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Cheikh Al-Alawi --- soufisme --- islam --- resurgence de l'islam authentique --- la Tariqa Alawiyya
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islamic culture --- sociology of religion --- islamic traditions --- comparative religions --- islam and tariqa --- Islam --- Islam. --- Civilization --- Mohammedanism --- Muhammadanism --- Muslimism --- Mussulmanism --- Religions --- Muslims --- Civilisation
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Zachte grootstedelijke religieuze trance. Op precieze plaatsen en momenten, vaak tijdens de weekends, gaan mensen in Brussel op zoek naar een vorm van zachte religieuze trance, of noem het zelfoverstijging, geestesverruiming. Het gaat onder meer om islamitische broederschapsbijeenkomsten buiten de moskeeën. Het gaat ook om christelijk pentecostaalse en evangelicaanse erediensten bij Romeense Roma, Rwandees-Burundese voormalige vluchtelingen, Braziliaanse migranten, Brusselse Iraniërs. Het gaat ten slotte eveneens om enkele boeddhistische bijeenkomsten. Alleen al bij deze publicatie zijn in totaal vele honderden mensen betrokken, volwassenen, met de meest uiteenlopende achtergronden en heel verschillende profielen. Wat hier te sprake komt, is geen marginaal fenomeen. Het lijkt er veelal op dat grootstedelijkheid en multicularisme, door een nostalgisch verlangen heen, een hunkering naar persoonlijke groei en een authentieke zoektocht naar spriritualiteit, tot dit soort bijeenkomsten leiden.De auteurs beschrijven die gemeenschappen en hun bijeenkomsten. Ze zoeken er een verklaring voor en illustreren hun verhalen met foto's. Deze publicatie kadert binnen een projectsubsidie van de Erfgoedcel van de Vlaamse Gemeenschapscommissie in Brussel.
#SBIB:39A10 --- #SBIB:316.331H570 --- #SBIB:316.331H580 --- #SBIB:316.331H590 --- Antropologie: religie, riten, magie, hekserij --- Relaties tussen godsdiensten: algemeen --- Godsdienstige verandering: algemeen --- Godsdienstige bewegingen: algemeen --- Brussel --- Geloofsleer --- Geloofsleven --- Spiritualiteit --- de zoektocht naar spirituele bewustzijnsverruiming --- dhikr --- Wazifa --- soefisme --- Tariqa Qadiriyya Budchichiyya --- de Brussels-Iraanse (neo-)evangelicalen --- Roemeense Roma-pinksterkerken in Brussel --- Igreja Videira Bruxelas --- Braziliaanse pinksterk in Brussel --- Brussels Rwandese pentecostaalse kerken --- Soka Gakkai International Belgium --- boeddhistisch genootschap --- Soka Gakkai (創価学会) --- japan
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Indonesia
Peasant uprisings --- Peasant uprisings. --- History. --- Indonesia. --- Peasants' uprisings --- Uprisings, Peasant --- Insurgency --- Revolutions --- Dutch East Indies --- Endonèsie --- Indanezii͡ --- Indoneshia --- Indoneshia Kyōwakoku --- Indonesi --- Indonesya --- Indonezia --- Indonezii͡ --- Indonezija --- İndoneziya --- İndoneziya Respublikası --- Indūnīsīy --- Induonezėj --- Jumhūrīyah Indūnīsīy --- PDRI --- Pemerintah Darurat Republik Indonesia --- R.I. --- Republic of Indonesia --- Republic of the United States of Indonesia --- Republica d'Indonesia --- Republiek van Indonesi --- Republik Indonesia --- Republik Indonesia Serikat --- Republika Indonezii͡ --- Republika Indonezija --- Rėspublika Indanezii͡ --- RI --- United States of Indonesia --- Yinni --- Indonesia --- Dutch East Indies (Territory under Japanese occupation, 1942-1945) --- Indanezii︠a︡ --- Indonesië --- Indonezii︠a︡ --- Indūnīsīyā --- Induonezėjė --- Jumhūrīyah Indūnīsīyā --- Republiek van Indonesië --- Republika Indonezii︠a︡ --- Rėspublika Indanezii︠a︡ --- indonesia --- Banten --- Christiaan Snouck Hurgronje --- Java --- Netherlands --- Serang --- Tariqa
