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Said Nursî

Said Nursi (Ottoman Turkish: سعيد نورسی, Kurdish: سەعید نوورسی, romanized: Seîdê Nursî‎; 1877[1] – 23 March 1960), also spelled Said-i Nursî or Said-i Kurdî,[13][14] and commonly known with the honorifics Bediüzzaman (meaning "wonder of the age") and Üstad (meaning "master")[15] among his followers, was a Kurdish Sunni Muslim theologian who wrote the Risale-i Nur Collection, a body of Qur'anic commentary exceeding six thousand pages.[16][17] Believing that modern science and logic was the way of the future, he advocated teaching religious sciences in secular schools and modern sciences in religious schools.[16][17][18]

Said-i Nursi
Üstad • Bediüzzaman
Said Nursi
Personal
Born1877[1]
Died23 March 1960 (aged 82–83)[7]
ReligionIslam
Parents
  • Sofi Mirza (father)
  • Nuriye Hanım (mother)
Era19th–20th century[4]
RegionKurdistan[5]
DenominationSunni
JurisprudenceShafi'i
CreedAsh'ari[6]
Main interest(s)Theology,[8] Tafsir,[8] Revival of Faith[9] Kalam, Eloquence
Muslim leader
SuccessorAhmet Husrev Altınbaşak[10]

Nursi inspired a religious movement[19][20] that has played a vital role in the revival of Islam in Turkey and now numbers several millions of followers worldwide.[21][22] His followers, often known as the "Nurcu movement" or the "Nur cemaati".[23] In a 2008 publication Nurcu worldwide adherents were estimated at 5 to 6 millions with numbers going up to 9 millions, with around 5500 dershanes or study halls where adherents would read Nursi’s writings collectively.[24]

Nursi categorizes his life as 3 periods: The first period he calls as "Old Said" which he describes as the period when he was actively involved in politics and believed he could serve Islam through politics. This period is from his birth until early 1920's coinciding with the aftermath of World War I and the fall of the Ottoman Empire. This period of upheaval caused Nursi to undergo a deep personal transformation. In the "New Said" period he entirely abstained from politics, and focused on writing Risale-i Nur collection using reasoning to demonstrate truth of Islam. Most of this period he spent in jail and exile. This period ended when he was released from Afyon prison in 1949. From 1949 till his death in 1960 he considers as "3rd Said" period when he experienced relative freedom which coincides with the first democratic elections in Turkey.[25]

"Old Said" Period edit

Early life edit

Said Nursi was born in the Kurdish village of Nurs near Hizan in the Bitlis Vilayet of the Ottoman Empire.[5] His father Mirza and his mother Nuriye both were Ahl al-Bayt (lineage of the Islamic prophet Muhammad).[26]

After staying with his brother for some time Said came back to Siirt. He went to the madrasa of Mullah Fathullah. Mullah Fathullah mentioned to Said that he[Said] was reading "Süyûtî" last year and asked whether he is reading "Mullah Jâmî" this year. Said responded that he finished Mullah Jami and many other books. Said was able to answer all questions from whatever book Mullah Fathullah asked. Mullah Fathullah was amazed by his intelligence.

Said was able to recite many books from memory. For instance: "So then he [Molla Fathullah] decided to test his memory and handed him a copy of the work by Al-Hariri of Basra (1054–1122) — also famous for his intelligence and power of memory — called Maqamat al-Hariri. Said read one page once, memorized it, then repeated it by heart. Molla Fathullah expressed his amazement."[27]

This news spread throughout Siirt. Mullah Fathullah said to the scholars, "A young student came to my school and answered every question I asked him. I am amazed by the wisdom and knowledge he has attained at such a young age!". After this, scholars of Siirt gave him the title "Bediuzzaman" meaning "Wonder of the Age".[28]

When he was 13–14 years old he completed the entire madrasa curriculum in 3 months, (there were more than a hundred books in the madrasa curriculum), which normally takes 10–15 years to complete. Said’s approach was to rely on the teacher , only to understand the key ideas of each book then to master whatever remained in the book with self-study.[28]

 
Said Nursi with his nephew and student Abdurrahman

Later on, he was invited by the governor of the Vilayet of Van to stay within his residency.[29] In the library of the governor, Nursi gained access to an archive of scientific knowledge he had not had access to previously. He studied the principles of history, geography, mathematics, geology, physics, chemistry, astronomy, and philosophy during his stay, besides Islamic sciences. He also memorized the books he studied, these are 90 books.[30][citation needed] Said Nursi also learned the Ottoman Turkish language there.[citation needed] During this time, he developed a plan to establish a university in the Eastern provinces of the Ottoman Empire,[31] which he named as "Madrasat-uz Zahra" which would combine scientific and religious (Islamic) education, and expected to advance overall education of these regions. He was able to secure 19 000 golds as funding for this project from the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed V and the construction started in 1913, but after the World War I started the project became void.[32]

Enraged by a newspaper report claiming that William Gladstone, the British Secretary for Colonies, stated in the parliament: "so long as the Muslims have the Qur’an we shall be unable to dominate them. We must either take it from them or make them lose their love of it." Said allegedly declared: "I shall prove and demonstrate to the world that the Quran is an undying, inexhaustible Sun!",[33] and set out to write his comprehensive Risale-i Nur, a collection of Said Nursi's own commentaries and interpretations of the Quran and Islam, as well as writings about his own life.[34]

Nursî and World War I edit

After World War I started, Russia attacked the Eastern part of Turkey. Nursî with his students established a volunteer brigade to resist the invasion.[35] In the First World War, he would enter the trenches himself despite heavy shelling which earned him the admiration of the troops he commanded. It was during these experiences that he allegedly wrote his Quranic commentary, Isharatul Icaz dictating to a scribe while on horseback or when he was back in trenches.[36] During a combat day, he broke his leg and was forced to surrender to Russian forces. He was taken prisoner by the Russian forces and spent 2.5 years in the Kostroma prisoner camp in the North-East of Moscow. During his imprisonment, one day the Russian Commander-in-Chief Nicolai Nicolaevich came to inspect the camp. He walked in front of him but Nursî didn't stand up, unlike the other prisoners. He walked again but Nursî didn't pay any attention to Nicolaevich. Nicolaevich asked him whether he knew who he was. Nursî said that he knew who he was, but because he is a Muslim scholar and a person with faith is superior to a person without, he couldn't stand up, that would be disrespecting his own faith. Russian martial court ordered his execution. He asked to do his last prayer before the execution. After a couple of minutes, they took him and tried to blindfold him, which he refused, claiming that he wants to look at paradise. Nicolaevich admired the brave attitude of him and understood that his intention was not to insult him, his behavior was just self respect. Nicolaevich immediately ordered to stop the execution and asked for forgiveness from him. Later on, he was allowed to stay in a Tatar mosque nearby. [37] After some time he found a way to escape from the Russian camp. He traveled to Istanbul via Warsaw, Berlin, Vienna, and Sofia. He was welcomed as a hero in Istanbul.[38]

