Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- PART ONE State-sponsored Sufism: The Sufis of the Khānqāh Saʿīd al-Su ʿadāʾ
- PART TWO State-sanctioned Sufism: The Nascent Shādhilīya
- PART THREE Unruly Sufism: The Sufis of Upper Egypt
- 7 The Regional Context of Upper-Egyptian Sufism
- 8 Sufi Activists and Enforcers
- 9 Wonder-working Sufis
- Concluding Remarks
- Works Cited
- Index
9 - Wonder-working Sufis
from PART THREE - Unruly Sufism: The Sufis of Upper Egypt
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 October 2017
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- PART ONE State-sponsored Sufism: The Sufis of the Khānqāh Saʿīd al-Su ʿadāʾ
- PART TWO State-sanctioned Sufism: The Nascent Shādhilīya
- PART THREE Unruly Sufism: The Sufis of Upper Egypt
- 7 The Regional Context of Upper-Egyptian Sufism
- 8 Sufi Activists and Enforcers
- 9 Wonder-working Sufis
- Concluding Remarks
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
Introduction
One of the more puzzling historical questions of this study is why no organised order linked to an Upper-Egyptian †arīqa developed during this period. Given the facts– that Sufism was well established there by the Mamluk period, that there were numerous Sufi masters who maintained ribā†s across the landscape, and that these masters enjoyed widespread fame and recognition– it is surprising that not a single initiatic lineage was institutionalised and organised around one of these masters. Some of the early circles in Qinā would seem to have been ripe for such a development, but in each case the collectivity of Sufis around a particular master ceased to exist in the first or second generation after his death. We find instead that the master's charismatic authority was itself institutionalised rather than any socially reproducible doctrine or praxis (i.e. a tarīqa). In terms of Blumer's symbolic interactionism, we might say that these Sufi masters became the objects of veneration and not emulation. Thus, instead of organised (informally or otherwise) collectivities linked to an eponymous tarīqa, localised shrine cults emerged at the physical site of interment. The fact that a Sufi's tomb would become the object of regular veneration and visitation was certainly not unusual or unique to Upper Egypt; this happened with most Sufi masters across Egypt during this period. But the specific form of Upper-Egyptian Sufism in this period seems to have completely displaced or foreclosed the possibility of other potential social formations. The answer to why this should be the case is inextricably linked to the way in which the Sufis of Upper Egypt produced and popularised Sufism in the Iaʿīd. This production was in turn rooted in how these Sufis understood and articulated their authority. In short, they conceptualised and legitimised their authority almost entirely in terms of a prophetically inherited access to the world of the unseen (al-ghayb), which access invested them with miraculous power.
In reading through the biographies of Upper-Egyptian Sufis in the seventh/thirteenth and early eighth/fourteenth centuries, one is immediately struck by the frequency, variety and audacity of the miracles (karāmāt) they are reported to have performed in comparison to other contemporary Sufis.
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- Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2015