Sufi orders
- Key People:
- Rūmī
- al-Mahdī
- al-Ḥallāj
- al-Muḥāsibī
- al-Ghazālī
Organization
Mystical life was first restricted to the relation between a master and a few disciples; the foundations of a monastic system were laid by the Persian Abū Saʿīd ebn Abī ol-Kheyr (died 1049), but real orders or fraternities came into existence only from the 12th century onward: ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Jīlānī (died 1166) gathered the first and still most important order around himself; then followed the Suhrawardīyyah, and the 13th century saw the formation of large numbers of different orders in the East (for example, Kubrawiyyah in Khwārezm) and West (Shādhiliyyah). Thus, Sufism ceased to be the way of the chosen few and influenced the masses. A strict ritual was elaborated: when the adept had found a master for whom he had to feel a preformed affinity, there was an initiation ceremony in which he swore allegiance (bayʿat) into the master’s hand; similarities to the initiation in Ismāʿīlism, the 9th-century sect, and in the guilds suggest a possible interaction. The disciple (murīd) had to undergo a stern training; he was often ordered to perform the lowest work in the community, to serve the brethren, to go out to beg (many of the old monasteries subsisted upon alms). A seclusion period of 40 days under hard conditions was common for the adepts in most orders.
Investiture with the khirqah, the frock of the master, originally made from shreds and patches, was the decisive act by which the disciple became part of the silsilah, the chain of mystical succession and transmission, which leads back—via Junayd—to the Prophet himself and differs in every order. Some mystical leaders claimed to have received their khirqah directly from al-Khiḍr, a mysterious immortal saint.
In the earliest times, allegiance was sworn exclusively to one master who had complete power over the disciple, controlling each of his movements, thoughts, visions, and dreams; but later many Sufis got the khirqah from two or more shaykhs. There is consequently a differentiation between the shaykh al-tarbiyah, who introduces the disciple into the ritual, forms, and literature of the order, and the shaykh al-ṣuḥbah, who steadily watches him and with whom the disciple lives. Only a few members of the fraternity remained in the centre (dargāh, khānqāh, tekke), close to the shaykh, but even those were not bound to celibacy. Most of the initiated returned to their daily life and partook in mystic services only during certain periods. The most mature disciple was invested as khalīfah (“successor”) to the shaykh and was often sent abroad to extend the activities of the order. The dargāhs were organized differently in the various orders; some relied completely upon alms, keeping their members in utmost poverty; others were rich, and their shaykh was not very different from a feudal lord. Relations with rulers varied—some masters refused contacts with the representatives of political power; others did not mind friendly relations with the grandees.
Discipline and ritual
Each order has peculiarities in its ritual. Most start the instruction with breaking the lower soul; others, such as the later Naqshbandīyyah, stress the purification of the heart by constant dhikr (“remembrance”) and by discourse with the master (ṣuḥbah). The forms of dhikr vary in the orders. Many of them use the word Allah, or the profession of faith with its rhythmical wording, sometimes accompanied by movements of the body, or by breath control up to complete holding of the breath. The Mawlawīs, the whirling dervishes, are famous for their dancing ritual, an organized variation of the earlier samāʿ practices, which were confined to music and poetry. The Rifāʿis, the so-called Howling Dervishes, have become known for their practice of hurting themselves while in an ecstatic state that they reach in performing their loud dhikr. (Such practices that might well degenerate into mere jugglery are not approved by most orders.) Some orders also teach the dhikr khafī, silent repetition of the formulas, and meditation, concentrating upon certain fixed points of the body; thus the Naqshbandīs do not allow any emotional practices and prefer contemplation to ecstasy, perhaps as a result of Buddhist influence from Central Asia. Other orders have special prayers given to the disciples, such as the protective ḥizb al-baḥr (“The protective armour of the sea”; i.e., for seafaring people—then extended to all travelers) in the Shādhilīyyah order. Most of them prescribe for their disciples additional prayers and meditation at the end of each ritual prayer.