Nursi's Opposition of British Invasion of Istanbul edit

In the aftermath of WWI, with Istanbul under foreign occupation, Nursi became a vocal critic. He exposed foreign powers manipulating religious leaders to undermine the nascent National Independence Movement in Anatolia. The Ottoman government, pressured by the British, even issued a fatwa opposing the movement. Undeterred, Nursi publicly challenged this fatwa and called it invalid.[39]

"New Said" Period edit

Teachings and movement edit

Humanity faced the greatest corruption of this period and the danger of unbelief, which was the greatest threat to humanity.[citation needed] Therefore, according to him, the greatest service in this period was the service of saving people's faith, and Risale-i Nur, who did this duty properly.[40] His commentary argues that the Quran encompasses the knowledge which allows for modern science.[41]

Risale-i Nur addresses the fundamental questions of human existence, such as the existence of God, the nature of the soul, and the purpose of life. It does so in a way that is both intellectually stimulating and spiritually uplifting. Risale-i Nur does not rely on blind faith or mysticism. Instead, it uses reason and logic to demonstrate the truths of belief. This makes it accessible to people of all backgrounds and beliefs.[41]

In Risale-i Nur he explains that if you see a painting you should assume the painter. A painting cannot exist without a painter. Nature is art and not the Artist. There is a hidden hand in every creation. The extraordinary abilities of animals (like cows producing fundamental nutrients for humans from converting raw grass, trees doing photosynthesis to produce sugar and carrying water to 200 feet high leaves, trees growing from a tiny seed) cannot be attributed to them but to their Creator. He uses analogies, reasoning and logic to prove God's existence.[42] According to Nursî all systems in the universe are interrelated. The designer of the Galaxies must be the designer of the Earth, human beings and all other creation. According to him "the One who created the eye of the mosquito must be the One who created the Sun"[43]

According to him, the Muslim World had 3 enemies: Ignorance, Poverty, and Division. To defeat these 3 enemies Muslims should use 3 weapons: Education, Art, and Unity.[44]

Besides the Risale-i Nur, a major factor in the success of the movement may be attributed to the very method Nursi had chosen, which may be summarized with two phrases: 'mânevî jihad,' that is, 'spiritual jihad' or 'non-physical jihad', and 'positive action.'[45][46] Nursi considered materialism and atheism and their source materialist philosophy to be his true enemies in this age of science, reason, and civilization.[47][48] He combated them with reasoned proofs in the Risale-i Nur, considering the Risale-i Nur as the most effective barrier against the corruption of society caused by these enemies. In order to be able to pursue this 'spiritual jihad' Nursi insisted that his students avoided any use of force and disruptive action. Through 'positive action,' and the maintenance of public order and security, the supposed damage caused by the forces of unbelief could be 'repaired' by the 'healing' truths of the Quran. Said Nursi lived much of his life in prison and in exile (over 20 years), persecuted by the secularist state for having invested in religious revival.[49] He advised his students to focus on spreading Risale-i Nur books and teaching people about them even when they were in jail. And most of the Risale-i Nur collection were written when he was in exile or jail.[50]

In 1911 when he was asked what he thinks about the idea of appointing Armenians as Governors in Ottoman States, he responded that there is no harm of doing this as there is no harm of Armenians being engineers, watchmakers [51]

Nursi's influence concerned the incipient leader of the Turkish Republic, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk,[52] which lead to Atatürk offering Nursi the post ‘Minister of Religious Affairs" for the eastern provinces of Turkey in attempt to make sure Nursi would not oppose Atatürk's regime, a post that Nursi famously refused.[53][54] Said Nursi was exiled to the Isparta Province for, amongst other things, performing the call to prayer in the Arabic language.[55] After his teachings attracted people in the area, the governor of Isparta sent him to a village named Barla[56] where he wrote two-thirds of his Risale-i Nur.[57] These manuscripts were sent to Sav, another village in the region, where people duplicated them in Arabic script (which was officially replaced by the modern Turkish alphabet in 1928).[55][57] After being finished, these books were sent to Nursi's disciples all over Turkey via the "Nurcu postal system".[58] Nursi repeatedly stated that all the persecutions and hardships inflicted on him by the secularist regime were God's blessings and that having destroyed the formal religious establishment, they had unwittingly left popular Islam as the only authentic faith of the Turks.[57]

The period believed to be the "golden age of Mahdi" will come in the future, and after this period that will last 30–40 years, irreligion will prevail again. According to him, the Doomsday may fall on the heads of the atheists in the Hijri calendar between 1530 and 1540.[59]

Later life ("3rd Said " Period) edit

Alarmed by the growing popularity of Nursi's teachings, which had spread even among the intellectuals and the military officers, the government arrested him for allegedly violating laws mandating secularism and sent him to exile.[citation needed] He was acquitted of all these charges in 1956.[57]

In the last decade of his life, Said Nursi settled in the city of Isparta.[citation needed] After the introduction of the multi-party system, he advised his followers to vote for the Democratic Party of Adnan Menderes, which had restored some religious freedom.[57] Said Nursi was a staunch anti-Communist, denouncing Communism as the greatest danger of the time. In 1956, he was allowed to have his writings printed. His books are collected under the name Risale-i Nur ("Letters of Divine Light").

