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Rahmaniyya

The Rahmaniyya (Arabic: الطريقة الرحمانية, romanizedal-Ṭarīqa al-Raḥmāniyya) is an Algerian Sufi order (tariqa or brotherhood) founded by Kabyle religious scholar Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Raḥman al-Azhari Bu Qabrayn in the 1770s.[1] It was initially a branch of the Khalwatîya (Arabic: الخلوتية) established in Kabylia region. However, its membership grew unwaveringly elsewhere in Algeria and in North Africa.[2]

Founder edit

Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Rahman al-Azharî (Arabic: محمد بن عبد الرحمن الأزهري), more commonly known as Bû Qabrayn (Arabic: بوقبرين, "the man with two tombs"), was an 18th-century Algerian Islamic scholar, saint and a Sufi mystic. He was born in 1715-29 into the Berber Ait Ismâ'îl tribe of the Qashtula, in Kabylia.[1] He studied first in a nearby zawiya in his hometown of Jurjura. Then, he went on studying at the Great Mosque in Algiers before undertaking his journey to Mašriq in 1739–40 to perform the hajj.

Following his stay in the Hijaz, Bu Qubrayn settled in Egypt to attain greater knowledge at the Al-Azhar mosque in Cairo. This is where he was initiated to the Sufi order of khalwatîya under Muḥammad ibn Salim al-Hifnawi (1689-1767/8), the leader of the Egyptian khalwatîya and rector of al-Azhar. As part of his learning with al-Hifnawi, Bu Qubrayn traveled extensively to teach ḫalwatîya doctrines, including in Darfur for six years and as far as India.

After three decades, Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Rahman returned to his village Jurjura in Algeria sometime between 1763 and 1770. There, he founded a school and zawiya in the 1770s and initiated the Kabyles into the tarîqa.[3] He rapidly attracted local notables and developed his zawiya into a prestigious center of learning, before his death in 1793/4.[4]

Propagation and influence edit

The Raḥmâniyya grew rapidly beyond Kabylia region, in eastern and south-eastern Algeria where it competed with other Sufi orders such as Qâdiriyya or Tijâniyya. However, within Kabylia, its influence was almost exclusive of any other order.[5] In 1851, French military authorities estimated the membership of the order to 295,000 members.[6]

After the death of Bu Qubrayn, his successor 'Alî ibn 'Îsâ al-Maghribî remained the undisputed leader of the order until 1835.[7] The leadership was then more disputed until 1860, which led to the division of the Raḥmâniyya into independent branches. But Muḥammad Amezzyân ibn al-Haddâd of Saddûk took over in 1860, bringing unity and dynamism back to the order for a decade.[5]

The Raḥmâniyya, along with other Sufi orders, fulfilled an important role as education centers and charitable organizations.[8] The zawiyas offered different teachings and supports across the order, but it included studies on religion, grammar, religious law, geography, and mathematics.[9]

Role in the uprising of 1871 edit

The Raḥmâniyya and Shaykh al-Haddâd [fr] played a major role during the Algerian uprising of 1871. After the transition from a military regime to a civilian regime, the Crémieux decree, and the French defeat in the Franco-Prussian War, Shaykh Mokrani launched the revolt against French authorities in March 1871.[10] But the insurrection really gained ground when Shaykh al-Haddâd proclaimed the holy war against the French in April.[11] Soon, around 250 tribes and 150,000 combattants rose from everywhere in Kabylia, especially members of the Raḥmâniyya.[12] However, Kabyle troops suffered decisive defeats in June and July, and the repression that followed was severe.[10]

Evolution after 1871 edit

After the insurrection of 1871, the main zawiya definitively lost control over the other branches of the order,[5] which were now following and adapting the Raḥmâniyya teachings more or less independently.[13] The order lost some of its influence but remained vigorous. In 1897, the Raḥmâniyya was the largest Sufi order in Algeria, with 177 zawiyas and over 155,000 members.[14]

