Rifai Sufi Order
The Rifai Sufi Order takes its name from Ahmad
al-Rifai (1106–82), a Shafii legal scholar and
mystic from the marshlands of southern i
raq
.
He was a contemporary of a
bd
al
-q
adir
al
-J
ilani
(d. 1166), the eponymous founder of the q
adiri
s
UFi
o
rder
, and disciples claimed he was from
the household of m
Uhammad
, the Prophet. Details
about al-Rifai’s life are sketchy, other than that he
was raised by his paternal uncle, Mansur, after the
death of his father. Mansur had initiated a
der
-
vish
order called the Rifaiyya, which Ahmad led
after his uncle’s death. He was 28 years old at the
time. His tomb in the village of Umm Ubayda in
southern Iraq had become a large dervish hospice
by the time i
bn
b
attUta
visited it in the mid-14th
century. The famed Rifai Mosque in c
airo
is also
thought to contain his remains, but because this
is a late-19th century
mosqUe
, it most likely con-
tains the remains of one of his descendants or a
Rifai shaykh.
As has often been the case for Islamic organi-
zations, it was Ahmad’s disciples who developed
the order’s rituals, rules, and doctrines. They
also established branches throughout the Middle
East and southeastern Europe. It remained the
most widespread order in Sunni a
rab
lands
until the 15th century, when it was superseded
by the Qadiri order. The Ottoman
sUltan
Abd
al-Hamid II (d. 1918) renewed its importance as
part of his effort to promote
pan
-i
slamism
. Today
the most prominent Rifai branches are in i
raq
,
s
yria
, p
alestine
, e
gypt
, t
Urkey
, Bosnia and Her-
zegovina, Albania, Bulgaria, and Greece. There
are branches in coastal cities of i
ndia
, especially
Surat, where it is the most important Sufi order.
Several branches have also been established in
the United States, including in California and
New York.
According to a 16th-century source, the Rifais
credited their founder with teaching about five
stages (maqamat) of spiritual development: pious
circumspection (waraa), worship (taabud), love
(mahabba), mystical insight or gnosis (maarifa),
and unity with God (
tawhid
). The Rifai order
is most famous for its ecstatic rituals, which
included riding lions, snake-handling, walking
on fire, eating glass, and piercing the body with
hooks, swords, and skewers. The shaykh of the
order purifies the wounds of the dervishes with
his spittle. The absence of bleeding is taken as a
demonstration of the
saint
’s miraculous powers.
Such practices came to be widely condemned in
the Muslim community only in the 19th and 20th
centuries, when political authorities, liberals,
and Wahhabi-minded reformers denounced such
K 592
ridda
practices as un-Islamic innovations. Nevertheless,
they are still conducted among some Rifai groups
today.
See also
ahl
al
-
bayt
; b
adaWi
, a
hmad
al
-;
bidaa
;
maqam
;
mawlid
;
miracle
; s
UFism
.
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