He died of exhaustion after travelling to Urfa.[60] He was buried in a tomb opposite the cave where prophet Ibrahim (Abraham) is widely believed to have been born.[61][62] After the military coup d'état in Turkey in 1960, a group of soldiers led by the later right-wing politician Alparslan Türkeş opened his grave and buried him at an unknown place near Isparta during July 1960 in order to prevent popular veneration.[63][64]

In popular culture edit

Published in 1999, Fred Reed's travelogue describes a journey around Turkey in the footsteps of Said Nursi.[65]

A Turkish film Free Man based on Nursi's biography was made in 2011.[66]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Şükran Vahide, Islam in Modern Turkey: An Intellectual Biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi, p 3. ISBN 0791482979
  2. ^ "Bediüzzaman Said Nursi'nin köyü Nurs, TRT'de" – via vimeo.com.
  3. ^ Ian Markham, Globalization, Ethics and Islam: The Case of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi, Introduction, xvii
  4. ^ Islam in Modern Turkey, Şükran Vahide (Suny Press, 2005)
  5. ^ a b Vahide, Şükran (2005). Islam in modern Turkey: an intellectual biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. SUNY Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-7914-6515-8. They [Said Nursî's parents] were among the settled Kurdish population of the geographical region the Ottomans called Kurdistan.
  6. ^ Ozgur, Koca. Said Nursi's Synthesis of Ash'arite Occasionalism and Ibn 'Arabi's Metaphysical Cosmology: "Diagonal Occasionalism," Modern Science", and "Free Will". UMI Dissertations Publishing. p. 217. ISBN 9781303619793.
  7. ^ Ian Markham, Engaging with Bediuzzaman Said Nursi: A Model of Interfaith Dialogue, p 4. ISBN 0754669319
  8. ^ a b Gerhard Böwering, Patricia Crone, Mahan Mirza, The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought, p482
  9. ^ Robert W. Hefner, Shari?a Politics: Islamic Law and Society in the Modern World, p 170. ISBN 0253223105
  10. ^ https://oku.risale.online/sualar/ondorduncu-sua#533
  11. ^ a b c David Livingstone, Black Terror White Soldiers: Islam, Fascism and the New Age, p. 568. ISBN 1481226509
  12. ^ M. Hakan Yavuz, John L. Esposito, Turkish Islam and the Secular State: The Gülen Movement, p. 6
  13. ^ Janet Klein (2011). The Margins of Empire: Kurdish Militias in the Ottoman Tribal Zone. pp. 106 & 116.
  14. ^ Şükran Vahide (2019). Bediuzzaman Said Nursi: Author of the Risale-i Nur. The Other Press. p. 195.
  15. ^ "nur.org". www.nur.org.
  16. ^ a b Gerhard Böwering, Patricia Crone, Mahan Mirza, The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought, p. 482. ISBN 0691134847
  17. ^ a b Ian S. Markham; Suendam Birinci; Suendam Birinci Pirim (2011). An Introduction to Said Nursi: Life, Thought and Writings. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd, p 194. ISBN 978-1-4094-0770-6.
  18. ^ Said Nursi, Munazarat, p. 86 "The religious sciences are the light of the conscience; the modern sciences are the light of the mind; only on the combining of the two does the truth emerge. The students’ aspiration will take flight with those two wings. When they are parted, it gives rise to bigotry in the one, and skepticism and trickery in the other."
  19. ^ Omer Taspinar, Kurdish Nationalism and Political Islam in Turkey: Kemalist Identity in Transition (Middle East Studies: History, Politics & Law), p. 228. ISBN 041594998X
  20. ^ Serif Mardin, Religion and Social Change in Modern Turkey: The Case of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi, p. 23. ISBN 0887069967
  21. ^ Şükran Vahide, Islam in Modern Turkey: An Intellectual Biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi, p. 425. ISBN 0791482979
  22. ^ Akyol, Mustafa (March 2007). "Render Unto Atatürk". First Things. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  23. ^ Balci, Bayram (June 2003). "Fethullah Gu¨len's Missionary Schools in Central Asia and their Role in the Spreading of Turkism and Islam". Religion, State and Society. 31 (2): 153. doi:10.1080/09637490308283. S2CID 145455130.
  24. ^ Banchoff, Thomas (2008). Religious Pluralism, Globalization, and World Politics. Oxford University Press. p. 237.
  25. ^ Balcı, Ramazan (2011). Bediuzzaman Said Nursi: "wonder of the age". Clifton, NJ: Tughra Books. p. 177. ISBN 978-1-59784-260-0.
  26. ^ "The Great Islamic Scholar". 17 September 2010.
  27. ^ Şükran Vahide. (2005). Islam in Modern Turkey. State University of New York Press, ISBN 0-7914-6515-2
  28. ^ a b Balcı, Ramazan (2011). Bediüzzaman Said Nursi "Wonder of the Age". Tughra Books. pp. 28–30. ISBN 978-1-59784-260-0.
  29. ^ Vahide, Şükran (2011). Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. Islamic Book Trust. p. 28. ISBN 978-967-5062-86-5.
  30. ^ "Books Bediuzzaman memorized".
  31. ^ İbrahim M. Abu-Rabi, ed. (2003). Islam at the crossroads: On the life and thought of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. SUNY Press. pp. xvii, 6. ISBN 978-0-7914-5700-9.
  32. ^ "Medresetu'z Zehra".
  33. ^ Vahide, Şükran (2005). Islam in modern Turkey: an intellectual biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. SUNY Press.
  34. ^ "Said Nursi'nin Yeşilay'ın kurucusu olduğu doğru mudur? Bu teşkilatın Kurtuluş Savaşı ile hiçbir ilgisinin olmadığı söylenmektedir. Buna ne dersiniz?" [Is it true that Said Nursi was the founder of the Green Crescent? It is said that this organization has nothing to do with the War of Independence. How about that?]. Sorularla Risale (in Turkish). 25 February 2012.
  35. ^ Balcı, Ramazan (2011). Bediüzzaman Said Nursi "Wonder of the Age". Tughra Books. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-59784-260-0.
  36. ^ Balcı, Ramazan (2011). Bediüzzaman Said Nursi "Wonder of the Age". Tughra Books. pp. 60–62. ISBN 978-1-59784-260-0.
  37. ^ Balcı, Ramazan (2011). Bediüzzaman Said Nursi "Wonder of the Age". Tughra Books. pp. 60–62. ISBN 978-1-59784-260-0.
  38. ^ Balci, Ramazan. Bediuzzaman Said Nursi "Wonder of the Age". pp. 67–68. ISBN 978-1-59784-260-0.
  39. ^ Balcı, Ramazan (2011). Bediuzzaman Said Nursi: "wonder of the age". Clifton, NJ: Tughra Books. pp. 67–68. ISBN 978-1-59784-260-0.
  40. ^ "SORU VE CEVAPLARLA RİSALE-İ NUR'DA MEHDİYET » Sorularla Risale". Sorularla Risale. 13 October 2010.
  41. ^ a b Slife (5 August 2012). "Slife". The Spiritual Life.
  42. ^ Nursi, Said. Flashes.
  43. ^ Nursi, Said. Masnawi-i Nuriye.
  44. ^ Tarihce-i Hayat. Sahdamar Yayinlari. p. 64. ISBN 978-605-4038-70-1.
  45. ^ Ian S. Markham, Engaging with Bediuzzaman Said Nursi: A Model of Interfaith Dialogue, p 15 [Quoting Şükran Vahide, The Biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi: the author of the Risale-i Nur (Istanbul, Sozler Publications 1992), p. 352]. ISBN 0754669319
  46. ^ Arvind Sharma, The World's Religions After September 11. p 92. ISBN 0275996212
  47. ^ Ian S. Markham, Suendam Birinci, Suendam Birinci Pirim, An Introduction to Said Nursi: Life, Thought and Writings. p 46. ISBN 1409407713
  48. ^ Ziaulhaq, Mochamad; Sen, Hasbi (31 July 2021). "Transforming Hate into Compassion as an Islamic Nonviolent Thought of Bediüzzaman Said Nursi". Wawasan: Jurnal Ilmiah Agama Dan Sosial Budaya. 6 (1): 13–30. doi:10.15575/jw.v6i1.13159. ISSN 2502-3489. S2CID 237460737.
  49. ^ Gerhard Böwering, Patricia Crone, Mahan Mirza, The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought, p. 482.
  50. ^ Emirdag Lahikası, s.241
  51. ^ Nursi, Said. Munazarat.
  52. ^ David Tittensor, The House of Service: The Gulen Movement and Islam's Third Way, p 37. ISBN 0199336415
  53. ^ David Livingstone, Black Terror White Soldiers: Islam, Fascism and the New Age, p. 569. ISBN 1481226509
  54. ^ Vahide, Şükran (2005). Islam in modern Turkey: an intellectual biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. SUNY Press. He offered Nursi Shaikh Sanusi's post as 'general preacher' in the Eastern Provinces with a salary of 300 liras, a deputyship in the Assembly, and a post equivalent to that he had held in the Darü'l-Hikmeti'l-Islamiye, together with various perks such as a residence. Part 1; Childhood and Early Life, chapter 8
  55. ^ a b David McDowall (14 May 2004). A Modern History of the Kurds: Third Edition. I.B.Tauris. pp. 210–211. ISBN 978-1-85043-416-0.
  56. ^ Şükran Vahide, Bediuzzaman Said Nursi, p. 230. ISBN 967506286X
  57. ^ a b c d e Bosworth, C.E.; van Donzel, E.; Heinrichs, W.P.; Lecomte, G. (1995). Encyclopaedia of Islam. Vol. VIII (Ned-Sam) (New ed.). Leiden, Netherlands: Brill. p. 144. ISBN 978-9004098343.
  58. ^ Awang, Ramli; Yusoff, Kamaruzaman; Ebrahimi, Mansoureh; Yilmaz, Omer (2015). "A Challenge from Teaching to Social Movement: Bediüzzaman Said Nursi's Struggles for Modification in Turkey". Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences. 6 (6): 446. doi:10.5901/mjss.2015.v6n6s1p444.
  59. ^ Kastamonu Lahikası, s.26
  60. ^ Ibrahim M. Abu-Rabi, Islam at the Crossroads: On the Life and Thought of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi, p. xxiv. ISBN 0791457001
  61. ^ Ibrahim M. Abu-Rabi, Islam at the Crossroads: On the Life and Thought of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi, p. xxiii. ISBN 0791457001
  62. ^ Ian S. Markham; Suendam Birinci; Suendam Birinci Pirim (2011). An Introduction to Said Nursi: Life, Thought and Writings. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd, p 17. ISBN 978-1-4094-0770-6.
  63. ^ Nursi's Letters Found in Yassiada Archives 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Zaman
  64. ^ Yes to 27 May No to 28th (in Turkish), Yeni Şafak, 16 August 2003, Retrieved 17 June 2014
  65. ^ Reed, Fred (1999). Anatolia Junction: A Journey into Hidden Turkey (1st ed.). Talon Books. ISBN 978-0-88922-426-1.
  66. ^ "Free Man (2011)". IMDb.

