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Millenarianism and Mahdism in Lebanon

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

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The image of the Ayatollah Khomeini is inextricably bound up with the popular conception of Islam today. This view of Islam as a religion of fanaticism and violence ignores the existence of a powerful mystical strand in the form of Sufism in which a philosophy of love is central. Between 1980 and 1981, as part of my doctoral research, I spent six months in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli, living with the pupils of a Sufi sheik. This group had millenarian beliefs which acted, not as a means of violent insurrection, but rather as a means of reconciling the contradictory and often violent forces to which they were subjected.

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Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Archives Européenes de Sociology 1989

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References

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(17) In the two most authoritative hadith collections of Muslim and Bukhari only a ‘Caliph of Allah’ is mentioned, but in other hadith collections, such as those of Abu Da'ud and Tirmidhi, he is referred to as ‘the Mahdi’.

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(27) The area between Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia.

(28) Hadith vary as to the exact location of his appearance.

(29) In the Hadith collections of Bukhari and Muslim only Mecca and Medina are afforded protection.

(30) Sheik Nazim's description of the appearance of ' Isa is a combination of two hadith found in Muslim, , Sahih Muslim, Transl. Siddiqi, Abdul Hamid. 4 vols (Lahore, Sheik Muhammad Ashraf, 1976), pp. 94, 1517–8.Google Scholar

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(32) This prophecy is contained in Muslim, op. cit. p. 1510.

(33) Ibid. p. 1506.

(34) Ibid. p. 1527 and p. 1520–1.

(35) This point is disputed by Hamid Algar who says that Sheik 'Abdullah Daghestani's fervent belief in the imminent arrival of the Mahdi was emphasized by him to a far greater extent than by his teachers and that it led to his separation from them (verbal communication).

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(41) Unless otherwise indicated, all reported speech of informants, including that of Sheik Nazim, was recorded during the period of research between 1980 and 1981 in London, Tripoli and Damascus.

(42) Worsley, P., op. cit. pp. 221–256.

(43) Adil, M. N., Mercy Oceans, Vol. I (1980), p. 71.Google Scholar This is a privately published collection of Sheik Nazim's talks.

(44) In shā' Allah means ‘If Allah wills it to be so’. Devout Muslims preface any statement about future activity with this phrase. It indicates that the speaker recognizes the ultimate subjection of his or her will to that of Allah's. Therefore a Muslim using this phrase is expressing a hope and an intention, rather than a certainty, that the event referred to will occur.

(45) Talmon, Y., op. cit. p. 182.

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(47) The period of research was one of relative peace in Tripoli. Events since that time, including the Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon the Palestinian intifada in the West Bank, and the renewed civil war have resulted in fresh turmoil. For obvious reasons, I have been unable to observe what effect these have had on Sheik Nazim's following in Tripoli.

(48) Trimingham, J. S., The Sufi Orders in Islam (London, Oxford University Press, 1971), p. 176Google Scholar; Lings, M., What is Sufism? (London, George Allen and Unwin, 1975), p. 28.Google Scholar

(49) Mitchell, R., The Muslim Brotherhood (London, Oxford University Press, 1969)Google Scholar. In Recognising Islam (London, Croom Helm, 1982, p. 248)Google ScholarPubMed Gilsenan examines the role of the petite bourgeoisie in contemporary Muslim religious movements.

(50) GuliCK, J., op. cit. p. 30.

(51) Koury, E. M., op. cit. p. 58.

(52) Ibid. p. 31.

(53) ‘When Allah's succour and the triumph cometh

And thou sees't mankind entering the religion of Allah in troops.

Then hymn the praises of thy Lord and seek forgiveness of Him.

Lo! He is ever ready to show Mercy' (‘The Light’, XXIV, 55. Transl. M. Pickthall).

(54) Only two of the twenty-six murids had been involved in active prolonged political participation. Most had little or no interest in politics and a number regarded active political involvements as anathema.

(55) Worsley, P., op. cit. p. 248.

(56) Adil, M. N., op. cit. p. 37–8.

(57) Transl. M. Pickthall.

(58) There was, in fact, some confusion amongst the murids as to whether it was Jesus or the Mahdi who killed Dajjal. In the hadith it is Jesus.

(59) For example, see Faruqi, B. A., The Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid (Lahore, Sheik Muhammad Ashraf, 1970).Google Scholar

(60) For example, see Corbin, H., Spiritual Body and Celestial Earth (Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1960)Google Scholar. Originale title: Corps spirituel et terre céleste (Paris, Buchet-Chastel, 1960 & 1979).Google Scholar