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Sufism

Sufism (Arabic: الصُّوفِيَّة aṣ-ṣūfiyya), also known as Tasawwuf[1] (التَّصَوُّف at-taṣawwuf), is a mystic body of religious practice, found mainly within Sunni Islam but also within Shia Islam, which is characterized by a focus on Islamic spirituality, ritualism, asceticism and esotericism.[2][3][4][5][6] It has been variously defined as "Islamic mysticism",[7][8][9] "the mystical expression of Islamic faith",[10] "the inward dimension of Islam",[11][12] "the phenomenon of mysticism within Islam",[13][14] the "main manifestation and the most important and central crystallization" of mystical practice in Islam,[15][16] and "the interiorization and intensification of Islamic faith and practice".[17]

Six Sufi masters, c. 1760

Practitioners of Sufism are referred to as "Sufis" (from صُوفِيّ, ṣūfīy),[13] and historically typically belonged to "orders" known as tariqa (pl. ṭuruq) – congregations formed around a grand wali who would be the last in a chain of successive teachers linking back to Muhammad.[18]

Sufism emerged early on in Islamic history,[13] partly as a reaction against the worldliness of the early Umayyad Caliphate (661–750) and mainly under the tutelage of Hasan Al-Basri.[19][page needed][20] Although Sufis were opposed to dry legalism, they strictly observed Islamic law and belonged to various schools of Islamic jurisprudence and theology.[21] Although the overwhelming majority of Sufis, both pre-modern and modern, remain adherents of Sunni Islam, certain strands of Sufi thought transferred over to the ambits of Shia Islam during the late medieval period.[22] This particularly happened after the Safavid conversion of Iran under the concept of Irfan.[22] Important focuses of Sufi worship include dhikr, the practice of remembrance of God.[23] Sufis also played an important role in spreading Islam through their missionary and educational activities.[21]

Despite a relative decline of Sufi orders in the modern era and attacks from revivalist Islamic movement (such as the Salafis and Wahhabis), Sufism has continued to play an important role in the Islamic world, especially in the neo-traditionalist strand of Sunni Islam.[24][25] It has also influenced various forms of spirituality in the West and generated lots of academic interest.[26][27][28] However, some recent scholarship has challenged the Western understanding of Sufism as orientalist in nature.[29][30]

Definitions

The Arabic word tasawwuf (lit.'being or becoming a Sufi'), generally translated as Sufism, is commonly defined by Western authors as Islamic mysticism.[31][32] The Arabic term Sufi has been used in Islamic literature with a wide range of meanings, by both proponents and opponents of Sufism.[31] Classical Sufi texts, which stressed certain teachings and practices of the Quran and the sunnah (exemplary teachings and practices of the Islamic prophet Muhammad), gave definitions of tasawwuf that described ethical and spiritual goals[note 1] and functioned as teaching tools for their attainment. Many other terms that described particular spiritual qualities and roles were used instead in more practical contexts.[31][32]

Some modern scholars have used other definitions of Sufism such as "intensification of Islamic faith and practice"[31] and "process of realizing ethical and spiritual ideals".[32]

The term Sufism was originally introduced into European languages in the 18th century by Orientalist scholars, who viewed it mainly as an intellectual doctrine and literary tradition at variance with what they saw as sterile monotheism of Islam. In modern scholarly usage the term serves to describe a wide range of social, cultural, political and religious phenomena associated with Sufis.[32]

Etymology

The original meaning of sufi seems to have been "one who wears wool (ṣūf)", and the Encyclopaedia of Islam calls other etymological hypotheses "untenable".[13][31] Woolen clothes were traditionally associated with ascetics and mystics.[13] Al-Qushayri and Ibn Khaldun both rejected all possibilities other than ṣūf on linguistic grounds.[33]

Another explanation traces the lexical root of the word to ṣafā (صفاء), which in Arabic means "purity", and in this context another similar idea of tasawwuf as considered in Islam is tazkiyah (تزكية, meaning: self-purification), which is also widely used in Sufism. These two explanations were combined by the Sufi al-Rudhabari (d. 322 AH), who said, "The Sufi is the one who wears wool on top of purity."[34][35]

Others have suggested that the word comes from the term Ahl al-Ṣuffa ("the people of the suffah or the bench"), who were a group of impoverished companions of Muhammad who held regular gatherings of dhikr, one of the most prominent companion among them was Abu Huraira. These men and women who sat at al-Masjid an-Nabawi are considered by some to be the first Sufis.[36][37]

History

Origins

Modern academics and scholars have rejected early Orientalist theories asserting a non-Islamic, or "Aryan" origin of Sufism.[21] The current consensus is that it emerged in the Hejaz, and that Sufism has existed as a practice of Muslims from the earliest days of Islam, even predating some sectarian divides.[38][better source needed]

Sufi orders are based on the bayah (Arabic: بَيْعَة, lit.'pledge') that was given to Muhammad by his Ṣahabah. By pledging allegiance to Muhammad, the Sahabah had committed themselves to the service of God.[39][40][41]Ernst, Carl W. (2003). "Tasawwuf [Sufism]". Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World.[full citation needed]

Verily, those who give Bay'âh (pledge) to you (O Muhammad) they are giving Bay'âh (pledge) to Allâh. The Hand of Allâh is over their hands. Then whosoever breaks his pledge, breaks it only to his own harm, and whosoever fulfils what he has covenanted with Allâh, He will bestow on him a great reward. — [Translation of Quran, 48:10]

Sufis believe that by giving bayʿah (pledging allegiance) to a legitimate Sufi Shaykh, one is pledging allegiance to Muhammad; therefore, a spiritual connection between the seeker and Muhammad is established. It is through Muhammad that Sufis aim to learn about, understand and connect with God.[42] Ali is regarded as one of the major figures amongst the Sahaba who have directly pledged allegiance to Muhammad, and Sufis maintain that through Ali, knowledge about Muhammad and a connection with Muhammad may be attained. Such a concept may be understood by the hadith, which Sufis regard to be authentic, in which Muhammad said, "I am the city of knowledge, and Ali is its gate."[43] Eminent Sufis such as Ali Hujwiri refer to Ali as having a very high ranking in Tasawwuf. Furthermore, Junayd of Baghdad regarded Ali as Sheikh of the principals and practices of Tasawwuf.[44]

Historian Jonathan A.C. Brown notes that during the lifetime of Muhammad, some companions were more inclined than others to "intensive devotion, pious abstemiousness and pondering the divine mysteries" more than Islam required, such as Abu Dharr al-Ghifari. Hasan al-Basri, a tabi', is considered a "founding figure" in the "science of purifying the heart".[45]

Practitioners of Sufism hold that in its early stages of development Sufism effectively referred to nothing more than the internalization of Islam.[46] According to one perspective, it is directly from the Qur'an, constantly recited, meditated, and experienced, that Sufism proceeded, in its origin and its development.[47] Other practitioners have held that Sufism is the strict emulation of the way of Muhammad, through which the heart's connection to the Divine is strengthened.[48]

Some contend that Sufism developed from people like Bayazid Bastami, who, in his utmost reverence to the sunnah, refused to eat a watermelon because he did not find any proof that Muhammad ever ate it.[49][50] According to the late medieval mystic, the Persian poet Jami,[51] Abd-Allah ibn Muhammad ibn al-Hanafiyyah (died c. 716) was the first person to be called a "Sufi".[33] The term also had a strong connection with Kufa, with three of the earliest scholars to be called by the term being Abu Hashim al-Kufi, Jabir ibn Hayyan and Abdak al-Sufi.[52] Later individuals included Hatim al-Attar, from Basra, and Al-Junayd al-Baghdadi.[52] Others, such as Al-Harith al-Muhasibi and Sari al-Saqati, were not known as Sufis during their lifetimes, but later came to be identified as such.[52]

Important contributions in writing are attributed to Uwais al-Qarani, Hasan of Basra, Harith al-Muhasibi, Abu Nasr as-Sarraj and Said ibn al-Musayyib.[53] Ruwaym, from the second generation of Sufis in Baghdad, was also an influential early figure,[54][55] as was Junayd of Baghdad; a number of early practitioners of Sufism were disciples of one of the two.[56]

Sufi orders

Historically, Sufis have often belonged to "orders" known as tariqa (pl. ṭuruq) – congregations formed around a grand master wali who will trace their teaching through a chain of successive teachers back to the Islamic prophet Muhammad.[18]

Within the Sufi tradition, the formation of the orders did not immediately produce lineages of master and disciple. There are few examples before the eleventh century of complete lineages going back to the Prophet Muhammad. Yet the symbolic importance of these lineages was immense: they provided a channel to divine authority through master-disciple chains. It was through such chains of masters and disciples that spiritual power and blessings were transmitted to both general and special devotees.[57]

These orders meet for spiritual sessions (majalis) in meeting places known as zawiyas, khanqahs or tekke.[58]

They strive for ihsan (perfection of worship), as detailed in a hadith: "Ihsan is to worship Allah as if you see Him; if you can't see Him, surely He sees you."[59] Sufis regard Muhammad as al-Insān al-Kāmil, the complete human who personifies the attributes of Absolute Reality,[60] and view him as their ultimate spiritual guide.[61]

Sufi orders trace most of their original precepts from Muhammad through Ali ibn Abi Talib,[62] with the notable exception of the Naqshbandi order, who trace their original precepts to Muhammad through Abu Bakr.[63] However, it was not necessary to formally belong to a tariqa.[64] In the Medieval period, Sufism was almost equal to Islam in general and not limited to specific orders.[65](p24)

Sufism had a long history already before the subsequent institutionalization of Sufi teachings into devotional orders (tariqa, pl. tarîqât) in the early Middle Ages.[66] The term tariqa is used for a school or order of Sufism, or especially for the mystical teaching and spiritual practices of such an order with the aim of seeking ḥaqīqah (ultimate truth). A tariqa has a murshid (guide) who plays the role of leader or spiritual director. The members or followers of a tariqa are known as murīdīn (singular murīd), meaning "desirous", viz. "desiring the knowledge of knowing God and loving God".[67]

Over the years, Sufi orders have influenced and been adopted by various Shi'i movements, especially Isma'ilism, which led to the Safaviyya order's conversion to Shia Islam from Sunni Islam and the spread of Twelverism throughout Iran.[68]

Prominent tariqa include the Ba 'Alawiyya, Badawiyya, Bektashi, Burhaniyya, Chishti, Khalwati, Kubrawiya, Madariyya, Mevlevi, Muridiyya, Naqshbandi, Nimatullahi, Qadiriyya, Qalandariyya, Rahmaniyya, Rifa'i, Safavid, Senussi, Shadhili, Suhrawardiyya, Tijaniyyah, Uwaisi and Zahabiya orders.

Sufism as an Islamic discipline

 
Dancing dervishes, by Kamāl ud-Dīn Behzād (c. 1480–1490)

Existing in both Sunni and Shia Islam, Sufism is not a distinct sect, as is sometimes erroneously assumed, but a method of approaching or a way of understanding the religion, which strives to take the regular practice of the religion to the "supererogatory level" through simultaneously "fulfilling ... [the obligatory] religious duties"[13] and finding a "way and a means of striking a root through the 'narrow gate' in the depth of the soul out into the domain of the pure arid unimprisonable Spirit which itself opens out on to the Divinity."[9] Academic studies of Sufism confirm that Sufism, as a separate tradition from Islam apart from so-called pure Islam, is frequently a product of Western orientalism and modern Islamic fundamentalists.[69]

As a mystic and ascetic aspect of Islam, it is considered as the part of Islamic teaching that deals with the purification of the inner self. By focusing on the more spiritual aspects of religion, Sufis strive to obtain direct experience of God by making use of "intuitive and emotional faculties" that one must be trained to use.[66] Tasawwuf is regarded as a science of the soul that has always been an integral part of Orthodox Islam.[70] In his Al-Risala al-Safadiyya, ibn Taymiyyah describes the Sufis as those who belong to the path of the Sunna and represent it in their teachings and writings.[citation needed]

Ibn Taymiyya's Sufi inclinations and his reverence for Sufis like Abdul-Qadir Gilani can also be seen in his hundred-page commentary on Futuh al-ghayb, covering only five of the seventy-eight sermons of the book, but showing that he considered tasawwuf essential within the life of the Islamic community.[citation needed]

In his commentary, Ibn Taymiyya stresses that the primacy of the sharia forms the soundest tradition in tasawwuf, and to argue this point he lists over a dozen early masters, as well as more contemporary shaykhs like his fellow Hanbalis, al-Ansari al-Harawi and Abdul-Qadir, and the latter's own shaykh, Hammad al-Dabbas the upright. He cites the early shaykhs (shuyukh al-salaf) such as Al-Fuḍayl ibn ‘Iyāḍ, Ibrahim ibn Adham, Ma`ruf al-Karkhi, Sirri Saqti, Junayd of Baghdad, and others of the early teachers, as well as Abdul-Qadir Gilani, Hammad, Abu al-Bayan and others of the later masters— that they do not permit the followers of the Sufi path to depart from the divinely legislated command and prohibition.[citation needed]

Al-Ghazali narrates in Al-Munqidh min al-dalal:

The vicissitudes of life, family affairs and financial constraints engulfed my life and deprived me of the congenial solitude. The heavy odds confronted me and provided me with few moments for my pursuits. This state of affairs lasted for ten years, but whenever I had some spare and congenial moments I resorted to my intrinsic proclivity. During these turbulent years, numerous astonishing and indescribable secrets of life were unveiled to me. I was convinced that the group of Aulia (holy mystics) is the only truthful group who follow the right path, display best conduct and surpass all sages in their wisdom and insight. They derive all their overt or covert behaviour from the illumining guidance of the holy Prophet, the only guidance worth quest and pursuit.[71]

Formalization of doctrine

 
A Sufi in Ecstasy in a Landscape. Isfahan, Safavid Persia (c. 1650–1660), LACMA.

In the eleventh-century, Sufism, which had previously been a less "codified" trend in Islamic piety, began to be "ordered and crystallized" into orders which have continued until the present day. All these orders were founded by a major Islamic scholar, and some of the largest and most widespread included the Suhrawardiyya (after Abu al-Najib Suhrawardi [d. 1168), Qadiriyya (after Abdul-Qadir Gilani [d. 1166]), the Rifa'iyya (after Ahmed al-Rifa'i [d. 1182]), the Chishtiyya (after Moinuddin Chishti [d. 1236]), the Shadiliyya (after Abul Hasan ash-Shadhili [d. 1258]), the Hamadaniyyah (after Sayyid Ali Hamadani [d. 1384], the Naqshbandiyya (after Baha-ud-Din Naqshband Bukhari [d. 1389]).[72] Contrary to popular perception in the West,[73] however, neither the founders of these orders nor their followers ever considered themselves to be anything other than orthodox Sunni Muslims,[73] and in fact all of these orders were attached to one of the four orthodox legal schools of Sunni Islam.[74] Thus, the Qadiriyya order was Hanbali, with its founder, Abdul-Qadir Gilani, being a renowned jurist; the Chishtiyya was Hanafi; the Shadiliyya order was Maliki; and the Naqshbandiyya order was Hanafi.[75] Thus, it is precisely because it is historically proven that "many of the most eminent defenders of Islamic orthodoxy, such as Abdul-Qadir Gilani, Ghazali, and the Sultan Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn (Saladin) were connected with Sufism"[76] that the popular studies of writers like Idries Shah are continuously disregarded by scholars as conveying the fallacious image that "Sufism" is somehow distinct from "Islam."[77][76][78] Nile Green has observed that, in the Middle Ages, Sufism more or less was Islam.[65](p24)

Growth of influence

 
A Mughal miniature dated from the early 1620s depicting the Mughal emperor Jahangir (d. 1627) preferring an audience with Sufi saint to his contemporaries, the Ottoman Sultan and the King of England James I (d. 1625); the picture is inscribed in Persian: "Though outwardly shahs stand before him, he fixes his gazes on dervishes."

Historically, Sufism became "an incredibly important part of Islam" and "one of the most widespread and omnipresent aspects of Muslim life" in Islamic civilization from the early medieval period onwards,[79][better source needed] when it began to permeate nearly all major aspects of Sunni Islamic life in regions stretching from India and Iraq to the Balkans and Senegal.[80][better source needed]

The rise of Islamic civilization coincides strongly with the spread of Sufi philosophy in Islam. The spread of Sufism has been considered a definitive factor in the spread of Islam, and in the creation of integrally Islamic cultures, especially in Africa[81] and Asia. The Senussi tribes of Libya and the Sudan are one of the strongest adherents of Sufism. Sufi poets and philosophers such as Khoja Akhmet Yassawi, Rumi, and Attar of Nishapur (c. 1145 – c. 1221) greatly enhanced the spread of Islamic culture in Anatolia, Central Asia, and South Asia.[82][83] Sufism also played a role in creating and propagating the culture of the Ottoman world,[84] and in resisting European imperialism in North Africa and South Asia.[85]

 
Blagaj Tekke, built c. 1520 next to the Buna wellspring cavern beneath a high vertical karstic cliff, in Blagaj, Bosnia. The natural and architectural ensemble, proposed for UNESCO inscription,[86] forms a spatially and topographically self-contained ensemble, and is National Monument of Bosnia.[87]

Between the 13th and 16th centuries, Sufism produced a flourishing intellectual culture throughout the Islamic world, a "Renaissance" whose physical artifacts survive.[citation needed] In many places a person or group would endow a waqf to maintain a lodge (known variously as a zawiya, khanqah, or tekke) to provide a gathering place for Sufi adepts, as well as lodging for itinerant seekers of knowledge. The same system of endowments could also pay for a complex of buildings, such as that surrounding the Süleymaniye Mosque in Istanbul, including a lodge for Sufi seekers, a hospice with kitchens where these seekers could serve the poor and/or complete a period of initiation, a library, and other structures. No important domain in the civilization of Islam remained unaffected by Sufism in this period.[88]

Modern era

Opposition to Sufi teachers and orders from more literalist and legalist strains of Islam existed in various forms throughout Islamic history. It took on a particularly violent form in the 18th century with the emergence of the Wahhabi movement.[89]

 
Whirling dervishes of the Mevlevi Order photographed by Pascal Sébah (Istanbul, 1870)

Around the turn of the 20th century, Sufi rituals and doctrines also came under sustained criticism from modernist Islamic reformers, liberal nationalists, and, some decades later, socialist movements in the Muslim world. Sufi orders were accused of fostering popular superstitions, resisting modern intellectual attitudes, and standing in the way of progressive reforms. Ideological attacks on Sufism were reinforced by agrarian and educational reforms, as well as new forms of taxation, which were instituted by Westernizing national governments, undermining the economic foundations of Sufi orders. The extent to which Sufi orders declined in the first half of the 20th century varied from country to country, but by the middle of the century the very survival of the orders and traditional Sufi lifestyle appeared doubtful to many observers.[90][89]

However, defying these predictions, Sufism and Sufi orders have continued to play a major role in the Muslim world, also expanding into Muslim-minority countries. Its ability to articulate an inclusive Islamic identity with greater emphasis on personal and small-group piety has made Sufism especially well-suited for contexts characterized by religious pluralism and secularist perspectives.[89]

In the modern world, the classical interpretation of Sunni orthodoxy, which sees in Sufism an essential dimension of Islam alongside the disciplines of jurisprudence and theology, is represented by institutions such as Egypt's Al-Azhar University and Zaytuna College, with Al-Azhar's current Grand Imam Ahmed el-Tayeb recently defining "Sunni orthodoxy" as being a follower "of any of the four schools of [legal] thought (Hanafi, Shafi’i, Maliki or Hanbali) and ... [also] of the Sufism of Imam Junayd of Baghdad in doctrines, manners and [spiritual] purification."[74]

Current Sufi orders include Alians, Bektashi Order, Mevlevi Order, Ba 'Alawiyya, Chishti Order, Jerrahi, Naqshbandi, Mujaddidi, Ni'matullāhī, Qadiriyya, Qalandariyya, Sarwari Qadiriyya, Shadhiliyya, Suhrawardiyya, Saifiah (Naqshbandiah), and Uwaisi.

The relationship of Sufi orders to modern societies is usually defined by their relationship to governments.[91]

 
Sufi Tanoura twirling in Muizz Street, Cairo

Turkey and Persia together have been a center for many Sufi lineages and orders. The Bektashi were closely affiliated with the Ottoman Janissaries and are the heart of Turkey's large and mostly liberal Alevi population. They have spread westwards to Cyprus, Greece, Albania, Bulgaria, North Macedonia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, and, more recently, to the United States, via Albania. Sufism is popular in such African countries as Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria, Sudan, Morocco, and Senegal, where it is seen as a mystical expression of Islam.[92] Sufism is traditional in Morocco, but has seen a growing revival with the renewal of Sufism under contemporary spiritual teachers such as Hamza al Qadiri al Boutchichi. Mbacke suggests that one reason Sufism has taken hold in Senegal is because it can accommodate local beliefs and customs, which tend toward the mystical.[93]

The life of the Algerian Sufi master Abdelkader El Djezairi is instructive in this regard.[94] Notable as well are the lives of Amadou Bamba and El Hadj Umar Tall in West Africa, and Sheikh Mansur and Imam Shamil in the Caucasus. In the twentieth century, some Muslims have called Sufism a superstitious religion which holds back Islamic achievement in the fields of science and technology.[95]

A number of Westerners have embarked with varying degrees of success on the path of Sufism. One of the first to return to Europe as an official representative of a Sufi order, and with the specific purpose to spread Sufism in Western Europe, was the Swedish-born wandering Sufi Ivan Aguéli. René Guénon, the French scholar, became a Sufi in the early twentieth century and was known as Sheikh Abdul Wahid Yahya. His manifold writings defined the practice of Sufism as the essence of Islam, but also pointed to the universality of its message. Spiritualists, such as George Gurdjieff, may or may not conform to the tenets of Sufism as understood by orthodox Muslims.[96]

Aims and objectives

 
The Tomb of Shah Rukn-e-Alam (built 1324 A.D) is located in Multan, Pakistan. Known for its multitude of Sufi shrines, Multan is nicknamed as The City of Saints.