Sources edit

  • Camilla T. Nereid (1997). In the Light of Said Nursi: Turkish Nationalism and the Religious Alternative. Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, University of Bergen. ISBN 978-1-85065-309-7.
  • Sahiner, Necmettin, Son Sahitler 3, Nesil Yayinlari, 2004.
  • Şükran Vahide (16 February 2012). Islam in Modern Turkey: An Intellectual Biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-8297-1.
  • Ian S. Markham; Suendam Birinci; Suendam Birinci Pirim (2011). An Introduction to Said Nursi: Life, Thought and Writings. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-1-4094-0770-6.

Further reading edit

  • Angel Rabasa; F. Stephen Larrabee (17 June 2008). The Rise of Political Islam in Turkey. Rand Corporation. ISBN 978-0-8330-4531-7.
  • Ibrahim M. Abu-Rabi‘ (9 April 2003). Islam at the Crossroads: On the Life and Thought of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-5700-9.
  • Ibrahim M. Abu-Rabi‘ (24 July 2008). Spiritual Dimensions of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi's Risale-I Nur: The Supreme Court of Israel and the Occupied Territories. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-7815-8.
  • Fred A. Reed (1 January 1999). Anatolia Junction: A Journey Into Hidden Turkey. Talonbooks, Limited. ISBN 978-0-88922-426-1.
  • Thomas F. Michel (2003). Reflections on Said Nursî's Views on Muslim-Christian Understanding. Söz Basim Yayin. ISBN 978-975-6438-02-2.
  • Thomas F. Michel (2013). Insights from the Risale-i Nur: Said Nursi's Advice for Modern Believers Clifton, NJ: Tughra Books ISBN 978-1597846783
  • Serif Mardin (1989). Religion and Social Change in Modern Turkey: The Case of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-88706-996-3.
  • Ibrahim Kalin; Oxford University Press (1 May 2010). Islam in Turkey: Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-980651-5.
  • Mustafa Gökhan Sahin, Said Nursi and the Nur Movement in Turkey: An Atomistic Approach
  • Colin Turner; Hasan Horkuc (15 June 2009). Said Nursi: Makers of Islamic Civilization. I. B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84511-774-0.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Said Nursi at Wikimedia Commons
  • Biodata at MuslimScholars.info
  • Bediuzzaman Said Nursi
  • SaidNur.com – A comprehensive page about Said Nursi and Risale-i Nur Collection in many languages
  • Suffa Vakfi – Said Nursi-based Organization.
  • The Risale-i Nur Collection, Bediuzzaman, Bediüzzaman Said Nursi – A web page including Risale-i Nur Collection in various languages
  • Risale-i A web page including Risale-i Nur Collection in English
  • Academic Researches on Said Nursi
  • A letter about ban of Risale-i Nur Collection to President of Russia Medvedev
  • A short biography of Said Nursi
  • Dr Colin Turner's works on Risale-i Nur

