Western Sufism
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Western Sufism,[1] sometimes identified with Universal Sufism, Neo-Sufism,[2] and Global Sufism, consists of a spectrum of Western European and North American manifestations and adaptations of Sufism, the mystical dimension of Islam.
Sufism flourished in Spain from the tenth to fifteenth centuries and spread throughout the Balkans during the Ottoman period. Enslaved Africans maintained Sufi traditions in the Americas.[3] It was not until the twentieth century, however, that Sufi organizations were established in Western Europe and North America. Inayat Khan promulgated Sufism in the United States and Europe from 1910 to 1926. In 1911 Ivan Aguéli established a Sufi society in Paris.
Inayat Khan’s legacy has sometimes been associated with the neologism "Universal Sufism," though he never used the phrase.[4] Inayat Khan opened his London-based Sufi Order to people of all faiths and simultaneously founded the Anjuman-i Islam (Islamic Society) for “the furtherance of the study of Islam and unity between the Muslims and the non-Muslims in the world by discovering the universal spirit of Islam.”[5] Aguéli’s legacy is associated with the Traditionalism and Perennialism of his student René Guénon.[6]
History
The Legacy of Inayat Khan
The scion of a family of Indian mystics and musicians of Central Asian origin, Inayat Khan was trained and authorized in the Chishti, Suhrawardi, Qadiri, and Naqshbandi lineages of Sufism. The Chishti order had for centuries engaged with Hindu spiritual traditions, thus exemplifying a broader Indian cultural phenomenon popularly known as ganga-jamni tahzib.[7] In a similar fashion, Inayat Khan saw his mission as the spiritual unification of the Abrahamic (Jewish, Christian and Islamic) and Vedic traditions of monotheism.[8] To this end, at the request of his students, he founded The Sufi Order in London in 1918 and The Sufi Movement in Geneva in 1923.[9] At the time of his death in India in 1927, Sufi centers had been established in the United States, England, France, the Netherlands, Germany, Sweden, and Switzerland.
Following the death of Inayat Khan, his brother Maheboob Khan was elected to lead his Movement. On the latter’s death in 1948, their cousin Mohammed Ali Khan was elected leader.[10] Inayat Khan’s eldest son and Sajjadanishin Vilayat Inayat Khan deferred to Mohammed Ali Khan, but subsequently assumed his father’s mantle in 1956.[11] [12] His lineage, traced via his elder sister Noor Inayat Khan (d. 1944) and now represented by his eldest son and successor Zia Inayat-Khan, is known today as the Inayatiyya.[13]
Mohammed Ali Khan (d. 1958) designated Maheboob Khan’s son Mahmood Khan (1927-) as his successor, but the latter stood down in deference to his uncle Musharaff Khan.[14] Following Musharaff Khan’s death in 1967, the Sufi Movement was led in turns by Fazal Inayat Khan (d. 1990) and Hidayat Inayat Khan (d. 2016). The current Representative General of the Sufi Movement is Nawab Pasnak.[15] In 2021, students of Mahmood Khan established the International Sufi Centre 1923 as an alternative structure for members of the Sufi Movement.[16]
Fazal left the Sufi Movement in 1988 and founded a new organization named The Sufi Way. Its current leader is Elias Amidon.[17]
Rabia Martin (d. 1947), who served as the North American representative of the Sufi Movement in Inayat Khan’s lifetime, broke away when Maheboob Khan assumed leadership. Another disciple of Inayat Khan, Samuel Lewis (Sufi Ahmed Murad Chisti, d. 1971), left with her, but subsequently broke from her when she affiliated herself with Meher Baba.[18] [19] [20] Rabia Martin’s successor Ivy Duce went on to found an organization under the leadership of Meher Baba named Sufism Reoriented. Samuel Lewis in turn founded a California-based organization named Sufi Islamia Ruhaniat Society. Now known as Sufi Ruhaniat International, its current leader is Shabda Kahn.[21]
Another organization, known as Sufi Contact, was founded by the Dutch Sufi proponent Gauri Voute. Its structure is strictly egalitarian, hence there is no central leader.
