Une Voie Soufie Dans Le Monde - La Shadhiliyya
Une Voie Soufie Dans Le Monde - La Shadhiliyya
Une Voie Soufie Dans Le Monde - La Shadhiliyya
The Shadhiliyya, a branch of Sufism –Islamic esoterism- was founded in the 13th
century by Abu l-Hasan al-Shadhili, a disciple of Ibn Mashish, the hermit of the
Moroccan Rif. To this Sufi brotherhood have belonged several spiritual masters of first
magnitude among them were Abu al-Abbas al-Mursi, Ibn Ata Allah and more recently, in
a time a decline of the Tasawwuf across the Islamic world, shaykh Al-Arabi al-Daraqawi
and shaykh Ahmad al-Alawi. As most of our readers already know, both René Guénon
(shaykh Abd al-Wahid Yahya) and Frithjof Schuon (shaykh Isa Nur al-Din Ahmad) were
attached to the spiritual lineage (silsilah) of this order. While he was in Paris, Guénon has
been initiated by Ivan Agueli, a European disciple of the Egyptian shaykh Abdur Rahman
Elish El-Kebir. In 1932, Schuon became the direct disciple of the shaykh Ahmad Alawi
himself, a holy man sometimes considered as the Pole (qutb) of his time. Both of them
have contributed to make known the universal Sufi legacy, the core and mystical essence
of the Islamic revelation in the West.
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One third of the presentations are in English, the rest being written in French.
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Vincit Omnia Veritas II,2
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Vincit Omnia Veritas II,2
inception by two of the most mysterious figures of Tasawwuf: Abu Madyan, to which Ibn
Arabi himself was particularly devoted and al-Hakim al-Tirmidhi, the author of “the Seal
of the Saint” (Khatm al-wilaya) and disciple of Khidr. As Geneviève Gobillot
establishes, although the Shadhilis do not share all the latter’s view, they have been
largely influenced by his doctrine of sainthood (walaya) and hagiographical typology.
It is important to mention finally that several contributors evoke directly operative
questions related to initiatory rites and esoteric practices in the Shadhilliyya and more
particularly in its latters emanations such as the 19th century Daraqawiyya and the 20th
century Alawiyya. The spiritual discipline of the Shadhiliyya -at least for those fuqara
belonging to the inner circles- is based on retreat (kalwah) and invocation (dhikr),
sometimes accompanied by meditations (fikra). Frithjof Schuon has also recognized in
ejaculatory prayers and the Divine Name the supreme means of spiritual realization,
sharing this view with the late shaykh Alawi, from whom he received, at least partially,
his spiritual method.
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In this issue
Editorial _____________________________________________________________ 1
Patricia Reynaud
The End of the Path___________________________________________________ 4
Shankara
The Vedanta and Western Tradition __________________________________ 34
Ananda K. Coomaraswamy
Sri Ramakrishna and Religious Tolerance ____________________________ 54
Ananda K. Coomaraswamy
The Vital Centre of the Human Being, Seat of Brahma _________________ 63
René Guénon
Mystery of the Bodhisattva ___________________________________________ 69
Frithjof Schuon
On “Gurus” and Spiritual Direction ___________________________________ 89
Rama Coomaraswamy
Quatrains from an Indian Notebook___________________________________ 94
Barry McDonald
The Cave of the Heart: The Life of Swami Abhishiktananda ____________ 97
Reviewed by Harry Oldmeadow
Paths to Transcendence according to Shankara, Ibn Arabi and Meister
Eckhart ____________________________________________________________ 102
Reviewed by Renaud Fabbri
The Metaphysics of Interfaith Dialogue ______________________________ 111
Reza Shah-Kazemi
Eckhart’s Image of the Eye and the Wood ____________________________ 156
Reza Shah-Kazemi
The Container and the Contained____________________________________ 176
Timothy Scott
Response to Questions on the Way of Invocation _____________________ 188
Patrick Laude
The Diabolical Symbolism of the Automobile _________________________ 193
Rodney Blackhirst
Une voie soufie dans le monde : la Shadhiliyya _______________________ 205
Reviewed by Renaud Fabbri