2. Outline
Problems of definition
Modern European and fundamentalist
concepts of Sufism
Quick vocabulary check on Sunni/Shi`I
Ibn Khaldun on Sufism
Institutional development of Sufism, post
1200
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3. 1. Definition and the problem of
“essentially contested terms”
Examples: Liberal; justice; freedom (see
George Lakoff, Whose Freedom? The
Battle over America's Most Important Idea)
Different perspectives on Sufism: foreign &
non-Islamic, or the heart of Islam?
Where do definitions come from?
Summaries of analytical observation (Plato)
Historical record (Oxford English Dictionary)
Authority (political/religious figures)
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4. Arabic definitions
The derivations of Sufi
suf, wool, garment of ascetic denial
safa’, “purity”
safwa, “the elite”
Ahl al-suffa, “the people of the bench” (early
Muslims who shared everything in common)
Tasawwuf, “becoming a Sufi” explained by
teaching definitions
How might that differ from “Sufism” as part of
the catalog of “isms”? 4
5. 2. Rediscovery of the Sufi
tradition
Spirituality, experience, mysticism: loaded
terms from European/Christian history
Early Europeans like Sufi poetry (love and
wine), thought it couldn’t possibly be
Islamic – must be from somewhere else?
Recent colonial/postcolonial reformations
of Islamic identity (“fundamentalism”)
reject Sufi saints, intercession, Sufi lineages
and practices, as evil innovations
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6. 3. Who overlaps with whom?
A quick vocabulary check
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Sunni Sufis, and Shi`i Sufis
8. 4. Ibn Khaldun on Sufism
Sufism “belongs to the sciences of the
religious law that originated in Islam”
Divine worship, devotion to God, aversion
from the world, abstinence from wealth,
retirement into solitude for worship – all
common among early Muslims
Special name “Sufi” developed a couple of
centuries later [compare special technical
terms of Islamic law and hadith]
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9. Ibn Khaldun: characteristics of
Sufism
Asceticism
Intuitive perception of psychological states
and stations
Self-scrutiny and quest for knowledge and
unity with God
Special language for inner experience,
parallel to other fields of religious
knowledge
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10. Ibn Khaldun explains Sufism
Philosophical psychology as an explanation
of Sufi experiences
“Removal of the veil” as a key metaphor for
perception that goes beyond the senses
Different views on God as separate or one
with creatures (p. 362); alleged similarity
with philosophical and Christian views
Disapproval of Sufis by legal scholars
(muftis, who give anti-Sufi fatwa decrees)
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11. Ibn Khaldun criticizes Sufism
Theories of absolute oneness: only God
exists
Theory of God’s imagination as source of
the cosmos
-- Ibn Khaldun dismisses these views as
contrary to both reason and experience
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12. More criticism of Sufism by I.K.
requires distinction of topics
1. “pious exertions” of meditation and
worship
2. Removal of the veil, perception of
supernatural realities
3. The operation of divine grace in the world
4. Ecstatic expressions that arouse suspicion
(“I am the truth” – Hallaj) These are the
primary problem; they should be
disapproved or reinterpreted
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13. Ibn Khaldun’s final verdict
Seeking inner experience is fine, but it’s
better not to discuss them publicly!
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14. 5. Institutional development of
Sufism, post 1200
“Saints” or living friends of God
Problems with using the term “saint”
Tombs as centers of pilgrimage: local forms
Masters (shaykh, pir) and disciples (murid)
“Chains” (silsila) of master and disciple,
going back to the Prophet [Sufi “orders”]
“Ways” (tariqa) taught by orders
Veneration of the Prophet
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15. Tomb of Mu`in al-Din Chishti
(Ajmer, India, d. 1235)
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17. Scale of Sufi shrine pilgrimage
Ajmer receives 1.5 million pilgrims at the
annual festival
Touba receives over 2 million pilgrims
Neither pilgrimage center is aware of or
connected to the other
Both challenge the hajj to Mecca in size
To what extent should they be considered
marginal in modern Islam?
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18. More institutional developments
Chanting the Arabic names of God as a
ritual of remembrance (dhikr)
Rituals of music, recitation of poetry
Sometimes arms-length from politics,
sometimes tightly involved
Abolition of Sufism in Turkey by secular
govt., in Saudi Arabia by fundamentalists
Modern phenomenon of Sufism for non-
Muslims
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all parties assume that the contested terms refer to agreed-upon realities when, in fact, they serve only to mask deep cultural differences. William Gallie, 1956 article, “Essentially Contested Terms”