said, nursî, nursi, redirects, here, estonian, village, nursi, estonia, said, nursi, ottoman, turkish, سعيد, نورسی, kurdish, سەعید, نوورسی, romanized, seîdê, nursî, 1877, march, 1960, also, spelled, said, nursî, said, kurdî, commonly, known, with, honorifics, . Nursi redirects here For Estonian village see Nursi Estonia Said Nursi Ottoman Turkish سعيد نورسی Kurdish سەعید نوورسی romanized Seide Nursi 1877 1 23 March 1960 also spelled Said i Nursi or Said i Kurdi 13 14 and commonly known with the honorifics Bediuzzaman meaning wonder of the age and Ustad meaning master 15 among his followers was a Kurdish Sunni Muslim theologian who wrote the Risale i Nur Collection a body of Qur anic commentary exceeding six thousand pages 16 17 Believing that modern science and logic was the way of the future he advocated teaching religious sciences in secular schools and modern sciences in religious schools 16 17 18 Said i NursiUstad BediuzzamanSaid NursiPersonalBorn1877 1 Nurs 2 3 Bitlis Vilayet Ottoman EmpireDied23 March 1960 aged 82 83 7 Urfa TurkeyReligionIslamParentsSofi Mirza father Nuriye Hanim mother Era19th 20th century 4 RegionKurdistan 5 DenominationSunniJurisprudenceShafi iCreedAsh ari 6 Main interest s Theology 8 Tafsir 8 Revival of Faith 9 Kalam EloquenceMuslim leaderSuccessorAhmet Husrev Altinbasak 10 Influenced by Ali ibn Abu Talib Husayn ibn Ali Abdul Qadir Gilani 11 Al Ghazali 11 Rumi 11 Ahmad Sirhindi 12 Baha al Din Naqshband Ash ari Al Taftazani Ahmad Khani Nursi inspired a religious movement 19 20 that has played a vital role in the revival of Islam in Turkey and now numbers several millions of followers worldwide 21 22 His followers often known as the Nurcu movement or the Nur cemaati 23 In a 2008 publication Nurcu worldwide adherents were estimated at 5 to 6 millions with numbers going up to 9 millions with around 5500 dershanes or study halls where adherents would read Nursi s writings collectively 24 Nursi categorizes his life as 3 periods The first period he calls as Old Said which he describes as the period when he was actively involved in politics and believed he could serve Islam through politics This period is from his birth until early 1920 s coinciding with the aftermath of World War I and the fall of the Ottoman Empire This period of upheaval caused Nursi to undergo a deep personal transformation In the New Said period he entirely abstained from politics and focused on writing Risale i Nur collection using reasoning to demonstrate truth of Islam Most of this period he spent in jail and exile This period ended when he was released from Afyon prison in 1949 From 1949 till his death in 1960 he considers as 3rd Said period when he experienced relative freedom which coincides with the first democratic elections in Turkey 25 Contents 1 Old Said Period 1 1 Early life 1 2 Nursi and World War I 1 3 Nursi s Opposition of British Invasion of Istanbul 2 New Said Period 2 1 Teachings and movement 3 Later life 3rd Said Period 4 In popular culture 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External links Old Said Period editEarly life edit Said Nursi was born in the Kurdish village of Nurs near Hizan in the Bitlis Vilayet of the Ottoman Empire 5 His father Mirza and his mother Nuriye both were Ahl al Bayt lineage of the Islamic prophet Muhammad 26 After staying with his brother for some time Said came back to Siirt He went to the madrasa of Mullah Fathullah Mullah Fathullah mentioned to Said that he Said was reading Suyuti last year and asked whether he is reading Mullah Jami this year Said responded that he finished Mullah Jami and many other books Said was able to answer all questions from whatever book Mullah Fathullah asked Mullah Fathullah was amazed by his intelligence Said was able to recite many books from memory For instance So then he Molla Fathullah decided to test his memory and handed him a copy of the work by Al Hariri of Basra 1054 1122 also famous for his intelligence and power of memory called Maqamat al Hariri Said read one page once memorized it then repeated it by heart Molla Fathullah expressed his amazement 27 This news spread throughout Siirt Mullah Fathullah said to the scholars A young student came to my school and answered every question I asked him I am amazed by the wisdom and knowledge he has attained at such a young age After this scholars of Siirt gave him the title Bediuzzaman meaning Wonder of the Age 28 When he was 13 14 years old he completed the entire madrasa curriculum in 3 months there were more than a hundred books in the madrasa curriculum which normally takes 10 15 years to complete Said s approach was to rely on the teacher only to understand the key ideas of each book then to master whatever remained in the book with self study 28 nbsp Said Nursi with his nephew and student Abdurrahman Later on he was invited by the governor of the Vilayet of Van to stay within his residency 29 In the library of the governor Nursi gained access to an archive of scientific knowledge he had not had access to previously He studied the principles of history geography mathematics geology physics chemistry astronomy and philosophy during his stay besides Islamic sciences He also memorized the books he studied these are 90 books 30 citation needed Said Nursi also learned the Ottoman Turkish language there citation needed During this time he developed a plan to establish a university in the Eastern provinces of the Ottoman Empire 31 which he named as Madrasat uz Zahra which would combine scientific and religious Islamic education and expected to advance overall education of these regions He was able to secure 19 000 golds as funding for this project from the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed V and the construction started in 1913 but after the World War I started the project became void 32 Enraged by a newspaper report claiming that William Gladstone the British Secretary for Colonies stated in the parliament so long as the Muslims have the Qur an we shall be unable to dominate them We must either take it from them or make them lose their love of it Said allegedly declared I shall prove and demonstrate to the world that the Quran is an undying inexhaustible Sun 33 and set out to write his comprehensive Risale i Nur a collection of Said Nursi s own commentaries and interpretations of the Quran and Islam as well as writings about his own life 34 Nursi and World War I edit After World War I started Russia attacked the Eastern part of Turkey Nursi with his students established