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SUFI (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   159371


Claiming the mystical self in new modernist Uyghur poetry / Byler, Darren   Journal Article
Byler, Darren Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract By recuperating the Sufi poetics of the Uyghur past, “avant-garde” Uyghur poets such as Tahir Hamut and Perhat Tursun are claiming a right to speak as heirs to both a religious and a literary tradition. For these modernist poets, finding one’s own way forward through the past is a way of reclaiming the discourse surrounding Uyghur identity, and the cultural symbols built into it, as an extension of the self. By channeling affect in such a way that it appears to derive from conventional Uyghur imagery, these poets demonstrate a measure of self-mastery that restores a feeling of existential security in the midst of political and religious change. This article argues that the purpose of their poems is to force the reader to accept new interpretations of images of Sufi embodiment and spirituality as valid and powerful. It further claims that the new indexing of Sufi imagery in this emerging corpus disrupts the unity of Uyghur poetry in the genres of Chinese Socialist Realism and ethno-nationalist Uyghur tradition, not in a negative process, but in order to create new forms of thought and subjectivity. It forces the reader to interpret the world not by trying to return to mythical Uyghur origins or reaching for a Socialist or an Islamic utopia but instead as a means of self-determination and affirming contemporary life itself.
Key Words Self-determination  China  Xinjiang  Uyghur  Sufi  Modernist Poetry 
Avant-Garde 
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2
ID:   152534


Migration and contemporary Muslim space in Moscow. Contextualizing North Caucasian loud Dhikr and the religious practices of Cen / Oparin, Dmitriy A   Journal Article
Oparin, Dmitriy A Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Over the last fifteen years, the ethnic make-up of Moscow’s mosques has undergone significant change, while the number of practicing Muslims has grown manifold. These quantitative changes are connected with both the internal migration of people from the North Caucasian republics (a migration that had already begun in the early 1990s) and the external migration of natives of Central Asian states, primarily Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kirgizia (a mass migration dating from the 2000s). This paper is dedicated to two phenomena of contemporary Moscow Muslim life – the loud dhikr of the Kunta Hajji wird of the Qadiri tariqa, practiced by Chechens and Ingush; and the religious practices of the Central Asian “uninstitutionalized” mullas. Both spiritual practices are popular and have great significance for a considerable proportion of Moscow Muslims, including those who do not directly participate in them. What both practices have in common is also found in their marginal nature with regard both to institutionalized Moscow Islam and to the fundamentalist trend which is now gathering steam here. This is an attempt to identify some specific features of contemporary Moscow Islam through the analysis of certain practices.
Key Words Migration  Integration  Diaspora  Ritual  Moscow  Sufi 
Religious Practices 
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3
ID:   047827


Pakistan at the millennium / Kennedy, Charles H (ed.); McNeil, Kathleen (ed.); Ernst, Carl (ed.); Gilmartin, David (ed.) 2003  Book
Kennedy, Charles H. (ed.) Book
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Publication Karachi, Oxford University Press, 2003.
Description xix, 390p.hbk
Standard Number 0195797760
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
047147954.91/KEN 047147MainOn ShelfGeneral 
4
ID:   101354


Sufi pluralism in Bangladesh: the case of the Maizbhandariyya Tariqa / Alam, Sarwar   Journal Article
Alam, Sarwar Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Key Words Pluralism  Bangladesh  Sufi  Maizbhandariyya Tariqa  Bengali Sufism 
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5
ID:   138353


Sufi's choice: a hardline cleric professes a new outlook on life / Dastageer, Ghulam   Article
Dastageer, Ghulam Article
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Key Words PML  Swat  Sufi  Sufi's Choice  Hardline Crisis 
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