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(“At Variance with Guénon”) of "Frithjof Schuon: Messenger of The
from: Frithjof Schuon: Messenger of the Perennial Philosophy ISBN: 978-1-935493-08-2 from the free Online Library at http://www.frithjofschuon.com/ 11. At Variance with Guénon In my early youth, my salvation was Shrī Shankara, and with him, spiritual virtue; And so I was able to learn: only inspiration, And not vain thinking, can give Wisdom. Then came the notion of tradition: Only the sacred may carry the sacred. All this Guénon wrote in his works with great diligence And zeal. But much still remained to be said!1 Frithjof Schuon always respected the metaphysical and conceptual frame- work articulated by René Guénon, whose writings were particularly important to him at the time when he was beginning to formulate his own perspective. Starting in 1939 and continuing throughout the rest of his life, Schuon delved into many subjects that Guénon never considered or only touched upon lightly, including Buddhism and American Indian spiritu- ality, sacred art in its diverse forms, and, especially, the operative aspects of spiritual realization—prayer of the heart and the human virtues. Martin Lings, who was Guénon’s personal assistant in Cairo during the 1940s, later expressed an observation that first became apparent in these years: “There is nothing in Guénon that is not to be found in Schuon. There is much in Schuon that is not to be found in Guénon.”2 When, after the war, com- munication could be resumed between Guénon in Cairo and Schuon in Lausanne, Guénon was generally supportive of Schuon’s point of view on these subjects and particularly appreciative of Schuon’s interest in American Indian spirituality. -
Sufism in the Western History : a Primary Outline
Sufism in the Western History : A Primary Outline Andrew Rawlinson University of Lancaster Abstract The phenomenon of Western Sufi teachers is unique, not just because of the individuals themselves, though they are certainly fascinating, but because of what they represent: the flowering of the Western genius, which has discovered Eastern traditions, absorbed them and in the process changed them and been changed by them. This paper is a primary outline of the main contours of this phenomenon, trying to brief its history and attempt an explanation of what it means. Keywords: Sufism, Western Sufism, Mysticism, History of Sufism Introduction About a century ago there were no Western gurus - no Westerners who were Hindu swamis, Zen roshis or Sufi sheikhs. Now there are hundreds. From a standing start, the West has produced its own spiritual teachers in traditions that were originally quite foreign. And in the last 25 years, a number of independent teachers have appeared, who belong to no tradition but teach from themselves. These people are changing Western culture by making available a view of the human condition which is new in the West. This view is based on four principles: - human beings are best understood in terms of consciousness and its modifications, - consciousness can be transformed by spiritual practice, - there are gurus/masters/teachers who have done this, - and they can help others to do the same by some form of transmission. Hundreds of thousands of Westerners now accept this teaching. To begin with, it was propounded by Easterners: Buddhists, Hindus and Sufis. But gradually Westerners began to teach the Buddhist, Hindu and Sufi versions of it. -
The Perennial Psychology and the Search for a Common Lexicon by Samuel Bendeck Sotillos
The Perennial Psychology and the Search for a Common Lexicon By Samuel Bendeck Sotillos We have wished to emphasize that the doctrine of the Philosophia Perennis, in which our psychology is included, is stated in different areas and at different times not only in cognate words, but often in the same idioms and in terms of the same symbolism…. We have sometimes dwelt on etymologies with a view to showing that the doctrines referred to are implicit in the very structure of the sacred languages in which they are stated.1 (Ananda K. Coomaraswamy) central challenge in discussing or writing about sacred A psychology is “what to call it?” A significant part of this dilemma is that philosophy, psychology and religion prior to the European Enlightenment of the seventeenth/eighteenth centuries were intercon- nected and anchored in the Sacred, in contradistinction with how they are viewed in the modern