henri Corbin, Tehran 1966
  • al-Sarrāj, Kitāb al-lumaʿ fī l-taṣawwuf, ed. Reynold Alleyne Nicholson, Leiden and London 1914
  • August Tholuck, Ssufismus sive Theosophia Persarum pantheistica, Berlin 1821
  • Robert C. Zaehner, Abū Yazīd of Bisṭām. A turning point in Islamic mysticism, Indo-Iranian Journal 1 (1957), 286–301
  • Robert C. Zaehner, Hindu and Muslim mysticism, London 1960.

Further reading edit

  • Keeler, Annabel (2020). "Abū Yazīd al-Bisṭāmī and Discussions about Intoxicated Sufism". In Ridgeon, Lloyd (ed.). Routledge Handbook on Sufism (1st ed.). Routledge. ISBN 9781138040120.

External links edit

  • Bayazid's Tomb in Iran
  • The Naqshbandiya Khalidiya Haqqaniya Tariqa in Italy
  • The Naqshbandi-Mujaddidiya Chain in the USA and Europe

bayazid, bastami, ibadi, berber, tribe, yazid, this, article, written, like, personal, reflection, personal, essay, argumentative, essay, that, states, wikipedia, editor, personal, feelings, presents, original, argument, about, topic, please, help, improve, re. For the Ibadi of the Berber tribe see Abu Yazid This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Abu Yazid Ṭayfur bin ʿisa bin Surushan al Bisṭami al Basṭami d 261 874 5 or 234 848 9 3 commonly known in the Iranian world as Bayazid Bisṭami Persian بایزید بسطامی was a Persian 4 5 6 7 Sufi from north central Iran 5 8 Known to future Sufis as Sultan ul Arifin King of the Gnostics Bisṭami is considered to be one of the expositors of the state of fana the notion of dying in mystical union with Allah 9 Bastami was famous for the boldness of his expression of the mystic s complete absorption into the mysticism 10 Many ecstatic utterances شطحات shatˤħat have been attributed to Bisṭami which lead to him being known as the drunken or ecstatic Arabic س ك ر sukr school of Islamic mysticism Such utterance may be argued as Bisṭami died with mystical union and the deity is speaking through his tongue 9 Bisṭami also claimed to have ascended through the seven heavens in his dream His journey known as the Mi raj of Bisṭami is clearly patterned on the Mi raj of the Islamic prophet Muhammad 9 Bisṭami is characterized in three different ways a free thinking radical a pious Sufi who is deeply concerned with following the sha ria and engaging in devotions beyond the obligatory and a pious individual who is presented as having a dream similar to the Mi raj of Muhammed 11 The Mi raj of Bisṭami seems as if Bisṭami is going through a self journey as he ascends through each heaven Bisṭami is gaining knowledge in how he communicates with the angels e g languages and gestures and the number of angels he encounters increases Bayazid BastamiCover from a lacquer mirror case with multiple scenes attributed to Mohammad Esmail Esfahani the top scene depicts Bayazid Bastami and disciples Created in Qajar Iran in the second half of the 19th centuryBorn804 CEBistam Qumis region Abbasid Caliphate modern Bastam Semnan Province Iran Died874 CE 2 Bangladesh Iran or TurkeyEraAbbasid Era Islamic Golden Age RegionWestern AsiaSchoolSunni 1 Main interestsMysticism PhilosophyNotable ideasSukrHis grandfather Surushan was born a Zoroastrian 12 an indication that Bastami had Persian heritage despite the fact that his transmitted sayings are in Arabic Very little is known about the life of Bastami whose importance lies in his biographical tradition since he left no written works The early biographical reports portray him as a wanderer 13 but also as the leader of teaching circles 14 The early biographers describe him as a mystic who dismissed excessive asceticism 15 but who was also scrupulous about ritual purity to the point of washing his tongue before chanting God s names 16 He also appreciated the work of the great jurists 17 A measure that shows how influential his image remains in posterity is the fact that he is named in the lineage silsila of one of the largest Sufi brotherhoods today the Naqshbandi order 18 Contents 1 Background 2 Influence 3 Shrine in Chittagong Bangladesh 4 Gallery 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground editThe name Bastami means from Bastam Bayazid s grandfather Sorushan was a Zoroastrian who converted to Islam 19 His grandfather had three sons who were named Adam Isa and Ali All of them were ascetics Bayazid was the son of Isa 20 Not much is known