In the 20th century, Sufism declined in Algeria for multiple reasons. First, the French colonial authorities both used Sufi orders and tried to weaken them. Second, reformers from the Islamic Modernism movement attacked Sufis, claiming they were into deviational and heretical practices, superstitions keeping people ignorant.[15] Also, under the presidencies of Ahmed Ben Bella (1963-1965) and Houari Boumedienne (1965-1978), Sufi orders were further weakened by governments trying to increase their control of Algerian society. Sufi shaykhs were often subject to house arrest, and Sufi-owned properties were nationalized.[16] However, the Raḥmâniyya experienced a renewed activity after the independence, and around 1950, it had around 230,000 members, mostly Berbers, namely almost half of the 500,000 members in Algerian Sufi orders.[14]

The situation of Sufi orders improved under the presidency of Chadli Benjedid (1979-1992), who returned some of the properties previously nationalized. Sufi orders managed to resume their activities and the number of their followers started to increase again. However, this reversal ended during the Algerian civil war in the 1990s. After the military took control of the state, they sanctioned not only Salafi and Wahhabi groups but also Sufi orders. At the end of the war, President Abdelaziz Bouteflika (1999-2019) endeavored to support "Sufism as a more moderate alternative to more radical Salafis and more conservative Wahhabis".[16]

Today, Sufi orders such as the Raḥmâniyya survive in Algeria despite their reduced influence in Algerian society. Sufism is viewed positively, even though most Algerian youth don't practice what they don't consider a modern lifestyle.[17] And in Kabylia, where the Raḥmāniyya is stronger, rates of affiliation are higher than in other regions.[18]

Practices of Raḥmâniyya edit

The principles of Raḥmâniyya are fairly egalitarian and democratic, which partly explains its success in Kabylia. The order recognizes local saints and integrates them in its Islamic teachings, achieving the synthesis between local traditions and Islamic orthodoxy. Its practices are simple and accessible, as they do not require an extensive knowledge of the Quran beyond a few important verses. Scholars and brothers widely use the Kabyle language and do not need a deep understanding of Arabic.[19]

A fundamental practice involves teaching the mûrîd (Arabic: موريد "the disciple") an array of seven "names". The first one consists in repeating lâ ilâha ilal 'llâhu (Arabic: لا إله إلا الله "there is no god except God") between 12,000 and 70,000 times in a day and night. If the mûršîd (Arabic: مورشيد "the spiritual guide") is satisfied with the mûrîd's progress, then the mûrîd is allowed to continue with the six remaining names: Allâh (Arabic: الله "God") three times; huwa (Arabic: هو "He is"), ḥaqq (Arabic: الحق "The Absolute Truth") three times; ḥayy (Arabic: الحى "The Ever- Living) three times; qayyûm (Arabic: القيوم "The Sustainer, The Self Subsisting") three times; qahhâr (Arabic: القهار "The Ever-Dominating").[7]

Organization of the Raḥmâniyya order edit

The Raḥmâniyya is organized following a hierarchy common in Sufi orders. Teaching and practicing are conducted in zawiyas under the direction of a shaykh (شيخ, šaiḫ, or religious scholar or master), assisted by a khalifa (ḫalifa or lieutenant) or a naib (نائب, nāʾib, or deputy), The muqaddams (representatives,[2] delegates or local chiefs) and finally the ikhwan (إخوان, iḫwan, or brothers) constitute the bottom of the hierarchy.[20]

Sheikhs edit

Sheikhs of Tariqa Rahmaniyya[21]
# Sheikhs From To
01 Sidi M'hamed Bou Qobrine 1774 1793
02 Mohamed Lamali [ar] 1793 1830
03 Hmida Lamali [ar] 1830 1863
04 Sheikh Kacimi [ar][22] 1863 1897
05 Zaynab Kacimi[23] 1897 1904
06 Mohamed Kacimi (Sufi) [Wikidata][24] 1904 1913
07 Mokhtar Kacimi [Wikidata] 1913 1915
08 Belkacem Kacimi [Wikidata] 1915 1927
09 Ahmed Kacimi [Wikidata] 1927 1928
10 Mostafa Kacimi [Wikidata] 1928 1970
11 Hassan Kacimi [Wikidata] 1970 1987
12 Khalil Kacimi [Wikidata] 1987 1994
13 Mohamed Mamoun Kacimi [Wikidata] 1994 2022