world as autonomous and eclipsed of their sacred function. Modern psychology and psychiatry for that matter, seek to treat the human psyche in a way that is devoid of its original meaning—“science of the soul”—which recognized the ultimate source of the human psyche’s health and well-being by what transcended it. What is ‘above’ the human psyche brings it balance and peace, and for this reason the human psyche is subordinate to what 1 Ananda K. Coomaraswamy, “On the Indian and Traditional Psychology, or Rather Pneumatol- ogy,” in Coomaraswamy, Vol. 2, Selected Papers: Metaphysics, ed. Roger Lipsey (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1978), p. 378. SACRED WEB 32 111 The Perennial Psychology and the Search for a Common Lexicon – Samuel Bendeck Sotillos transcends it. -
Outline of Sufism: the Essentials of Islamic Spirituality Appears As One of Our Selections in the Perennial Philosophy Series
World Wisdom The Library of Perennial Philosophy The Library of Perennial Philosophy is dedicated to the exposition of the timeless Truth underlying the diverse reli- gions. This Truth, often referred to as the Sophia Perennis— or Perennial Wisdom—finds its expression in the revealed Scriptures as well as in the writings of the great sages and the artistic creations of the traditional worlds. Outline of Sufism: The Essentials of Islamic Spirituality appears as one of our selections in the Perennial Philosophy series. The Perennial Philosophy Series In the beginning of the twentieth century, a school of thought arose which has focused on the enunciation and expla- nation of the Perennial Philosophy. Deeply rooted in the sense of the sacred, the writings of its leading exponents establish an indispensable foundation for understanding the timeless Truth and spiritual practices which live in the heart of all religions. Some of these titles are companion volumes to the Treasures of the World’s Religions series, which allows a comparison of the writings of the great sages of the past with the perennialist authors of our time. Other WOrks by William stOddart What Does Islam Mean in Today’s World? What Do the Religions Say about Each Other? Christian Attitudes towards Islam, Islamic Attitudes towards Christianity Invincible Wisdom: Quotations from the Scriptures, Saints, and Sages of All Times and Places Remembering in a World of Forgetting: Thoughts on Tradition and Postmodernism Outline of Buddhism Outline of Hinduism Outline of Sufism The Essentials of Islamic Spirituality William Stoddart Foreword by R.W. J. Austin Outline of Sufism: The Essentials of Islamic Spirituality ©2012 World Wisdom, Inc. -
Framing Islam at the World of Islam Festival, London, 1976
Journal of Muslims in Europe 7 (2018) 73-93 brill.com/jome Framing Islam at the World of Islam Festival, London, 1976 Klas Grinell Dep. of Literature, History of Ideas, and Religion, Gothenburg University, Sweden [email protected] Abstract This article focuses on a neglected historical example where contemporary museo- logical framings of Islam in Europe were established—the World of Islam Festival in London, 1976. The material consulted consists of the publications and materials from the Festival Trust, media coverage and academic discussions of the Festival. These are analyzed from a frame theory perspective. The Festival is situated in a very specific historical period after the advent of Gulf oil money, but before the resurgence of Islam and the Iranian revolution. It was framed by the traditionalist perspective of Frithjof Schuon and Seyyed Hossein Nasr and in large part funded by the United Arab Emirates. It is argued that what might at first appear to be a festival celebrating the presence of Muslims in modern Britain acted to stabilize a dichotomy between Islam and moder- nity that is still dominant in museological framings of Islam in Europe. Keywords World of Islam Festival – museums – Islamic art – cultural heritage – traditionalism – 1970s 1 Aims and Introduction The 1976 World of Islam Festival in Britain is certain to be regarded in retrospect as an important milestone in the relations between Islam and Christianity. The effect that it has had in awakening Europeans to the sig- nificance of Islamic civilization is already apparent. © Klas GrinelL, 2018 | doi 10.1163/22117954-12341365 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the prevailing CC-BY-NC license at the time of publication. -
What Do We Mean When We Say Islamic Art?