a volunteer brigade to resist the invasion 35 In the First World War he would enter the trenches himself despite heavy shelling which earned him the admiration of the troops he commanded It was during these experiences that he allegedly wrote his Quranic commentary Isharatul Icaz dictating to a scribe while on horseback or when he was back in trenches 36 During a combat day he broke his leg and was forced to surrender to Russian forces He was taken prisoner by the Russian forces and spent 2 5 years in the Kostroma prisoner camp in the North East of Moscow During his imprisonment one day the Russian Commander in Chief Nicolai Nicolaevich came to inspect the camp He walked in front of him but Nursi didn t stand up unlike the other prisoners He walked again but Nursi didn t pay any attention to Nicolaevich Nicolaevich asked him whether he knew who he was Nursi said that he knew who he was but because he is a Muslim scholar and a person with faith is superior to a person without he couldn t stand up that would be disrespecting his own faith Russian martial court ordered his execution He asked to do his last prayer before the execution After a couple of minutes they took him and tried to blindfold him which he refused claiming that he wants to look at paradise Nicolaevich admired the brave attitude of him and understood that his intention was not to insult him his behavior was just self respect Nicolaevich immediately ordered to stop the execution and asked for forgiveness from him Later on he was allowed to stay in a Tatar mosque nearby 37 After some time he found a way to escape from the Russian camp He traveled to Istanbul via Warsaw Berlin Vienna and Sofia He was welcomed as a hero in Istanbul 38 Nursi s Opposition of British Invasion of Istanbul edit In the aftermath of WWI with Istanbul under foreign occupation Nursi became a vocal critic He exposed foreign powers manipulating religious leaders to undermine the nascent National Independence Movement in Anatolia The Ottoman government pressured by the British even issued a fatwa opposing the movement Undeterred Nursi publicly challenged this fatwa and called it invalid 39 New Said Period editTeachings and movement edit Humanity faced the greatest corruption of this period and the danger of unbelief which was the greatest threat to humanity citation needed Therefore according to him the greatest service in this period was the service of saving people s faith and Risale i Nur who did this duty properly 40 His commentary argues that the Quran encompasses the knowledge which allows for modern science 41 Risale i Nur addresses the fundamental questions of human existence such as the existence of God the nature of the soul and the purpose of life It does so in a way that is both intellectually stimulating and spiritually uplifting Risale i Nur does not rely on blind faith or mysticism Instead it uses reason and logic to demonstrate the truths of belief This makes it accessible to people of all backgrounds and beliefs 41 In Risale i Nur he explains that if you see a painting you should assume the painter A painting cannot exist without a painter Nature is art and not the Artist There is a hidden hand in every creation The extraordinary abilities of animals like cows producing fundamental nutrients for humans from converting raw grass trees doing photosynthesis to produce sugar and carrying water to 200 feet high leaves trees growing from a tiny seed cannot be attributed to them but to their Creator He uses analogies reasoning and logic to prove God s existence 42 According to Nursi all systems in the universe are interrelated The designer of the Galaxies must be the designer of the Earth human beings and all other creation According to him the One who created the eye of the mosquito must be the One who created the Sun 43 According to him the Muslim World had 3 enemies Ignorance Poverty and Division To defeat these 3 enemies Muslims should use 3 weapons Education Art and Unity 44 Besides the Risale i Nur a major factor in the success of the movement may be attributed to the very method Nursi had chosen which may be summarized with two phrases manevi jihad that is spiritual jihad or non physical jihad and positive action 45 46 Nursi considered materialism and atheism and their source materialist philosophy to be his true enemies in this age of science reason and civilization 47 48 He combated them with reasoned proofs in the Risale i Nur considering the Risale i Nur as the most effective barrier against the corruption of society caused by these enemies In order to be able to pursue this spiritual jihad Nursi insisted that his students avoided any use of force and disruptive action Through positive action and the maintenance of public order and security the supposed damage caused by the forces of unbelief could be repaired by the healing truths of the Quran Said Nursi lived much of his life in prison and in exile over 20 years persecuted by the secularist state for having invested in religious revival 49 He advised his students to focus on spreading Risale i Nur books and teaching people about them even when they were in jail And most of the Risale i Nur collection were written when he was in exile or jail 50 In 1911 when he was asked what he thinks about the idea of appointing Armenians as Governors in Ottoman States he responded that there is no harm of doing this as there is no harm of Armenians being engineers watchmakers 51 Nursi s influence concerned the incipient leader of the Turkish Republic Mustafa Kemal Ataturk 52 which lead to Ataturk offering Nursi the post Minister of Religious Affairs for the eastern provinces of Turkey in attempt to make sure Nursi would not oppose Ataturk s regime a post that Nursi famously refused 53 54 Said Nursi was exiled to the Isparta Province for amongst other things performing the call to prayer in the Arabic language 55 After his teachings attracted people in the area the governor of Isparta sent him to a village named Barla 56 where he wrote two thirds of his Risale i Nur 57 These manuscripts were sent to Sav another village in the region where people duplicated them in Arabic script which was officially replaced by the modern Turkish alphabet in 1928 55 57 After being finished these books were sent to Nursi s disciples all over Turkey via the Nurcu postal system 58 Nursi repeatedly stated that all the persecutions and hardships inflicted on him by the secularist regime were God s blessings and that having destroyed the formal religious