While all Muslims believe that they are on the pathway to Allah and hope to become close to God in Paradise—after death and after the Last Judgment—Sufis also believe that it is possible to draw closer to God and to more fully embrace the divine presence in this life.[citation needed] The chief aim of all Sufis is to seek the pleasing of God by working to restore within themselves the primordial state of fitra.[97]

To Sufis, the outer law consists of rules pertaining to worship, transactions, marriage, judicial rulings, and criminal law—what is often referred to, broadly, as "qanun". The inner law of Sufism consists of rules about repentance from sin, the purging of contemptible qualities and evil traits of character, and adornment with virtues and good character.[98]

Teachings

 
Man holding the hem of his beloved, an expression of a Sufi's agony of longing for the divine union

To the Sufi, it is the transmission of divine light from the teacher's heart to the heart of the student, rather than worldly knowledge, that allows the adept to progress. They further believe that the teacher should attempt inerrantly to follow the Divine Law.[99]

According to Moojan Momen "one of the most important doctrines of Sufism is the concept of al-Insan al-Kamil ("the Perfect Man"). This doctrine states that there will always exist upon the earth a "Qutb" (Pole or Axis of the Universe)—a man who is the perfect channel of grace from God to man and in a state of wilayah (sanctity, being under the protection of Allah). The concept of the Sufi Qutb is similar to that of the Shi'i Imam.[100][101] However, this belief puts Sufism in "direct conflict" with Shia Islam, since both the Qutb (who for most Sufi orders is the head of the order) and the Imam fulfill the role of "the purveyor of spiritual guidance and of Allah's grace to mankind". The vow of obedience to the Shaykh or Qutb which is taken by Sufis is considered incompatible with devotion to the Imam".[100]

As a further example, the prospective adherent of the Mevlevi Order would have been ordered to serve in the kitchens of a hospice for the poor for 1001 days prior to being accepted for spiritual instruction, and a further 1,001 days in solitary retreat as a precondition of completing that instruction.[102]

Some teachers, especially when addressing more general audiences, or mixed groups of Muslims and non-Muslims, make extensive use of parable, allegory, and metaphor.[103] Although approaches to teaching vary among different Sufi orders, Sufism as a whole is primarily concerned with direct personal experience, and as such has sometimes been compared to other, non-Islamic forms of mysticism (e.g., as in the books of Hossein Nasr).

Many Sufi believe that to reach the highest levels of success in Sufism typically requires that the disciple live with and serve the teacher for a long period of time.[104] An example is the folk story about Baha-ud-Din Naqshband Bukhari, who gave his name to the Naqshbandi Order. He is believed to have served his first teacher, Sayyid Muhammad Baba As-Samasi, for 20 years, until as-Samasi died. He is said to then have served several other teachers for lengthy periods of time. He is said to have helped the poorer members of the community for many years, and after this concluded his teacher directed him to care for animals cleaning their wounds, and assisting them.[105]

Muhammad

His [Muhammad's] aspiration preceded all other aspirations, his existence preceded nothingness, and his name preceded the Pen, because he existed before all peoples. There is not in the horizons, beyond the horizons or below the horizons, anyone more elegant, more noble, more knowing, more just, more fearsome, or more compassionate, than the subject of this tale. He is the leader of created beings, the one "whose name is glorious Ahmad". —Mansur Al-Hallaj[106]

 
The name of Muhammad in Islamic calligraphy. Sufis believe the name of Muhammad is holy and sacred.

Devotion to Muhammad is the strongest practice within Sufism.[107] Sufis have historically revered Muhammad as the prime personality of spiritual greatness. The Sufi poet Saadi Shirazi stated, "He who chooses a path contrary to that of the prophet shall never reach the destination. O Saadi, do not think that one can treat that way of purity except in the wake of the chosen one."[108] Rumi attributes his self-control and abstinence from worldly desires as qualities attained by him through the guidance of Muhammad. Rumi states, "I 'sewed' my two eyes shut from [desires for] this world and the next – this I learned from Muhammad."[109] Ibn Arabi regards Muhammad as the greatest man and states, "Muhammad's wisdom is uniqueness (fardiya) because he is the most perfect existent creature of this human species. For this reason, the command began with him and was sealed with him. He was a Prophet while Adam was between water and clay, and his elemental structure is the Seal of the Prophets."[110] Attar of Nishapur claimed that he praised Muhammad in such a manner that was not done before by any poet, in his book the Ilahi-nama.[111] Fariduddin Attar stated, "Muhammad is the exemplar to both worlds, the guide of the descendants of Adam. He is the sun of creation, the moon of the celestial spheres, the all-seeing eye...The seven heavens and the eight gardens of paradise were created for him; he is both the eye and the light in the light of our eyes."[112] Sufis have historically stressed the importance of Muhammad's perfection and his ability to intercede. The persona of Muhammad has historically been and remains an integral and critical aspect of Sufi belief and practice.[107] Bayazid Bastami is recorded to have been so devoted to the sunnah of Muhammad that he refused to eat a watermelon because he could not establish that Muhammad ever ate one.[113]

In the 13th century, a Sufi poet from Egypt, Al-Busiri, wrote the al-Kawākib ad-Durrīya fī Madḥ Khayr al-Barīya ('The Celestial Lights in Praise of the Best of Creation'), commonly referred to as Qaṣīdat al-Burda ('Poem of the Mantle'), in which he extensively praised Muhammad.[114] This poem is still widely recited and sung amongst Sufi groups and lay Muslims alike all over the world.[114]

Sufi beliefs about Muhammad

According to Ibn Arabi, Islam is the best religion because of Muhammad.[60] Ibn Arabi regards that the first entity that was brought into existence is the reality or essence of Muhammad (al-ḥaqīqa al-Muhammadiyya). Ibn Arabi regards Muhammad as the supreme human being and master of all creatures. Muhammad is therefore the primary role model for human beings to aspire to emulate.[60] Ibn Arabi believes that God's attributes and names are manifested in this world and that the most complete and perfect display of these divine attributes and names are seen in Muhammad.[60] Ibn Arabi believes that one may see God in the mirror of Muhammad, meaning that the divine attributes of God are manifested through Muhammad.[60] Ibn Arabi maintains that Muhammad is the best proof of God, and by knowing Muhammad one knows God.[60] Ibn Arabi also maintains that Muhammad is the master of all of humanity in both this world and the afterlife. In this view, Islam is the best religion because Muhammad is Islam.[60]

Sufism and Islamic law

Sufis believe the sharia (exoteric "canon"), tariqa ("order") and haqiqa ("truth") are mutually interdependent.[115] Sufism leads the adept, called salik or "wayfarer", in his sulûk or "road" through different stations (maqaam) until he reaches his goal, the perfect tawhid, the existential confession that God is One.[116] Ibn Arabi says, "When we see someone in this Community who claims to be able to guide others to God, but is remiss in but one rule of the Sacred Law—even if he manifests miracles that stagger the mind—asserting that his shortcoming is a special dispensation for him, we do not even turn to look at him, for such a person is not a sheikh, nor is he speaking the truth, for no one is entrusted with the secrets of God Most High save one in whom the ordinances of the Sacred Law are preserved. (Jamiʿ karamat al-awliyaʾ)".[117][118]

It is related, moreover, that Malik, one of the founders of the four schools of Sunni law, was a strong proponent of combining the "inward science" ('ilm al-bātin) of mystical knowledge with the "outward science" of jurisprudence.[119] For example, the famous twelfth-century Maliki jurist and judge Qadi Iyad, later venerated as a saint throughout the Iberian Peninsula, narrated a tradition in which a man asked Malik "about something in the inward science," to which Malik replied: "Truly none knows the inward science except those who know the outward science! When he knows the outward science and puts it into practice, God shall open for him the inward science – and that will not take place except by the opening of his heart and its enlightenment." In other similar traditions, it is related that Malik said: "He who practices Sufism (tasawwuf) without learning Sacred Law corrupts his faith (tazandaqa), while he who learns Sacred Law without practicing Sufism corrupts himself (tafassaqa). Only he who combines the two proves true (tahaqqaqa)".[119]

The Amman Message, a detailed statement issued by 200 leading Islamic scholars in 2005 in Amman, specifically recognized the validity of Sufism as a part of Islam. This was adopted by the Islamic world's political and temporal leaderships at the Organisation of the Islamic Conference summit at Mecca in December 2005, and by six other international Islamic scholarly assemblies including the International Islamic Fiqh Academy of Jeddah, in July 2006. The definition of Sufism can vary drastically between different traditions (what may be intended is simple tazkiah as opposed to the various manifestations of Sufism around the Islamic world).[120]

Traditional Islamic thought and Sufism

 
Urs of Islamic Naqshbandi saints of Allo Mahar is celebrated on 23 March every year

The literature of Sufism emphasizes highly subjective matters that resist outside observation, such as the subtle states of the heart. Often these resist direct reference or description, with the consequence that the authors of various Sufi treatises took recourse to allegorical language. For instance, much Sufi poetry refers to intoxication, which Islam expressly forbids. This usage of indirect language and the existence of interpretations by people who had no training in Islam or Sufism led to doubts being cast over the validity of Sufism as a part of Islam. Also, some groups emerged that considered themselves above the sharia and discussed Sufism as a method of bypassing the rules of Islam in order to attain salvation directly. This was disapproved of by traditional scholars.

For these and other reasons, the relationship between traditional Islamic scholars and Sufism is complex, and a range of scholarly opinion on Sufism in Islam has been the norm. Some scholars, such as Al-Ghazali, helped its propagation while other scholars opposed it. William Chittick explains the position of Sufism and Sufis this way:

In short, Muslim scholars who focused their energies on understanding the normative guidelines for the body came to be known as jurists, and those who held that the most important task was to train the mind in achieving correct understanding came to be divided into three main schools of thought: theology, philosophy, and Sufism. This leaves us with the third domain of human existence, the spirit. Most Muslims who devoted their major efforts to developing the spiritual dimensions of the human person came to be known as Sufis.[49]

Persian influence on Sufism

Persians played a huge role in developing and systematising Islamic mysticism. One of the first to formalise the science was Junayd of Baghdad - a Persian from Baghdad. [121] Other great Persian Sufi poets include Rudaki, Rumi, Attar, Nizami, Hafez, Sanai, Shamz Tabrizi and Jami.[122] Famous poems that still resonate across the Muslim world include The Masnavi of Rumi, The Bustan by Saadi, The Conference of the Birds by Attar and The Divān of Hafez.

Neo-Sufism

 
The mausoleum (gongbei) of Ma Laichi in Linxia City, China

The term neo-Sufism was originally coined by Fazlur Rahman and used by other scholars to describe reformist currents among 18th century Sufi orders, whose goal was to remove some of the more ecstatic and pantheistic elements of the Sufi tradition and reassert the importance of Islamic law as the basis for inner spirituality and social activism.[28][26] In recent times, it has been increasingly used by scholars like Mark Sedgwick in the opposite sense, to describe various forms of Sufi-influenced spirituality in the West, in particular the deconfessionalized spiritual movements which emphasize universal elements of the Sufi tradition and de-emphasize its Islamic context.[26][27]

Devotional practices

 
Sufi gathering engaged in dhikr

The devotional practices of Sufis vary widely. Prerequisites to practice include rigorous adherence to Islamic norms (ritual prayer in its five prescribed times each day, the fast of Ramadan, and so forth). Additionally, the seeker ought to be firmly grounded in supererogatory practices known from the life of Muhammad (such as the "sunnah prayers"). This is in accordance with the words, attributed to God, of the following, a famous Hadith Qudsi:

My servant draws near to Me through nothing I love more than that which I have made obligatory for him. My servant never ceases drawing near to Me through supererogatory works until I love him. Then, when I love him, I am his hearing through which he hears, his sight through which he sees, his hand through which he grasps, and his foot through which he walks.

It is also necessary for the seeker to have a correct creed (aqidah),[123] and to embrace with certainty its tenets.[124] The seeker must also, of necessity, turn away from sins, love of this world, the love of company and renown, obedience to satanic impulse, and the promptings of the lower self. (The way in which this purification of the heart is achieved is outlined in certain books, but must be prescribed in detail by a Sufi master.) The seeker must also be trained to prevent the corruption of those good deeds which have accrued to his or her credit by overcoming the traps of ostentation, pride, arrogance, envy, and long hopes (meaning the hope for a long life allowing us to mend our ways later, rather than immediately, here and now).

Sufi practices, while attractive to some, are not a means for gaining knowledge. The traditional scholars of Sufism hold it as absolutely axiomatic that knowledge of God is not a psychological state generated through breath control. Thus, practice of "techniques" is not the cause, but instead the occasion for such knowledge to be obtained (if at all), given proper prerequisites and proper guidance by a master of the way. Furthermore, the emphasis on practices may obscure a far more important fact: The seeker is, in a sense, to become a broken person, stripped of all habits through the practice of (in the words of Imam Al-Ghazali) solitude, silence, sleeplessness, and hunger.[125]

Dhikr

 
The name of Allah as written on the disciple's heart, according to the Sarwari Qadri Order

Dhikr is the remembrance of Allah commanded in the Quran for all Muslims through a specific devotional act, such as the repetition of divine names, supplications and aphorisms from hadith literature and the Quran. More generally, dhikr takes a wide range and various layers of meaning.[126] This includes dhikr as any activity in which the Muslim maintains awareness of Allah. To engage in dhikr is to practice consciousness of the Divine Presence and love, or "to seek a state of godwariness". The Quran refers to Muhammad as the very embodiment of dhikr of Allah (65:10–11). Some types of dhikr are prescribed for all Muslims and do not require Sufi initiation or the prescription of a Sufi master because they are deemed to be good for every seeker under every circumstance.[127]

The dhikr may slightly vary among each order. Some Sufi orders[128] engage in ritualized dhikr ceremonies, or sema. Sema includes various forms of worship such as recitation, singing (the most well known being the Qawwali music of the Indian subcontinent), instrumental music, dance (most famously the Sufi whirling of the Mevlevi order), incense, meditation, ecstasy, and trance.[129]

Some Sufi orders stress and place extensive reliance upon dhikr. This practice of dhikr is called Dhikr-e-Qulb (invocation of Allah within the heartbeats). The basic idea in this practice is to visualize the Allah as having been written on the disciple's heart.[130]

Muraqaba

 
An Algerian Sufi in Murāqabah. La prière by Eugène Girardet.

The practice of muraqaba can be likened to the practices of meditation attested in many faith communities.[131] While variation exists, one description of the practice within a Naqshbandi lineage reads as follows:

He is to collect all of his bodily senses in concentration, and to cut himself off from all preoccupation and notions that inflict themselves upon the heart. And thus he is to turn his full consciousness towards God Most High while saying three times: "Ilahî anta maqsûdî wa-ridâka matlûbî—my God, you are my Goal and Your good pleasure is what I seek". Then he brings to his heart the Name of the Essence—Allâh—and as it courses through his heart he remains attentive to its meaning, which is "Essence without likeness". The seeker remains aware that He is Present, Watchful, Encompassing of all, thereby exemplifying the meaning of his saying (may God bless him and grant him peace): "Worship God as though you see Him, for if you do not see Him, He sees you". And likewise the prophetic tradition: "The most favored level of faith is to know that God is witness over you, wherever you may be".[132]

Sufi whirling

 
Whirling Dervishes, at Rumi Fest 2007

The traditional view of most orthodox Sunni Sufi orders, such as the Qadiriyya and the Chisti, as well as Sunni Muslim scholars in general, is that dancing with intent during dhikr or whilst listening to Sema is prohibited.[133][134][135][136]

Sufi whirling (or Sufi spinning) is a form of Sama or physically active meditation which originated among some Sufis, and practised by the Sufi Dervishes of the Mevlevi order. It is a customary dance performed within the sema, through which dervishes (also called semazens, from Persian سماعزن) aim to reach the source of all perfection, or kemal. This is sought through abandoning one's nafs, egos or personal desires, by listening to the music, focusing on God, and spinning one's body in repetitive circles, which has been seen as a symbolic imitation of planets in the Solar System orbiting the sun.[137]

As explained by Mevlevi practitioners:[138]

In the symbolism of the Sema ritual, the semazen's camel's hair hat (sikke) represents the tombstone of the ego; his wide, white skirt (tennure) represents the ego's shroud. By removing his black cloak (hırka), he is spiritually reborn to the truth. At the beginning of the Sema, by holding his arms crosswise, the semazen appears to represent the number one, thus testifying to God's unity. While whirling, his arms are open: his right arm is directed to the sky, ready to receive God's beneficence; his left hand, upon which his eyes are fastened, is turned toward the earth. The semazen conveys God's spiritual gift to those who are witnessing the Sema. Revolving from right to left around the heart, the semazen embraces all humanity with love. The human being has been created with love in order to love. Mevlâna Jalâluddîn Rumi says, "All loves are a bridge to Divine love. Yet, those who have not had a taste of it do not know!"

Singing

Kurdish Dervishes practice Sufism with playing Daf in Sulaymaniyah, Iraqi Kurdistan.

Musical instruments (except the Daf) have traditionally been considered as prohibited by the four orthodox Sunni schools,[133][139][140][141][142] and the more orthodox Sufi tariqas also continued to prohibit their use. Throughout history most Sufi saints have stressed that musical instruments are forbidden.[133][143][144] However some Sufi Saints permitted and encouraged it, whilst maintaining that musical instruments and female voices should not be introduced, although these are common practice today.[133][143]

For example Qawwali was originally a form of Sufi devotional singing popular in the Indian subcontinent, and is now usually performed at dargahs. Sufi saint Amir Khusrau is said to have infused Persian, Arabic Turkish and Indian classical melodic styles to create the genre in the 13th century. The songs are classified into hamd, na'at, manqabat, marsiya or ghazal, among others.

Nowadays, the songs last for about 15 to 30 minutes, are performed by a group of singers, and instruments including the harmonium, tabla and dholak are used. Pakistani singing maestro Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan is credited with popularizing qawwali all over the world.[145]

Saints

 
A Persian miniature depicting the medieval saint and mystic Ahmad Ghazali (d. 1123), brother of the famous Abu Hamid al-Ghazali (d. 1111), talking to a disciple, from the Meetings of the Lovers (1552)

Walī (Arabic: ولي, plural ʾawliyāʾ أولياء) is an Arabic word whose literal meanings include "custodian", "protector", "helper", and "friend."[146] In the vernacular, it is most commonly used by Muslims to indicate an Islamic saint, otherwise referred to by the more literal "friend of God."[147][148][149] In the traditional Islamic understanding of saints, the saint is portrayed as someone "marked by [special] divine favor ... [and] holiness", and who is specifically "chosen by God and endowed with exceptional gifts, such as the ability to work miracles."[150] The doctrine of saints was articulated by Islamic scholars very early on in Muslim history,[151][152][13][153] and particular verses of the Quran and certain hadith were interpreted by early Muslim thinkers as "documentary evidence"[13] of the existence of saints.

Since the first Muslim hagiographies were written during the period when Sufism began its rapid expansion, many of the figures who later came to be regarded as the major saints in Sunni Islam were the early Sufi mystics, like Hasan of Basra (d. 728), Farqad Sabakhi (d. 729), Dawud Tai (d. 777-81) Rabi'a al-'Adawiyya (d. 801), Maruf Karkhi (d. 815), and Junayd of Baghdad (d. 910). From the twelfth to the fourteenth century, "the general veneration of saints, among both people and sovereigns, reached its definitive form with the organization of Sufism ... into orders or brotherhoods."[154] In the common expressions of Islamic piety of this period, the saint was understood to be "a contemplative whose state of spiritual perfection ... [found] permanent expression in the teaching bequeathed to his disciples."[154]

Visitation

 
Sufi mosque in Esfahan, Iran

In popular Sufism (i.e. devotional practices that have achieved currency in world cultures through Sufi influence), one common practice is to visit or make pilgrimages to the tombs of saints, renowned scholars, and righteous people. This is a particularly common practice in South Asia, where famous tombs include such saints as Sayyid Ali Hamadani in Kulob, Tajikistan; Afāq Khoja, near Kashgar, China; Lal Shahbaz Qalandar in Sindh; Ali Hujwari in Lahore, Pakistan; Bahauddin Zakariya in Multan Pakistan; Moinuddin Chishti in Ajmer, India; Nizamuddin Auliya in Delhi, India; and Shah Jalal in Sylhet, Bangladesh.