The most well-known legatee of Inayat Khan is his daughter Noor, famed as an author and as a posthumously decorated hero of the Second World War.[22]
The Legacy of René Guénon
Other Sufi groups in the West
See also
- Friedrich von Frankenberg, founder of the first Sufi society in Australia
- Inayati Order
- Islam in Australia#Sufi
Notes
- ^ Rawlinson 1993.
- ^ Sedgwick 2016, p. 2.
- ^ "Omar Ibn Said Collection".
- ^ H.J. Witteveen coined the term “Universal Sufism” in his book of the same title (London: Vega, 2002).
- ^ “Laws of Anjuman Islam,” MS in the hand of Sharifa Goodenough in the archival collection of the Nekbakht Foundation, Suresnes, France.
- ^ Mark Sedgwick, Against the Modern World: Traditionalism and the Secret Intellectual History of the Twentieth Century (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009) and Western Sufism: From the Abbasids to the New Age (New York: Oxford University Press, 2016).
- ^ See, for example, Roderic Vassie, "‘Abd al-Raḥman Chishtī and the Bhagavadgita: ‘Unity of Religion’ Theory in Practice" in Leonard Lewisohn, ed., The Heritage of Sufism: The Legacy of Medieval Persian Sufism (London and New York: Khaniqahi Nimatullahi Publications, 1992), p. 367-377.
- ^ Inayat Khan, The Unity of Religious Ideals (London: The Sufi Movement, 1928), 159. Cf Prince Dara Shikuh’s https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dara_Shikoh Majmu‘ al-bahrayn (The Merging of Two Seas).
- ^ Shaikh al-Mashaik Mahmood Khan, “Hazrat Inayat Khan: A Biographical Perspective” in Pirzade Zia Inayat Khan, ed., A Pearl in Wine (New Lebanon, NY: Omega Publication, 2001), p. 267-232..
- ^ Karin Jironet, Sufi Mysticism into the West: Life and Leadership of Hazrat Inayat Khan’s Brothers 1927-1967 (Leuven, Belgium: Peeters, 2009).
- ^ Zia Inayat-Khan, “A Hybrid Sufi Order at the Crossroads of Modernity,” unpublished dissertation (https://www.scribd.com/document/356817550/A-Hybrid-Sufi-Order-at-the-Crossroads-of-Modernity-the-Sufi-Order-and-Sufi-Movement-of-Pir-o-Murshid-Inayat-Khan), p. 225-6.
- ^ Mikhail Horowitz, Illumination: The Saga of a Spiritual Master (New Lebanon, NY: Sacred Spirit Music, 2018), p. 157..
- ^ Website: www.inayatiorder.org. Also www.pirzia.org.
- ^ Zia Inayat-Khan, “A Hybrid Sufi Order,”, p. 246..
- ^ Website: www.sufimovement.org.
- ^ See: https://weltkloster.de/2021/03/18/wege-der-sprirtualitaet-in-zeiten-von-krisen-und-herausforderungen/.
- ^ Website: www.sufiway.org.
- ^ "On Rabia Martin and Sufism Reoriented".
- ^ On Samuel Lewis’ dissent, see Murshid Wali Ali Meyer, “A Sunrise in the West: Hazrat Inayat Khan’s Legacy in California” in Pirzade Zia Inayat Khan, ed., A Pearl in Wine (New Lebanon, NY: Omega Publications, 2001), p. 395-436..
- ^ Andrew Rawlinson (1993), "A History of Western Sufism". Diskus. 1 (1): 45–83.
- ^ Website: www.ruhaniat.org.
- ^ Website: www.noorsociety.org. For Noor’s biography, see Shrabani Basu, Spy Princess (Thrupp, U.K.: Sutton Publishing, 2006). Noor’s works are compiled in Dream Flowers: The Collected Works of Noor Inayat Khan (Richmond, VA: Suluk Press, 2020).
References
- Sedgwick, Mark (2016). Western Sufism: From the Abbasids to the New Age. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199977659.
- Rawlinson, Andrew (1993). "A History of Western Sufism". Diskus. 1 (1): 45–83.
External links
Webpages of Western Sufi Orders