establishment they had unwittingly left popular Islam as the only authentic faith of the Turks 57 The period believed to be the golden age of Mahdi will come in the future and after this period that will last 30 40 years irreligion will prevail again According to him the Doomsday may fall on the heads of the atheists in the Hijri calendar between 1530 and 1540 59 Later life 3rd Said Period editAlarmed by the growing popularity of Nursi s teachings which had spread even among the intellectuals and the military officers the government arrested him for allegedly violating laws mandating secularism and sent him to exile citation needed He was acquitted of all these charges in 1956 57 In the last decade of his life Said Nursi settled in the city of Isparta citation needed After the introduction of the multi party system he advised his followers to vote for the Democratic Party of Adnan Menderes which had restored some religious freedom 57 Said Nursi was a staunch anti Communist denouncing Communism as the greatest danger of the time In 1956 he was allowed to have his writings printed His books are collected under the name Risale i Nur Letters of Divine Light He died of exhaustion after travelling to Urfa 60 He was buried in a tomb opposite the cave where prophet Ibrahim Abraham is widely believed to have been born 61 62 After the military coup d etat in Turkey in 1960 a group of soldiers led by the later right wing politician Alparslan Turkes opened his grave and buried him at an unknown place near Isparta during July 1960 in order to prevent popular veneration 63 64 In popular culture editPublished in 1999 Fred Reed s travelogue describes a journey around Turkey in the footsteps of Said Nursi 65 A Turkish film Free Man based on Nursi s biography was made in 2011 66 See also editMuhammad Emin Er 1914 2013 one of Said Nursi s students Bediuzzaman Museum a museum inside the Rustem Pasha Medrese at Fatih Istanbul Mustafa Sabri Fethullah Gulen Zubeyir Gunduzalp 1920 1971 One of the closest students of Said Nursi Erisale Read Risale i Nur OnlineReferences edit a b Sukran Vahide Islam in Modern Turkey An Intellectual Biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi p 3 ISBN 0791482979 Bediuzzaman Said Nursi nin koyu Nurs TRT de via vimeo com Ian Markham Globalization Ethics and Islam The Case of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi Introduction xvii Islam in Modern Turkey Sukran Vahide Suny Press 2005 a b Vahide Sukran 2005 Islam in modern Turkey an intellectual biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi SUNY Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 7914 6515 8 They Said Nursi s parents were among the settled Kurdish population of the geographical region the Ottomans called Kurdistan Ozgur Koca Said Nursi s Synthesis of Ash arite Occasionalism and Ibn Arabi s Metaphysical Cosmology Diagonal Occasionalism Modern Science and Free Will UMI Dissertations Publishing p 217 ISBN 9781303619793 Ian Markham Engaging with Bediuzzaman Said Nursi A Model of Interfaith Dialogue p 4 ISBN 0754669319 a b Gerhard Bowering Patricia Crone Mahan Mirza The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought p482 Robert W Hefner Shari a Politics Islamic Law and Society in the Modern World p 170 ISBN 0253223105 https oku risale online sualar ondorduncu sua 533 a b c David Livingstone Black Terror White Soldiers Islam Fascism and the New Age p 568 ISBN 1481226509 M Hakan Yavuz John L Esposito Turkish Islam and the Secular State The Gulen Movement p 6 Janet Klein 2011 The Margins of Empire Kurdish Militias in the Ottoman Tribal Zone pp 106 amp 116 Sukran Vahide 2019 Bediuzzaman Said Nursi Author of the Risale i Nur The Other Press p 195 nur org www nur org a b Gerhard Bowering Patricia Crone Mahan Mirza The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought p 482 ISBN 0691134847 a b Ian S Markham Suendam Birinci Suendam Birinci Pirim 2011 An Introduction to Said Nursi Life Thought and Writings Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 194 ISBN 978 1 4094 0770 6 Said Nursi Munazarat p 86 The religious sciences are the light of the conscience the modern sciences are the light of the mind only on the combining of the two does the truth emerge The students aspiration will take flight with those two wings When they are parted it gives rise to bigotry in the one and skepticism and trickery in the other Omer Taspinar Kurdish Nationalism and Political Islam in Turkey Kemalist Identity in Transition Middle East Studies History Politics amp Law p 228 ISBN 041594998X Serif Mardin Religion and Social Change in Modern Turkey The Case of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi p 23 ISBN 0887069967 Sukran Vahide Islam in Modern Turkey An Intellectual Biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi p 425 ISBN 0791482979 Akyol Mustafa March 2007 Render Unto Ataturk First Things Retrieved 20 May 2021 Balci Bayram June 2003 Fethullah Gu len s Missionary Schools in Central Asia and their Role in the Spreading of Turkism and Islam Religion State and Society 31 2 153 doi 10 1080 09637490308283 S2CID 145455130 Banchoff Thomas 2008 Religious Pluralism Globalization and World Politics Oxford University Press p 237 Balci Ramazan 2011 Bediuzzaman Said Nursi wonder of the age Clifton NJ Tughra Books p 177 ISBN 978 1 59784 260 0 The Great Islamic Scholar 17 September 2010 Sukran Vahide 2005 Islam in Modern Turkey State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 6515 2 a b Balci Ramazan 2011 Bediuzzaman Said Nursi Wonder of the Age Tughra Books pp 28 30 ISBN 978 1 59784 260 0 Vahide Sukran 2011 Bediuzzaman Said Nursi Islamic Book Trust p 28 ISBN 978 967 5062 86 5 Books Bediuzzaman memorized Ibrahim M Abu Rabi ed 2003 Islam at the crossroads On the life and thought of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi SUNY Press pp xvii 6 ISBN 978 0 7914 5700 9 Medresetu z Zehra Vahide Sukran 2005 Islam in modern Turkey an intellectual biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi SUNY Press Said Nursi nin Yesilay in kurucusu oldugu dogru mudur Bu teskilatin Kurtulus Savasi ile hicbir ilgisinin olmadigi soylenmektedir Buna ne dersiniz Is it true that Said Nursi was the founder of the Green Crescent It is said that this organization has nothing to do with the War of Independence How about that Sorularla Risale in Turkish 25 February 2012 Balci Ramazan 2011 Bediuzzaman Said Nursi Wonder of the Age Tughra Books p 59 ISBN 978 1 59784 260 0 Balci Ramazan 2011 Bediuzzaman Said Nursi