Muḥammad in Ṣūfī eyes: Prophetic legitimacy in medieval Iran and Central Asia
Document Type
Book Chapter
ISBN
9780511781551
Editor
Jonathan E. Brockopp
Publication (Name of Journal)
The Cambridge Companion to Muhammad
Department
Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations, London
DOI
10.1017/CCOL9780521886079.011
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
City
Cambridge
Abstract
To understand Muḥammad’s active presence in Muslim societies over the centuries is, in considerable part, a matter of trying to interpret narratives of miracles, dreams, trances, and other such phenomena that reside outside the purview of ordinary perception. Materials of this nature are available in great abundance in works penned by Ṣūfī Muslims because of their investment in the idea of an esoteric counterpart to the physical universe that is accessible to the spiritual elect. This is evident most prominently in Ṣūfī hagiography, a genre that began with the establishment of the first Ṣūfī communities in early Islamic centuries and continued to expand throughout the Middle Ages as Ṣūfī ideas gained greater currency across various Muslim societies. Saintly figures encountering Muḥammad in the esoteric world (bāṭin) is a familiar trope in this vast literature, usually aimed to establish a protagonist as an heir to the Prophet. Although this is a pattern relevant for the beliefs of many different Muslim groups, for medieval Ṣūfīs, encountering the Prophet in dreams and visions was an especially significant component in putting forth their claims of religious authority.
Recommended Citation
Bashir, S.
(2010). Muḥammad in Ṣūfī eyes: Prophetic legitimacy in medieval Iran and Central Asia. The Cambridge Companion to Muhammad, 201-225.
Available at:
https://ecommons.aku.edu/book_chapters/574
Comments
This work was published before Shahzad joined Aga Khan University.