SUFISM

sooˈfĭzəm, an umbrella term for the ascetic and mystical movements within Islam. While Sufism is said to have incorporated elements of Christian monasticism, gnosticism, and Indian mysticism, its origins are traced to forms of devotion and groups of penitents (zuhhad) in the formative period of Islam. The early pious figures, later appropriated by Sufism, include Ali, Hasan al-Basri (d. 801), and Rabia al-Adawiyya, a woman from Basra (Iraq) who rejected worship motivated by the desire for heavenly reward or the fear of punishment and insisted on the love of God as the sole valid form of adoration. The word Sufi first appears in the 8th cent., probably in connection with the coarse wool that many ascetics wore.

Two central Sufi concepts are tawakkul, the total reliance on God, and dhikr, the perpetual remembrance of God. Al-Muhasibi (d. 857) and his disciple Junayd (d. 910) are representative early figures. The introduction of gnostic elements (marifa) into Sufism is often attributed to Dhu-n-Nun al-Misri (d. 859). Sufism nonetheless faced growing opposition from orthodox clerics. The scholastic and ecstatic paths further diverged with the concept of fana, the dissolution into the divine, advocated by al-Bistami (d. 874), and used by Hallaj in the declaration of his unity with God, which eventually led to his execution in 922. Islamic orthodoxy and Sufism were not irreconcilable, as attested by the attempt by al-Ghazali (d. 1111) to infuse conformist Muslim religious life with mysticism.

The evolution of Sufism in the post-Ghazali period was influenced by Ibn al-Arabi and Ibn al-Farid. Their theoretical contributions led to the development within Sufism of a complex system of initiation and progression toward the Divine and set the stage for the emergence of organized Sufi orders. This phase of literary Sufism was also characterized by the prominence of Persian works, notably those of Shihab ad-Din Suhrawardi (d. 1191), Farid ad-Din Attar, and Jalal ad-Din Rumi, and the subsequent development of Persian, Turkish, and Urdu mystic poetry. Important Sufi figures elsewhere in the Islamic world include Muin ad-Din Chishti in India and Baha ad-Din Naqshband (d. 1390) in central Asia.

Sufi orders, which assimilated aspects of native religious traditions more readily than more dogmatic versions of Islam, played a major role in the expansion of Islam into sub-Saharan Africa and central, S, and SE Asia. The oldest extant order with attested historicity is probably the Qadiriyya, founded by Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani (d. 1166) in Baghdad. Other important orders include the Ahmadiyya (notably in Egypt), Naqshbandiyya (Central Asia), Nimatullahiyya (Iran), Rifaiyya (Egypt, SW Asia), Shadhiliyya (N Africa, Arabia), Suhrawardiyya and Chishtiyya (S and central Asia), and Tijaniyya (N and W Africa).

The work of Idries Shah has been instrumental in introducing Sufism to the West; see his The Sufis (1964) and The Way of the Sufi (1968). Although Sufism has made significant contributions to the spread of Islam and the development of various aspects of Islamic civilization (e.g., literature and calligraphy), many conservative Muslims disagree with many popular Sufi practices, particularly saint worship, the visiting of tombs, and the incorporation of non-Islamic customs. Consequently, in recent centuries Sufism has been a target for Islamic reformist and modernist movements.

See A. J. Arberry, Sufism (1970); L. Lewin, ed., The Diffusion of Sufi Ideas in the West (1972); A. Schimmel, Mystical Dimensions of Islam (1975) and As through a Veil (1982).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Sufism  - 1158 results

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...in print. His position in relation to Sufism as a group of historically documented...significant role in representing the essence of Sufism as a non-confessional, individualistic...distillation of spiritual wisdom. Global Sufism In the West, it is only over the last...
...emerged as a trademark of the reconstituted Sufism of Khurasan. Similarly, the Malamati...have facilitated the ascendancy, in the Sufism of Khurasan, of the sociallyconformist, sober aspect of Iraq Sufism associated with Junayd (characterised...
...from revolutionary Iran that testify to Sufism as a target are either unavailable, as...Nevertheless, many Iranians narrate the fate of Sufism in terms of official persecution. An...to the revolution explained to me that Sufism was referred to in schools as an example...
...everywhere. In the famous handbook of Sufism by Abu Hafs Omar as-Suhrawardi (d...eleventh century "people thought that Sufism consists mainly of dancing". This remark...know nothing about the spiritual roots of Sufism. Almost everyone in the medieval Muslim...
...Weismann, Itzchak. Taste of Modernity : Sufism, Salafiyya, and Arabism in Late Ottoman...paper) 1. Salafiyah-Syria. 2. Sufism-Syria. 3.Islam-Syria. I. Title...Weismann, Itzchak : Taste of modernity : Sufism, Salafiyya, and Arabism in Late Ottoman...
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journal articles on: Sufism  - 404 results

