Minault, 3–53. (Columbia, Mo.: South Asia Books,
563
AF
J:
Qadari School
See m
utazili
s
chool
;
theology
.
qadi
See
crime
and
punishment
;
fiqh
;
sharia
.
Qadiri Sufi Order
The Qadiri
tariqa
is one of the oldest and most
widespread of the Sufi orders. It is named after
a
bd
al
-q
adir
al
-J
ilani
, a pious Hanbali jurist
who lived in b
aghdad
in the 11th and 12th centu-
ries. Abd al-Qadir was a Sufi ascetic and popular
preacher, but he did not establish a formal Sufi
organization in his lifetime. The development of
the order that bears his name occurred in the cen-
turies after his death, beginning with the efforts of
his sons and other followers in i
raq
, with Bagh-
dad as the center of their activity. A 14th-century
biography credits his sons with spreading the
Qadiri order throughout Islamdom, but it is more
likely that it did not really begin to spread until
the 14th century. Stories about Abd al-Qadir’s
miraculous powers gained wide circulation. Indi-
vidual Qadiri shaykhs trained disciples, drawing
from the teachings, meditation techniques, and
ritual practices that were in circulation among
other Sufi groups. Eventually the order acquired
a more formal hierarchy and system of rituals
and techniques, but it retained enough flexibility
to adapt to different cultural environments. It
traced its spiritual genealogy from Abd al-Qadir
back to m
Uhammad
, through a
li
bin
a
bi
t
alib
(d.
661) and a number of other prominent Sufis and
descendants of Muhammad’s household.
The first branches outside of Iraq may have
been in s
yria
, e
gypt
, and y
emen
, and the Mongol
invasions of the 13th and 15th centuries prob-
ably helped the order spread eastward to i
ran
,
a
Fghanistan
, and i
ndia
and
westward to North
Africa. The first branches in India were in the
northwest and the Deccan, and they were favored
by Muslim ruling elites in cities and towns.
Among the most prominent Indian Qadiris were
Muhammad Ghawth of Uchch (d. 1517), credited
with introducing the order in India, and Miyan
Mir (d. 1635), who was attributed with healing
powers and claimed to be in spiritual contact
with Abd al-Qadir. He later became the teacher of
the Mughal prince d
ara
s
hikoh
(d. 1659), who
was deeply interested in both Muslim and Hindu
mysticism. The Qadiris also established branches
in Central Asia, China, and Southeast Asia, where
they still exist. In Iraq the Ottoman Turks lavishly
restored the shrine of Abd al-Qadir in 1535, but
the order did not found any hospices in Istanbul,
the Ottoman capital, until the 17th century. From
Q
there they established branches in Anatolia and
southeastern Europe. In 1925 the new republican
government of Mustafa Kemal a
tatUrk
(d. 1938)
officially banned the Qadiri order, as well as all
other tariqas, in t
Urkey
. To
the west, the Qadiris
spread from m
orocco
southward into Mauritania
and W
est
a
Frica
in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Among the most prominent members to arise
in that region were al-Mukhtar ibn Ahmad al-
Kunti (d. 1811), a revered teacher and saint who
inspired U
sman
d
an
F
odio
(d. 1817), the founder
of the s
okoto
c
aliphate
in Nigeria. The most
famous Algerian Qadiri leader was a
bd
al
-q
adir
al
-J
izairi
(d. 1883), who led the resistance against
French colonial expansion in North Africa until
he surrendered in 1847. In the early 20th century
a Turkish Qadiri branch joined with a branch of
the r
iFai
s
UFi
o
rder
to form the Qadiri-Rifai Sufi
Order, which now has branches in North America,
Bosnia, and a
Ustralia
.
See also
asceticism
; h
anbali
l
egal
s
chool
;
o
ttoman
dynasty
; s
UFism
.
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