Beshara and Ibn 'Arabi: A Movement of Sufi Spirituality in the Modern World

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Anqa Publishing, Nov 18, 2010 - Religion - 490 pages

Investigating Sufi-inspired spirituality in the modern world, this interdisciplinary text combines cultural study with solid data to provide a comprehensive look at how the teachings of Ibn 'Arabi have been adopted and adapted by Muslims and non-Muslims. At the heart of this movement is the Beshara School in Scotland, founded in the 1960s, and now a center of international scholarship. Using the school as a case study, the discussion describes its emergence and evolution, its approach to spiritual education, the origins of its spiritual teacher, its major teachings and practices, and its projection of Ibn 'Arabi. Both rigorous and very timely, this effort points to areas of cultural exchange between East and West and highlights commonalities in the various historical changes both societies have undergone.

 

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Contents

Emergence and history
19
Emergence consolidation and expansion of
35
3
45
4
63
Bulent Rauf as guiding figure
69
5
97
A direct personal message
104
Preparing for the Second Coming of Christ
116
universality
122
6
135
origins and adaptations
141
Projecting Ibn Arabi for todays world
171
Beshara and sufism in the modern world
195
Epilogue
233
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About the author (2010)

Suha Taji-Farouki is a senior lecturer in modern Islam at the Institute of Arab and Islamic studies at the University of Exeter and research associate at the Institute of Ismaili Studies–London. She is the editor of Islamic Thought in the Twentieth Century and Modern Muslim Intellectuals and the Qur’an.

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