Famous Zawiyas edit

Prominent Raḥmâniyya Sufis edit

Bibliography edit

  • Benaissa, O., "Le soufisme algérien à l'époque coloniale", in: Horizons Maghrébins - Le droit à la mémoire, N°41, 1999. Jorge Luis Borges et l'héritage littéraire arabo-musulman / Le soufisme en Occident Musulman. pp. 91–103 ; doi:10.3406/horma.1999.1843
  • Clancy-Smith, J. A., "Between Cairo and the Algerian Kabylia: the Rahmaniyya tariqa, 1715-1800", in: Muslim Travellers, Pilgrimage, migration, and the religious imagination, Edited by Dale F. Eickelman and James Piscatori. Published by Routledge, 2013
  • Jong, F. de, "K̲h̲alwatiyya", in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, Edited by: Bearman, P., Bianquis, Th., Bosworth, C. E., van Donzel, E., Heinrichs, W.P. First published online: 2012. First print edition: ISBN 9789004161214, 1960-2007
  • Khemissi, H., Larémont, R. R., & Eddine, T. T., (2012) "Sufism, Salafism and state policy towards religion in Algeria: a survey of Algerian youth", The Journal of North African Studies, 17:3, 547–558, doi:10.1080/13629387.2012.675703
  • Lacoste-Dujardin, C., Dictionnaire de la culture berbère en Kabylie. Edition La Découverte, 2005
  • Margoliouth, D.S., "Raḥmāniyya", in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, Edited by: Bearman, P., Bianquis, Th., Bosworth, C. E., van Donzel, E., Heinrichs, W.P. First published online: 2012. First print edition: ISBN 9789004161214, 1960-2007
  • Nadir, A., "La fortune d'un ordre religieux algérien vers la fin du XIXe siècle", in: Le Mouvement social, Oct. - Dec., 1974, No. 89, pp. 59–84
  • Salhi, M. B., Confrérie religieuse et champ religieux en Grande-Kabylie au milieu du XXe siècle: la rahmaniyya, in: Annuaire de l'Afrique du Nord , Centre national de la recherche scientifique; Institut de recherches et d'études sur le monde arabe et musulman (IREMAM) (éds.), Paris, Editions du CNRS, 1996, pp. 253–269.
  • Salhi, M. B., La tariqa Rahmaniya De l'avènement à l'insurrection de 1871. Published by: Haut Commissariat à l'Amazighité, 2008
  • Salhi, M. B., "L'insurrection de 1871", in : Histoire de l'Algérie à la période coloniale : 1830-1962, Sous la direction de Bouchène, A., Peyroulou, J.-P., Tengour, O. S., Thénault, S. Edition La Découverte, 2014, pp. 103–109.
  • Yacono, X., "Kabylie : L'insurrection de 1871", in: Encyclopédie berbère [En ligne], 26 | 2004, document K08, mis en ligne le 01 juin 2011. URL: http://journals.openedition.org/ encyclopedieberbere/1410; doi:10.4000/encyclopedieberbere.1410

