Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022
It is indisputable that the religious history both of the Safavid period and of the two centuries that preceded it remains inadequately explored. There existed in Transoxania and Anatolia, as well as the Iranian plateau, a plethora of groups and individuals with diverse tendencies and aspirations that it is difficult, in our present state of knowledge, to synthesize into a comprehensible whole. There are however a number of minor observations on Professor Nasr's presentation that I wish to make. The first is an expression of respectful disagreement, and the others are intended to direct attention to matters not mentioned in his otherwise comprehensive paper.
Professor Nasr's contention that Sufism owes its essential origin to Shiᶜism, and that therefore its suppression in the Safavid period ought to be regarded as a return to the womb that bore it, is highly contestable.
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9. Ibid., ff. 2b-3a. We may note in passing that Imam Jaᶜfar aṣ-Ṣādiq was also physically descended from Abū Bakr: his maternal grandfather was Qāsim b. Muḥammad b. Abī Bakr, one of the prominent tābiᶜīn.
10. Ḥāfiẓ Ḥusayn Karbalā'ī Tabrīzī, Rauḍāt al-Janān wa Jannat al-Jinān, ed. Jaᶜfar Sulṭān al-Qurrā'ī (Tehran: 1344/1965), I, p. 135.Google Scholar
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17. On this topic see the interesting study of Asrar, Ahmet, Osmanlilarin Dini Siyaseti ve İslam Alemi (Istanbul: 1972).Google Scholar