What do we mean when we say ‘Islamic art’? A plea for a critical rewriting of the history of the arts of Islam Avinoam Shalem In a book published in 2008, Arnold Hottinger provocatively asserted that as far as the Western stance toward Islam is concerned, Islam does not exist.1 He argued correctly that it is pure fiction to speak about Islam using one sole, monolithic and global term. Moreover, he added that the desire to see in the wide-ranging and diverse ‘worlds of Islam’ a homogenous sphere called Islam is simply an abstract cognitive notion, which, as with any general concept, has its sole origin in the mind of the person who creates this concept or theory. It is quite clear, then, that Hottinger, like many other scholars of Islamic studies, developed his ideas in the critical ‘Post-Edwardian Era’; that is, the period following the death of Edward Said in 2003, in which renewed discussion has taken place around his renowned book Orientalism, first published in 1978.2 The ‘imaginary Orient’, as termed by Linda Nochlin in 1983,3 is not restricted to Western literature but impinges on many other fields and is undoubtedly rooted in the history of European thought, especially in the construction of the image of its major ‘Other’ and the creation of its own historical narrative. And yet, this critical notion can and should also be applied to the field of art history in general, and to the construction of the field of Islamic art history within the larger discipline of Western art history in particular. -
What Does Islam Mean in Today's World? Religion, Politics, Spirituality
What Does Islam Mean in Today’s World? Religion, Politics, Spirituality By William Stoddart Foreword by Harry Oldmeadow World Wisdom, Bloomington, Indiana, USA, 2012 Reviewed by M. Ali Lakhani r. Stoddart begins this book with the words, D“Islam is the unknown religion”. It is a sen‑ tence he first wrote over 35 years ago and, as he notes in his Introduction, his observation remains sadly true today. What Islam means in today’s world for most “Westerners” is an association with terrorism and fundamentalism—terms that do not necessarily overlap but are often conflated. This misperception about Islam is at root a mispercep‑ tion about—or worse, a falsification of—religion itself. Dr. Stoddart describes the purpose of the book as follows: This book deals with the nature of religion—Islamic and other—and how, in the present age, it has become subject to massive betrayal and perversion. It also touches on how religion is falsified by being amalgamated with secular political programs, which are superficial and outward in the extreme, and which are either entirely devoid of principles, or alternatively, imbued with fundamentally false principles. The importance and relevance of the book’s theme—the falsifica‑ tion of religion, and its consequences for our times, particularly for Islam—cannot be overstated. The book’s theme relates to the central question of how human beings perceive reality and their purpose in life, and it therefore engages issues such as whether reality places man or God at the center, and whether the diversity within life—and religions in particular—can be harmonized without recourse to an interiority SACRED WEB 28 117 What Does Islam Mean in Today’s World? Religion, Politics, Spirituality – M. -
Sundanese Sufi and Religious Diversity in the Archipelago: the Pluralistic Vision of Haji Hasan Mustapa (1852-1930)
Sundanese Sufi and Religious Diversity in the Archipelago: The Pluralistic Vision of Haji Hasan Mustapa (1852-1930) Jajang A Rohmana1 Abstract The paper aims to analyze moderate understanding of Haji Hasan Mustapa on religious diversity in the archipelago. He is a greatest Sundanese poet who has studied in Mecca and served as Hoofd Penghulu of Kotaraja Aceh and Bandung in the colonial era. This study is focused on sufism and religious diversity, Mustapa‘s scholarship, and on his pluralistic vision, using intertextual studies and semantic analysis. This research argues that Mustapa has tolerance and moderate understanding similarly with Ibn ”Arabi‘s thought. He uses kernel and husk as symbolic images which expressed using natural richness of Sundanese culture for demonstrating his religious conviction that rasa is the kernel of all religions. This study is significant for strengthening the discourse of religious pluralism from sufi perspective in the archipelago which cannot be separated from the chain of Islamic intellectual