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Sufism and the Aesthetics of Penmanship in Siraj...the intimate relationship of his art to Sufism, as expounded by his teacher, a calligrapher...213 mim-lam mabna al-tasawwuf basis of Sufism 49-50 <br/ 213 mim-lam al-latifa...
Sufism and Theology. by Ahmet T. Karamustafa...The overlap between traditionalism and Sufism, especially in the period between the tenth...representative of Shafii traditionalist Sufism who wrote in Persian, following the path...
Cities and Saints: Sufism and the Transformation of Space in Medieval...by Jane Hathaway Cities and Saints: Sufism and the Transformation of Space in Medieval...revisionist work on medieval and premodern sufism. JANE HATHAWAY OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
John Glover, Sufism and Jihad in Modern Senegal: The Murid Order. by David E. Skinner JOHN GLOVER, Sufism and Jihad in Modern Senegal: the Murid order. Rochester NY: University of Rochester Press (hb 40 pounds sterling--978 1 58046 268...
Sufism and Modernity in the Thought of Fethullah...together two such disparate concepts as "Sufism" and "modernity" in the thought of Fethullah...undertaken a slippery task. On the one hand, Sufism, the generally accepted term for the Islamic...
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magazine articles on: Sufism  - 124 results

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Sufism - the Path of Love. by Shusha Guppy Susha...Master has truly arrived! NEW INTEREST IN SUFISM Partly through the discovery of these mystics...poetry, there is an upsurge of interest in Sufism, the spiritual dimension of Islam, with...
...a Gentle, Tolerant Version of Islam. Sufism Is Exactly That, but It Faces Growing...people together, not to divide them. Sufism was not just something ethereal and otherworldly...petroleum reserves--to try to suppress Sufism and other tolerant forms of popular Islam...
...loudly-patterned shirts. It all looked far too haphazard to be a proper Sufi festival. But think again, I told myself: Sufism is a more relaxed Islamic tradition. Its adherents have traditionally been wandering mystics, similar to the itinerant preachers...
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newspaper articles on: Sufism  - 55 results

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...about peace. It is a peace sought by Sufism, the mystical branch of Islam, that...are handed down a spiritual status. In Sufism, which traces its spirituality to the...brotherhoods. Spiritual disciplines of Sufism were diluted by this popular spread...
...tradition of refraining from politics. Sufism, or "tasawwuf" in Arabic, is the name...Sunni and Shia Muslims, who considered Sufism to be a threat to existing orthodoxy and...secular, and the moderate teachings of Sufism speak to the hearts of the nation. Indeed...
...members of the Mevlevi Order, a branch of Sufism - had for centuries been performing semas...become interested in the traditions of Sufism, especially through the writings of Mevlana...professor of Islamic studies and an expert on Sufism. "Combined with remarkable serenity...
...a mixture of Islam, Zoroastrianism, gnosticism, Judaism, Sufism and shamanism. Their highly syncretistic beliefs - including...a mixture of Islam, Zoroastrianism, gnosticism, Judaism, Sufism and shamanism. The countrys Muslim population considers the...
...tensions so fascinating in Mr. Gulgees work. The sculptor follows Sufism, a special form of Islamic mysticism. Mr. Gulgee says it...forms and simple scripts will connect man with the Divine. Sufism is often symbolized as "Nur," or divine light. Mr. Gulgee...
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encyclopedia articles on: Sufism  - 12 results

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SUFISM soo fiz m, an umbrella term for the ascetic and mystical movements within Islam . While Sufism is said to have incorporated elements of...early pious figures, later appropriated by Sufism, include Ali , Hasan al-Basri (d. 801...
...and a mysticism related to that of classical Sufi poetry (see Sufism ). Themes of exile and sensuality recur in his verse, as do...such as An Introduction to Arab Poetics (tr. 1990) and Sufism and Surrealism (1992, tr. 2005). Adonis has frequently...
...000 U.S. adherents and 225,000 in Canada. Sikhism is heterodox, combining the teachings of Bhakti Hinduism and Islamic Sufism. The founder and first Sikh guru , the mystic Nanak (c.1469 c.1539), proclaimed monotheism, the provisional nature...
...the African steppes, through the Indian subcontinent, central Asia, and the Arab world, and ideologically from ecstatic Sufism to the puritanic literalism of the Wahhabis and Salafias, through scholasticism and secularism. The scholastic formulation...
...structures in the form of Sufi orders was, from the 13th cent. onwards, one of the driving forces in the spread of Islam (see Sufism ; fakir ). Sufi orders were instrumental in expanding the realm of Islam to trans-Saharan Africa, stabilizing its commercial...
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