Urban Heirs of Ibn al-‘Arabi and the Defence of Religious Pluralism in Contemporary Indonesia

This paper calls attention to the appreciative interest Indonesia’s cosmopolitan Muslim urbanites are now showing in Ibn al-‘Arabi’s Unity of Being metaphysics and in Sufi spiritual practices associated with it. Introducing two recently formed groups, Padepokan Thoha and Pusaka Hati, that facilitate...

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Auteur principal: Howell, Julia Day 1943- (Auteur)
Type de support: Électronique Article
Langue:Anglais
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Publié: Equinox Publ. 2005
Dans: Journal for the academic study of religion
Année: 2005, Volume: 18, Numéro: 2, Pages: 197-209
Sujets non-standardisés:B Theology
B Spirituality
B Worldviews
B Religious Studies
B belief systems
B Biblical Studies
B Philosophy of religion
B Religion
B Social Theory
B Postcolonial Studies
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Résumé:This paper calls attention to the appreciative interest Indonesia’s cosmopolitan Muslim urbanites are now showing in Ibn al-‘Arabi’s Unity of Being metaphysics and in Sufi spiritual practices associated with it. Introducing two recently formed groups, Padepokan Thoha and Pusaka Hati, that facilitate study and practice in this tradition, the paper accounts for the apparently paradoxical appeal of Wujudiyya Sufism, reviled by twentieth-century Muslim Modernists, to religiously committed Muslims at the leading edge of the nation’s modernisation. Padepokan Thoha and Pusaka Hati’s this-worldly, non-authoritarian and inclusivist renderings of Wujudiyya Sufism model an alternative to the exclusivism now aggressively promoted by better-known Islamist groups.
ISSN:2047-7058
Contient:Enthalten in: Journal for the academic study of religion
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1558/jasr.v18i2.197