Likewise, in Fez, Morocco, a popular destination for such pious visitation is the Zaouia Moulay Idriss II and the yearly visitation to see the current Sheikh of the Qadiri Boutchichi Tariqah, Sheikh Sidi Hamza al Qadiri al Boutchichi to celebrate the Mawlid (which is usually televised on Moroccan National television).[155][156] This action has voiced particular condemnation by the Salafis and Wahhabis.

Miracles

In Islamic mysticism, karamat (Arabic: کرامات karāmāt, pl. of کرامة karāmah, lit. generosity, high-mindedness[157]) refers to supernatural wonders performed by Muslim saints. In the technical vocabulary of Islamic religious sciences, the singular form karama has a sense similar to charism, a favor or spiritual gift freely bestowed by God.[158] The marvels ascribed to Islamic saints have included supernatural physical actions, predictions of the future, and "interpretation of the secrets of hearts".[158] Historically, a "belief in the miracles of saints (karāmāt al-awliyāʾ, literally 'marvels of the friends [of God]')" has been "a requirement in Sunni Islam."[159]

Shrines

A dargah (Persian: درگاه dargâh or درگه dargah, also in Punjabi and Urdu) is a shrine built over the grave of a revered religious figure, often a Sufi saint or dervish. Sufis often visit the shrine for ziyarat, a term associated with religious visits and pilgrimages. Dargahs are often associated with Sufi eating and meeting rooms and hostels, called khanqah or hospices. They usually include a mosque, meeting rooms, Islamic religious schools (madrassas), residences for a teacher or caretaker, hospitals, and other buildings for community purposes.

Theoretical perspectives

 
The works of Al-Ghazali firmly defended the concepts of Sufism within the Islamic faith.

Traditional Islamic scholars have recognized two major branches within the practice of Sufism and use this as one key to differentiating among the approaches of different masters and devotional lineages.[160]

On the one hand there is the order from the signs to the Signifier (or from the arts to the Artisan). In this branch, the seeker begins by purifying the lower self of every corrupting influence that stands in the way of recognizing all of creation as the work of God, as God's active self-disclosure or theophany.[161] This is the way of Imam Al-Ghazali and of the majority of the Sufi orders.

On the other hand, there is the order from the Signifier to his signs, from the Artisan to his works. In this branch the seeker experiences divine attraction (jadhba), and is able to enter the order with a glimpse of its endpoint, of direct apprehension of the Divine Presence towards which all spiritual striving is directed. This does not replace the striving to purify the heart, as in the other branch; it simply stems from a different point of entry into the path. This is the way primarily of the masters of the Naqshbandi and Shadhili orders.[162]

Contemporary scholars may also recognize a third branch, attributed to the late Ottoman scholar Said Nursi and explicated in his vast Qur'an commentary called the Risale-i Nur. This approach entails strict adherence to the way of Muhammad, in the understanding that this wont, or sunnah, proposes a complete devotional spirituality adequate to those without access to a master of the Sufi way.[163]

Contributions to other domains of scholarship

Sufism has contributed significantly to the elaboration of theoretical perspectives in many domains of intellectual endeavor. For instance, the doctrine of "subtle centers" or centers of subtle cognition (known as Lataif-e-sitta) addresses the matter of the awakening of spiritual intuition.[164] In general, these subtle centers or latâ'if are thought of as faculties that are to be purified sequentially in order to bring the seeker's wayfaring to completion. A concise and useful summary of this system from a living exponent of this tradition has been published by Muhammad Emin Er.[160]

Sufi psychology has influenced many areas of thinking both within and outside of Islam, drawing primarily upon three concepts. Ja'far al-Sadiq (both an imam in the Shia tradition and a respected scholar and link in chains of Sufi transmission in all Islamic sects) held that human beings are dominated by a lower self called the nafs (self, ego, person), a faculty of spiritual intuition called the qalb (heart), and ruh (soul). These interact in various ways, producing the spiritual types of the tyrant (dominated by nafs), the person of faith and moderation (dominated by the spiritual heart), and the person lost in love for God (dominated by the ruh).[165]

Of note with regard to the spread of Sufi psychology in the West is Robert Frager, a Sufi teacher authorized in the Khalwati Jerrahi order. Frager was a trained psychologist, born in the United States, who converted to Islam in the course of his practice of Sufism and wrote extensively on Sufism and psychology.[166]

Sufi cosmology and Sufi metaphysics are also noteworthy areas of intellectual accomplishment.[167]

Prominent Sufis

Abdul-Qadir Gilani

 
Geometric tiling on the underside of the dome of Hafiz Shirazi's tomb in Shiraz

Abdul-Qadir Gilani (1077–1166) was a Mesopotamian-born Hanbali jurist and prominent Sufi scholar based in Baghdad, with Persian roots. Qadiriyya was his patronym. Gilani spent his early life in Na'if, a town just East of Baghdad, also the town of his birth. There, he pursued the study of Hanbali law. Abu Saeed Mubarak Makhzoomi gave Gilani lessons in fiqh. He was given lessons about hadith by Abu Bakr ibn Muzaffar. He was given lessons about Tafsir by Abu Muhammad Ja'far, a commentator. His Sufi spiritual instructor was Abu'l-Khair Hammad ibn Muslim al-Dabbas. After completing his education, Gilani left Baghdad. He spent twenty-five years as a reclusive wanderer in the desert regions of Iraq. In 1127, Gilani returned to Baghdad and began to preach to the public. He joined the teaching staff of the school belonging to his own teacher, Abu Saeed Mubarak Makhzoomi, and was popular with students. In the morning he taught hadith and tafsir, and in the afternoon he held discourse on the science of the heart and the virtues of the Quran. He is the founder of Qadiri order.[168]

Abul Hasan ash-Shadhili

Abul Hasan ash-Shadhili (died 1258), the founder of the Shadhiliyya order, introduced dhikr jahri (the remembrance of God out loud, as opposed to the silent dhikr). He taught that his followers need not abstain from what Islam has not forbidden, but to be grateful for what God has bestowed upon them,[169] in contrast to the majority of Sufis, who preach to deny oneself and to destroy the ego-self (nafs) "Order of Patience" (Tariqus-Sabr), Shadhiliyya is formulated to be "Order of Gratitude" (Tariqush-Shukr). Imam Shadhili also gave eighteen valuable hizbs (litanies) to his followers, out of which the notable Hizb al-Bahr[170] is recited worldwide even today.

Ahmad Al-Tijani

 
A manuscript of Sufi Islamic theology, Shams al-Ma'arif (The Book of the Sun of Gnosis), was written by the Algerian Sufi master Ahmad al-Buni during the 12th century.

Ahmed Tijani (1737–1815), in Arabic سيدي أحمد التجاني (Sidi Ahmed Tijani), is the founder of the Tijaniyya Sufi order. He was born in a Berber family,[171][172][173] in Aïn Madhi, present-day Algeria, and died at the age of 78 in Fez.[174][175]

Bayazid Bastami

Bayazid Bastami is a recognized and influential Sufi personality from Shattari order.[citation needed] Bastami was born in 804 in Bastam.[176] Bayazid is regarded for his devout commitment to the Sunnah and his dedication to fundamental Islamic principals and practices.

Sayyed Badiuddin

Sayyid Badiuddin[177] was a Sufi saint who founded the Madariyya Silsila.[178] He was also known by the title Qutb-ul-Madar.[179]

He hailed originally from Syria, and was born in Aleppo[177] to a Syed Hussaini family.[180] His teacher was Bayazid Tayfur al-Bistami.[181] After making a pilgrimage to Medina, he journeyed to India to spread the Islamic faith, where he founded the Madariyya order.[179] His tomb is at Makanpur.[182]

Bawa Muhaiyaddeen

Bawa Muhaiyaddeen (died 1986) was a Sufi Sheikh from Sri Lanka. He was found by a group of religious pilgrims in the early 1900s meditating in the jungles of Kataragama in Sri Lanka (Ceylon). Awed and inspired by his personality and the depth of his wisdom, he was invited to a nearby village. Thereafter, people from various walks of life, from paupers to prime ministers, belonging to various religious and ethnic backgrounds came to see Sheikh Bawa Muhaiyaddeen to seek comfort, guidance and help. Sheikh Bawa Muhaiyaddeen spent the rest of his life preaching, healing and comforting the many souls that came to see him.

Ibn Arabi

Ibn 'Arabi (or Ibn al-'Arabi) (AH 561 – AH 638; July 28, 1165 – November 10, 1240) is considered to be one of the most important Sufi masters, although he never founded any order (tariqa). His writings, especially al-Futuhat al-Makkiyya and Fusus al-hikam, have been studied within all the Sufi orders as the clearest expression of tawhid (Divine Unity), though because of their recondite nature they were often only given to initiates. Later those who followed his teaching became known as the school of wahdat al-wujud (the Oneness of Being). He himself considered his writings to have been divinely inspired. As he expressed the Way to one of his close disciples, his legacy is that 'you should never ever abandon your servant-hood (ʿubudiyya), and that there may never be in your soul a longing for any existing thing'.[183]

Junayd of Baghdad

Junayd al-Baghdadi (830–910) was one of the great early Sufis. His practice of Sufism was considered dry and sober unlike some of the more ecstatic behaviours of other Sufis during his life. His order was Junaidia, which links to the golden chain of many Sufi orders. He laid the groundwork for sober mysticism in contrast to that of God-intoxicated Sufis like al-Hallaj, Bayazid Bastami and Abusaeid Abolkheir. During the trial of al-Hallaj, his former disciple, the Caliph of the time demanded his fatwa. In response, he issued this fatwa: "From the outward appearance he is to die and we judge according to the outward appearance and God knows better". He is referred to by Sufis as Sayyid-ut Taifa—i.e., the leader of the group. He lived and died in the city of Baghdad.

Mansur Al-Hallaj

Mansur Al-Hallaj (died 922) is renowned for his claim, Ana-l-Haqq ("I am The Truth"), his ecstatic Sufism and state trial. His refusal to recant this utterance, which was regarded as apostasy, led to a long trial. He was imprisoned for 11 years in a Baghdad prison, before being tortured and publicly dismembered on March 26, 922. He is still revered by Sufis for his willingness to embrace torture and death rather than recant. It is said that during his prayers, he would say "O Lord! You are the guide of those who are passing through the Valley of Bewilderment. If I am a heretic, enlarge my heresy".[184]

Moinuddin Chishti

 
A Mughal-era Sufi prayer book from the Chishti order

Moinuddin Chishti was born in 1141 and died in 1236. Also known as Gharīb Nawāz ("Benefactor of the Poor"), he is the most famous Sufi saint of the Chishti Order. Moinuddin Chishti introduced and established the order in the Indian subcontinent. The initial spiritual chain or silsila of the Chishti order in India, comprising Moinuddin Chishti, Bakhtiyar Kaki, Baba Farid, Nizamuddin Auliya (each successive person being the disciple of the previous one), constitutes the great Sufi saints of Indian history. Moinuddin Chishtī turned towards India, reputedly after a dream in which Muhammad blessed him to do so. After a brief stay at Lahore, he reached Ajmer along with Sultan Shahāb-ud-Din Muhammad Ghori, and settled down there. In Ajmer, he attracted a substantial following, acquiring a great deal of respect amongst the residents of the city. Moinuddin Chishtī practiced the Sufi Sulh-e-Kul (peace to all) concept to promote understanding between Muslims and non-Muslims.[185]

Rabi'a Al-'Adawiyya

 
Depiction of Rabi'a grinding grain from a Persian dictionary

Rabi'a al-'Adawiyya or Rabia of Basra (died 801) was a mystic who represents countercultural elements of Sufism, especially with regards to the status and power of women. Prominent Sufi leader Hasan of Basra is said to have castigated himself before her superior merits and sincere virtues.[186] Rabi'a was born of very poor origin, but was captured by bandits at a later age and sold into slavery. She was however released by her master when he awoke one night to see the light of sanctity shining above her head.[187] Rabi'a al-Adawiyya is known for her teachings and emphasis on the centrality of the love of God to a holy life.[188] She is said to have proclaimed, running down the streets of Basra, Iraq:

O God! If I worship You for fear of Hell, burn me in Hell, and if I worship You in hope of Paradise, exclude me from Paradise. But if I worship You for Your Own sake, grudge me not Your everlasting Beauty.

— Rabi'a al-Adawiyya

There are different opinions about the wisal and resting place of Bibi Rabia. Some believe her resting place to be Jerusalem whereas other believe it as Basra.[189][190]

Notable works

Among the most popular Sufi works are:[191][192][193]

  • Al-Ta'arruf li-Madhhab Ahl al-Tasawwuf [ar] (The Exploration of the Path of Sufis) by Abu Bakr al-Kalabadhi (d. ca. 380/990), a popular text about which 'Umar al-Suhrawardi (d. 632/1234) is reported to have said: “if it were not for the Ta'arruf, we would know nothing about Sufism”.[194]
  • Qūt al-Qulūb [ar] (The Nourishment of Hearts) by Abu Talib al-Makki (d. 386/996).
  • Hilyat al-Awliya' wa Tabaqat al-Asfiya' [ar] (The Adornment of the Saints and the Generations of the Pure) by Abu Na'im al-Isfahani (d. 430/1038), which is a voluminous collection of biographies of Sufis and other early Muslim religious leaders.[195]
  • Al-Risala al-Qushayriyya (The Treatise of al-Qushayri) by al-Qushayri (d. 465/1072).
  • Ihya' 'Ulum al-Din (The Revival of the Sciences of Religion) by al-Ghazali (d. 505/1111).
  • Al-Hikam al-'Ata'iyya [ar] (The Aphorisms of Ibn 'Ata' Allah) by Ibn 'Ata' Allah al-Sakandari (d. 709/1309).

Reception

Persecution of Sufi Muslims

 
Muslim pilgrims gathered around the Ḍarīẖ covering the grave (qabr) of the 13th-century Sufi saint Lal Shahbaz Qalandar (shrine located in Sehwan Sharif, Pakistan); on 16 February 2017, ISIS claimed responsibility for a suicide attack on the shrine which resulted in the deaths of 90 people.[196][197][198]

The persecution of Sufism and Sufi Muslims over the course of centuries has included acts of religious discrimination, persecution and violence, such as the destruction of Sufi shrines, tombs, and mosques, suppression of Sufi orders, and discrimination against adherents of Sufism in a number of Muslim-majority countries.[3] The Republic of Turkey banned all Sufi orders and abolished their institutions in 1925, after Sufis opposed the new secular order. The Islamic Republic of Iran has harassed Shia Sufis, reportedly for their lack of support for the government doctrine of "governance of the jurist" (i.e., that the supreme Shiite jurist should be the nation's political leader).

In most other Muslim-majority countries, attacks on Sufis and especially their shrines have come from adherents of puritanical and revivalist Islamic movements (Salafis and Wahhabis), who believe that practices such as visitation to and veneration of the tombs of Sufi saints, celebration of the birthdays of Sufi saints, and dhikr ("remembrance" of God) ceremonies are bid‘ah (impure "innovation") and shirk ("polytheistic").[3][199][200][201][202]

In Egypt, at least 305 people were killed and more than 100 wounded during the November 2017 Islamic terrorist attack on a Sufi mosque located in Sinai; it is considered one of the worst terrorist attacks in the history of modern Egypt.[199][203] Most of the victims were Sufis.[199][203]

Perception outside Islam

 
A choreographed Sufi performance on a Friday in Sudan

Sufi mysticism has long exercised a fascination upon the Western world, and especially its Orientalist scholars.[204] In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, European orientalists treated Sufism and Islam as distinct subjects, leading to “an over-emphasis on the translation of classical Sufi mystical literature” in the academic study of Sufism at the expense of the lived practises in Islam, as well as a separation of Sufism from its Islamic roots in the development of Sufism as a religious form in the West.[205][206] Figures like Rumi have become well known in the United States, where Sufism is perceived as a peaceful and apolitical form of Islam.[204][207] Hossein Nasr states that the preceding theories are false according to the point of view of Sufism.[208] The 19th-century Scottish explorer David Livingstone said of Sufism:

"Sufi practices are merely attempts to attain psychic states—for their own sake—though it is claimed the pursuit represents seeking closeness to God, and that the achieved magical powers are gifts of advanced spirituality. For several reasons, Sufism was generally looked upon as heretical among Muslim scholars. Among the deviations introduced by the Sufis was the tendency to believe the daily prayers to be only for the masses who had not achieved deeper spiritual knowledge, but could be disregarded by those more advanced spiritually. The Sufis introduced the practice of congregational Dhikr, or religious oral exercises, consisting of a continuous repetition of the name of God. These practices were unknown to early Islam, and consequently regarded as Bid'ah, meaning "unfounded innovation." Also, many of the Sufis adopted the practice of total Tawakkul, or complete "trust" or "dependence" on God, by avoiding all kinds of labor or commerce, refusing medical care when they were ill, and living by begging."[209]

 
A 17th-century miniature of Nasreddin, a Seljuk satirical figure, currently in the Topkapı Palace Museum Library

The Islamic Institute in Mannheim, Germany, which works towards the integration of Europe and Muslims, sees Sufism as particularly suited for interreligious dialogue and intercultural harmonisation in democratic and pluralist societies; it has described Sufism as a symbol of tolerance and humanism—nondogmatic, flexible and non-violent.[210] According to Philip Jenkins, a professor at Baylor University, "the Sufis are much more than tactical allies for the West: they are, potentially, the greatest hope for pluralism and democracy within Muslim nations." Likewise, several governments and organisations have advocated the promotion of Sufism as a means of combating intolerant and violent strains of Islam.[211] For example, the Chinese and Russian[212] governments openly favor Sufism as the best means of protecting against Islamist subversion. The British government, especially following the 7 July 2005 London bombings, has favoured Sufi groups in its battle against Muslim extremist currents. The influential RAND Corporation, an American think-tank, issued a major report titled "Building Moderate Muslim Networks," which urged the US government to form links with and bolster[213] Muslim groups that opposed Islamist extremism. The report stressed the Sufi role as moderate traditionalists open to change, and thus as allies against violence.[214][215] News organisations such as the BBC, Economist and Boston Globe have also seen Sufism as a means to deal with violent Muslim extremists.[216]

Idries Shah states that Sufism is universal in nature, its roots predating the rise of Islam and Christianity.[217] He quotes Suhrawardi as saying that "this (Sufism) was a form of wisdom known to and practiced by a succession of sages including the mysterious ancient Hermes of Egypt.", and that Ibn al-Farid "stresses that Sufism lies behind and before systematization; that 'our wine existed before what you call the grape and the vine' (the school and the system)..."[218] Shah's views have however been rejected by modern scholars.[21] Such modern trends of neo-Sufis in Western countries allow non-Muslims to receive "instructions on following the Sufi path", not without opposition by Muslims who consider such instruction outside the sphere of Islam.[219]

Similarities with Eastern religions

Numerous comparisons have been made between Sufism and the mystic components of some Eastern religions.

The tenth-century Persian polymath Al-Biruni in his book Tahaqeeq Ma Lilhind Min Makulat Makulat Fi Aliaqbal Am Marzula (Critical Study of Indian Speech: Rationally Acceptable or Rejected) discusses the similarity of some Sufism concepts with aspects of Hinduism, such as: Atma with ruh, tanasukh with reincarnation, Mokhsha with Fanafillah, Ittihad with Nirvana: union between Paramatma in Jivatma, Avatar or Incarnation with Hulul, Vedanta with Wahdatul Ujud, Mujahadah with Sadhana.[citation needed]

Other scholars have likewise compared the Sufi concept of Waḥdat al-Wujūd to Advaita Vedanta,[220] Fanaa to Samadhi,[221] Muraqaba to Dhyana, and tariqa to the Noble Eightfold Path.[222]

The ninth-century Iranian mystic Bayazid Bostami is alleged to have imported certain concepts from Hindusim into his version of Sufism under the conceptual umbrella of baqaa, meaning perfection.[223] Ibn al-Arabi and Mansur al-Hallaj both referred to Muhammad as having attained perfection and titled him as Al-Insān al-Kāmil.[224][225][226][227][228][229] The Sufism concept of hulul has similarly been compared with the idea of Ishvaratva, that God dwells in some creatures in Hinduism and Buddhism, and godhood of Jesus in Christianity.[230]

Influence on Judaism

There is evidence that Sufism did influence the development of some schools of Jewish philosophy and ethics. In the first writing of this kind, we see Kitab al-Hidayah ila Fara'iḍ al-Ḳulub, Duties of the Heart, of Bahya ibn Paquda. This book was translated by Judah ibn Tibbon into Hebrew under the title Chovot HaLevavot.[231]

The precepts prescribed by the Torah number 613 only; those dictated by the intellect are innumerable.

— Kremer, Alfred Von. 1868. "Notice sur Sha‘rani." Journal Asiatique 11 (6): 258.