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A pathbreaking history of Sufism, from the earliest centuries of Islam to the present. After centuries as the most important ascetic-mystical strand of Islam, Sufism saw a sharp decline in the twentieth century, only to experience a stunning revival in recent decades. In this comprehensive new history of Sufism from the earliest centuries of Islam to today, Alexander Knysh, a leading expert on the subject, reveals the tradition in all its richness. Knysh explores how Sufism has been viewed by both insiders and outsiders since its inception. He examines the key aspects of Sufism, from definitions and discourses to leadership, institutions, and practices. He devotes special attention to Sufi approaches to the Qur'an, drawing parallels with similar uses of scripture in Judaism and Christianity. He traces how Sufism grew from a set of simple moral-ethical precepts into a sophisticated tradition with professional Sufi masters (shaykhs) who became powerful players in Muslim public life but whose authority was challenged by those advocating the equality of all Muslims before God. Knysh also examines the roots of the ongoing conflict between the Sufis and their fundamentalist critics, the Salafis--a major fact of Muslim life today. Based on a wealth of primary and secondary sources, Sufism is an indispensable account of a vital aspect of Islam --
Mysticism --- RELIGION / Islam / General. --- Sufism --- Sufism. --- Islam --- History. --- Islam. --- Dark night of the soul --- Mystical theology --- Theology, Mystical --- Spiritual life --- Negative theology --- Abrahamic religions. --- Al-Ghazali. --- Al-Qushayri. --- Asceticism. --- Author. --- Bernard McGinn (theologian). --- Bruce Lincoln. --- Christian mysticism. --- Christianity and Islam. --- Christianity. --- Christopher Melchert. --- Dhikr. --- Dichotomy. --- Divine presence. --- Doctrine. --- Edward Said. --- Esoteric interpretation of the Quran. --- Exegesis. --- Fear of God. --- Fiqh. --- Font Bureau. --- God. --- Hadith. --- Heresy. --- Historiography. --- Ibn Khaldun. --- Ibn Taymiyyah. --- Idolatry. --- Illustration. --- Irfan. --- Islamic culture. --- Islamic fundamentalism. --- Islamic holy books. --- Islamic studies. --- Jews. --- Judaism. --- Judeo-Christian. --- Justification (theology). --- Kafir. --- Kashf. --- Literature. --- Louis Massignon. --- Mansur Al-Hallaj. --- Modernity. --- Monasticism. --- Mosque. --- Muhammad. --- Murid. --- Muslim world. --- Muslim. --- Mystical theology. --- Mysticism. --- Najm al-Din. --- Naqshbandi. --- Narrative. --- Occult. --- Orientalism. --- Orthodoxy. --- P. J. Conkwright. --- Persecution. --- Philosopher. --- Philosophy. --- Physician. --- Piety. --- Plotinus. --- Polemic. --- Political correctness. --- Presence of God (Catholicism). --- Princeton University Press. --- Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite. --- Quran. --- Religion. --- Religious studies. --- Religious text. --- Renunciation. --- Sadr al-Din al-Qunawi. --- Saint. --- Salafi movement. --- Sayyid. --- Sheikh. --- Silsila. --- Sufi cosmology. --- Sufi metaphysics. --- Sufi studies. --- Sunni Islam. --- Tariqa. --- The Sufis. --- Theology. --- Treatise. --- Ulama. --- Umberto Eco. --- Ummah. --- Wahhabism. --- William Chittick. --- World to come. --- World view. --- Worship. --- Writing.
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Waqfs, or religious endowments, have long been at the very center of daily Islamic life, establishing religious, cultural, and welfare institutions and serving as a legal means to keep family property intact through several generations. In this book R. D. McChesney focuses on the major Muslim shrine at Balkh--once a flourishing city on an ancient trade route in what is now northern Afghanistan--and provides a detailed study of the political, economic, and social conditions that influenced, and were influenced by, the development of a single religious endowment. From its founding in 1480 until 1889, when the Afghan government took control of it, the waqf at Balkh was a formidable economic force in a financially dynamic region, particularly during those times when the endowment's sacred character and the tax privileges it acquired gave its managers considerable financial security. This study sheds new light on the legal institution of waqf within Muslim society and on how political conditions affected the development of socio-religious institutions