SUFI
        The Mystical Movement within Islam that began in 8th and 9th centuries,
        partly as a call to return to a simple ascetic life with devotional
        practices (eg. the dervish rituals of using the name of God), and
        partly as a reaction against the excesses of the jurists, the
        thoelogicans and the philosphers. They developed many Sufi orders
        (similar to Christian orders or communities), which kept Islam very
        much alive among the people and became a strong missionary movement.
        Two well known Sufis are 
		al-Junayd 
        (d.908) and al-Hallaj (d. 922).
        The latter was crucified for heresy. Another famous sufi
		is ibn al-Arabi (d. 1240).
		Perhaps the most famous is 
		al-Ghazali
		who managed to establish sufiism within orthodox Islam.
        The following quotations are taken from 
	this article 
	exploring Sufism in Islam.
- ayas used to justify Sufism, 
    al-Baqarah 2:156; an-Nur 24:35; Qaf 50:6.
- Prince Dara Shikoh, sufi son of Moghul Emperor Shar Jahan, affirms that 
    Sufism and Advaita Vedantism (Hinduism) are essentially the same,
    (Martin Lings, What is Sufism?, London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd.,
    1975, p. 99 )
- Hossein Nasr acknowledges that "many Sufis in India called Hinduism the 
    religion of Adam," and, "[the] orthodox Naqshbandsaint Mirza Mazhar Jan 
    Janan considered the Vedas as divinely inspired." (Seyyed Hossein Nasr, 
    Sufi Essays, London: George Allen and Unwin Ltd., 1972, p. 139) 
- Mansur al-Hallaj (d.922): "I saw my Lord with the eye
      of the heart. I said: Who art Thou? He answered: Thou."
- Abu Maydan (d. 1197): "Everything outside of God is
      unreal, everything taken individually or collectively,
      when you truly know it ... Whatever does not have root
      in his Being, can in no wise be real."
- Muhammad al-Harraq (d. 1845):  "Seekest thou Laila
      [Divine Reality], when she is manifest within thee?
      Thou deemest her to be other, but she is not other
      than thou."       (Stoddart, 83-84)
- Jalal al-Din Rumi (d.1273):  "Though the many ways
      [diverse religions] are various, the goal is one. Do you
      not see there are many roads to the Kaaba?"
      (Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Sufi Essays, London: George Allen and Unwin 
      Ltd., 1972, p. 149)
Further reading:
The Mystics of Islam 
by Reynold A. Nicholson
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