In the ethical writings of the Sufis Al-Kusajri and Al-Harawi there are sections which treat of the same subjects as those treated in the Chovot ha-Lebabot and which bear the same titles: e.g., "Bab al-Tawakkul"; "Bab al-Taubah"; "Bab al-Muḥasabah"; "Bab al-Tawaḍu'"; "Bab al-Zuhd". In the ninth gate, Baḥya directly quotes sayings of the Sufis, whom he calls Perushim. However, the author of the Chovot HaLevavot did not go so far as to approve of the asceticism of the Sufis, although he showed a marked predilection for their ethical principles.

Abraham Maimonides, the son of the Jewish philosopher Maimonides, believed that Sufi practices and doctrines continue the tradition of the biblical prophets.[232]

Abraham Maimonides' principal work was originally composed in Judeo-Arabic and entitled "כתאב כפאיה אלעאבדין" Kitāb Kifāyah al-'Ābidīn (A Comprehensive Guide for the Servants of God). From the extant surviving portion it is conjectured that the treatise was three times as long as his father's Guide for the Perplexed. In the book, he evidences a great appreciation for, and affinity to, Sufism. Followers of his path continued to foster a Jewish-Sufi form of pietism for at least a century, and he is rightly considered the founder of this pietistic school, which was centered in Egypt.[233]

The followers of this path, which they called, Hasidism (not to be confused with the [later] Jewish Hasidic movement) or Sufism (Tasawwuf), practiced spiritual retreats, solitude, fasting and sleep deprivation. The Jewish Sufis maintained their own brotherhood, guided by a religious leader like a Sufi sheikh.[234]

The Jewish Encyclopedia, in its entry on Sufism, states that the revival of Jewish mysticism in Muslim countries is probably due to the spread of Sufism in the same geographical areas. The entry details many parallels to Sufic concepts found in the writings of prominent Kabbalists during the Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain.[235][236]

Culture

Literature

The 13th century Persian poet Rumi, is considered one of the most influential figures of Sufism, as well as one of the greatest poets of all time. He has become one of the most widely read poets in the United States, thanks largely to the interpretative translations published by Coleman Barks.[237] Elif Şafak's novel The Forty Rules of Love is a fictionalized account of Rumi's encounter with the Persian dervish Shams Tabrizi.[238]

Allama Iqbal, one of the greatest Urdu poets has discussed Sufism, philosophy and Islam in his English work The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam.[239]

Visual art

Many painters and visual artists have explored the Sufi motif through various disciplines. One of the outstanding pieces in the Brooklyn Museum's Islamic gallery has been the museum's associate curator of Islamic art, is a large 19th- or early-20th-century portrayal of the Battle of Karbala painted by Abbas Al-Musavi,[240] which was a violent episode in the disagreement between the Sunni and Shia branches of Islam; during this battle, Husayn ibn Ali, a pious grandson of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, died and is considered a martyr in Islam.[241]

In July 2016, at International Sufi Festival[242] held in Noida Film City, UP, India, H.E. Abdul Basit who was the High Commissioner of Pakistan to India at that time, while inaugurating the exhibition of Farkhananda Khan ‘Fida’ said, "There is no barrier of words or explanation about the paintings or rather there is a soothing message of brotherhood, peace in Sufism".

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ The following are among definitions of Sufism quoted in an early Sufi treatise by Abu Nasr as-Sarraj:
     • "Sufism is that you should be with God--without any attachment." (Junayd of Baghdad)
     • "Sufism consists of abandoning oneself to God in accordance with what God wills." (Ruwaym ibn Ahmad)
     • "Sufism is that you should not possess anything nor should anything possess you." (Samnun)
     • "Sufism consists of entering every exalted quality (khulq) and leaving behind every despicable quality." (Abu Muhammad al-Jariri)
     • "Sufism is that at each moment the servant should be in accord with what is most appropriate (awla) at that moment." ('Amr ibn 'Uthman al-Makki)

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  • Zarrabi-Zadeh, Saeed (2016). Practical Mysticism in Islam and Christianity: A Comparative Study of Jalal al-Din Rumi and Meister Eckhart. Routledge Sufi Series. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-13-810012-1.

