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Sufismus. --- Sufismus. --- Sufismus. --- Geschichte. --- Geschichte.
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The poetry of Bullhe Shah (d. 1758) is considered one of the glories of premodern Panjabi literature. Born in Uch, Panjab, in present-day Pakistan, Bullhe Shah drew profoundly upon Sufi mysticism in his writings. His lyrics, famous for their vivid style and outspoken denunciation of artificial religious divisions, have long been held in affection by Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs, and they continue to win audiences today across national boundaries and in the global Panjabi diaspora. Indeed, many young people in South Asia are already acquainted-albeit unknowingly at times-with the iconic eighteenth-century Panjabi poet's words through popular musical genres of the twenty-first century. The striking new translation in English is presented alongside the Panjabi text, in the Gurmukhi script, re-edited on the basis of the best modern Pakistani and Indian editions. This book thus offers at once the most complete and most approachable version of this great poet's works yet available. The Murty Classical Library of India makes available original texts and modern English translations of the masterpieces of literature and thought from across the whole spectrum of Indic languages over the past two millennia in the most authoritative and accessible formats on offer anywhere.
Dichtung --- Lyrik. --- Sufi poetry. --- Sufismus --- Sufismus. --- Punjab (algemeen). --- Punjab.
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The figure of the shaman has always been a prominent motif within the Islamic world, particularly in relation to the mystical domain of Sufism.
Islam. --- Schamanismus. --- Sufismus. --- Shamanism. --- Sufism.
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Diwan (Literatur). --- Epos. --- Liebe. --- Sufismus. --- Osmanisch. --- Osmanisches Reich.
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Islam. --- Mönchtum. --- Soefisme. --- Sufismus. --- Tarika's. --- Tijānīyah. --- Tijāniyah. --- al-Tijānīyah. --- Westafrika.
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Mevleviyeh --- Mevleviyeh. --- Mewlewije. --- Mysticism --- Mysticism --- Sufism --- Sufism. --- Sufismus. --- Islam --- Islam. --- Turkey. --- Türkei.
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Liu Zhi (c.1662-c.1730), a well-known Muslim scholar in China, published in Chinese outstanding theological works, short treatises, and easy-to-memorize short poems on Islam. He encountered various challenges in his interpretation and transmission of Islamic texts. First, traditional Arabic and Persian Islamic texts used Arabic and Persian concepts to explain Islam. This book answers the question, did Liu Zhi communicate difficult Islamic concepts? Second, Islam has insisted on monotheism. This book discusses whether and how Liu Zhi integrated the basic religious living of the Hui Muslims into their pluralistic Chinese culture. Finally, Muslims have settled over hundreds of years in various parts of China. Were Liu Zhi's works able to make a substantial difference in the life and thought of Hui Muslims in China? Liu Zhi's success was due to his method of contextualization, integrating the Muslim way of life into Chinese culture. This book is an in-depth study of Liu Zhi's contextualization of Islam into Chinese culture that argues that his contextualization has not deviated from the basic tenets of Islamic belief.
Sufism --- Sufismus. --- History --- China --- Liu, Zhi, --- 1600-1799. --- China. --- Islam --- History. --- Liu, Jielian,
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