of Bayazid s childhood but he spent most of his time isolated in his house and the mosque Although he remained in isolation from the material world he did not isolate himself from the Sufi realm He welcomed people into his house to discuss Islam Like his father and uncles Bayazid led a life of asceticism and renounced all worldly pleasures in order to be one with Allah The Exalted Ultimately this led Bayazid to a state of self union which according to many Sufi orders is the only state a person could be in order to attain unity with God Influence editBastami s predecessor Dhul Nun al Misri d CE 859 was a murid initiate as well 21 Al Misri had formulated the doctrine of ma rifa gnosis presenting a system which helped the murid and the sheikh guide to communicate Bayazid Bastami took this a step further and emphasized the importance of religious ecstasy in Islam referred to in his words as drunkenness Sukr or wajd a means of self annihilation in the Divine Presence of the Creator Before him the Sufi path was mainly based on piety and obedience and he played a major role in placing the concept of divine love at the core of Sufism When Bayazid died he was over seventy years old Before he died someone asked him his age He said I am four years old For seventy years I was veiled I got rid of my veils only four years ago Bayazid died in 874 CE and is likely buried in Bistam There is also a shrine in Kirikhan Turkey in the name of Bayazid Bastami 22 His corpus of writings is minimal when compared to his influence His ascetic approach to religious studies emphasizes his sole devotion to the almighty Shrine in Chittagong Bangladesh editFurther information Shrine of Bayazid Bostami nbsp Tomb of Bayazid Bastami in Bastam near Shahroud There is a Sufi shrine in Chittagong Bangladesh dating back to 850 AD that is said to be Bastami s tomb Although this may be unlikely given the fact that Bastami was never known to have visited Bangladesh However Sufism spread throughout the Middle East parts of Asia and Northern Africa and many Sufi teachers where influenced in the spread of Islam in Bengal Also one local legend says that Bastami did visit Chattagong which might explain the belief of the locals in Chittagong Nevertheless Islamic scholars usually attribute the tomb to Bayazid 23 While there is no recorded evidence of his visit to the region Chittagong was a major port on the southern silk route connecting India China and the Middle East and the first Muslims to travel to China may have used the Chittagong Burma Sichuan trade route Chittagong was a religious city and also a center of Sufism and Muslim merchants in the subcontinent since the 9th century and it is possible that either Bayazid or his followers visited the port city around the middle of the 9th century 2 Gallery edit nbsp Bayazid Bastami s shrine in Chittagong Bangladesh nbsp Interior of Bayazid s Mosque nbsp Dome of Bayazid s Mosque nbsp Carving of Bayazid s MosqueNotes edit by the certified Mr T a b Karim Abdul 2012 Bayejid Bostami In Islam Sirajul Jamal Ahmed A eds Banglapedia National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh Second ed Asiatic Society of Bangladesh The Darvishes Or Oriental Spiritualism By John Pair Brown p 141 Irwin Robert ed 2010 The new Cambridge history of Islam Volume 4 1 publ ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 72 ISBN 978 0 521 83824 5 a b Walbridge John Suhrawardi and Illumination in The Cambridge Companion to Arabic Philosophy edited by Peter Adamson Richard C Taylor Cambridge University Press 2005 pg 206 Shaked Shaul August 20 1999 Quests and Visionary Journeys in Sasanian Iran In Assmann Jan Stroumsa Guy eds Transformations of the Inner Self in Ancient Religions BRILL p 71 ISBN 978 90 04 11356 5 Still earlier in the short sayings of another great Muslim mystic of Persian origin Abu Yazid al Bistami written down from oral transmission we have several examples of a similar schematic movement of life Yazaki Saeko December 8 2014 Morality in Early Sufi Literature In Ridgeon Lloyd ed The Cambridge Companion to Sufism Cambridge University Press p 77 ISBN 978 1107679504 Rejection of this world is also manifest in a saying by the famous Persian Sufi Abu Yazid al Bistami d c 261 875 This world is nothing how can one renounce it Mojaddedi Jawid al Bisṭami Abu Yazid