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Clancy-Smith. Between Cairo and the Algerian Kabylia: the Rahmaniyya tariqa, 1715-1800. p. 202.
  2. ^ a b Clancy-Smith. Between Cairo and the Algerian Kabylia: the Rahmaniyya tariqa, 1715-1800. p. 204.
  3. ^ Clancy-Smith. Between Cairo and the Algerian Kabylia: the Rahmaniyya tariqa, 1715-1800. p. 203.
  4. ^ Clancy-Smith. Between Cairo and the Algerian Kabylia: the Rahmaniyya tariqa, 1715-1800. p. 208.
  5. ^ a b c Salhi. "Confrérie religieuse et champ religieux en Grande-Kabylie au milieu du XXe siècle: la rahmaniyya". Annuaire de l'Afrique du Nord: 254.
  6. ^ Bouchène; et al. "La résistance de l'émir Abd el-Kader". Histoire de l'Algérie à la période coloniale : 1830-1962.
  7. ^ a b Margoliouth. "Raḥmāniyya". Encyclopaedia of Islam (Second ed.).
  8. ^ Khemissi; et al. "Sufism, Salafism and state policy towards religion in Algeria: a survey of Algerian youth". The Journal of North African Studies: 549.
  9. ^ Salhi. "Confrérie religieuse et champ religieux en Grande-Kabylie au milieu du XXe siècle: la rahmaniyya". Annuaire de l'Afrique du Nord: 256 & 258.
  10. ^ a b Yacono. "Kabylie : L'insurrection de 1871". Encyclopédie berbère. pp. 3–5.
  11. ^ Bouchène; et al. "1871-1881: d'une insurrection à l'autre". Histoire de l'Algérie à la période coloniale: 1830-1962.
  12. ^ Lacoste-Dujardin. "Insurrection de 1871". Dictionnaire de la culture berbère en Kabylie.
  13. ^ Nadir. "La fortune d'un ordre religieux algérien vers la fin du XIXe siècle". Le Mouvement Social: 61.
  14. ^ a b Benaissa. "Le soufisme algérien à l'époque coloniale". Horizons Maghrébins - le droit à la mémoire: 92.
  15. ^ Benaissa. "Le soufisme algérien à l'époque coloniale". Horizons Maghrébins - le droit à la mémoire: 100.
  16. ^ a b Khemissi; et al. "Sufism, Salafism and state policy towards religion in Algeria: a survey of Algerian youth". The Journal of North African Studies: 550.
  17. ^ Khemissi; et al. "Sufism, Salafism and state policy towards religion in Algeria: a survey of Algerian youth". The Journal of North African Studies: 553.
  18. ^ Khemissi; et al. "Sufism, Salafism and state policy towards religion in Algeria: a survey of Algerian youth". The Journal of North African Studies: 555.
  19. ^ Lacoste-Dujardin. Dictionnaire de la culture berbère en Kabylie. pp. Rahmaniya.
  20. ^ Nadir. "La fortune d'un ordre religieux algérien vers la fin du XIXe siècle". Le Mouvement Social: 59.
  21. ^ دار الخليل القاسمي للنشر والتوزيع: تعريف الطريقة الرحمانيّة الخلوتيّة والزاويّة القاسميّة 2017-07-30 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ ترجمة مؤسس زاوية الهامل سيدي محمد بن أبي القاسم الهاملي - مدونة برج بن عزوز 2017-07-29 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ El Kacimi: لالة زينب القاسمية المرأة الرمز 2017-09-04 at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ ترجمة الشيخ الفقيه العلامة سيدي محمد بن الحاج محمد. - مدونة برج بن عزوز 2017-05-16 at the Wayback Machine