External links

sufism, this, article, about, other, uses, disambiguation, sufi, redirects, here, other, uses, sufi, sufi, disambiguation, sanctification, islam, tazkiah, arabic, الص, وف, aṣ, ṣūfiyya, also, known, tasawwuf, الت, taṣawwuf, mystic, body, religious, practice, fo. This article is about Sufism For other uses see Sufism disambiguation Sufi redirects here For other uses of Sufi see Sufi disambiguation For sanctification in Islam see Tazkiah Sufism Arabic الص وف ي ة aṣ ṣufiyya also known as Tasawwuf 1 الت ص و ف at taṣawwuf is a mystic body of religious practice found mainly within Sunni Islam but also within Shia Islam which is characterized by a focus on Islamic spirituality ritualism asceticism and esotericism 2 3 4 5 6 It has been variously defined as Islamic mysticism 7 8 9 the mystical expression of Islamic faith 10 the inward dimension of Islam 11 12 the phenomenon of mysticism within Islam 13 14 the main manifestation and the most important and central crystallization of mystical practice in Islam 15 16 and the interiorization and intensification of Islamic faith and practice 17 Six Sufi masters c 1760 Practitioners of Sufism are referred to as Sufis from ص وف ي ṣufiy 13 and historically typically belonged to orders known as tariqa pl ṭuruq congregations formed around a grand wali who would be the last in a chain of successive teachers linking back to Muhammad 18 Sufism emerged early on in Islamic history 13 partly as a reaction against the worldliness of the early Umayyad Caliphate 661 750 and mainly under the tutelage of Hasan Al Basri 19 page needed 20 Although Sufis were opposed to dry legalism they strictly observed Islamic law and belonged to various schools of Islamic jurisprudence and theology 21 Although the overwhelming majority of Sufis both pre modern and modern remain adherents of Sunni Islam certain strands of Sufi thought transferred over to the ambits of Shia Islam during the late medieval period 22 This particularly happened after the Safavid conversion of Iran under the concept of Irfan 22 Important focuses of Sufi worship include dhikr the practice of remembrance of God 23 Sufis also played an important role in spreading Islam through their missionary and educational activities 21 Despite a relative decline of Sufi orders in the modern era and attacks from revivalist Islamic movement such as the Salafis and Wahhabis Sufism has continued to play an important role in the Islamic world especially in the neo traditionalist strand of Sunni Islam 24 25 It has also influenced various forms of spirituality in the West and generated lots of academic interest 26 27 28 However some recent scholarship has challenged the Western understanding of Sufism as orientalist in nature 29 30 Contents 1 Definitions 2 Etymology 3 History 3 1 Origins 3 2 Sufi orders 3 3 Sufism as an Islamic discipline 3 4 Formalization of doctrine 3 5 Growth of influence 3 6 Modern era 4 Aims and objectives 4 1 Teachings 4 2 Muhammad 4 2 1 Sufi beliefs about Muhammad 4 3 Sufism and Islamic law 4 4 Traditional Islamic thought and Sufism 4 5 Persian influence on Sufism 4 6 Neo Sufism 5 Devotional practices 5 1 Dhikr 5 2 Muraqaba 5 3 Sufi whirling 5 4 Singing 6 Saints 6 1 Visitation 6 2 Miracles 6 3 Shrines 7 Theoretical perspectives 7 1 Contributions to other domains of scholarship 8 Prominent Sufis 8 1 Abdul Qadir Gilani 8 2 Abul Hasan ash Shadhili 8 3 Ahmad Al Tijani 8 4 Bayazid Bastami 8 5 Sayyed Badiuddin 8 6 Bawa Muhaiyaddeen 8 7 Ibn Arabi 8 8 Junayd of Baghdad 8 9 Mansur Al Hallaj 8 10 Moinuddin Chishti 8 11 Rabi a Al Adawiyya 9 Notable works 10 Reception 10 1 Persecution of Sufi Muslims 10 2 Perception outside Islam 10 3 Similarities with Eastern religions 10 4 Influence on Judaism 11 Culture 11 1 Literature 11 2 Visual art 12 See also 13 References 13 1 Notes 13 2 Citations 13 3 Sources 14 External linksDefinitions EditThe Arabic word tasawwuf lit being or becoming a Sufi generally translated as Sufism is commonly defined by Western authors as Islamic mysticism 31 32 The Arabic term Sufi has been used in Islamic literature with a wide range of meanings by both proponents and opponents of Sufism 31 Classical Sufi texts which stressed certain teachings and practices of the Quran and the sunnah exemplary teachings and practices of the Islamic prophet Muhammad gave definitions of tasawwuf that described ethical and spiritual goals note 1 and functioned as teaching tools for their attainment Many other terms that described particular spiritual qualities and roles were used instead in more practical contexts 31 32 Some modern scholars have used other definitions of Sufism such as intensification of Islamic faith and practice 31 and process of realizing ethical and spiritual ideals 32 The term Sufism was originally introduced into European languages in the 18th century by Orientalist scholars who viewed it mainly as an intellectual doctrine and literary tradition at variance with what they saw as sterile monotheism of Islam In modern scholarly usage the term serves to describe a wide range of social cultural political and religious phenomena associated with Sufis 32 Etymology Edit Look up Sufi in Wiktionary the free dictionary The original meaning of sufi seems to have been one who wears wool ṣuf and the Encyclopaedia of Islam calls other etymological hypotheses untenable 13 31 Woolen clothes were traditionally associated with ascetics and mystics 13 Al Qushayri and Ibn Khaldun both rejected all possibilities other than ṣuf on linguistic grounds 33 Another explanation traces the lexical root of the word to ṣafa صفاء which in Arabic means purity and in this context another similar idea of tasawwuf as considered in Islam is tazkiyah تزكية meaning self purification which is also widely used in Sufism These two explanations were combined by the Sufi al Rudhabari d 322 AH who said The Sufi is the one who wears wool on top of purity 34 35 Others have suggested that the word comes from the term Ahl al Ṣuffa the people of the suffah or the bench who were a group of impoverished companions of Muhammad who held regular gatherings of dhikr one of the most prominent companion among them was Abu Huraira These men and women who sat at al Masjid an Nabawi are considered by some to be the first Sufis 36 37 History EditMain article History of Sufism Origins Edit Modern academics and scholars have rejected early Orientalist theories asserting a non Islamic or Aryan origin of Sufism 21 The current consensus is that it emerged in the Hejaz and that Sufism has existed as a practice of Muslims from the earliest days of Islam even predating some sectarian divides 38 better source needed Sufi orders are based on the bayah Arabic ب ي ع ة lit pledge that was given to Muhammad by his Ṣahabah By pledging allegiance to Muhammad the Sahabah had committed themselves to the service of God 39 40 41 Ernst Carl W 2003 Tasawwuf Sufism Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World full citation needed Verily those who give Bay ah pledge to you O Muhammad they are giving Bay ah pledge to Allah The Hand of Allah is over their hands Then whosoever breaks his pledge breaks it only to his own harm and whosoever fulfils what he has covenanted with Allah He will bestow on him a great reward Translation of Quran 48 10 Sufis believe that by giving bayʿah pledging allegiance to a legitimate Sufi Shaykh one is pledging allegiance to Muhammad therefore a spiritual connection between the seeker and Muhammad is established It is through Muhammad that Sufis aim to learn about understand and connect with God 42 Ali is regarded as one of the major figures amongst the Sahaba who have directly pledged allegiance to Muhammad and Sufis maintain that through Ali knowledge about Muhammad and a connection with Muhammad may be attained Such a concept may be understood by the hadith which Sufis regard to be authentic in which Muhammad said I am the city of knowledge and Ali is its gate 43 Eminent Sufis such as Ali Hujwiri refer to Ali as having a very high ranking in Tasawwuf Furthermore Junayd of Baghdad regarded Ali as Sheikh of the principals and practices of Tasawwuf 44 Historian Jonathan A C Brown notes that during the lifetime of Muhammad some companions were more inclined than others to intensive devotion pious abstemiousness and pondering the divine mysteries more than Islam required such as Abu Dharr al Ghifari Hasan al Basri a tabi is considered a founding figure in the science of purifying the heart 45 Practitioners of Sufism hold that in its early stages of development Sufism effectively referred to nothing more than the internalization of Islam 46 According to one perspective it is directly from the Qur an constantly recited meditated and experienced that Sufism proceeded in its origin and its development 47 Other practitioners have held that Sufism is the strict emulation of the way of Muhammad through which the heart s connection to the Divine is strengthened 48 Some contend that Sufism developed from people like Bayazid Bastami who in his utmost reverence to the sunnah refused to eat a watermelon because he did not find any proof that Muhammad ever ate it 49 50 According to the late medieval mystic the Persian poet Jami 51 Abd Allah ibn Muhammad ibn al Hanafiyyah died c 716 was the first person to be called a Sufi 33 The term also had a strong connection with Kufa with three of the earliest scholars to be called by the term being Abu Hashim al Kufi Jabir ibn Hayyan and Abdak al Sufi 52 Later individuals included Hatim al Attar from Basra and Al Junayd al Baghdadi 52 Others such as Al Harith al Muhasibi and Sari al Saqati were not known as Sufis during their lifetimes but later came to be identified as such 52 Important contributions in writing are attributed to Uwais al Qarani Hasan of Basra Harith al Muhasibi Abu Nasr as Sarraj and Said ibn al Musayyib 53 Ruwaym from the second generation of Sufis in Baghdad was also an influential early figure 54 55 as was Junayd of Baghdad a number of early practitioners of Sufism were disciples of one of the two 56 Sufi orders Edit Main articles Tariqa and List of Sufi orders Historically Sufis have often belonged to orders known as tariqa pl ṭuruq congregations formed around a grand master wali who will trace their teaching through a chain of successive teachers back to the Islamic prophet Muhammad 18 Within the Sufi tradition the formation of the orders did not immediately produce lineages of master and disciple There are few examples before the eleventh century of complete lineages going back to the Prophet Muhammad Yet the symbolic importance of these lineages was immense they provided a channel to divine authority through master disciple chains It was through such chains of masters and disciples that spiritual power and blessings were transmitted to both general and special devotees 57 These orders meet for spiritual sessions majalis in meeting places known as zawiyas khanqahs or tekke 58 They strive for ihsan perfection of worship as detailed in a hadith Ihsan is to worship Allah as if you see Him if you can t see Him surely He sees you 59 Sufis regard Muhammad as al Insan al Kamil the complete human who personifies the attributes of Absolute Reality 60 and view him as their ultimate spiritual guide 61 Sufi orders trace most of their original precepts from Muhammad through Ali ibn Abi Talib 62 with the notable exception of the Naqshbandi order who trace their original precepts to Muhammad through Abu Bakr 63 However it was not necessary to formally belong to a tariqa 64 In the Medieval period Sufism was almost equal to Islam in general and not limited to specific orders 65 p24 Sufism had a long history already before the subsequent institutionalization of Sufi teachings into devotional orders tariqa pl tariqat in the early Middle Ages 66 The term tariqa is used for a school or order of Sufism or especially for the mystical teaching and spiritual practices of such an order with the aim of seeking ḥaqiqah ultimate truth A tariqa has a murshid guide who plays the role of leader or spiritual director The members or followers of a tariqa are known as muridin singular murid meaning desirous viz desiring the knowledge of knowing God and loving God 67 Over the years Sufi orders have influenced and been adopted by various Shi i movements especially Isma ilism which led to the Safaviyya order s conversion to Shia Islam from Sunni Islam and the spread of Twelverism throughout Iran 68 Prominent tariqa include the Ba Alawiyya Badawiyya Bektashi Burhaniyya Chishti Khalwati Kubrawiya Madariyya Mevlevi Muridiyya Naqshbandi Nimatullahi Qadiriyya Qalandariyya Rahmaniyya Rifa i Safavid Senussi Shadhili Suhrawardiyya Tijaniyyah Uwaisi and Zahabiya orders Sufism as an Islamic discipline Edit Dancing dervishes by Kamal ud Din Behzad c 1480 1490 Existing in both Sunni and Shia Islam Sufism is not a distinct sect as is sometimes erroneously assumed but a method of approaching or a way of understanding the religion which strives to take the regular practice of the religion to the supererogatory level through simultaneously fulfilling the obligatory religious duties 13 and finding a way and a means of striking a root through the narrow gate in the depth of the soul out into the domain of the pure arid unimprisonable Spirit which itself opens out on to the Divinity 9 Academic studies of Sufism confirm that Sufism as a separate tradition from Islam apart from so called pure Islam is frequently a product of Western orientalism and modern Islamic fundamentalists 69 As a mystic and ascetic aspect of Islam it is considered as the part of Islamic teaching that deals with the purification of the inner self By focusing on the more spiritual aspects of religion Sufis strive to obtain direct experience of God by making use of intuitive and emotional faculties that one must be trained to use 66 Tasawwuf is regarded as a science of the soul that has always been an integral part of Orthodox Islam 70 In his Al Risala al Safadiyya ibn Taymiyyah describes the Sufis as those who belong to the path of the Sunna and represent it in their teachings and writings citation needed Ibn Taymiyya s Sufi inclinations and his reverence for Sufis like Abdul Qadir Gilani can also be seen in his hundred page commentary on Futuh al ghayb covering only five of the seventy eight sermons of the book but showing that he considered tasawwuf essential within the life of the Islamic community citation needed In his commentary Ibn Taymiyya stresses that the primacy of the sharia forms the soundest tradition in tasawwuf and to argue this point he lists over a dozen early masters as well as more contemporary shaykhs like his fellow Hanbalis al Ansari al Harawi and Abdul Qadir and the latter s own shaykh Hammad al Dabbas the upright He cites the early shaykhs shuyukh al salaf such as Al Fuḍayl ibn Iyaḍ Ibrahim ibn Adham Ma ruf al Karkhi Sirri Saqti Junayd of Baghdad and others of the early teachers as well as Abdul Qadir Gilani Hammad Abu al Bayan and others of the later masters that they do not permit the followers of the Sufi path to depart from the divinely legislated command and prohibition citation needed Al Ghazali narrates in Al Munqidh min al dalal The vicissitudes of life family affairs and financial constraints engulfed my life and deprived me of the congenial solitude The heavy odds confronted me and provided me with few moments for my pursuits This state of affairs lasted for ten years but whenever I had some spare and congenial moments I resorted to my intrinsic proclivity During these turbulent years numerous astonishing and indescribable secrets of life were unveiled to me I was convinced that the group of Aulia holy mystics is the only truthful group who follow the right path display best conduct and surpass all sages in their wisdom and insight They derive all their overt or covert behaviour from the illumining guidance of the holy Prophet the only guidance worth quest and pursuit 71 Formalization of doctrine Edit A Sufi in Ecstasy in a Landscape Isfahan Safavid Persia c 1650 1660 LACMA In the eleventh century Sufism which had previously been a less codified trend in Islamic piety began to be ordered and crystallized into orders which have continued until the present day All these orders were founded by a major Islamic scholar and some of the largest and most widespread included the Suhrawardiyya after Abu al Najib Suhrawardi d 1168 Qadiriyya after Abdul Qadir Gilani d 1166 the Rifa iyya after Ahmed al Rifa i d 1182 the Chishtiyya after Moinuddin Chishti d 1236 the Shadiliyya after Abul Hasan ash Shadhili d 1258 the Hamadaniyyah after Sayyid Ali Hamadani d 1384 the Naqshbandiyya after Baha ud Din Naqshband Bukhari d 1389 72 Contrary to popular perception in the West 73 however neither the founders of these orders nor their followers ever considered themselves to be anything other than orthodox Sunni Muslims 73 and in fact all of these orders were attached to one of the four orthodox legal schools of Sunni Islam 74 Thus the Qadiriyya order was Hanbali with its founder Abdul Qadir Gilani being a renowned jurist the Chishtiyya was Hanafi the Shadiliyya order was Maliki and the Naqshbandiyya order was Hanafi 75 Thus it is precisely because it is historically proven that many of the most eminent defenders of Islamic orthodoxy such as Abdul Qadir Gilani Ghazali and the Sultan Ṣalaḥ ad Din Saladin were connected with Sufism 76 that the popular studies of writers like Idries Shah are continuously disregarded by scholars as conveying the fallacious image that Sufism is somehow distinct from Islam 77 76 78 Nile Green has observed that in the Middle Ages Sufism more or less was Islam 65 p24 Growth of influence Edit A Mughal miniature dated from the early 1620s depicting the Mughal emperor Jahangir d 1627 preferring an audience with Sufi saint to his contemporaries the Ottoman Sultan and the King of England James I d 1625 the picture is inscribed in Persian Though outwardly shahs stand before him he fixes his gazes on dervishes Historically Sufism became an incredibly important part of Islam and one of the most widespread and omnipresent aspects of Muslim life in Islamic civilization from the early medieval period onwards 79 better source needed when it began to permeate nearly all major aspects of Sunni Islamic life in regions stretching from India and Iraq to the Balkans and Senegal 80 better source needed The rise of Islamic civilization coincides strongly with the spread of Sufi philosophy in Islam The spread of Sufism has been considered a definitive factor in the spread of Islam and in the creation of integrally Islamic cultures especially in Africa 81 and Asia The Senussi tribes of Libya and the Sudan are one of the strongest adherents of Sufism Sufi poets and philosophers such as Khoja Akhmet Yassawi Rumi and Attar of Nishapur c 1145 c 1221 greatly enhanced the spread of Islamic culture in Anatolia Central Asia and South Asia 82 83 Sufism also played a role in creating and propagating the culture of the Ottoman world 84 and in resisting European imperialism in North Africa and South Asia 85 Blagaj Tekke built c 1520 next to the Buna wellspring cavern beneath a high vertical karstic cliff in Blagaj Bosnia The natural and architectural ensemble proposed for UNESCO inscription 86 forms a spatially and topographically self contained ensemble and is National Monument of Bosnia 87 Between the 13th and 16th centuries Sufism produced a flourishing intellectual culture throughout the Islamic world a Renaissance whose physical artifacts survive citation needed In many places a person or group would endow a waqf to maintain a lodge known variously as a zawiya khanqah or tekke to provide a gathering place for Sufi adepts as well as lodging for itinerant seekers of knowledge The same system of endowments could also pay for a complex of buildings such as that surrounding the Suleymaniye Mosque in Istanbul including a lodge for Sufi seekers a hospice with kitchens where these seekers could serve the poor and or complete a period of initiation a library and other structures No important domain in the civilization of Islam remained unaffected by Sufism in this period 88 Modern era Edit Opposition to Sufi teachers and orders from more literalist and legalist strains of Islam existed in various forms throughout Islamic history It took on a particularly violent form in the 18th century with the emergence of the Wahhabi movement 89 Whirling dervishes of the Mevlevi Order photographed by Pascal Sebah Istanbul 1870 Around the turn of the 20th century Sufi rituals and doctrines also came under sustained criticism from modernist Islamic reformers liberal nationalists and some decades later socialist movements in the Muslim world Sufi orders were accused of fostering popular superstitions resisting modern intellectual attitudes and standing in the way of progressive reforms Ideological attacks on Sufism were reinforced by agrarian and educational reforms as well as new forms of taxation which were instituted by Westernizing national governments undermining the economic foundations of Sufi orders The extent to which Sufi orders declined in the first half of the 20th century varied from country to country but by the middle of the century the very survival of the orders and traditional Sufi lifestyle appeared doubtful to many observers 90 89 However defying these predictions Sufism and Sufi orders have continued to play a major role in the Muslim world also expanding into Muslim minority countries Its ability to articulate an inclusive Islamic identity with greater emphasis on personal and small group piety has made Sufism especially well suited for contexts characterized by religious pluralism and secularist perspectives 89 In the modern world the classical interpretation of Sunni orthodoxy which sees in Sufism an essential dimension of Islam alongside the disciplines of jurisprudence and theology is represented by institutions such as Egypt s Al Azhar University and Zaytuna College with Al Azhar s current Grand Imam Ahmed el Tayeb recently defining Sunni orthodoxy as being a follower of any of the four schools of legal thought Hanafi Shafi i Maliki or Hanbali and also of the Sufism of Imam Junayd of Baghdad in doctrines manners and spiritual purification 74 Current Sufi orders include Alians Bektashi Order Mevlevi Order Ba Alawiyya Chishti Order Jerrahi Naqshbandi Mujaddidi Ni matullahi Qadiriyya Qalandariyya Sarwari Qadiriyya Shadhiliyya Suhrawardiyya Saifiah Naqshbandiah and Uwaisi The relationship of Sufi orders to modern societies is usually defined by their relationship to governments 91 Sufi Tanoura twirling in Muizz Street Cairo Turkey and Persia together have been a center for many Sufi lineages and orders The Bektashi were closely affiliated with the Ottoman Janissaries and are the heart of Turkey s large and mostly liberal Alevi population They have spread westwards to Cyprus Greece Albania Bulgaria North Macedonia Bosnia and Herzegovina Kosovo and more recently to the United States via Albania Sufism is popular in such African countries as Egypt Tunisia Algeria Sudan Morocco and Senegal where it is seen as a mystical expression of Islam 92 Sufism is traditional in Morocco but has seen a growing revival with the renewal of Sufism under contemporary spiritual teachers such as Hamza al Qadiri al Boutchichi Mbacke suggests that one reason Sufism has taken hold in Senegal is because it can accommodate local beliefs and customs which tend toward the mystical 93 The life of the Algerian Sufi master Abdelkader El Djezairi is instructive in this regard 94 Notable as well are the lives of Amadou Bamba and El Hadj Umar Tall in West Africa and Sheikh Mansur and Imam Shamil in the Caucasus In the twentieth century some Muslims have called Sufism a superstitious religion which holds back Islamic achievement in the fields of science and technology 95 A number of Westerners have embarked with varying degrees of success on the path of Sufism One of the first to return to Europe as an official representative of a Sufi order and with the specific purpose to spread Sufism in Western Europe was the Swedish born wandering Sufi Ivan Agueli Rene Guenon the French scholar became a Sufi in the early twentieth century and was known as Sheikh Abdul Wahid Yahya His manifold writings defined the practice of Sufism as the essence of Islam but also pointed to the universality of its message Spiritualists such as George Gurdjieff may or may not conform to the tenets of Sufism as understood by orthodox Muslims 96 Aims and objectives Edit The Tomb of Shah Rukn e Alam built 1324 A D is located in Multan Pakistan Known for its multitude of Sufi shrines Multan is nicknamed as The City of Saints While all Muslims believe that they are on the pathway to Allah and hope to become close to God in Paradise after death and after the Last Judgment Sufis also believe that it is possible to draw closer to God and to more fully embrace the divine presence in this life citation needed The chief aim of all Sufis is to seek the pleasing of God by working to restore within themselves the primordial state of fitra 97 To Sufis the outer law consists of rules pertaining to worship transactions marriage judicial rulings and criminal law what is often referred to broadly as qanun The inner law of Sufism consists of rules about repentance from sin the purging of contemptible qualities and evil traits of character and adornment with virtues and good character 98 Teachings Edit Man holding the hem of his beloved an expression of a Sufi s agony of longing for the divine union To the Sufi it is the transmission of divine light from the teacher s heart to the heart of the student rather than worldly knowledge that allows the adept to progress They further believe that the teacher should attempt inerrantly to follow the Divine Law 99 According to Moojan Momen one of the most important doctrines of Sufism is the concept of al Insan al Kamil the Perfect Man This doctrine states that there will always exist upon the earth a Qutb Pole or Axis of the Universe a man who is the perfect channel of grace from God to man and in a state of wilayah sanctity being under the protection of Allah The concept of the Sufi Qutb is similar to that of the Shi i Imam 100 101 However this belief puts Sufism in direct conflict with Shia Islam since both the Qutb who for most Sufi orders is the head of the order and the Imam fulfill the role of the purveyor of spiritual guidance and of Allah s grace to mankind The vow of obedience to the Shaykh or Qutb which is taken by Sufis is considered incompatible with devotion to the Imam 100 As a further example the prospective adherent of the Mevlevi Order would have been ordered to serve in the kitchens of a hospice for the poor for 1001 days prior to being accepted for spiritual instruction and a further 1 001 days in solitary retreat as a precondition of completing that instruction 102 Some teachers especially when addressing more general audiences or mixed groups of Muslims and non Muslims make extensive use of parable allegory and metaphor 103 Although approaches to teaching vary among different Sufi orders Sufism as a whole is primarily concerned with direct personal experience and as such has sometimes been compared to other non Islamic forms of mysticism e