throughout Central Asia over a period of four hundred years.Originally published in 1991.The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations --- Islamic shrines --- Fondations (Droit) --- History --- Histoire --- Mazar-e Sharif (Afghanistan) --- Mazare e Sharif (Afghanistan) --- History. --- Mazār-i Sharīf (Afghanistan) --- Muslim shrines --- Shrines --- Charitable remainder trusts --- Donations --- Endowments --- Charities --- Charity laws and legislation --- Juristic persons --- Trusts and trustees --- Uses (Law) --- Charitable bequests --- Law and legislation --- Mazār-e Sharīf (Afghanistan) --- Mazār-e Sharīf, Afghanistan --- Mazār Sharīf (Afghanistan) --- Mazari Sharif (Afghanistan) --- Abbasid Caliphate. --- Abd Al-Rahman. --- Abd al-Mu'min. --- Abu Bakr. --- Abu Talib ibn Abd al-Muttalib. --- Abu Yazid. --- Abu Yusuf. --- Abu'l-Khayr Khan. --- Ahab. --- Ahl al-Bayt. --- Ahmad Shah. --- Al-Ghazali. --- Al-Qastallani. --- Al-Shahrastani. --- Ali Mardan Khan. --- Appanage. --- Aqsaqal. --- Ardabil. --- Ashraf Ghani. --- Atabeg. --- Badakhshan. --- Bahram (Shahnameh). --- Balkh. --- Banna'i. --- Battle of Khaybar. --- Bayazid Bastami. --- Bukhara. --- Caliphate. --- Central Asia. --- Central Authority. --- Dastur al-Muluk. --- Deployment plan. --- Dushanbe. --- Emirate. --- Foreign policy. --- Hanafi. --- Hegira. --- Herat. --- Hulagu Khan. --- Ibn Battuta. --- Ishmael in Islam. --- Iskandar (Timurid dynasty). --- Islam. --- Islamic culture. --- Islamic state. --- Ja'far al-Sadiq. --- Kandahar. --- Karbala. --- Kashgar. --- Khagan. --- Khan (title). --- Khanate. --- Khaybar. --- Khoja (Turkestan). --- Kipchaks. --- Majlis. --- Maoism. --- Mazar-i-Sharif. --- Mihrab. --- Mufti. --- Muhammad Akram. --- Muhammad Ishaq. --- Muhammad Khan (Ilkhan). --- Muhammad Salih. --- Muhammad al-Baqir. --- Muhammad al-Shaybani. --- Muhammad of Ghor. --- Mukhayriq. --- Murad Bakhsh. --- Naqshbandi. --- Oedipus complex. --- Qadi. --- Rabi' al-awwal. --- Rustam (Haqqani network). --- Safavid dynasty. --- Sahabah. --- Samarkand. --- Sayyid. --- Shafi'i. --- Shah Jahan. --- Shahnameh. --- Shahrbanu. --- Shams al-Din Muhammad. --- Sheikh. --- Shia Islam. --- Shrine of Ali. --- Sufism. --- Syncretism. --- Tariqa. --- Timur. --- Transoxiana. --- Turkistan (city). --- Umayyad Caliphate. --- Uthman. --- Uzbek language. --- Uzbeks. --- Waqf. --- Yaqut al-Hamawi. --- Zaidiyyah. --- Zakat. --- Mazar-i Sharif (Afghanistan)
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"The Tijaniyya is the largest Sufi order in West and North Africa. In this unprecedented analysis of the Tijaniyya's origins and development in the late eighteenth century, Zachary Valentine Wright situates the order within the broader intellectual history of Islam in the early modern period. While introducing the group's founder, Ahmad al-Tijani (1735-1815), Wright's focus is on the wider network in which the order developed-a veritable global Islamic revival whose scholars commanded large followings, shared key ideas, and produced literature read widely throughout the Muslim world. They were linked, Wright shows, through chains of knowledge transmission in the face of widespread Muslim prejudice against Sufism"--
Islam --- Sufism --- Tijānīyah --- History --- Tijānī, Abū al-ʻAbbās Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad, --- Tijani Sufi Order --- Tijaniyya --- Sofism --- Mysticism --- Mohammedanism --- Muhammadanism --- Muslimism --- Mussulmanism --- Religions --- Muslims --- Abū al-ʻAbbās Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad al-Tijānī, --- Abū al-ʻAbbās Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad al-Tijjānī, --- Ahmad al-Tijani, --- Aḥmad al-Tijjānī, --- Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad al-Tijānī, --- Tidiane, Ahmadou, --- Tijānī, Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad, --- Tijjānī, Abū al-ʻAbbās Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad, --- Tidjani, Ahmad, --- Tidjani, Ahmed, --- تجاني، أبو العباس أحمد بن محمد --- تيجاني, أبي العباس أحمد بن محمد --- تيجاني, ابي العباس احمد بن محمد --- Tidjāniya --- Tijaniyyah --- Tijānīyah - Africa, North --- Sufism - Africa, North --- Islam - History - 18th century --- Tijānī, Abū al-ʻAbbās Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad, - 1737 or 1738-1815 --- Tijāniyya; Aḥmad al-Tijānī; Ṭarīqa Muḥammadiyya; Neo-Sufism; Sufism; Islamic mysticism; Islamic sainthood; saintly hierarchy; seal of saints; Mawlay Sulayman; Ḥamdūn Ibn al-Ḥājj; Scholars of Fez (Fes); Muslim scholars of Algeria; Muslim scholars of Morocco; Muslim scholars and the state in precolonial North Africa; Sufism in Africa; Islam in Africa; Islamic scholarship in Africa; Eighteenth-Century Intellectual History; Islamic Intellectual History; Islamic Scholarly Renewal; Islamic Revivalism; Islamic Renaissance; Waḥdat al-wujūd; Sufi gnosis; ʿilm al-asrār; Islamic esotericism; Islamic occult; Sufism and Islamic law; dreams and visions in Islam; vision of the Prophet Muḥammad; Islamic Humanism; Islamic Actualization; Ibrāhim al-Kūrānī; Muḥammad Ḥayāt al-Sindī; Kūrānī School; ʿAbd al-Ghanī al-Nābulusī; Muṣṭafā al-Bakrī; Muḥammad al-Ḥifnī (Ḥifnāwī); Maḥmūd al-Kurdī; Khalwatiyya Sufi Order; Muḥammad al-Sammān; Sammāniyya Sufi Order; Al-Jawāhir al-maʿānī; al-Jawāhir al-khams; Salwat al-anfās. --- Tijānīyah
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Islam --- Islamic sects --- Mysticism --- Sectes islamiques --- Mysticisme --- History --- 297.14 --- #GGSB: --- 297.14 Islam: religieus leven; ascese; devotie --- Islam: religieus leven; ascese; devotie --- islam --- soufisme --- le Coran --- le Prophète --- l'Hégire --- spiritualité --- Ghazali --- khirqa --- Iraq --- Iran --- Asie centrale --- Inde --- Espagne musulmane --- Maghreb --- Egypte --- Syrie --- Anatolie --- Azerbaïdjan --- Caucase --- le renouveau confrérique --- le Hedjaz --- Russie --- Chine --- l'Insulinde --- doctrines et croyances --- science et connaissance --- règles et rituels soufis --- cheikh et disciple --- costume symbolique --- règles de conduite --- rites collectifs et rituels de prière --- rituels d'initiation --- musique et rites --- la sama --- dhikr et sama --- la musique dans le soufisme contemporain --- la littérature soufie --- soufisme et sciences occultes --- sciences occultes et spiritualité --- tariqa et orthodoxie --- Ibn Taymiyya --- associations intiatiques --- sociabilité mystique --- les ta'ifa --- assises matérielles et rôle économique des ordres soufis --- unité sociale --- les soufis et le pouvoir temporel --- les rois soufis --- la femme et la sexualité --- le Turkestan chinois --- l'Asie du Sud-Est --- les mystiques de Sumatra --- l'Arabie --- les ordres et la société indonésienne --- le sous-continent indien --- l'islam dans l'histoire de l'Inde --- Sultanat de Delhi --- les Moghols --- la Naqchbandiyya --- la Qadiriyya --- sunnisme --- chiisme --- les ordres soufis iraniens --- le soufisme en Iran moderne --- l'Empire ottoman --- le mouvement qizilbache --- l'hétérodoxie anatolienne --- derviches et sultans --- les Qadizadelis et la polémique anticonfrérique --- confréries dans le monde ottoman --- le Moyen-Orient arabe --- ascétisme mystique --- Mamelouks et Ottomans --- la modernité européenne --- Liban --- Palestine --- Israël --- Arabie Saoudite --- Yémen --- Oman --- la Turquie républicaine --- les Balkans post-ottomans --- les turuq --- le Maroc --- la Tunisie --- les confréries maghrébines --- la Libye --- la Mauritanie --- l'Afrique occidentale et centrale --- la Tidjaniyya --- le nord-est et l'est de l'Afrique --- Qadiriyya et Chadhiliyya --- Ahmad ibn Idris al-Fasi --- l'Europe occidentale contemporaine --- Ahmad Sirhindi et Mawlana Khalid --- la Bektachiyya --- l'ordre des Bektachis dans l'Empire ottoman --- le bektachisme --- Muhammad Nur Al-'Arabi et la confrérie Malamiyya --- Bayrami-hamzavi --- Istanbul --- la Khalwatiyya --- Khalvetiye --- la Rifa'iyya --- la Chattariyya --- les Qalenderis --- la Mevleviye --- confrérie des derviches tourneurs --- le soufisme au XXIe siècle --- Hindoustan --- l'Europe ottomane --- derviches dans l'ex-Yougoslavie
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