See also edit

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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French September 2012 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the French article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 6 207 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at fr Rahmaniya see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated fr Rahmaniya to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Rahmaniyya Arabic الطريقة الرحمانية romanized al Ṭariqa al Raḥmaniyya is an Algerian Sufi order tariqa or brotherhood founded by Kabyle religious scholar Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al Raḥman al Azhari Bu Qabrayn in the 1770s 1 It was initially a branch of the Khalwatiya Arabic الخلوتية established in Kabylia region However its membership grew unwaveringly elsewhere in Algeria and in North Africa 2 Contents 1 Founder 2 Propagation and influence 3 Role in the uprising of 1871 4 Evolution after 1871 5 Practices of Raḥmaniyya 6 Organization of the Raḥmaniyya order 7 Sheikhs 8 Famous Zawiyas 9 Prominent Raḥmaniyya Sufis 10 Bibliography 11 Citations 12 See alsoFounder editMain article Khalwati orderMuhammad ibn Abd al Rahman al Azhari Arabic محمد بن عبد الرحمن الأزهري more commonly known as Bu Qabrayn Arabic بوقبرين the man with two tombs was an 18th century Algerian Islamic scholar saint and a Sufi mystic He was born in 1715 29 into the Berber Ait Isma il tribe of the Qashtula in Kabylia 1 He studied first in a nearby zawiya in his hometown of Jurjura Then he went on studying at the Great Mosque in Algiers before undertaking his journey to Masriq in 1739 40 to perform the hajj Following his stay in the Hijaz Bu Qubrayn settled in Egypt to attain greater knowledge at the Al Azhar mosque in Cairo This is where he was initiated to the Sufi order of khalwatiya under Muḥammad ibn Salim al Hifnawi 1689 1767 8 the leader of the Egyptian khalwatiya and rector of al Azhar As part of his learning with al Hifnawi Bu Qubrayn traveled extensively to teach ḫalwatiya doctrines including in Darfur for six years and as far as India After three decades Muhammad ibn Abd al Rahman returned to his village Jurjura in Algeria sometime between 1763 and 1770 There he founded a school and zawiya in the 1770s and initiated the Kabyles into the tariqa 3 He rapidly attracted local notables and developed his zawiya into a prestigious center of learning before his death in 1793 4 4 See also List of Sufi ordersPropagation and influence editThe Raḥmaniyya grew rapidly beyond Kabylia region in eastern and south eastern Algeria where it competed with other Sufi orders such as Qadiriyya or Tijaniyya However within Kabylia its influence was almost exclusive of any other order 5 In 1851 French military authorities estimated the membership of the order to 295 000 members 6 After the death of Bu Qubrayn his successor Ali ibn Isa al Maghribi remained the undisputed leader of the order until 1835 7 The leadership was then more disputed until 1860 which led to the division of the Raḥmaniyya into independent branches But Muḥammad Amezzyan ibn al Haddad of Sadduk took over in 1860 bringing unity and dynamism back to the order for a decade 5 The Raḥmaniyya along with other Sufi orders fulfilled an important role as education centers and charitable organizations 8 The zawiyas offered different teachings and supports across the order but it included studies on religion grammar religious law geography and mathematics 9 Role in the uprising of 1871 editMain article Mokrani Revolt The Raḥmaniyya and Shaykh al Haddad fr played a major role during the Algerian uprising of 1871 After the transition from a military regime to a civilian regime the Cremieux decree and the French defeat in the Franco Prussian War Shaykh Mokrani launched the revolt against French authorities in March 1871 10 But the insurrection really gained ground when Shaykh al Haddad proclaimed the holy war against the French in April 11 Soon around 250 tribes and 150 000 combattants rose from everywhere in Kabylia especially members of the Raḥmaniyya 12 However Kabyle troops suffered decisive defeats in June and July and the repression that followed was severe 10 Evolution after 1871 editAfter the insurrection of 1871 the main zawiya definitively lost control over the other branches of the order 5 which were now following and adapting the Raḥmaniyya teachings more or less independently 13 The order lost some of its influence but remained vigorous In 1897 the Raḥmaniyya was the largest Sufi order in Algeria with 177 zawiyas and over 155 000 members 14 In the 20th century Sufism declined in Algeria for multiple reasons First the French colonial authorities both used Sufi orders and tried