g as in the books of Hossein Nasr Many Sufi believe that to reach the highest levels of success in Sufism typically requires that the disciple live with and serve the teacher for a long period of time 104 An example is the folk story about Baha ud Din Naqshband Bukhari who gave his name to the Naqshbandi Order He is believed to have served his first teacher Sayyid Muhammad Baba As Samasi for 20 years until as Samasi died He is said to then have served several other teachers for lengthy periods of time He is said to have helped the poorer members of the community for many years and after this concluded his teacher directed him to care for animals cleaning their wounds and assisting them 105 Muhammad Edit His Muhammad s aspiration preceded all other aspirations his existence preceded nothingness and his name preceded the Pen because he existed before all peoples There is not in the horizons beyond the horizons or below the horizons anyone more elegant more noble more knowing more just more fearsome or more compassionate than the subject of this tale He is the leader of created beings the one whose name is glorious Ahmad Mansur Al Hallaj 106 The name of Muhammad in Islamic calligraphy Sufis believe the name of Muhammad is holy and sacred Devotion to Muhammad is the strongest practice within Sufism 107 Sufis have historically revered Muhammad as the prime personality of spiritual greatness The Sufi poet Saadi Shirazi stated He who chooses a path contrary to that of the prophet shall never reach the destination O Saadi do not think that one can treat that way of purity except in the wake of the chosen one 108 Rumi attributes his self control and abstinence from worldly desires as qualities attained by him through the guidance of Muhammad Rumi states I sewed my two eyes shut from desires for this world and the next this I learned from Muhammad 109 Ibn Arabi regards Muhammad as the greatest man and states Muhammad s wisdom is uniqueness fardiya because he is the most perfect existent creature of this human species For this reason the command began with him and was sealed with him He was a Prophet while Adam was between water and clay and his elemental structure is the Seal of the Prophets 110 Attar of Nishapur claimed that he praised Muhammad in such a manner that was not done before by any poet in his book the Ilahi nama 111 Fariduddin Attar stated Muhammad is the exemplar to both worlds the guide of the descendants of Adam He is the sun of creation the moon of the celestial spheres the all seeing eye The seven heavens and the eight gardens of paradise were created for him he is both the eye and the light in the light of our eyes 112 Sufis have historically stressed the importance of Muhammad s perfection and his ability to intercede The persona of Muhammad has historically been and remains an integral and critical aspect of Sufi belief and practice 107 Bayazid Bastami is recorded to have been so devoted to the sunnah of Muhammad that he refused to eat a watermelon because he could not establish that Muhammad ever ate one 113 In the 13th century a Sufi poet from Egypt Al Busiri wrote the al Kawakib ad Durriya fi Madḥ Khayr al Bariya The Celestial Lights in Praise of the Best of Creation commonly referred to as Qaṣidat al Burda Poem of the Mantle in which he extensively praised Muhammad 114 This poem is still widely recited and sung amongst Sufi groups and lay Muslims alike all over the world 114 Sufi beliefs about Muhammad Edit According to Ibn Arabi Islam is the best religion because of Muhammad 60 Ibn Arabi regards that the first entity that was brought into existence is the reality or essence of Muhammad al ḥaqiqa al Muhammadiyya Ibn Arabi regards Muhammad as the supreme human being and master of all creatures Muhammad is therefore the primary role model for human beings to aspire to emulate 60 Ibn Arabi believes that God s attributes and names are manifested in this world and that the most complete and perfect display of these divine attributes and names are seen in Muhammad 60 Ibn Arabi believes that one may see God in the mirror of Muhammad meaning that the divine attributes of God are manifested through Muhammad 60 Ibn Arabi maintains that Muhammad is the best proof of God and by knowing Muhammad one knows God 60 Ibn Arabi also maintains that Muhammad is the master of all of humanity in both this world and the afterlife In this view Islam is the best religion because Muhammad is Islam 60 Sufism and Islamic law Edit Tomb of Salim Chishti Fatehpur Sikri Agra Uttar Pradesh India Sufis believe the sharia exoteric canon tariqa order and haqiqa truth are mutually interdependent 115 Sufism leads the adept called salik or wayfarer in his suluk or road through different stations maqaam until he reaches his goal the perfect tawhid the existential confession that God is One 116 Ibn Arabi says When we see someone in this Community who claims to be able to guide others to God but is remiss in but one rule of the Sacred Law even if he manifests miracles that stagger the mind asserting that his shortcoming is a special dispensation for him we do not even turn to look at him for such a person is not a sheikh nor is he speaking the truth for no one is entrusted with the secrets of God Most High save one in whom the ordinances of the Sacred Law are preserved Jamiʿ karamat al awliyaʾ 117 118 It is related moreover that Malik one of the founders of the four schools of Sunni law was a strong proponent of combining the inward science ilm al batin of mystical knowledge with the outward science of jurisprudence 119 For example the famous twelfth century Maliki jurist and judge Qadi Iyad later venerated as a saint throughout the Iberian Peninsula narrated a tradition in which a man asked Malik about something in the inward science to which Malik replied Truly none knows the inward science except those who know the outward science When he knows the outward science and puts it into practice God shall open for him the inward science and that will not take place except by the opening of his heart and its enlightenment In other similar traditions it is related that Malik said He who practices Sufism tasawwuf without learning Sacred Law corrupts his faith tazandaqa while he who learns Sacred Law without practicing Sufism corrupts himself tafassaqa Only he who combines the two proves true tahaqqaqa 119 The Amman Message a detailed statement issued by 200 leading Islamic scholars in 2005 in Amman specifically recognized the validity of Sufism as a part of Islam This was adopted by the Islamic world s political and temporal leaderships at the Organisation of the Islamic Conference summit at Mecca in December 2005 and by six other international Islamic scholarly assemblies including the International Islamic Fiqh Academy of Jeddah in July 2006 The definition of Sufism can vary drastically between different traditions what may be intended is simple tazkiah as opposed to the various manifestations of Sufism around the Islamic world 120 Traditional Islamic thought and Sufism Edit Tomb of Sayyid Ali Hamadani Kulob Tajikistan Urs of Islamic Naqshbandi saints of Allo Mahar is celebrated on 23 March every year The literature of Sufism emphasizes highly subjective matters that resist outside observation such as the subtle states of the heart Often these resist direct reference or description with the consequence that the authors of various Sufi treatises took recourse to allegorical language For instance much Sufi poetry refers to intoxication which Islam expressly forbids This usage of indirect language and the existence of interpretations by people who had no training in Islam or Sufism led to doubts being cast over the validity of Sufism as a part of Islam Also some groups emerged that considered themselves above the sharia and discussed Sufism as a method of bypassing the rules of Islam in order to attain salvation directly This was disapproved of by traditional scholars For these and other reasons the relationship between traditional Islamic scholars and Sufism is complex and a range of scholarly opinion on Sufism in Islam has been the norm Some scholars such as Al Ghazali helped its propagation while other scholars opposed it William Chittick explains the position of Sufism and Sufis this way In short Muslim scholars who focused their energies on understanding the normative guidelines for the body came to be known as jurists and those who held that the most important task was to train the mind in achieving correct understanding came to be divided into three main schools of thought theology philosophy and Sufism This leaves us with the third domain of human existence the spirit Most Muslims who devoted their major efforts to developing the spiritual dimensions of the human person came to be known as Sufis 49 Persian influence on Sufism Edit Persians played a huge role in developing and systematising Islamic mysticism One of the first to formalise the science was Junayd of Baghdad a Persian from Baghdad 121 Other great Persian Sufi poets include Rudaki Rumi Attar Nizami Hafez Sanai Shamz Tabrizi and Jami 122 Famous poems that still resonate across the Muslim world include The Masnavi of Rumi The Bustan by Saadi The Conference of the Birds by Attar and The Divan of Hafez Neo Sufism Edit The mausoleum gongbei of Ma Laichi in Linxia City China The term neo Sufism was originally coined by Fazlur Rahman and used by other scholars to describe reformist currents among 18th century Sufi orders whose goal was to remove some of the more ecstatic and pantheistic elements of the Sufi tradition and reassert the importance of Islamic law as the basis for inner spirituality and social activism 28 26 In recent times it has been increasingly used by scholars like Mark Sedgwick in the opposite sense to describe various forms of Sufi influenced spirituality in the West in particular the deconfessionalized spiritual movements which emphasize universal elements of the Sufi tradition and de emphasize its Islamic context 26 27 Devotional practices Edit Sufi gathering engaged in dhikrThe devotional practices of Sufis vary widely Prerequisites to practice include rigorous adherence to Islamic norms ritual prayer in its five prescribed times each day the fast of Ramadan and so forth Additionally the seeker ought to be firmly grounded in supererogatory practices known from the life of Muhammad such as the sunnah prayers This is in accordance with the words attributed to God of the following a famous Hadith Qudsi My servant draws near to Me through nothing I love more than that which I have made obligatory for him My servant never ceases drawing near to Me through supererogatory works until I love him Then when I love him I am his hearing through which he hears his sight through which he sees his hand through which he grasps and his foot through which he walks It is also necessary for the seeker to have a correct creed aqidah 123 and to embrace with certainty its tenets 124 The seeker must also of necessity turn away from sins love of this world the love of company and renown obedience to satanic impulse and the promptings of the lower self The way in which this purification of the heart is achieved is outlined in certain books but must be prescribed in detail by a Sufi master The seeker must also be trained to prevent the corruption of those good deeds which have accrued to his or her credit by overcoming the traps of ostentation pride arrogance envy and long hopes meaning the hope for a long life allowing us to mend our ways later rather than immediately here and now Sufi practices while attractive to some are not a means for gaining knowledge The traditional scholars of Sufism hold it as absolutely axiomatic that knowledge of God is not a psychological state generated through breath control Thus practice of techniques is not the cause but instead the occasion for such knowledge to be obtained if at all given proper prerequisites and proper guidance by a master of the way Furthermore the emphasis on practices may obscure a far more important fact The seeker is in a sense to become a broken person stripped of all habits through the practice of in the words of Imam Al Ghazali solitude silence sleeplessness and hunger 125 Dhikr Edit Main article Dhikr The name of Allah as written on the disciple s heart according to the Sarwari Qadri Order Dhikr is the remembrance of Allah commanded in the Quran for all Muslims through a specific devotional act such as the repetition of divine names supplications and aphorisms from hadith literature and the Quran More generally dhikr takes a wide range and various layers of meaning 126 This includes dhikr as any activity in which the Muslim maintains awareness of Allah To engage in dhikr is to practice consciousness of the Divine Presence and love or to seek a state of godwariness The Quran refers to Muhammad as the very embodiment of dhikr of Allah 65 10 11 Some types of dhikr are prescribed for all Muslims and do not require Sufi initiation or the prescription of a Sufi master because they are deemed to be good for every seeker under every circumstance 127 The dhikr may slightly vary among each order Some Sufi orders 128 engage in ritualized dhikr ceremonies or sema Sema includes various forms of worship such as recitation singing the most well known being the Qawwali music of the Indian subcontinent instrumental music dance most famously the Sufi whirling of the Mevlevi order incense meditation ecstasy and trance 129 Some Sufi orders stress and place extensive reliance upon dhikr This practice of dhikr is called Dhikr e Qulb invocation of Allah within the heartbeats The basic idea in this practice is to visualize the Allah as having been written on the disciple s heart 130 Muraqaba Edit Main article Muraqaba An Algerian Sufi in Muraqabah La priere by Eugene Girardet The practice of muraqaba can be likened to the practices of meditation attested in many faith communities 131 While variation exists one description of the practice within a Naqshbandi lineage reads as follows He is to collect all of his bodily senses in concentration and to cut himself off from all preoccupation and notions that inflict themselves upon the heart And thus he is to turn his full consciousness towards God Most High while saying three times Ilahi anta maqsudi wa ridaka matlubi my God you are my Goal and Your good pleasure is what I seek Then he brings to his heart the Name of the Essence Allah and as it courses through his heart he remains attentive to its meaning which is Essence without likeness The seeker remains aware that He is Present Watchful Encompassing of all thereby exemplifying the meaning of his saying may God bless him and grant him peace Worship God as though you see Him for if you do not see Him He sees you And likewise the prophetic tradition The most favored level of faith is to know that God is witness over you wherever you may be 132 Sufi whirling Edit Main article Sufi whirling Whirling Dervishes at Rumi Fest 2007 The traditional view of most orthodox Sunni Sufi orders such as the Qadiriyya and the Chisti as well as Sunni Muslim scholars in general is that dancing with intent during dhikr or whilst listening to Sema is prohibited 133 134 135 136 Sufi whirling or Sufi spinning is a form of Sama or physically active meditation which originated among some Sufis and practised by the Sufi Dervishes of the Mevlevi order It is a customary dance performed within the sema through which dervishes also called semazens from Persian سماعزن aim to reach the source of all perfection or kemal This is sought through abandoning one s nafs egos or personal desires by listening to the music focusing on God and spinning one s body in repetitive circles which has been seen as a symbolic imitation of planets in the Solar System orbiting the sun 137 As explained by Mevlevi practitioners 138 In the symbolism of the Sema ritual the semazen s camel s hair hat sikke represents the tombstone of the ego his wide white skirt tennure represents the ego s shroud By removing his black cloak hirka he is spiritually reborn to the truth At the beginning of the Sema by holding his arms crosswise the semazen appears to represent the number one thus testifying to God s unity While whirling his arms are open his right arm is directed to the sky ready to receive God s beneficence his left hand upon which his eyes are fastened is turned toward the earth The semazen conveys God s spiritual gift to those who are witnessing the Sema Revolving from right to left around the heart the semazen embraces all humanity with love The human being has been created with love in order to love Mevlana Jalaluddin Rumi says All loves are a bridge to Divine love Yet those who have not had a taste of it do not know Singing Edit source Kurdish Dervishes practice Sufism with playing Daf in Sulaymaniyah Iraqi Kurdistan Musical instruments except the Daf have traditionally been considered as prohibited by the four orthodox Sunni schools 133 139 140 141 142 and the more orthodox Sufi tariqas also continued to prohibit their use Throughout history most Sufi saints have stressed that musical instruments are forbidden 133 143 144 However some Sufi Saints permitted and encouraged it whilst maintaining that musical instruments and female voices should not be introduced although these are common practice today 133 143 For example Qawwali was originally a form of Sufi devotional singing popular in the Indian subcontinent and is now usually performed at dargahs Sufi saint Amir Khusrau is said to have infused Persian Arabic Turkish and Indian classical melodic styles to create the genre in the 13th century The songs are classified into hamd na at manqabat marsiya or ghazal among others Nowadays the songs last for about 15 to 30 minutes are performed by a group of singers and instruments including the harmonium tabla and dholak are used Pakistani singing maestro Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan is credited with popularizing qawwali all over the world 145 Saints Edit A Persian miniature depicting the medieval saint and mystic Ahmad Ghazali d 1123 brother of the famous Abu Hamid al Ghazali d 1111 talking to a disciple from the Meetings of the Lovers 1552 Main article Wali Wali Arabic ولي plural ʾawliyaʾ أولياء is an Arabic word whose literal meanings include custodian protector helper and friend 146 In the vernacular it is most commonly used by Muslims to indicate an Islamic saint otherwise referred to by the more literal friend of God 147 148 149 In the traditional Islamic understanding of saints the saint is portrayed as someone marked by special divine favor and holiness and who is specifically chosen by God and endowed with exceptional gifts such as the ability to work miracles 150 The doctrine of saints was articulated by Islamic scholars very early on in Muslim history 151 152 13 153 and particular verses of the Quran and certain hadith were interpreted by early Muslim thinkers as documentary evidence 13 of the existence of saints Since the first Muslim hagiographies were written during the period when Sufism began its rapid expansion many of the figures who later came to be regarded as the major saints in Sunni Islam were the early Sufi mystics like Hasan of Basra d 728 Farqad Sabakhi d 729 Dawud Tai d 777 81 Rabi a al Adawiyya d 801 Maruf Karkhi d 815 and Junayd of Baghdad d 910 From the twelfth to the fourteenth century the general veneration of saints among both people and sovereigns reached its definitive form with the organization of Sufism into orders or brotherhoods 154 In the common expressions of Islamic piety of this period the saint was understood to be a contemplative whose state of spiritual perfection found permanent expression in the teaching bequeathed to his disciples 154 Visitation Edit Main article Ziyara Sufi mosque in Esfahan Iran In popular Sufism i e devotional practices that have achieved currency in world cultures through Sufi influence one common practice is to visit or make pilgrimages to the tombs of saints renowned scholars and righteous people This is a particularly common practice in South Asia where famous tombs include such saints as Sayyid Ali Hamadani in Kulob Tajikistan Afaq Khoja near Kashgar China Lal Shahbaz Qalandar in Sindh Ali Hujwari in Lahore Pakistan Bahauddin Zakariya in Multan Pakistan Moinuddin Chishti in Ajmer India Nizamuddin Auliya in Delhi India and Shah Jalal in Sylhet Bangladesh Likewise in Fez Morocco a popular destination for such pious visitation is the Zaouia Moulay Idriss II and the yearly visitation to see the current Sheikh of the Qadiri Boutchichi Tariqah Sheikh Sidi Hamza al Qadiri al Boutchichi to celebrate the Mawlid which is usually televised on Moroccan National television 155 156 This action has voiced particular condemnation by the Salafis and Wahhabis Miracles Edit Main article Karamat In Islamic mysticism karamat Arabic کرامات karamat pl of کرامة karamah lit generosity high mindedness 157 refers to supernatural wonders performed by Muslim saints In the technical vocabulary of Islamic religious sciences the singular form karama has a sense similar to charism a favor or spiritual gift freely bestowed by God 158 The marvels ascribed to Islamic saints have included supernatural physical actions predictions of the future and interpretation of the secrets of hearts 158 Historically a belief in the miracles of saints karamat al awliyaʾ literally marvels of the friends of God has been a requirement in Sunni Islam 159 Shrines Edit A dargah Persian درگاه dargah or درگه dargah also in Punjabi and Urdu is a shrine built over the grave of a revered religious figure often a Sufi saint or dervish Sufis often visit the shrine for ziyarat a term associated with religious visits and pilgrimages Dargahs are often associated with Sufi eating and meeting rooms and hostels called khanqah or hospices They usually include a mosque meeting rooms Islamic religious schools madrassas residences for a teacher or caretaker hospitals and other buildings for community purposes Theoretical perspectives Edit The works of Al Ghazali firmly defended the concepts of Sufism within the Islamic faith Traditional Islamic scholars have recognized two major branches within the practice of Sufism and use this as one key to differentiating among the approaches of different masters and devotional lineages 160 On the one hand there is the order from the signs to the Signifier or from the arts to the Artisan In this branch the seeker begins by purifying the lower self of every corrupting influence that stands in the way of recognizing all of creation as the work of God as God s active self disclosure or theophany 161 This is the way of Imam Al Ghazali and of the majority of the Sufi orders On the other hand there is the order from the Signifier to his signs from the Artisan to his works In this branch the seeker experiences divine attraction jadhba and is able to enter the order with a glimpse of its endpoint of direct apprehension of the Divine Presence towards which all spiritual striving is directed This does not replace the striving to purify the heart as in the other branch it simply stems from a different point of entry into the path This is the way primarily of the masters of the Naqshbandi and Shadhili orders 162 Contemporary scholars may also recognize a third branch attributed to the late Ottoman scholar Said Nursi and explicated in his vast Qur an commentary called the Risale i Nur This approach entails strict adherence to the way of Muhammad in the understanding that this wont or sunnah proposes a complete devotional spirituality adequate to those without access to a master of the Sufi way 163 Contributions to other domains of scholarship Edit Sufism has contributed significantly to the elaboration of theoretical perspectives in many domains of intellectual endeavor For instance the doctrine of subtle centers or centers of subtle cognition known as Lataif e sitta addresses the matter of the awakening of spiritual intuition 164 In general these subtle centers or lata if are thought of as faculties that are to be purified sequentially in order to bring the seeker s wayfaring to completion A concise and useful summary of this system from a living exponent of this tradition has been published by Muhammad Emin Er 160 Sufi psychology has influenced many areas of thinking both within and outside of Islam drawing primarily upon three concepts Ja far al Sadiq both an imam in the Shia tradition and a respected scholar and link in chains of Sufi transmission in all Islamic sects held that human beings are dominated by a lower self called the nafs self ego person a faculty of spiritual intuition called the qalb heart and ruh soul These interact in various ways producing the spiritual types of the tyrant dominated by nafs the person of faith and moderation dominated by the spiritual heart and the person lost in love for God dominated by the ruh 165 Of note with regard to the spread of Sufi psychology in the West is Robert Frager a Sufi teacher authorized in the Khalwati Jerrahi order Frager was a trained psychologist born in the United States who converted to Islam in the course of his practice of Sufism and wrote extensively on Sufism and psychology 166 Sufi cosmology and Sufi metaphysics are also noteworthy areas of intellectual accomplishment 167 Prominent Sufis EditSee also List of Sufi saints and List of Sufis Abdul Qadir Gilani Edit Geometric tiling on the underside of the dome of Hafiz Shirazi s tomb in Shiraz Abdul Qadir Gilani 1077 1166 was a Mesopotamian born Hanbali jurist and prominent Sufi scholar based in Baghdad with Persian roots Qadiriyya was his patronym Gilani spent his early life in Na if a town just East of Baghdad also the town of his birth There he pursued the study of Hanbali law Abu Saeed Mubarak Makhzoomi gave Gilani lessons in fiqh He was given lessons about hadith by Abu Bakr ibn Muzaffar He was given lessons about Tafsir by Abu Muhammad Ja far a commentator His Sufi spiritual instructor was Abu l Khair Hammad ibn Muslim al Dabbas After completing his education Gilani left Baghdad He spent twenty five years as a reclusive wanderer in the desert regions of Iraq In 1127 Gilani returned to Baghdad and began to preach to the public He joined the teaching staff of the school belonging to his own teacher Abu Saeed Mubarak Makhzoomi and was popular with students In the morning he taught hadith and tafsir and in the afternoon he held discourse on the science of the heart and the virtues of the Quran He is the founder of Qadiri order 168 Abul Hasan ash Shadhili Edit Abul Hasan ash Shadhili died 1258 the founder of the Shadhiliyya order introduced dhikr jahri the remembrance of God out loud as opposed to the silent dhikr He taught that his followers need not abstain from what Islam has not forbidden but to be grateful for what God has bestowed upon them 169 in contrast to the majority of Sufis who preach to deny oneself and to destroy the ego self nafs Order of Patience Tariqus Sabr Shadhiliyya is formulated to be Order of Gratitude Tariqush Shukr Imam Shadhili also gave eighteen valuable hizbs litanies to his followers out of which the notable Hizb al Bahr 170 is recited worldwide even today Ahmad Al Tijani Edit A manuscript of Sufi Islamic theology Shams al Ma arif The Book of the Sun of