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A mística islâmica em Terræ Brasilis: o sufismo e as ordens sufis em São PauloSilva Filho, Mário Alves da 22 October 2012 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2012-10-22 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / This research has, by scope, to present Tasawwuf (Arabic word that refers to mysticism and
Islamic esotericism), known in the West as Sufism and discuss their presence in Brazil in
general, specifically in Sao Paulo. Our aim is to try to discuss the presence of Sufism in our
country, taking stock of the relationship between the Muslim Sufis with the communities in
which they live. We will attempt to demonstrate the presence of Sufism and Sufi orders since
the time of slavery to present day. Pointing the presence of Sufi orders that exist today in Sao
Paulo. Sufism is a very current issue, being necessary to know and understand it. We see daily
the critical irascible behavior of some Muslim communities, but little or no news about
Sufism and its active role in Islamic communities, especially as a counterpoint to his irascible
behavior pointed. This gap is what we will try to fill. We will discuss Sufism by an
exclusively Muslim bias, ie , completely inserted in the universe of Islam. The research will
consist of free observing Sufi Orders and open interviews of those responsible for them. We
were able to identify nine Sufi Orders in Sao Paulo, and seven of them were described / Esta pesquisa tem, por escopo, apresentar o Tasawwuf (palavra árabe que designa o
misticismo e esoterismo islâmicos), conhecido no Ocidente como Sufismo e discutir a sua
presença no Brasil no geral e em São Paulo especificamente. Nosso objetivo é tentar discorrer
sobre a presença do Sufismo em nosso país, fazendo um balanço da relação entre os
muçulmanos Sufis com as comunidades em que estão inseridos. Tentaremos demonstrar a
presença do Sufismo e de Ordens Sufis desde a época da escravidão até os dias atuais.
Apontando a presença das Ordens Sufis que existem em São Paulo hoje. O Sufismo é um
assunto bastante atual, sendo necessário que se o compreenda e o conheça. Vemos críticas
diárias ao comportamento irascível de algumas comunidades muçulmanas, porém pouca ou
nenhuma notícia sobre o Sufismo e seu papel atuante nas comunidades islâmicas,
especialmente como contraponto ao seu comportamento iracundo apontado. Esta lacuna é que
tentaremos preencher. Abordaremos o Sufismo por um viés exclusivamente muçulmano, ou
seja, completamente inserido no universo do Islã. A pesquisa constará de observação livre das
Ordens Sufis e entrevistas abertas dos responsáveis por elas. Foi-nos possível identificar nove
Ordens Sufis em São Paulo, sendo que sete delas foram descritas
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Tasawwuf (Sufism) : its role and impact on the culture of Cape IslamHendricks, Seraj 30 November 2005 (has links)
The primary focus of this dissertation is to establish the extent to which ta§awwuf,
commonly referred to as Islamic Spirituality, impacted on Cape Muslim culture. The study spans the time period between the arrival of the first significant political exiles at the Cape in 1667 to the founding of the Muslim Judicial Council in 1945. To this end a short historical review of ta§awwuf as it unfolded since its inception in
the Muslim world is given in order to provide the necessary background against which any study of ta§awwuf at the Cape must be measured. This, in the authorÕs opinion, has not been attempted before in local studies in any systematic way.
To further augment this study, a review of the nature and character of ta§awwuf as it emerged in the geographical areas from whence the political exiles and slaves were brought to the Cape is also engaged. As part of the conclusion to this dissertation an ÒafterwordÓ is provided that briefly sketches the post-1945 theological milieu that increasingly witnessed the emergence of new anti-ta§awwuf pressures within the Muslim community. / Religious Studies and Arabic / MA (Arabic)
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Förändring och kontinuitet : Al-Ghazâlîs politiska omsvängning / Transition and continuity : The political reversal of al-GhazâlîFazlhashemi, Mohammad January 1994 (has links)
The present dissertation ia an analysis in the history of ideas of the 12th-century Persian-Islamic thinker Abß Hamid Muhammad al-Ghazâlî's political ideas and his political reversal, ie. his abandonment of a religiously-influenced political theory in favour of a Persian-influenced political theory. This study is based upon source studies and a comparison between his manual for government and other writings in which his political ideas are expressed, along with a comparative study of his manual and other manuals of the same period. The dissertation begins with a description of the socio-political conditions of the 11th- and 12th-century Islam and provides a background to the seizing of power in the eastern region of the Islamic realm by the Central Asian Turks, accenting their relationship to the militarily and politically enfeebled c Abbasid caliphate in Baghdad. The dissertation also describes the status of political theory in the Islamic world and the various political currents of the era. During his lifetime, al-Ghazâlî was one of the foremost authorities of Islamic theology, honoured with the title Hujjat al-Islam, "sign of Islam". He was also a respected critic of Islamic philosophy who in one of his books proclaimed the caliphate to be the religiously and logically necessary head of Islam. In the mid-1090s al-Ghazâlî went through a spiritual crisis which led to his stepping down from his post as head of Nizâmiyya school in Baghdad, subsequently affiliating himself with Stjfîsm and retiring from public life. Having reemerged at the begining of the I2th century al-Ghazâlî wrote his manual Nasîhat al-Multik (Counsel for Kings) for the Saljfiq sultan Sanjar, where he in contrast to his earlier political writings employed pre-Islamic Persian ideas, eg. the idea of the ruler as being chosen by God, Farr-i îzadî (divine radiance), and the principle of justice. He now proclaimed the sultân to be the head of the Islamic state and elevated the Turkish sultan to "God's shadow on earth", not once mentioning the role of the caliphate. Furthermore, he made use of numerous fabricated Persian narratives in this book, presenting the pre-Islamic Persian era as a lost Golden Age. The present dissertation studies whether al-Ghazâlî's "conversion" to Sûfîsm in the 1090s played a role in his political reversal and his use of pre-Islamic Persian ideas, or if this should be interpreted as a literary conceit typicall such manuals. Moreover, the dissertation examines whether his transition to a Persian-influenced political theory implies a change in and therefore an abndonment of his fundamental political ideals, or if one may instead speak of a form of continuity in his political thought. This would mean that these new ideas should be seen as novel, normative sources which al-Ghazâlî employed in order to retain his fundamental political ideals under the pressure of the changed political climate. / <p>Diss. Umeå : Univ., 1994</p> / digitalisering@umu
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Tasawwuf (Sufism) : its role and impact on the culture of Cape IslamHendricks, Seraj 30 November 2005 (has links)
The primary focus of this dissertation is to establish the extent to which ta§awwuf,
commonly referred to as Islamic Spirituality, impacted on Cape Muslim culture. The study spans the time period between the arrival of the first significant political exiles at the Cape in 1667 to the founding of the Muslim Judicial Council in 1945. To this end a short historical review of ta§awwuf as it unfolded since its inception in
the Muslim world is given in order to provide the necessary background against which any study of ta§awwuf at the Cape must be measured. This, in the authorÕs opinion, has not been attempted before in local studies in any systematic way.
To further augment this study, a review of the nature and character of ta§awwuf as it emerged in the geographical areas from whence the political exiles and slaves were brought to the Cape is also engaged. As part of the conclusion to this dissertation an ÒafterwordÓ is provided that briefly sketches the post-1945 theological milieu that increasingly witnessed the emergence of new anti-ta§awwuf pressures within the Muslim community. / Religious Studies and Arabic / MA (Arabic)
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