TY - CHAP
T1 - Javad Nurbakhsh and the Ni'matullahi 'Khaniqahi' Order
AU - Milani, Milad
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - This chapter addresses the designation of Ṣūfi Master JavÄd NÅ«rbakhsh (1926-2008) and the NiÊ¿matullÄhÄ« 'Khaniqahi' Order or KhÄniqÄh-i-NiÊ¿mat AllÄhÄ« as sectarian. Within the field of Islamic Studies, or even the broader scope of the study of Islam, there is no sufficient term that equates with 'sect' or 'sectarian'. Generally, Islamic history"”from early on"”is replete with examples of divisions between political alliances/parties (for example, shīʿat Ê¿AlÄ« or shīʿat MuÊ¿Äwiya) pertaining to leadership (imÄma) and schools of thought (madhhab) and to methods of reading and practicing the religion. Yet it has to be cautioned that none of these are tantamount to the 'church-sect typology' as set out in the sociology of religion for the Western Christian context. Max Weber (1922) and Ernst Troeltsch (1912) used the typology as a heuristic tool. In their theorising, the church was equated with the larger bureaucratic state-sponsored organisation that ministered to the general population, whilst the sect was the smaller evangelical group that adopted a radical stance towards the state. Bryan R. Wilson (1959, 1992) later modified the typology to define sects by the way in which they positioned themselves in opposition to social values or demonstrated their indifference to societal norms. In this sense, it has been more about a study that assists in the categorisation of dissention and along with it claims about the return to true religion. As such, and despite my own reservations about the application of 'sectarian' to groupings within Islam, one point of entry into the debate might very well be the combined issue of the interpretation of religion and legitimation of rule that both dominated early debates and forced Muslims to pick sides. Obviously, Muslims gradually became aware of partisanship, dissention, apostasy (ridda), and secession (khawÄrij), although more sharply once a sense of orthodoxy had begun to take shape.
AB - This chapter addresses the designation of Ṣūfi Master JavÄd NÅ«rbakhsh (1926-2008) and the NiÊ¿matullÄhÄ« 'Khaniqahi' Order or KhÄniqÄh-i-NiÊ¿mat AllÄhÄ« as sectarian. Within the field of Islamic Studies, or even the broader scope of the study of Islam, there is no sufficient term that equates with 'sect' or 'sectarian'. Generally, Islamic history"”from early on"”is replete with examples of divisions between political alliances/parties (for example, shīʿat Ê¿AlÄ« or shīʿat MuÊ¿Äwiya) pertaining to leadership (imÄma) and schools of thought (madhhab) and to methods of reading and practicing the religion. Yet it has to be cautioned that none of these are tantamount to the 'church-sect typology' as set out in the sociology of religion for the Western Christian context. Max Weber (1922) and Ernst Troeltsch (1912) used the typology as a heuristic tool. In their theorising, the church was equated with the larger bureaucratic state-sponsored organisation that ministered to the general population, whilst the sect was the smaller evangelical group that adopted a radical stance towards the state. Bryan R. Wilson (1959, 1992) later modified the typology to define sects by the way in which they positioned themselves in opposition to social values or demonstrated their indifference to societal norms. In this sense, it has been more about a study that assists in the categorisation of dissention and along with it claims about the return to true religion. As such, and despite my own reservations about the application of 'sectarian' to groupings within Islam, one point of entry into the debate might very well be the combined issue of the interpretation of religion and legitimation of rule that both dominated early debates and forced Muslims to pick sides. Obviously, Muslims gradually became aware of partisanship, dissention, apostasy (ridda), and secession (khawÄrij), although more sharply once a sense of orthodoxy had begun to take shape.
KW - Sufism
KW - Javad Nurbakhsh
KW - Nimatullahi Order
KW - religion
KW - Islam
KW - mysticism
KW - belief
KW - practice
KW - soceity
KW - modernity
KW - culture
KW - religion and politics
UR - https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:60266
UR - https://brill.com/display/book/9789004435544/BP000036.xml?language=en
U2 - 10.1163/9789004435544_029
DO - 10.1163/9789004435544_029
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9789004425255
T3 - Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion
SP - 543
EP - 567
BT - Handbook of Islamic Sects and Movements
A2 - Upal, Muhammad Afzal
A2 - Cusack, Carole M.
PB - Brill
CY - Netherlands
ER -