Gnosis was written by the Algerian Sufi master Ahmad al Buni during the 12th century Ahmed Tijani 1737 1815 in Arabic سيدي أحمد التجاني Sidi Ahmed Tijani is the founder of the Tijaniyya Sufi order He was born in a Berber family 171 172 173 in Ain Madhi present day Algeria and died at the age of 78 in Fez 174 175 Bayazid Bastami Edit Bayazid Bastami is a recognized and influential Sufi personality from Shattari order citation needed Bastami was born in 804 in Bastam 176 Bayazid is regarded for his devout commitment to the Sunnah and his dedication to fundamental Islamic principals and practices Sayyed Badiuddin Edit Sayyid Badiuddin 177 was a Sufi saint who founded the Madariyya Silsila 178 He was also known by the title Qutb ul Madar 179 He hailed originally from Syria and was born in Aleppo 177 to a Syed Hussaini family 180 His teacher was Bayazid Tayfur al Bistami 181 After making a pilgrimage to Medina he journeyed to India to spread the Islamic faith where he founded the Madariyya order 179 His tomb is at Makanpur 182 Bawa Muhaiyaddeen Edit Bawa Muhaiyaddeen died 1986 was a Sufi Sheikh from Sri Lanka He was found by a group of religious pilgrims in the early 1900s meditating in the jungles of Kataragama in Sri Lanka Ceylon Awed and inspired by his personality and the depth of his wisdom he was invited to a nearby village Thereafter people from various walks of life from paupers to prime ministers belonging to various religious and ethnic backgrounds came to see Sheikh Bawa Muhaiyaddeen to seek comfort guidance and help Sheikh Bawa Muhaiyaddeen spent the rest of his life preaching healing and comforting the many souls that came to see him Ibn Arabi Edit Ibn Arabi or Ibn al Arabi AH 561 AH 638 July 28 1165 November 10 1240 is considered to be one of the most important Sufi masters although he never founded any order tariqa His writings especially al Futuhat al Makkiyya and Fusus al hikam have been studied within all the Sufi orders as the clearest expression of tawhid Divine Unity though because of their recondite nature they were often only given to initiates Later those who followed his teaching became known as the school of wahdat al wujud the Oneness of Being He himself considered his writings to have been divinely inspired As he expressed the Way to one of his close disciples his legacy is that you should never ever abandon your servant hood ʿubudiyya and that there may never be in your soul a longing for any existing thing 183 Junayd of Baghdad Edit Junayd al Baghdadi 830 910 was one of the great early Sufis His practice of Sufism was considered dry and sober unlike some of the more ecstatic behaviours of other Sufis during his life His order was Junaidia which links to the golden chain of many Sufi orders He laid the groundwork for sober mysticism in contrast to that of God intoxicated Sufis like al Hallaj Bayazid Bastami and Abusaeid Abolkheir During the trial of al Hallaj his former disciple the Caliph of the time demanded his fatwa In response he issued this fatwa From the outward appearance he is to die and we judge according to the outward appearance and God knows better He is referred to by Sufis as Sayyid ut Taifa i e the leader of the group He lived and died in the city of Baghdad Mansur Al Hallaj Edit Mansur Al Hallaj died 922 is renowned for his claim Ana l Haqq I am The Truth his ecstatic Sufism and state trial His refusal to recant this utterance which was regarded as apostasy led to a long trial He was imprisoned for 11 years in a Baghdad prison before being tortured and publicly dismembered on March 26 922 He is still revered by Sufis for his willingness to embrace torture and death rather than recant It is said that during his prayers he would say O Lord You are the guide of those who are passing through the Valley of Bewilderment If I am a heretic enlarge my heresy 184 Moinuddin Chishti Edit A Mughal era Sufi prayer book from the Chishti order Moinuddin Chishti was born in 1141 and died in 1236 Also known as Gharib Nawaz Benefactor of the Poor he is the most famous Sufi saint of the Chishti Order Moinuddin Chishti introduced and established the order in the Indian subcontinent The initial spiritual chain or silsila of the Chishti order in India comprising Moinuddin Chishti Bakhtiyar Kaki Baba Farid Nizamuddin Auliya each successive person being the disciple of the previous one constitutes the great Sufi saints of Indian history Moinuddin Chishti turned towards India reputedly after a dream in which Muhammad blessed him to do so After a brief stay at Lahore he reached Ajmer along with Sultan Shahab ud Din Muhammad Ghori and settled down there In Ajmer he attracted a substantial following acquiring a great deal of respect amongst the residents of the city Moinuddin Chishti practiced the Sufi Sulh e Kul peace to all concept to promote understanding between Muslims and non Muslims 185 Rabi a Al Adawiyya Edit Depiction of Rabi a grinding grain from a Persian dictionary Rabi a al Adawiyya or Rabia of Basra died 801 was a mystic who represents countercultural elements of Sufism especially with regards to the status and power of women Prominent Sufi leader Hasan of Basra is said to have castigated himself before her superior merits and sincere virtues 186 Rabi a was born of very poor origin but was captured by bandits at a later age and sold into slavery She was however released by her master when he awoke one night to see the light of sanctity shining above her head 187 Rabi a al Adawiyya is known for her teachings and emphasis on the centrality of the love of God to a holy life 188 She is said to have proclaimed running down the streets of Basra Iraq O God If I worship You for fear of Hell burn me in Hell and if I worship You in hope of Paradise exclude me from Paradise But if I worship You for Your Own sake grudge me not Your everlasting Beauty Rabi a al Adawiyya There are different opinions about the wisal and resting place of Bibi Rabia Some believe her resting place to be Jerusalem whereas other believe it as Basra 189 190 Notable works EditMain article Sufi literature Among the most popular Sufi works are 191 192 193 Al Ta arruf li Madhhab Ahl al Tasawwuf ar The Exploration of the Path of Sufis by Abu Bakr al Kalabadhi d ca 380 990 a popular text about which Umar al Suhrawardi d 632 1234 is reported to have said if it were not for the Ta arruf we would know nothing about Sufism 194 Qut al Qulub ar The Nourishment of Hearts by Abu Talib al Makki d 386 996 Hilyat al Awliya wa Tabaqat al Asfiya ar The Adornment of the Saints and the Generations of the Pure by Abu Na im al Isfahani d 430 1038 which is a voluminous collection of biographies of Sufis and other early Muslim religious leaders 195 Al Risala al Qushayriyya The Treatise of al Qushayri by al Qushayri d 465 1072 Ihya Ulum al Din The Revival of the Sciences of Religion by al Ghazali d 505 1111 Al Hikam al Ata iyya ar The Aphorisms of Ibn Ata Allah by Ibn Ata Allah al Sakandari d 709 1309 Reception EditPersecution of Sufi Muslims Edit Main article Persecution of Sufis See also Sectarian violence among Muslims and Sufi Salafi relations Muslim pilgrims gathered around the Ḍariẖ covering the grave qabr of the 13th century Sufi saint Lal Shahbaz Qalandar shrine located in Sehwan Sharif Pakistan on 16 February 2017 ISIS claimed responsibility for a suicide attack on the shrine which resulted in the deaths of 90 people 196 197 198 The persecution of Sufism and Sufi Muslims over the course of centuries has included acts of religious discrimination persecution and violence such as the destruction of Sufi shrines tombs and mosques suppression of Sufi orders and discrimination against adherents of Sufism in a number of Muslim majority countries 3 The Republic of Turkey banned all Sufi orders and abolished their institutions in 1925 after Sufis opposed the new secular order The Islamic Republic of Iran has harassed Shia Sufis reportedly for their lack of support for the government doctrine of governance of the jurist i e that the supreme Shiite jurist should be the nation s political leader In most other Muslim majority countries attacks on Sufis and especially their shrines have come from adherents of puritanical and revivalist Islamic movements Salafis and Wahhabis who believe that practices such as visitation to and veneration of the tombs of Sufi saints celebration of the birthdays of Sufi saints and dhikr remembrance of God ceremonies are bid ah impure innovation and shirk polytheistic 3 199 200 201 202 In Egypt at least 305 people were killed and more than 100 wounded during the November 2017 Islamic terrorist attack on a Sufi mosque located in Sinai it is considered one of the worst terrorist attacks in the history of modern Egypt 199 203 Most of the victims were Sufis 199 203 Perception outside Islam Edit A choreographed Sufi performance on a Friday in Sudan Sufi mysticism has long exercised a fascination upon the Western world and especially its Orientalist scholars 204 In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries European orientalists treated Sufism and Islam as distinct subjects leading to an over emphasis on the translation of classical Sufi mystical literature in the academic study of Sufism at the expense of the lived practises in Islam as well as a separation of Sufism from its Islamic roots in the development of Sufism as a religious form in the West 205 206 Figures like Rumi have become well known in the United States where Sufism is perceived as a peaceful and apolitical form of Islam 204 207 Hossein Nasr states that the preceding theories are false according to the point of view of Sufism 208 The 19th century Scottish explorer David Livingstone said of Sufism Sufi practices are merely attempts to attain psychic states for their own sake though it is claimed the pursuit represents seeking closeness to God and that the achieved magical powers are gifts of advanced spirituality For several reasons Sufism was generally looked upon as heretical among Muslim scholars Among the deviations introduced by the Sufis was the tendency to believe the daily prayers to be only for the masses who had not achieved deeper spiritual knowledge but could be disregarded by those more advanced spiritually The Sufis introduced the practice of congregational Dhikr or religious oral exercises consisting of a continuous repetition of the name of God These practices were unknown to early Islam and consequently regarded as Bid ah meaning unfounded innovation Also many of the Sufis adopted the practice of total Tawakkul or complete trust or dependence on God by avoiding all kinds of labor or commerce refusing medical care when they were ill and living by begging 209 A 17th century miniature of Nasreddin a Seljuk satirical figure currently in the Topkapi Palace Museum Library The Islamic Institute in Mannheim Germany which works towards the integration of Europe and Muslims sees Sufism as particularly suited for interreligious dialogue and intercultural harmonisation in democratic and pluralist societies it has described Sufism as a symbol of tolerance and humanism nondogmatic flexible and non violent 210 According to Philip Jenkins a professor at Baylor University the Sufis are much more than tactical allies for the West they are potentially the greatest hope for pluralism and democracy within Muslim nations Likewise several governments and organisations have advocated the promotion of Sufism as a means of combating intolerant and violent strains of Islam 211 For example the Chinese and Russian 212 governments openly favor Sufism as the best means of protecting against Islamist subversion The British government especially following the 7 July 2005 London bombings has favoured Sufi groups in its battle against Muslim extremist currents The influential RAND Corporation an American think tank issued a major report titled Building Moderate Muslim Networks which urged the US government to form links with and bolster 213 Muslim groups that opposed Islamist extremism The report stressed the Sufi role as moderate traditionalists open to change and thus as allies against violence 214 215 News organisations such as the BBC Economist and Boston Globe have also seen Sufism as a means to deal with violent Muslim extremists 216 Idries Shah states that Sufism is universal in nature its roots predating the rise of Islam and Christianity 217 He quotes Suhrawardi as saying that this Sufism was a form of wisdom known to and practiced by a succession of sages including the mysterious ancient Hermes of Egypt and that Ibn al Farid stresses that Sufism lies behind and before systematization that our wine existed before what you call the grape and the vine the school and the system 218 Shah s views have however been rejected by modern scholars 21 Such modern trends of neo Sufis in Western countries allow non Muslims to receive instructions on following the Sufi path not without opposition by Muslims who consider such instruction outside the sphere of Islam 219 Similarities with Eastern religions Edit See also Hindu Islamic relations Sufism Numerous comparisons have been made between Sufism and the mystic components of some Eastern religions The tenth century Persian polymath Al Biruni in his book Tahaqeeq Ma Lilhind Min Makulat Makulat Fi Aliaqbal Am Marzula Critical Study of Indian Speech Rationally Acceptable or Rejected discusses the similarity of some Sufism concepts with aspects of Hinduism such as Atma with ruh tanasukh with reincarnation Mokhsha with Fanafillah Ittihad with Nirvana union between Paramatma in Jivatma Avatar or Incarnation with Hulul Vedanta with Wahdatul Ujud Mujahadah with Sadhana citation needed Other scholars have likewise compared the Sufi concept of Waḥdat al Wujud to Advaita Vedanta 220 Fanaa to Samadhi 221 Muraqaba to Dhyana and tariqa to the Noble Eightfold Path 222 The ninth century Iranian mystic Bayazid Bostami is alleged to have imported certain concepts from Hindusim into his version of Sufism under the conceptual umbrella of baqaa meaning perfection 223 Ibn al Arabi and Mansur al Hallaj both referred to Muhammad as having attained perfection and titled him as Al Insan al Kamil 224 225 226 227 228 229 The Sufism concept of hulul has similarly been compared with the idea of Ishvaratva that God dwells in some creatures in Hinduism and Buddhism and godhood of Jesus in Christianity 230 Influence on Judaism Edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Jewish philosophyThere is evidence that Sufism did influence the development of some schools of Jewish philosophy and ethics In the first writing of this kind we see Kitab al Hidayah ila Fara iḍ al Ḳulub Duties of the Heart of Bahya ibn Paquda This book was translated by Judah ibn Tibbon into Hebrew under the title Chovot HaLevavot 231 The precepts prescribed by the Torah number 613 only those dictated by the intellect are innumerable Kremer Alfred Von 1868 Notice sur Sha rani Journal Asiatique 11 6 258 In the ethical writings of the Sufis Al Kusajri and Al Harawi there are sections which treat of the same subjects as those treated in the Chovot ha Lebabot and which bear the same titles e g Bab al Tawakkul Bab al Taubah Bab al Muḥasabah Bab al Tawaḍu Bab al Zuhd In the ninth gate Baḥya directly quotes sayings of the Sufis whom he calls Perushim However the author of the Chovot HaLevavot did not go so far as to approve of the asceticism of the Sufis although he showed a marked predilection for their ethical principles Abraham Maimonides the son of the Jewish philosopher Maimonides believed that Sufi practices and doctrines continue the tradition of the biblical prophets 232 Abraham Maimonides principal work was originally composed in Judeo Arabic and entitled כתאב כפאיה אלעאבדין Kitab Kifayah al Abidin A Comprehensive Guide for the Servants of God From the extant surviving portion it is conjectured that the treatise was three times as long as his father s Guide for the Perplexed In the book he evidences a great appreciation for and affinity to Sufism Followers of his path continued to foster a Jewish Sufi form of pietism for at least a century and he is rightly considered the founder of this pietistic school which was centered in Egypt 233 The followers of this path which they called Hasidism not to be confused with the later Jewish Hasidic movement or Sufism Tasawwuf practiced spiritual retreats solitude fasting and sleep deprivation The Jewish Sufis maintained their own brotherhood guided by a religious leader like a Sufi sheikh 234 The Jewish Encyclopedia in its entry on Sufism states that the revival of Jewish mysticism in Muslim countries is probably due to the spread of Sufism in the same geographical areas The entry details many parallels to Sufic concepts found in the writings of prominent Kabbalists during the Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain 235 236 Culture EditLiterature Edit The 13th century Persian poet Rumi is considered one of the most influential figures of Sufism as well as one of the greatest poets of all time He has become one of the most widely read poets in the United States thanks largely to the interpretative translations published by Coleman Barks 237 Elif Safak s novel The Forty Rules of Love is a fictionalized account of Rumi s encounter with the Persian dervish Shams Tabrizi 238 Allama Iqbal one of the greatest Urdu poets has discussed Sufism philosophy and Islam in his English work The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam 239 Visual art Edit Main article Islamic art Many painters and visual artists have explored the Sufi motif through various disciplines One of the outstanding pieces in the Brooklyn Museum s Islamic gallery has been the museum s associate curator of Islamic art is a large 19th or early 20th century portrayal of the Battle of Karbala painted by Abbas Al Musavi 240 which was a violent episode in the disagreement between the Sunni and Shia branches of Islam during this battle Husayn ibn Ali a pious grandson of the Islamic prophet Muhammad died and is considered a martyr in Islam 241 In July 2016 at International Sufi Festival 242 held in Noida Film City UP India H E Abdul Basit who was the High Commissioner of Pakistan to India at that time while inaugurating the exhibition of Farkhananda Khan Fida said There is no barrier of words or explanation about the paintings or rather there is a soothing message of brotherhood peace in Sufism See also EditAshʿari Barakah Index of Sufism related articles List of modern Sufi scholars List of Sufi saints Maturidi Shab e barat Tawassul Tazkiah World Sufi forum Karwan I IslamiReferences EditNotes Edit The following are among definitions of Sufism quoted in an early Sufi treatise by Abu Nasr as Sarraj Sufism is that you should be with God without any attachment Junayd of Baghdad Sufism consists of abandoning oneself to God in accordance with what God wills Ruwaym ibn Ahmad Sufism is that you should not possess anything nor should anything possess you Samnun Sufism consists of entering every exalted quality khulq and leaving behind every despicable quality Abu Muhammad al Jariri Sufism is that at each moment the servant should be in accord with what is most appropriate awla at that moment Amr ibn Uthman al Makki Citations Edit Qamar ul Huda 2003 Striving for Divine Union Spiritual Exercises for Suhraward Sufis RoutledgeCurzon pp 1 4 ISBN 9781135788438 Refworld Iran Information on Sufism or Tasawwuf Islamic mysticism in Iran a b c Cook David May 2015 Mysticism in Sufi Islam Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Religion Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199340378 013 51 ISBN 9780199340378 Archived from the original on 28 November 2018 Retrieved 4 January 2022 Anjum Tanvir 2006 Sufism in History and its Relationship with Power Islamic Studies 45 2 221 268 ISSN 0578 8072 JSTOR 20839016 Sebottendorff Baron Rudolf von 2013 01 17 Secret Practices of the Sufi Freemasons The Islamic Teachings at the Heart of Alchemy Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 62055 001 4 Belhaj Abdessamad 2013 Legal Knowledge by Application Sufism as Islamic Legal Hermeneutics in the 10th 12th Centuries Studia Islamica 108 1 82 107 doi 10 1163 19585705 12341276 ISSN 0585 5292 JSTOR 43577536 Knysh Alexander D 2006 Ṣufism and the Qurʾan In McAuliffe Jane Dammen ed Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan Vol V Leiden Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1875 3922 q3 EQCOM 00196 ISBN 90 04 14743 8 Milani Milad 2012 The Cultural Products of Global Sufism In Cusack Carol Norman Alex eds Handbook of New Religions and Cultural Production Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 4 Leiden Brill Publishers pp 659 680 doi 10 1163 9789004226487 027 ISBN 978 90 04 22187 1 ISSN 1874 6691 a b Martin Lings What is Sufism Lahore Suhail Academy 2005 first imp 1983 second imp 1999 p 15 Halligan Fredrica R 2014 Sufis and Sufism In Leeming David A ed Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion 2nd ed Boston Springer Verlag pp 1750 1751 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 6086 2 666 ISBN 978 1 4614 6087 9 Titus Burckhardt Art of Islam Language and Meaning Bloomington World Wisdom 2009 p 223 Seyyed Hossein Nasr The Essential Seyyed Hossein Nasr ed William C Chittick Bloomington World Wisdom 2007 p 74 a b c d e f g h Massington L Radtke B Chittick W C Jong F de Lewisohn L Zarcone Th Ernst C Aubin Francoise Hunwick J O 2012 2000 Taṣawwuf In Bosworth C E van Donzel E J Heinrichs W P eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Vol 10 Leiden Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam COM 1188 ISBN 978 90 04 11211 7 Martin Lings What is Sufism Lahore Suhail Academy 2005 first imp 1983 second imp 1999 p 12 Mystics on the other hand and Sufism is a kind of mysticism are by definition concerned above all with the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven Compare Nasr Seyyed Hossein 2007 Chittick William C ed The Essential Seyyed Hossein Nasr The perennial philosophy series Bloomington Indiana World Wisdom Inc p 74 ISBN 9781933316383 Retrieved 2017 06 24 Sufism is the esoteric or inward dimension of Islam Islamic esoterism is however not exhausted by Sufism but the main manifestation and the most important and central crystallization of Islamic esotericism is to be found in Sufism Shah 1964 2014 p 30 According to Idries Shah Sufism is as old as Adam and is the essence of all religions monotheistic or not See Perennial philosophy Chittick 2007 p 22 a b Tariqa Encyclopedia Britannica 2014 02 04 Retrieved 29 May 2015 G R Hawting 2002 The First Dynasty of Islam The Umayyad Caliphate 661 750 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 203 13700 0 Nasr Seyyed Hossein 2008 The garden of truth the vision and promise of Sufism Islam s mystical tradition pp 45 3736 45 3736 ISBN 978 0061625992 a b c d Schimmel Annemarie Sufism Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2018 06 26 Opposed to the dry casuistry of the lawyer divines the mystics nevertheless scrupulously observed the commands of the divine law the mystics belonged to all schools of Islamic law and theology of the times a b Bos Matthijs van den 2002 Mystic Regimes Sufism and the State in Iran from the Late Qajar Era to the Islamic Republic Brill ISBN 978 90 04 12815 6 A Prayer for Spiritual Elevation and Protection 2007 by Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Suha Taji Farouki Global sufism boundaries structures and politics Francesco Piraino Mark J Sedgwick London 2019 ISBN 978 1 78738 134 6 OCLC 1091678717 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Newlon Brendan 2017 07 01 Nationalism Language and Muslim Exceptionalism American Journal of Islam and Society 34 3 156 158 doi 10 35632 ajis v34i3 789 ISSN 2690 3741 a b c Howell Julia Sufism in the Modern World Oxford Islamic Studies Online a b Sedgwick Mark 2012 Neo Sufism In Hammer Olav Rothstein Mikael eds The Cambridge Companion to New Religious Movements Cambridge University Press a b Voll John O 2009 Sufism Ṣufi Orders In Esposito John L ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World Oxford Oxford University Press 1 The Dabistan and Orientalist Views of Sufism 33 Sufism East and West BRILL pp 33 52 2019 03 19 doi 10 1163 9789004393929 003 ISBN 9789004393929 S2CID 199203524 retrieved 2022 08 02 The Cambridge companion to Sufism Lloyd V J Ridgeon New York NY 2015 ISBN 978 1 107 01830 3 OCLC 890107285 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c d e Chittick William C 2009 Sufism Ṣufi Thought and Practice In Esposito John L ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World Oxford Oxford University Press a b c d Ernst Carl W 2004 Tasawwuf In Martin Richard C ed Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World MacMillan Reference USA a b Rashid Ahmad Jullundhry Qur anic Exegesis in Classical Literature pg 56 New Westminster The Other Press 2010 ISBN 9789675062551 The Naqshbandi Sufi Tradition Guidebook of Daily Practices and Devotions p 83 Muhammad Hisham Kabbani Shaykh Muhammad Hisham Kabbani 2004 Sufism in Islam Mac abc se Archived from the original on April 17 2012 Retrieved 13 August 2012 The Bloomsbury Companion to Islamic Studies by Clinton Bennett p 328 Origin of sufism Qadiri Sufi Way 2003 Archived from the original on 27 January 2021 Retrieved 13 August 2012 Abdurahman Abdullahi Baadiyow 2017 Making Sense of Somali History Volume 1 Adonis amp Abbey Publishers p 70 ISBN 9781909112797 Taking Initiation Bay ah Naqshbandi Sufi Way Muhammad Hisham Kabbani June 2004 Classical Islam and the Naqshbandi Sufi tradition Islamic Supreme Council of America p 644 ISBN 9781930409231 Ernst Carl W 2003 Tasawwuf Sufism Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World full citation needed Taking Initiation Bay ah The Naqshbandiyya Nazimiyya Sufi Order of America Sufism and Spirituality naqshbandi org Retrieved 2017 05 12 Shaykh Tariq Knecht 2018 11 09 Journal of a Sufi Odyssey Tauba Press ISBN 9781450554398 Khalifa Ali bin Abu Talib Ali The Father of Sufism Alim org Retrieved 27 September 2014 Brown Jonathan A C 2014 Misquoting Muhammad The Challenge and Choices of Interpreting the Prophet s Legacy Oneworld Publications p 58 ISBN 978 1780744209 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Emara Nancy 2002 08 30 Sufism A Tradition of Transcendental Mysticism IslamOnline net Archived from the original on July 24 2009 Massignon Louis Essai sur les origines du lexique technique de la mystique musulmane Paris Vrin 1954 p 104 Imam Birgivi The Path of Muhammad WorldWisdom ISBN 0 941532 68 2 a b Chittick 2007 Nasr Hossein 1993 An Introduction to Islamic Cosmological Doctrines SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 1515 3 Jami Persian poet and scholar Encyclopedia Britannica a b c Masterton Rebecca 2015 A Comparative Exploration of the Spiritual Authority of the Awiliya in the Shi i and Sufi Traditions American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences International Institute of Islamic Thought 32 1 49 74 doi 10 35632 ajiss v32i1 260 S2CID 166309522 Karamustafa Ahmet 2007 Sufism The Formative Period Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0520252691 Ridgeon Lloyd 2010 Morals and Mysticism in Persian Sufism A History of Sufi Futuwwat in Iran Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 