to weaken them Second reformers from the Islamic Modernism movement attacked Sufis claiming they were into deviational and heretical practices superstitions keeping people ignorant 15 Also under the presidencies of Ahmed Ben Bella 1963 1965 and Houari Boumedienne 1965 1978 Sufi orders were further weakened by governments trying to increase their control of Algerian society Sufi shaykhs were often subject to house arrest and Sufi owned properties were nationalized 16 However the Raḥmaniyya experienced a renewed activity after the independence and around 1950 it had around 230 000 members mostly Berbers namely almost half of the 500 000 members in Algerian Sufi orders 14 The situation of Sufi orders improved under the presidency of Chadli Benjedid 1979 1992 who returned some of the properties previously nationalized Sufi orders managed to resume their activities and the number of their followers started to increase again However this reversal ended during the Algerian civil war in the 1990s After the military took control of the state they sanctioned not only Salafi and Wahhabi groups but also Sufi orders At the end of the war President Abdelaziz Bouteflika 1999 2019 endeavored to support Sufism as a more moderate alternative to more radical Salafis and more conservative Wahhabis 16 Today Sufi orders such as the Raḥmaniyya survive in Algeria despite their reduced influence in Algerian society Sufism is viewed positively even though most Algerian youth don t practice what they don t consider a modern lifestyle 17 And in Kabylia where the Raḥmaniyya is stronger rates of affiliation are higher than in other regions 18 Practices of Raḥmaniyya editThe principles of Raḥmaniyya are fairly egalitarian and democratic which partly explains its success in Kabylia The order recognizes local saints and integrates them in its Islamic teachings achieving the synthesis between local traditions and Islamic orthodoxy Its practices are simple and accessible as they do not require an extensive knowledge of the Quran beyond a few important verses Scholars and brothers widely use the Kabyle language and do not need a deep understanding of Arabic 19 A fundamental practice involves teaching the murid Arabic موريد the disciple an array of seven names The first one consists in repeating la ilaha ilal llahu Arabic لا إله إلا الله there is no god except God between 12 000 and 70 000 times in a day and night If the mursid Arabic مورشيد the spiritual guide is satisfied with the murid s progress then the murid is allowed to continue with the six remaining names Allah Arabic الله God three times huwa Arabic هو He is ḥaqq Arabic الحق The Absolute Truth three times ḥayy Arabic الحى The Ever Living three times qayyum Arabic القيوم The Sustainer The Self Subsisting three times qahhar Arabic القهار The Ever Dominating 7 See also Sufism in Algeria and Algerian Islamic referenceOrganization of the Raḥmaniyya order editMain article Zawiyas in AlgeriaThe Raḥmaniyya is organized following a hierarchy common in Sufi orders Teaching and practicing are conducted in zawiyas under the direction of a shaykh شيخ saiḫ or religious scholar or master assisted by a khalifa ḫalifa or lieutenant or a naib نائب naʾib or deputy The muqaddams representatives 2 delegates or local chiefs and finally the ikhwan إخوان iḫwan or brothers constitute the bottom of the hierarchy 20 Sheikhs editSheikhs of Tariqa Rahmaniyya 21 Sheikhs From To 01 Sidi M hamed Bou Qobrine 1774 1793 02 Mohamed Lamali ar 1793 1830 03 Hmida Lamali ar 1830 1863 04 Sheikh Kacimi ar 22 1863 1897 05 Zaynab Kacimi 23 1897 1904 06 Mohamed Kacimi Sufi Wikidata 24 1904 1913 07 Mokhtar Kacimi Wikidata 1913 1915 08 Belkacem Kacimi Wikidata 1915 1927 09 Ahmed Kacimi Wikidata 1927 1928 10 Mostafa Kacimi Wikidata 1928 1970 11 Hassan Kacimi Wikidata 1970 1987 12 Khalil Kacimi Wikidata 1987 1994 13 Mohamed Mamoun Kacimi Wikidata 1994 2022Famous Zawiyas editZawiyet El Hamel Zawiyet Sidi Amar Cherif Zawiyet Sidi Boumerdassi Zawiyet Sidi Boushaki Zawiya Thaalibia nbsp Zawiyet Sidi Boumerdassi nbsp Zawiyet El HamelProminent Raḥmaniyya Sufis editAbderrahmane Boushaki 1896 1985 Ahmed bin Salem born 1802 Ali Boushaki 1855 1965 Brahim Boushaki 1912 1997 Shaykh al Haddad fr 1790 1873 Lalla Zaynab 1850 1904 Mohamed Rahmoune 1940 2022 Mohamed Seghir Boushaki 1869 1959 Mohand al Hosin fr 1836 1901 Yahia Boushaki 1935 1960 Bibliography editBenaissa O Le soufisme algerien a l epoque coloniale in Horizons Maghrebins Le droit a la memoire N 41 1999 Jorge Luis Borges et l heritage litteraire arabo musulman Le soufisme en Occident Musulman pp 91 103 doi 10 3406 horma 1999 1843 Clancy Smith J A Between Cairo and the Algerian Kabylia the Rahmaniyya tariqa 1715 1800 in Muslim Travellers Pilgrimage migration