Function and role in Islamic society
The orders formed an excellent means of bringing together the spiritually interested members of the community. They acted as a counterweight against the influence of hairsplitting lawyer-divines and gave the masses an emotional outlet in enthusiastic celebrations (ʿurs, “marriage”) of the anniversaries of the deaths of founders of mystic orders or similar festivals in which they indulged in music and festivity. The orders were adaptable to every social level; thus, some of them were responsible for adapting a number of un-Islamic folkloristic practices such as veneration of saints. Their way of life often differed so much from Islamic ideals that one distinguishes in Iran and India between orders bā sharʿ (law-bound) and bī sharʿ (not following the injunctions of the Qurʾān). Some orders were more fitting for the rural population, such as the Aḥmadiyyah (after Aḥmad al-Badawī; died 1286) in Egypt. The Aḥmadiyyah, however, even attracted some Mamlūk rulers. The Turkish Bektāshiyyah (Haci Bektaș, early 14th century), together with strange syncretistic cults, showed a prevalence of the ideals of the Shīʿites (the followers of ʿAlī, son-in-law of the prophet Muhammad, whose descendants claimed to be rightful successors to the religious leadership of Islam). The figure of ʿAlī also played a role in other fraternities, and the relations between Sufism in the 14th and 15th centuries and the Shīʿites still have to be explored, as is also true of the general influence of Shīʿite ideas on Sufism. Other orders, such as the Shādhiliyyah, an offshoot of which still plays an important role among Egyptian officials and employees, are typically middle class. This order demands not a life in solitude but strict adherence to one’s profession and fulfillment of one’s duty. Still other orders were connected with the ruling classes, such as, for a time, the Chishtiyyah in Mughal India, and the Mawlawiyyah, whose leader had to invest the Ottoman sultan with the sword. The Mawlawiyyah is also largely responsible for the development of classical Turkish poetry, music, and fine arts, just as the Chishtiyyah contributed much to the formation of classical Indo-Muslim music.
The main contribution of the orders, however, is their missionary activity. The members of different orders who settled in India from the early 13th century attracted thousands of Hindus by their example of love of both God and their own brethren and by preaching the equality of men. Missionary activity was often joined with political activity, as in 17th- and 18th-century Central Asia, where the Naqshbandīyyah exerted strong political influence. In North Africa the Tijāniyyah, founded in 1781, and the Sanūsiyyah, active since the early 19th century, both heralded Islam and engaged in politics; the Sanūsiyyah fought against Italy, and the former king of Libya was the head of the order. The Tijāniyyah extended the borders of Islam toward Senegal and Nigeria, and their representatives founded large kingdoms in West Africa. Their influence, as well as that of the Qādiriyyah, is still an important sociopolitical factor in those areas.
Geographical extent of Sufi orders
It would be impossible to number the members of mystical orders in the Islamic world. Even in such countries as Turkey, where the orders have been banned since 1925, many people still cling to the mystical tradition and feel themselves to be links in the spiritual chains of the orders and try to implement their ideals in modern society. The most widely spread group is, no doubt, the Qādiriyyah, whose adherents are found from West Africa to India—the tomb of ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Jīlānī in Baghdad still being a place of pilgrimage. The areas where the Sanūsiyyah live are restricted to the Maghrib, the Atlas Massif, and the coastal plain from Morocco to Tunisia, whereas the Tijāniyyah have some offshoots in Turkey. Such rural orders as the Egyptian Aḥmadiyyah and Dasūqiyyah (named after Ibrāhīm al-Dasūqī; died 1277) are bound to their respective countries, as are the Mawlawīs and Bektāshiyyah to the realms of the former Ottoman Empire. The Bektāshiyyah had gained political importance in the empire because of its relations with the Janissaries, the standing army. Albania, since 1929, has had a strong and officially recognized group of Bektāshiyyah who were even granted independent status after World War II. The Shaṭṭārīyyah (derived from ʿAbd al-Shaṭṭār; died 1415) extend from India to Java, whereas the Chishtiyyah (derived from Khwājah Muʿīnud-Dīn Chishtīp; died 1236 in Ajmer) and Suhrawardiyyah remain mainly inside the Indo-Pakistan subcontinent. The Kubrāwiyyah reached Kashmir through ʿAlī Hamadānī (died 1385), a versatile author, but the order later lost its influence.
The great variety of possible forms may be seen by comparing the Haddāwah, vagabonds in Morocco, who “do not spoil God’s day by work” and the Shādhiliyyah with a sober attitude toward professional life and careful introspection. Out of the Shādhiliyyah developed the austere Darqāwīyyah, who, in turn, produced the ʿAlāwiyyah, whose master has attracted even a number of Europeans. The splitting up and formation of suborders is a normal process, but most of the subgroups have only local importance. The High Sufi Convent in Egypt counts 60 registered orders.