97058 0 p 32 Ibn Khallikan s Biographical Dictionary translated by William McGuckin de Slane Paris Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland Sold by Institut de France and Royal Library of Belgium Vol 3 p 209 Ahmet T Karamustafa Sufism The Formative Period pg 58 Berkeley University of California Press 2007 Carl W Ernst Bruce B Lawrence Sufi Martyrs of Love The Chishti Order in South Asia and Beyond Palgrave Macmillan 2002 p 22 ISBN 1403960275 9781403960276 Glasse 2008 p 499 Bin Jamil Zeno Muhammad 1996 The Pillars of Islam amp Iman Darussalam pp 19 ISBN 978 9960 897 12 7 a b c d e f g Fitzpatrick amp Walker 2014 p 446 Spiritual Healing and Sufi Practices ResearchGate Retrieved 2021 06 12 ʿAli Shiʿism Sufism and the chivalric orders Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 06 12 Kabbani Muhammad Hisham 2004 Classical Islam and the Naqshbandi Sufi Tradition Islamic Supreme Council of America p 557 ISBN 978 1 930409 23 1 Dagli C Ayduz S 2014 The Oxford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Science and Technology in Islam Vereinigtes Konigreich Oxford University Press p 267 a b Peacock A C S 2019 Islam Literature and Society in Mongol Anatolia Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781108582124 ISBN 9781108582124 S2CID 211657444 a b Trimingham J Spencer 1998 The Sufi Orders in Islam Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512058 5 Mario Alves da Silva Filho 2012 A Mistica Islamica emTerrae Brasilis o Sufismo e as Ordens Sufis em Sao Paulo Islamic Mystique in Terrae Brasilis Sufism and Sufi Orders in Sao Paulo PDF Dissertation Master of Science in Religion in Portuguese Sao Paulo PONTIFICIA UNIVERSIDADE CAToLICA DE SAO PAULO PUC SP Archived from the original PDF on 2015 04 14 Daftary Farhad 2013 A History of Shi i Islam New York NY I B Tauris and Co ltd page 28 ISBN 9780300035315 4 8 2015 Michael S Pittman Classical Spirituality in Contemporary America The Confluence and Contribution of G I Gurdjieff and Sufism Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 441 13113 3 Faridi Shaikh Shahidullah The Meaning of Tasawwuf masud co uk Retrieved 2017 05 12 Ghazzali Ghazzali al Ghazali Abu Hamid Muhammad McCarthy Richard Joseph 1999 Deliverance from Error An Annotated Translation of Al Munqidh Min Al Dal al and Other Relevant Works of Al Ghaz al i Fons Vitae ISBN 978 1 887752 27 5 Seyyed Hossein Nasr The Essential Seyyed Hossein Nasr ed William C Chittick Bloomington World Wisdom 2007 p 76 a b Martin Lings What is Sufism Lahore Suhail Academy 2005 first imp 1983 second imp 1999 p 16 a b Profile of Sheikh Ahmad Muhammad Al Tayyeb on The Muslim 500 The Muslim 500 The World s Most Influential Muslims Archived from the original on 2017 06 06 Retrieved 2017 06 04 Massington L Radtke B Chittick W C Jong F de Lewisohn L Zarcone Th Ernst C Aubin Francoise 2012 Taṣawwuf In P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 2nd ed Brill doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam COM 1188 q v Hanafi Hanbali and Maliki and under mysticism in for each a b Titus Burckhardt Introduction to Sufi Doctrine Bloomington World Wisdom 2008 p 4 note 2 Martin Lings What is Sufism Lahore Suhail Academy 2005 first imp 1983 second imp 1999 pp 16 17 Rozina Ali The Erasure of Islam from the Poetry of Rumi The New Yorker Jan 5 2017 Is orthodox Islam possible without Sufism Shaykh Abdal Hakim Murad Dr Timothy Winter youtube com 13 May 2015 Archived from the original on 2021 12 11 Dr Jonathan A C Brown What is Sufism youtube com 13 May 2015 For the pre modern era see Vincent J Cornell Realm of the Saint Power and Authority in Moroccan Sufism ISBN 978 0 292 71209 6 and for the colonial era Knut Vikyr Sufi and Scholar on the Desert Edge Muhammad B Oali Al Sanusi and His Brotherhood ISBN 978 0 8101 1226 1 Leonard Lewisohn The Legacy of Medieval Persian Sufism Khaniqahi Nimatullahi Publications 1992 Seyyed Hossein Nasr Islam Religion History and Civilization HarperSanFrancisco 2003 Ch 1 Dina Le Gall A Culture of Sufism Naqshbandis in the Ottoman World 1450 1700 ISBN 978 0 7914 6245 4 Arthur F Buehler Sufi Heirs of the Prophet The Indian Naqshbandiyya and the Rise of the Mediating Sufi Shaykh ISBN 978 1 57003 783 2 The natural and architectural ensemble of Blagaj UNESCO World Heritage Centre Tentative List of Bosnia and Herzegovina 11 December 2007 Retrieved 2 May 2020 Tekke in Blagaj on the Buna Spring the natural and architectural ensemble of Blagaj Commission to Preserve National Monuments of Bosnia and Herzegovina Tekke in Blagaj on the Buna Spring the natural and architectural ensemble of Blagaj 9 May 2005 Retrieved 2 May 2020 Victor Danner The Islamic Tradition An introduction Amity House February 1988 a b c Voll John O 2009 Ṣufi Orders In John L Esposito ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic 9 3World Oxford Oxford University Press Knysh Alexander 2010 Sufism In Irwin Robert ed The New Cambridge History of Islam Volume 4 Islamic Cultures and Societies to the End of the Eighteenth Century Cambridge University Press pp 60 61 Masatoshi Kisaichi The Burhami order and Islamic resurgence in modern Egypt Popular Movements and Democratization in the Islamic World pg 57 Part of the New Horizons in Islamic Studies series Ed Masatoshi Kisaichi London Routledge 2006 ISBN 9781134150618 Babou 2007 p 184 6 Mbacke amp Hunwick 2005 Chodkiewicz 1995 Introduction Sufism Oxford Islamic Studies Online Retrieved 26 August 2015 Googelberg compiled form Wikipedia entries and published by Dr Islam Lulu com ISBN 978 1 291 21521 2 Abul Hasan ash Shadhili 1993 The School of the Shadhdhuliyyah Islamic Texts Society ISBN 978 0 946621 57 6 Muhammad Emin Er Laws of the Heart A Practical Introduction to the Sufi Path Shifa Publishers 2008 ISBN 978 0 9815196 1 6 Abdullah Nur ad Din Durkee The School of the Shadhdhuliyyah Volume One Orisons see also Shaykh Muhammad Hisham Kabbani Classical Islam and the Naqshbandi Sufi Tradition ISBN 978 1 930409 23 1 which reproduces the spiritual lineage silsila of a living Sufi master a b Momen Moojan 1985 An Introduction to Shiʻi Islam The History and Doctrines of Twelver Shiʻism Yale University Press p 209 ISBN 978 0 300 03531 5 Mohammad Najib ur Rehman Madzillah ul Aqdus 2015 Sultan Bahoo The Life and Teachings Sultan ul Faqr Publications ISBN 978 969 9795 18 3 See Muhammad Emin Er Laws of the Heart A Practical Introduction to the Sufi Path Shifa Publishers 2008 ISBN 978 0 9815196 1 6 for a detailed description of the practices and preconditions of this sort of spiritual retreat See examples provided by Muzaffar Ozak in Irshad Wisdom of a Sufi Master addressed to a general audience rather than specifically to his own students Knysh Alexander Sufism Islamic cultures and societies to the end of the eighteenth century Irwin Robert 1946 Cambridge ISBN 9781139056144 OCLC 742957142 Shaykh Muhammad Hisham Kabbani Classical Islam and the Naqshbandi Sufi Tradition ISBN 978 1 930409 23 1 Ernst 2010 p 125 a b Ernst 2010 p 130 Aavani Gholamreza Glorification of the Prophet Muhammad in the Poems of Sa adi p 4 Gamard 2004 p 169 Arabi Ibn The Seals of Wisdom Fusus al Hikam Aisha Bewley Attar Fariduddin Ilahi nama The Book of God John Andrew Boyle translator Thou knowest that none of the poets have sung such praise save only I Attar Fariduddin Ilahi nama The Book of God John Andrew Boyle translator The Signs of a Sincere Lover PDF p 91 a b Suzanne Pinckney Stetkevych 2010 The Mantle Odes Arabic Praise Poems to the Prophet Muhammad Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253354877 Muhammad Emin Er The Soul of Islam Essential Doctrines and Beliefs Shifa Publishers 2008 ISBN 978 0 9815196 0 9 Schimmel 2013 p 99 Ahmad ibn Naqib al Misri Nuh Ha Mim Keller 1368 Reliance of the Traveller PDF Amana Publications pp 778 795 Retrieved 14 May 2020 Ahmad ibn Naqib al Misri Nuh Ha Mim Keller 1368 A Classic Manual of Islamic Scared Law PDF Shafiifiqh com Retrieved 14 May 2020 a b Gibril F Haddad The Four Imams and Their Schools London Muslim Academic Trust 2007 p 179 The Amman Message Summary Retrieved on Feb 2 2010 Silvers Laury 2013 09 01 al Fatḥ al Mawṣili Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE uncle of the famous early Persian Ṣufi Junayd al Baghdadi d 298 911 Nemanja 2022 10 25 5 Greatest Persian Poets and Why They Remain Relevant Symbol Sage Retrieved 2022 12 03 For an introduction to the normative creed of Islam as espoused by the consensus of scholars see Hamza Yusuf The Creed of Imam al Tahawi ISBN 978 0 9702843 9 6 and Ahmad Ibn Muhammad Maghnisawi Imam Abu Hanifa s Al Fiqh Al Akbar Explained ISBN 978 1 933764 03 0 The meaning of certainty in this context is emphasized in Muhammad Emin Er The Soul of Islam Essential Doctrines and Beliefs Shifa Publishers 2008 ISBN 978 0 9815196 0 9 See in particular the introduction by T J Winter to Abu Hamid Muhammad al Ghazali Al Ghazali on Disciplining the Soul and on Breaking the Two Desires Books XXII and XXIII of the Revival of the Religious Sciences ISBN 978 0 946621 43 9 Abdullah Jawadi Amuli Dhikr and the Wisdom Behind It PDF Translated by A Rahmim Retrieved 2020 02 08 Hakim Moinuddin Chisti The Book of Sufi Healing ISBN 978 0 89281 043 7 The Naqshbandi Way of Dhikr Archived from the original on 1997 05 29 Retrieved 26 August 2015 Touma 1996 p 162 full citation needed What is Remembrance and what is Contemplation Archived from the original on 2008 04 15 Muraqaba Archived from the original on 2015 06 09 Muhammad Emin Er Laws of the Heart A Practical Introduction to the Sufi Path ISBN 978 0 9815196 1 6 p 77 a b c d Hussain Zahid 22 April 2012 Is it permissible to listen to Qawwali TheSunniWay Retrieved 12 June 2020 Unfortunately the name Qawwali is now only used if there is an addition of musical instruments and at times with the add on of dancing and whirling depending on the mood of those present Musical instruments are forbidden And so is dancing if it is with intent Desai Siraj 13 January 2011 Moulana Rumi and Whirling Zikr askmufti Retrieved 12 June 2020 However later on this Simaa was modernized to include dancing and music thus giving rise to the concept of whirling dervishes This is a Bid ah and is not the creation of orthodox Sufism Abidin Ibn Radd al Muhtar Vol 6 Darul Ma rifa p 396 Hashiyah at Tahtaawi Al Ilmiyya p 319 The Sema of the Mevlevi Mevlevi Order of America Archived from the original on 2012 12 21 Retrieved 2009 03 26 The Whirling Dervishes of Rumi Murad Abdul Hakim Music in the Islamic Tradition Cambridge Muslim College Retreat May 18 2017 Rabbani Faraz 25 December 2012 Listening to Islamic Songs with Musical Instruments Seekers Guidance Retrieved 12 June 2020 Is Music Prohibited in Islam My Religion Islam Retrieved 12 June 2020 Muhammad Ibn Adam 14 April 2004 Music and Singing A Detailed Article Darul Ifta Leicester a b Muhammad bin Mubarak Kirmani Siyar ul Auliya History of Chishti Silsila in Urdu Translated by Ghulam Ahmed Biryan Lahore Mushtaq Book Corner Auliya Nizamuddin 31 December 1996 Fawa id al Fu aad Spiritual and Literal Discourses Translated by Z H Faruqi D K Print World Ltd ISBN 9788124600429 Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan National Geographic World Music 2013 03 20 Archived from the original on 2013 03 20 Retrieved 2018 10 09 Mawrid Reader ejtaal net John Renard Friends of God Islamic Images of Piety Commitment and Servanthood Berkeley University of California Press 2008 Idem Tales of God Friends Islamic Hagiography in Translation Berkeley University of California Press 2009 et passim Radtke B Lory P Zarcone Th DeWeese D Gaborieau M Denny F M Aubin Francoise Hunwick J O Mchugh N 2012 Wali In P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 2nd ed Brill doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam COM 1335 Kramer Robert S Lobban Richard A Jr Fluehr Lobban Carolyn 2013 Historical Dictionary of the Sudan Historical Dictionaries of Africa 4 ed Lanham Maryland USA Scarecrow Press an imprint of Rowman amp Littlefield p 361 ISBN 978 0 8108 6180 0 Retrieved 2 May 2015 QUBBA The Arabic name for the tomb of a holy man A qubba is usually erected over the grave of a holy man identified variously as wali saint faki or shaykh since according to folk Islam this is where his baraka blessings is believed to be strongest Radtke B Saint in Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan General Editor Jane Dammen McAuliffe Georgetown University Washington D C J van Ess Theologie und Gesellschaft im 2 und 3 Jahrhundert Hidschra Eine Geschichte des religiosen Denkens im fruhen Islam II Berlin New York 1992 pp 89 90 B Radtke and J O Kane The Concept of Sainthood in Early Islamic Mysticism London 1996 pp 109 110 B Radtke Drei Schriften des Theosophen von Tirmid ii Beirut Stuttgart 1996 pp 68 69 a b Titus Burckhardt Art of Islam Language and Meaning Bloomington World Wisdom 2009 p 99 Popular Sufi leader in Morocco dies aged 95 gulfnews com Retrieved 2020 12 30 Staff Writer 2018 03 28 Confreries A Crossroads of Morocco s Literary and Spiritual Diversity Morocco World News Retrieved 2020 12 30 Wehr Hans Cowan J Milton 1979 A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic 4th ed Spoken Language Services a b Gardet L 2012 Karama In P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 2nd ed Brill doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam COM 0445 Jonathan A C Brown Faithful Dissenters Journal of Sufi Studies 1 2012 p 123 a b Muhammad Emin Er Laws of the Heart A Practical Introduction to the Sufi Order Shifa Publishers 2008 ISBN 978 0 9815196 1 6 For a systematic description of the diseases of the heart that are to be overcome in order for this perspective to take root see Hamza Yusuf Purification of the Heart Signs Symptoms and Cures of the Spiritual Diseases of the Heart ISBN 978 1 929694 15 0 Concerning this and for an excellent discussion of the concept of attraction jadhba see especially the Introduction to Abdullah Nur ad Din Durkee The School of the Shadhdhuliyyah Volume One Orisons ISBN 977 00 1830 9 Muhammad Emin Er al Wasilat al Fasila unpublished MS Realities of The Heart Lataif Schimmel 2013 See especially Robert Frager Heart Self amp Soul The Sufi Psychology of Growth Balance and Harmony ISBN 978 0 8356 0778 0 Akhtar Ali Humayun June 10 2017 Philosophical Sufis among Scholars ʿulamaʾ and Their Impact on Political Culture Philosophers Sufis and Caliphs Politics and Authority from Cordoba to Cairo and Baghdad Cambridge University Press pp 135 237 ISBN 9781107182011 Sufism Sufi orders Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 04 18 Thareeqush Shukr Shazuli com Retrieved 13 August 2012 Hizb ul Bahr Litany of the Sea Deenislam co uk Retrieved 27 September 2014 Jestice Phyllis G 2004 12 15 Holy people of the world a cross cultural encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 858 ISBN 9781576073551 Willis John Ralph 2012 10 12 Studies in West African Islamic History Volume 1 The Cultivators of Islam Volume 2 The Evolution of Islamic Institutions amp Volume 3 The Growth of Arabic Literature Routledge p 234 ISBN 9781136251603 Gibb H A R 1970 Mohammedanism OUP USA p 116 ISBN 9780195002454 Bangstad Sindre 2007 Global Flows Local Appropriations Facets of Secularisation and Re Islamization Among Contemporary Cape Muslims Amsterdam University Press ISBN 978 90 5356 015 0 Akyeampong Emmanuel Kwaku Henry Louis Gates Jr 2012 02 02 Dictionary of African Biography OUP USA ISBN 978 0 19 538207 5 Ahmad Khwaja Jamil 1971 Hundred great Muslims by Jamil Ahmad Ferozsons OCLC 977150850 a b James Wise 10 November 2016 Notes on the Races Castes and Trades of Eastern Bengal Taylor amp Francis p 78 ISBN 978 1 351 99740 9 Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute The Institute 2006 p 241 a b Bhattacharya Ananda 2008 Madariya Sufi Silsila Their Distinctive Characteristics and Relations with the Indian Powers Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 69 384 402 JSTOR 44147203 Suvorova A A 2004 Muslim saints of South Asia the eleventh to fifteenth centuries London RoutledgeCurzon p 171 ISBN 0 203 59271 9 OCLC 57176198 Murray Thurston Titus 1930 Indian Islam a religious history of Islam in India H Milford Oxford university press p 128 Zinda Shah Madar Retrieved 17 July 2022 K al Wasa il quoted in The Unlimited Mercifier Stephen Hirtenstein p 246 Memoirs of the Saints p 108 full citation needed Sultan e Hind Mysticism takes centre stage The Express Tribune 2011 12 19 Retrieved 2021 04 18 Ahmed Leila Women and Gender in Islam Yale University Press 1992 p 112 Smith Margaret Rabi a The Mystic Cambridge University Press 1928 Ahmed Leila Women and Gender in Islam Yale University Press 1992 p 87 Qalandaria Brief History of Hazrat Rabia al Basri R A Qalandaria Retrieved 15 July 2022 Meeting of Rabia Basri with Hasan Basri By Sayyed Aminul Qadri Retrieved 25 July 2022 Mohammed A Rauf 1964 A Brief History of Islam With Special Reference to Malaya Kuala Lumpur Oxford University Press p 89 ASIN B005JNAG7A Lloyd Ridgeon University of Glasgow ed 2015 The Cambridge Companion to Sufism Cambridge Companions to Religion Cambridge University Press p 75 76 ISBN 9781107018303 Leonard Lewisohn ed 2018 The Heritage of Sufism Classical Persian Sufism from Its Origins to Rumi 700 1300 Vol 1 Oneworld Publications p 3 ISBN 9781786075260 via Distributed by Simon amp Schuster Erik S Ohlander 2008 Sufism in an Age of Transition ʿUmar al Suhrawardi and the Rise of the Islamic Mystical Brotherhoods Islamic History and Civilization Vol 71 Leiden Boston Brill Publishers p 46 ISBN 9789047432142 Josef W Meri ed 2006 Medieval Islamic Civilization An Encyclopedia New York and London Routledge p 401 ISBN 9781135455965 Hassan Syed Raza 17 February 2017 Pakistan s Sufis defiant after Islamic State attack on shrine kills 83 Reuters London Retrieved 13 September 2020 88 dead 343 injured in Sehwan shrine explosion official data Daily Times Pakistan 17 February 2017 Retrieved 13 September 2020 Sehwan blast Death toll reaches 90 as two more victims succumb to injuries Geo News 20 February 2017 Retrieved 13 September 2020 a b c Specia Megan 24 November 2017 Who Are Sufi Muslims and Why Do Some Extremists Hate Them The New York Times Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 15 September 2020 Ibrahim Baher 10 May 2010 Salafi intolerance threatens Sufis The Guardian Mir Tariq Kashmir From Sufi to Salafi November 5 2012 Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting Retrieved 20 February 2013 Salafi Violence against Sufis Islamopedia Online Archived from the original on 2013 05 30 Retrieved 24 February 2013 a b Walsh Declan Youssef Nour 24 November 2017 Militants Kill 305 at Sufi Mosque in Egypt s Deadliest Terrorist Attack The New York Times Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 15 September 2020 a b Geaves Ron Gabriel Theodore Haddad Yvonne Smith Jane Idleman Islam and the West Post 9 11 Ashgate Publishing p 67 The Dabistan and Orientalist views of Sufism SOAS University of London www soas ac uk Retrieved 2022 04 30 Geaves Ron 2014 Ridgeon Lloyd ed Sufism in the West The Cambridge Companion to Sufism Cambridge Companions to Religion Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 233 256 ISBN 978 1 107 01830 3 retrieved 2022 04 30 Throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries European orientalists would develop the thesis that Sufism and Islam were separate religious phenomena The effect on Sufism in the West was twofold The first impacted on the academic study of Sufism and the second on the development of Sufism as a religious form in Europe and North America The separation of Sufism from its Islamic roots led to an over emphasis on the translation of classical Sufi mystical literature at the expense of the lived religion practised throughout the Muslim world and perceived as part and parcel of a normative Islamic worldview even if deeply contested in the Muslim majority world Corbett Rosemary R 2016 Making Moderate Islam Sufism Service and the Ground Zero Mosque Controversy Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804791281 Archived from the original on 2016 10 29 Retrieved 2019 01 02 Nasr Seyyed Hossein Nasr 1993 01 01 An Introduction to Islamic Cosmological Doctrines ISBN 9780791415153 Retrieved 17 January 2015 Livingstone David 2002 The Dying God The Hidden History of Western Civilization iUniverse ISBN 978 0 595 23199 7 Jamal Malik John R Hinnells Sufism in the West Routledge p 25 Jenkins Philip January 25 2009 Mystical power Globe Newspaper Company Archived from the original on 2014 07 08 Retrieved 26 June 2014 Parfitt Tom 23 November 2007 The battle for the soul of Chechnya Guardian News and Media Limited Archived from the original on 2014 09 14 Retrieved 26 June 2014 Sufism Of saints and sinners The Economist Dec 18 2008 Archived from the original on 2014 05 16 Retrieved 26 June 2014 MUSLIM NETWORKS AND MOVEMENTS IN WESTERN EUROPE Pew Research Center Government Promotion of Sufism September 15 2010 Archived from the original on 2014 06 23 Retrieved 26 June 2014 Rabasa Angel Benard Cheryl Schwartz Lowell H Sickle Peter 2007 Building Moderate Muslim Networks PDF RAND Corporation Archived PDF from the original on 2014 05 31 Retrieved 26 June 2014 ETERAZ ALI June 10 2009 State Sponsored Sufism FP Archived from the original on 2014 09 14 Retrieved 26 June 2014 Munn Richard C January March 1969 Reviewed work s The Sufis by Idries Shah Journal of the American Oriental Society American Oriental Society 89 1 279 281 doi 10 2307 598339 JSTOR 598339 Shah 1970 p 28 29 Shah 1964 2014 Malika Mohammada The Foundations of the Composite Culture in India Aakar Books 2007 ISBN 978 8 189 83318 3 page 141 The Jamaat Tableegh and the Deobandis by Sajid Abdul Kayum Chapter 1 Overview and Background Mohammada Malika 2007 The Foundations of the Composite Culture in India Aakar Books p 90 ISBN 978 81 89833 18 3 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Siddiqui Ataullah Waugh Earle H American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences 16 3 International Institute of Islamic Thought IIIT p 12 Retrieved 27 December 2021 Laliwala J I 2005 Islamic Philosophy of Religion Synthesis of Science Religion and Philosophy Sarup amp Sons p 81 ISBN 978 81 7625 476 2 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Chamankhah Leila 3 September 2019 The Conceptualization of Guardianship in Iranian Intellectual History 1800 1989 Reading Ibn ʿArabi s Theory of Wilaya in the Shiʿa World Springer Nature p 253 ISBN 978 3 030 22692 3 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Madzillah ul Aqdus Sultan ul Ashiqeen Hazrat Sakhi Sultan Mohammad Najib ur Rehman 11 March 2015 Sultan Bahoo The Life and Teachings Sultan ul Faqr Publications p 49 ISBN 978 969 9795 18 3 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Bahoo Sultan ul Arifeen Hazrat Sakhi Sultan 2015 Risala Roohi Sharif The Divine Soul English Translation and Exegesis with Persian Text Sultan ul Faqr Publications p 58 ISBN 978 969 9795 28 2 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Bennett Clinton 1 January 1998 In Search of Muhammad A amp C Black p 223 ISBN 978 0 304 70401 9 Bennett Clinton 1 January 1998 In Search of Muhammad A amp C Black p 190 ISBN 978 0 304 70401 9 Retrieved 7 January 2022 Nicholls Ruth J Riddell Peter G 31 July 2020 Insights into Sufism Voices from the Heart Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 181 ISBN 978 1 5275 5748 2 Retrieved 7 January 2022 A Sufi Jewish Dialogue Philosophy and Mysticism in Bahya ibn Paquda s Duties of the Heart Diana Lobel See Sefer Hammaspiq Happerishuth Chapter 11 Ha mmaʿaḇaq s v hithbonen efo be masoreth mufla a zo citing the Talmudic explanation of Jeremiah 13 27 in Chagigah 5b in Rabbi Yaakov Wincelberg s translation The Way of Serving God Feldheim p 429 and above p 427 Also see ibid Chapter 10 Iqquḇim s v wa halo yoḏeʾaʿ atta in The Way of Serving God p 371 Maimonides Abraham Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 2021 04 18 Loubet Mireille 15 October 2000 Jewish pietism of the Sufi type Bulletin du Centre de Recherche Francais A Jerusalem bcrfj revues org 7 87 91 Retrieved 26 August 2015 Jewish Encyclopedia Vol 11 1906 pp 579 581 Shah 1970 p 14 15 Curiel Jonathan 6 February 2005 Islamic verses The influence of Muslim literature in the United States has grown stronger since the Sept 11 attacks SFGate The Forty Rules of Love by Elif Shafak review The Guardian 2011 07 01 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2017 05 05 Muhammad Iqbal 1990 The reconstruction of religious thought in Islam 4th ed New Delhi Kitab Bhavan ISBN 978 8171510818 OCLC 70825403 Battle of Karbala Brooklynmuseum org Brooklyn Museum 2020 Retrieved 1 July 2020 Cotter Holland 2009 06 11 The Many Voices of Enlightenment The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 01 15 Exhibition of Paintings by Farkhananda Khan at Sufi Festival mstv co in July 5 2016 Retrieved 2020 01 15 Sources Edit Babou Cheikh Anta 2007 Sufism and Religious Brotherhoods in Senegal The International Journal of African Historical Studies 40 1 184 Chittick William 2007 Sufism A Beginner s Guide Oneworld Publications ISBN 978 1 78074 052 2 Chodkiewicz Michel 1995 The Spiritual Writings of Amir ʿAbd al Kader SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 2446 9 Chopra R M 2016 SUFISM Origin Growth Eclipse Resurgence New Delhi Anuradha Prakashan ISBN 978 93 85083 52 5 Ernst Carl W 2010 Muḥammad as the Pole of Existence In Brockopp Jonathan E ed The Cambridge Companion to Muhammad Cambridge University Press pp 123 138 ISBN 9781139828383 Fitzpatrick Coeli Walker Hani 2014 Muhammad in History Thought and Culture ABC Clio ISBN 978 1 61069 177 2 Gamard Ibrahim 2004 Rumi and Islam Selections from His Stories Poems and Discourses Annotated amp Explained SkyLight Paths Publishing ISBN 978 1 59473 002 3 Glasse Cyril 2008 The New Encyclopedia of Islam Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 0 7425 6296 7 Guenon Rene 2001 Insights Into Islamic Esoterism and Taoism Sophia Perennis ISBN 978 0 900588 43 3 Mbacke Khadim Hunwick John O 2005 Sufism and Religious Brotherhoods in Senegal Markus Wiener Publishers ISBN 978 1 55876 342 5 Rahimi Sadeq September 2007 Intimate Exteriority Sufi Space as Sanctuary for Injured Subjectivities in Turkey Journal of Religion and Health Springer 46 3 409 421 doi 10 1007 s10943 006 9073 2 JSTOR 27513026 S2CID 26296782 Schimmel Annemarie 2013 Mystical Dimension of Islam Noura Books ISBN 978 979 433 797 4 Schmidle Nicholas December 2008 Pakistan s Sufis Preach Faith and Ecstasy Smithsonian Magazine Archived from the original on 2009 01 22 Sells Michael 1996 Early Islamic Mysticism Sufi Qurʼan Miraj Poetic and Theological Writings Paulist Press ISBN 978 0 8091 3619 3 Shah Idries 1964 2014 The Sufis ISF Publishing ISBN 978 1784790035 Shah Idries 1970 The Way of the Sufi E P Dutton Zarrabi Zadeh Saeed 2016 Practical Mysticism in Islam and Christianity A Comparative Study of Jalal al Din Rumi and Meister Eckhart Routledge Sufi Series Routledge ISBN 978 1 13 810012 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sufism Wikiquote has quotations related to Sufism Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Sufism Portals Religion Islam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sufism amp 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