and the religious imagination Edited by Dale F Eickelman and James Piscatori Published by Routledge 2013 Jong F de K h alwatiyya in Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Edited by Bearman P Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P First published online 2012 First print edition ISBN 9789004161214 1960 2007 Khemissi H Laremont R R amp Eddine T T 2012 Sufism Salafism and state policy towards religion in Algeria a survey of Algerian youth The Journal of North African Studies 17 3 547 558 doi 10 1080 13629387 2012 675703 Lacoste Dujardin C Dictionnaire de la culture berbere en Kabylie Edition La Decouverte 2005 Margoliouth D S Raḥmaniyya in Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Edited by Bearman P Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P First published online 2012 First print edition ISBN 9789004161214 1960 2007 Nadir A La fortune d un ordre religieux algerien vers la fin du XIXe siecle in Le Mouvement social Oct Dec 1974 No 89 pp 59 84 Salhi M B Confrerie religieuse et champ religieux en Grande Kabylie au milieu du XXe siecle la rahmaniyya in Annuaire de l Afrique du Nord Centre national de la recherche scientifique Institut de recherches et d etudes sur le monde arabe et musulman IREMAM eds Paris Editions du CNRS 1996 pp 253 269 Salhi M B La tariqa Rahmaniya De l avenement a l insurrection de 1871 Published by Haut Commissariat a l Amazighite 2008 Salhi M B L insurrection de 1871 in Histoire de l Algerie a la periode coloniale 1830 1962 Sous la direction de Bouchene A Peyroulou J P Tengour O S Thenault S Edition La Decouverte 2014 pp 103 109 Yacono X Kabylie L insurrection de 1871 in Encyclopedie berbere En ligne 26 2004 document K08 mis en ligne le 01 juin 2011 URL http journals openedition org encyclopedieberbere 1410 doi 10 4000 encyclopedieberbere 1410Citations edit a b Clancy Smith Between Cairo and the Algerian Kabylia the Rahmaniyya tariqa 1715 1800 p 202 a b Clancy Smith Between Cairo and the Algerian Kabylia the Rahmaniyya tariqa 1715 1800 p 204 Clancy Smith Between Cairo and the Algerian Kabylia the Rahmaniyya tariqa 1715 1800 p 203 Clancy Smith Between Cairo and the Algerian Kabylia the Rahmaniyya tariqa 1715 1800 p 208 a b c Salhi Confrerie religieuse et champ religieux en Grande Kabylie au milieu du XXe siecle la rahmaniyya Annuaire de l Afrique du Nord 254 Bouchene et al La resistance de l emir Abd el Kader Histoire de l Algerie a la periode coloniale 1830 1962 a b Margoliouth Raḥmaniyya Encyclopaedia of Islam Second ed Khemissi et al Sufism Salafism and state policy towards religion in Algeria a survey of Algerian youth The Journal of North African Studies 549 Salhi Confrerie religieuse et champ religieux en Grande Kabylie au milieu du XXe siecle la rahmaniyya Annuaire de l Afrique du Nord 256 amp 258 a b Yacono Kabylie L insurrection de 1871 Encyclopedie berbere pp 3 5 Bouchene et al 1871 1881 d une insurrection a l autre Histoire de l Algerie a la periode coloniale 1830 1962 Lacoste Dujardin Insurrection de 1871 Dictionnaire de la culture berbere en Kabylie Nadir La fortune d un ordre religieux algerien vers la fin du XIXe siecle Le Mouvement Social 61 a b Benaissa Le soufisme algerien a l epoque coloniale Horizons Maghrebins le droit a la memoire 92 Benaissa Le soufisme algerien a l epoque coloniale Horizons Maghrebins le droit a la memoire 100 a b Khemissi et al Sufism Salafism and state policy towards religion in Algeria a survey of Algerian youth The Journal of North African Studies 550 Khemissi et al Sufism Salafism and state policy towards religion in Algeria a survey of Algerian youth The Journal of North African Studies 553 Khemissi et al Sufism Salafism and state policy towards religion in Algeria a survey of Algerian youth The Journal of North African Studies 555 Lacoste Dujardin Dictionnaire de la culture berbere en Kabylie pp Rahmaniya Nadir La fortune d un ordre religieux algerien vers la fin du XIXe siecle Le Mouvement Social 59 دار الخليل القاسمي للنشر والتوزيع تعريف الطريقة الرحماني ة الخلوتي ة والزاوي ة القاسمي ة Archived 2017 07 30 at the Wayback Machine ترجمة مؤسس زاوية الهامل سيدي محمد بن أبي القاسم الهاملي مدونة برج بن عزوز Archived 2017 07 29 at the Wayback Machine El Kacimi لالة زينب القاسمية المرأة الرمز Archived 2017 09 04 at the Wayback Machine ترجمة الشيخ الفقيه العلامة سيدي محمد بن الحاج محمد مدونة برج بن عزوز Archived 2017 05 16 at the Wayback MachineSee also editKhalwati order Sufism List of Sufi orders Portals nbsp Religion nbsp Islam nbsp Education nbsp Psychology nbsp Algeria nbsp Africa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rahmaniyya amp oldid 1220557002, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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