Wonder of the Age Tughra Books pp 60 62 ISBN 978 1 59784 260 0 Balci Ramazan 2011 Bediuzzaman Said Nursi Wonder of the Age Tughra Books pp 60 62 ISBN 978 1 59784 260 0 Balci Ramazan Bediuzzaman Said Nursi Wonder of the Age pp 67 68 ISBN 978 1 59784 260 0 Balci Ramazan 2011 Bediuzzaman Said Nursi wonder of the age Clifton NJ Tughra Books pp 67 68 ISBN 978 1 59784 260 0 SORU VE CEVAPLARLA RISALE I NUR DA MEHDIYET Sorularla Risale Sorularla Risale 13 October 2010 a b Slife 5 August 2012 Slife The Spiritual Life Nursi Said Flashes Nursi Said Masnawi i Nuriye Tarihce i Hayat Sahdamar Yayinlari p 64 ISBN 978 605 4038 70 1 Ian S Markham Engaging with Bediuzzaman Said Nursi A Model of Interfaith Dialogue p 15 Quoting Sukran Vahide The Biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi the author of the Risale i Nur Istanbul Sozler Publications 1992 p 352 ISBN 0754669319 Arvind Sharma The World s Religions After September 11 p 92 ISBN 0275996212 Ian S Markham Suendam Birinci Suendam Birinci Pirim An Introduction to Said Nursi Life Thought and Writings p 46 ISBN 1409407713 Ziaulhaq Mochamad Sen Hasbi 31 July 2021 Transforming Hate into Compassion as an Islamic Nonviolent Thought of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi Wawasan Jurnal Ilmiah Agama Dan Sosial Budaya 6 1 13 30 doi 10 15575 jw v6i1 13159 ISSN 2502 3489 S2CID 237460737 Gerhard Bowering Patricia Crone Mahan Mirza The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought p 482 Emirdag Lahikasi s 241 Nursi Said Munazarat David Tittensor The House of Service The Gulen Movement and Islam s Third Way p 37 ISBN 0199336415 David Livingstone Black Terror White Soldiers Islam Fascism and the New Age p 569 ISBN 1481226509 Vahide Sukran 2005 Islam in modern Turkey an intellectual biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi SUNY Press He offered Nursi Shaikh Sanusi s post as general preacher in the Eastern Provinces with a salary of 300 liras a deputyship in the Assembly and a post equivalent to that he had held in the Daru l Hikmeti l Islamiye together with various perks such as a residence Part 1 Childhood and Early Life chapter 8 a b David McDowall 14 May 2004 A Modern History of the Kurds Third Edition I B Tauris pp 210 211 ISBN 978 1 85043 416 0 Sukran Vahide Bediuzzaman Said Nursi p 230 ISBN 967506286X a b c d e Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P Lecomte G 1995 Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol VIII Ned Sam New ed Leiden Netherlands Brill p 144 ISBN 978 9004098343 Awang Ramli Yusoff Kamaruzaman Ebrahimi Mansoureh Yilmaz Omer 2015 A Challenge from Teaching to Social Movement Bediuzzaman Said Nursi s Struggles for Modification in Turkey Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences 6 6 446 doi 10 5901 mjss 2015 v6n6s1p444 Kastamonu Lahikasi s 26 Ibrahim M Abu Rabi Islam at the Crossroads On the Life and Thought of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi p xxiv ISBN 0791457001 Ibrahim M Abu Rabi Islam at the Crossroads On the Life and Thought of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi p xxiii ISBN 0791457001 Ian S Markham Suendam Birinci Suendam Birinci Pirim 2011 An Introduction to Said Nursi Life Thought and Writings Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 17 ISBN 978 1 4094 0770 6 Nursi s Letters Found in Yassiada Archives Archived 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Zaman Yes to 27 May No to 28th in Turkish Yeni Safak 16 August 2003 Retrieved 17 June 2014 Reed Fred 1999 Anatolia Junction A Journey into Hidden Turkey 1st ed Talon Books ISBN 978 0 88922 426 1 Free Man 2011 IMDb Sources editCamilla T Nereid 1997 In the Light of Said Nursi Turkish Nationalism and the Religious Alternative Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies University of Bergen ISBN 978 1 85065 309 7 Sahiner Necmettin Son Sahitler 3 Nesil Yayinlari 2004 Sukran Vahide 16 February 2012 Islam in Modern Turkey An Intellectual Biography of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 8297 1 Ian S Markham Suendam Birinci Suendam Birinci Pirim 2011 An Introduction to Said Nursi Life Thought and Writings Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 1 4094 0770 6 Further reading editAngel Rabasa F Stephen Larrabee 17 June 2008 The Rise of Political Islam in Turkey Rand Corporation ISBN 978 0 8330 4531 7 Ibrahim M Abu Rabi 9 April 2003 Islam at the Crossroads On the Life and Thought of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 5700 9 Ibrahim M Abu Rabi 24 July 2008 Spiritual Dimensions of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi s Risale I Nur The Supreme Court of Israel and the Occupied Territories SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 7815 8 Fred A Reed 1 January 1999 Anatolia Junction A Journey Into Hidden Turkey Talonbooks Limited ISBN 978 0 88922 426 1 Thomas F Michel 2003 Reflections on Said Nursi s Views on Muslim Christian Understanding Soz Basim Yayin ISBN 978 975 6438 02 2 Thomas F Michel 2013 Insights from the Risale i Nur Said Nursi s Advice for Modern Believers Clifton NJ Tughra Books ISBN 978 1597846783 Serif Mardin 1989 Religion and Social Change in Modern Turkey The Case of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 88706 996 3 Ibrahim Kalin Oxford University Press 1 May 2010 Islam in Turkey Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 980651 5 Mustafa Gokhan Sahin Said Nursi and the Nur Movement in Turkey An Atomistic Approach Colin Turner Hasan Horkuc 15 June 2009 Said Nursi Makers of Islamic Civilization I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 774 0 External links edit nbsp Media related to Said Nursi at Wikimedia Commons Biodata at MuslimScholars info Bediuzzaman Said Nursi SaidNur com A comprehensive page about Said Nursi and Risale i Nur Collection in many languages Suffa Vakfi Said Nursi based Organization Risale i Nur The Risale i Nur Collection Bediuzzaman Bediuzzaman Said Nursi A web page including Risale i Nur Collection in various languages Risale i A web page including Risale i Nur Collection in English Academic Researches on Said Nursi A letter about ban of Risale i Nur Collection to President of Russia Medvedev A short biography of Said Nursi Dr Colin Turner s works on Risale i Nur Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Islam nbsp Turkey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Said Nursi amp oldid 1221104389, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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