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The Sufis of Baghdad In the Sixth Century A.H. / Twelfth Century A.D.: An historical study. By Omar S. AL-TAL Supervisor Dr. A. A. Dury ABSTRACT
This study has sought to deal with the sufis of Baghdad in the sixth century A.H./ twelfth century A.D. from an historical perspective, aiming at illuminating Sufism in Baghdad in terms of its sheikhs, murids, their institutions through which they practiced their activities, the sufi discourse, its basis, subjects and expressions, and, finally, their relationships with the sectors of society. The data was mainly collected from a variety of sources contemporary to the era considered. These sources included sufi texts, biographies, travel books and general history ones, along with some modern references. The writer sought to illustrate continuity and change in the history of Sufism. Sufism was a social movement which witnessed a gradual shift in the mid fifth century A.H. from a state of social isolation to a state of active social involvement in which a considerable mass of people from diverse backgrounds were involved . The study came to some conclusions:
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The emergence of sufism from its isolation coincided with the coming of the saljuks to Baghdad and with the foundation of both the Nizamiya school and the ribat of shaikh-shoyokh. In spite of the rising tensions between the asharites and hanabalites of Baghdad, Sufism managed to keep out of this feud, thanks to the rising trend of sufi faqihs which was pioneered by the hanbalite sufi shaikh Abdul Qadir Al-Jili and the Shafiite Shaikh Abdul Qaher Al- Suhrawardi. This trend of sufi faqihs took an institutional form: the building of ribats beside the madrasas. The trend, in its turn, had resulted in mitigating the tension between the fiqhi madhahib, and in involving the masses in Sufism to an unprecedented degree until Sufism became a considerable social movement. Thus, sultans and, later on, caliphs in their turn, sought to institutionalize and contain this movement through building ribats and allocating waqfs to them, a process which lent duration to these institutions. All of this contributed to a later development in Sufism, namely, the emergence of sufi orders (Tariqas) which were named after some prominent sufi sheikhs of Baghdad such as Al-Jili, Al-Suhrawardi and Al-Rifai. Because Sufism was not restricted to any particular fiqhi madhhab, and because the involved masses came from diverse social, political and economic backgrounds, Sufism was a unifying social factor, and a moderating one to such sectors of society as ayyarin-shuttar and fityan.
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: The original title of the book
متصوفة بغداد في القرن السادس الهجري /الثاني عشر الميلدي :دراسة تاريخية . : Publisher دار المأمون للنشر و التوزيع – عمان /الردن . http://daralmamoun2007.maktoobblog.com Amman – Jordan