Bayazid in Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Edited by Kate Fleet Gudrun Kramer Denis Matringe John Nawas Everett Rowson a b c Hermansen Marcia K Early Islamic Mysticism Sufi Quran Miraj Poetic and Theological Writings by Sells Michael The Classics of Western Spirituality Series 398 pages appendix notes bibliography index Mahwah NJ Paulist Press 1996 24 95 Paper ISBN 0 8091 3619 8 Review of Middle East Studies 31 2 1997 172 173 p 212 Muslim Saints and Mystics Episodes from the Tadhkirat al Auliya Memorial of the Saints Ames Omphaloskepsis 2000 p 119 Hermansen Marcia K Early Islamic Mysticism Sufi Quran Miraj Poetic and Theological Writings by Sells Michael The Classics of Western Spirituality Series 398 pages appendix notes bibliography index Mahwah NJ Paulist Press 1996 24 95 Paper ISBN 0 8091 3619 8 Review of Middle East Studies 31 2 1997 172 173 p 213 Bowering Gerhard BESṬAMi BAYAZiD iranicaonline org Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 2 April 2017 Abu Nuʿaym ʿAli b Sahl Iṣfahani Ḥilyat al awliyaʾ 10 vols Cairo 1932 8 10 33 Al Iṣfahani 10 34 Al Iṣfahani 10 36 7 Al Iṣfahani 10 35 Al Iṣfahani 10 36 Mojaddedi al Bisṭami Abu Yazid Bayazid Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE al Qushayri Abu l Qasim 2007 Alexander D Knysh Muhammad Eissa eds Al Qushayri s Epistle on Sufism Al Risala al qushayriyya fi ilm al tasawwuf Alexander D Knysh trans 1st ed Reading UK Garnet Pub p 32 ISBN 978 1859641866 Ongut Omer 2018 Sadat i Kiram Istanbul Hakikat p 125 al Qifti Tarikh al Hukama Leipzig 1903 185 al Shibi op cit 360 Adamec Ludwig W 2017 Historical Dictionary of Islam Rowman amp Littlefield p 80 ISBN 9781442277243 Bangladesh A pivot of the south eastern Silk Road New Age Dhaka Archived from the original on 26 December 2013 References editArthur John Arberry Bistamiana BSOAS 25 1 1962 28 37 ʿAbd al Raḥman al Badawi Shaṭaḥat al Ṣufiyya Cairo 1949 Carl W Ernst Words of ecstasy in Sufism Albany 1985 Carl W Ernst The man without attributes Ibn ʿArabi s interpretation of al Bisṭami Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn ʿArabi Society 13 1993 1 18 ʿAbd al Rafiʿ Ḥaqiqat Sulṭan al ʿArifin Bayazid Basṭami Tehran 1361sh 1982 Max Horten Indische Stromungen in der islamischen Mystik 2 vols Heidelberg 1927 8 ʿAli al Hujwiri Kashf al maḥjub ed V A Zhukovskiĭ Leningrad 1926 repr Tehran 1957 Abu Nuʿaym ʿAli b Sahl Iṣfahani Ḥilyat al awliyaʾ 10 vols Cairo 1932 8 ʿAbd al Raḥman Jami Nafaḥat al uns ed Maḥmud ʿAbidi Tehran 1370sh 1991 Mahmud Khatami Zaehner Arberry controversy on Abu Yazid the Sufi A historical review Transcendent Philosophy 7 2006 203 26 Abdelwahab Meddeb trans Les dits de Bistami Paris 1989 Jawid Ahmad Mojaddedi The biographical tradition in Sufism The Ṭabaqat genre from al Sulami to Jami Richmond Surrey 2001 Jawid Ahmad Mojaddedi Getting drunk with Abu Yazid or staying sober with Junayd The creation of a popular typology of Sufism BSOAS 66 1 2003 1 13 Reynold A Nicholson An early Arabic version of the Miʿraj of Abu Yazid al Bisṭami Islamica 2 1926 402 15 Javad Nurbakhsh Bayazid Tehran 1373sh 1994 Hellmut Ritter Die Ausspruche des Bayezid Bisṭami in Fritz Meier ed Westostliche Abhandlungen Wiesbaden 1954 231 43 Jalal al Din Rumi Fihi ma fihi ed Badiʿ al Zaman Furuzanfar Tehran 1957 Jalal al Din Rumi Mathnawi ed Reynold A Nicholson 8 vols London 1925 40 Ruzbihan Baqli Sharḥ i shaṭḥiyyat ed Henri Corbin Tehran 1966 al Sarraj Kitab al lumaʿ fi l taṣawwuf ed Reynold Alleyne Nicholson Leiden and London 1914 August Tholuck Ssufismus sive Theosophia Persarum pantheistica Berlin 1821 Robert C Zaehner Abu Yazid of Bisṭam A turning point in Islamic mysticism Indo Iranian Journal 1 1957 286 301 Robert C Zaehner Hindu and Muslim mysticism London 1960 Further reading editKeeler Annabel 2020 Abu Yazid al Bisṭami and Discussions about Intoxicated Sufism In Ridgeon Lloyd ed Routledge Handbook on Sufism 1st ed Routledge ISBN 9781138040120 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Bayazid Bastami Bayazid s Tomb in Iran The Naqshbandiya Khalidiya Haqqaniya Tariqa in Italy The Naqshbandi Mujaddidiya Chain in the USA and Europe Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bayazid Bastami amp oldid 1200587762, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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