network. This research has also a significant impact on Chittick‘s assumption aEout the depth of sufi poetry which mostly reveal their tolerance views on religious diversity living in harmony. Keywords: poetry, sufism, Sunda, religious diversity A. Introduction The study of sufism and religious pluralism generally tend to be rooted in the idea of sufis in the Middle East. However, scholars have not been expand the issue of religious pluralism in the context of sufism in Nusantara. It is important to explain that the Nusantara sufi cannot be separated from the sufi tradition in Arab and Persia. Ibn ”Arabi and Al-Jili‘s concept of wahdat al-wujud (the unity of being) for example, has a great influence on sufi tradition in Nusantara.2 96 Jajang A Rohmana, Sundanese Sufi and Religious Diversity in the Archipelago Therefore, it is important to explore how Nusantara sufis captured the concept of sufi pluralism in Arab and Persia and put it in their religious diversity life in Nusantara. -
William C. Chittick Chronological List of Publications Books
1 William C. Chittick Chronological List of Publications Books 1974 The Sufi Doctrine of Rumi: An Introduction. Tehran: Aryamehr University Press, 1974, 96 pp. (New edition 2005) Muqaddima bar `irfān-i Mawlawī. Persian translation by Shihāb al-Dīn `Abbāsī. Ganjīna-yi Ma`nawī-yi Mawlānā. Tehran: Intishārāt-i Murwārīd, 1383/2004, pp. 41-119. 1975 Collaboration with Seyyed Hossein Nasr in An Annotated Bibliography of Islamic Science. Vols. 1-2. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1975-78, 432, 317 pp.; Vol. 3, Tehran, 1991; vols. 1 & 2 reprinted Lahore: Suhail Academy, 1985. 1977 Edition of `Abd al-Rahmān Jāmī. Naqd al-nusūs fī sharh naqsh al-fusūs. Persian and Arabic text with critical apparatus, notes, English and Persian introductions, indexes. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977, 648 pp. 1981 A Shi'ite Anthology. Albany: SUNY Press, 1981, 152 pp. http://www.al-islam.org/anthology/index.htm Translation of J. Nurbakhsh (compiler). Sufism [I]: Meaning, Knowledge, and Unity. New York: Khaniqahi-Nimatullahi, 1981, 111 pp. 1982 Fakhruddin ‘Iraqi: Divine Flashes (with P.L. Wilson). With introduction and notes. New York: Paulist Press (Classics of Western Spirituality), 1982, 178 pp. Translation of J. Nurbakhsh. Sufism [II]: Fear and Hope, Contraction and Expansion, Gathering and Dispersion, Intoxication and Sobriety, Annihilation and Subsistence. New York: Khaniqahi-Nimatullahi, 1982, 126 pp. Translation of `Alī ibn Abī Tālib. Supplications (Du'ā). London: Muhammadi Trust, 1982, 66 pp. 1983 The Sufi Path of Love: The Spiritual Teachings of Rumi. Albany: SUNY Press, 1983, 433 pp. 2 Russian translation by Marietta Stepaniants and Andrey Smirnov. -
Meditating Loss in Relation to Islamic Aesthetics and Spirituality Within Mosque Spaces in Contemporary Singapore
This document is downloaded from DR‑NTU (https://dr.ntu.edu.sg) Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. The art of 'none' to 'nur' : meditating loss in relation to Islamic aesthetics and spirituality within mosque spaces in contemporary Singapore Muhammad Noor Iskandar Othman 2018 Muhammad Noor Iskandar Othman. (2018). The art of 'none' to 'nur' : meditating loss in relation to Islamic aesthetics and spirituality within mosque spaces in contemporary Singapore. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. http://hdl.handle.net/10356/75885 https://doi.org/10.32657/10356/75885 Downloaded on 29 Sep 2021 20:37:35 SGT THE ART OF ‘NONE’ TO ‘NUR’: MEDITATING LOSS IN RELATION TO ISLA MIC AESTHETICS AND SPIRITUALITY WITHIN MOSQUE SPACES IN CONTEMPORARY SINGAPORE MUHAMMAD NOOR ISKANDAR BIN OTHMAN SCHOOL OF ART, DESIGN AND MEDIA 2018 THE ART OF ‘NONE’ TO ‘NUR’: MEDITATING LOSS IN RELATION TO ISLAMIC AESTHETICS AND SPIRITUALITY WITHIN MOSQUE SPACES IN CONTEMPORARY SINGAPORE MUHAMMAD NOOR ISKANDAR BIN OTHMAN SCHOOL OF ART, DESIGN AND MEDIA A thesis submitted to the Nanyang Technological University in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts (Research) 2018 1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT For the dreamers who feel so much spirit and consciousness in Art, And the soul craving for the Light to fill the longing in the Heart. I dedicate my gratitude to the Almighty for the bounteous blessings, both manifested and hidden, amidst this journey of discovery. To my supervisor, Dr Gül İnanç, who guided me with conviction, and all rivers of trust and patience, I am forever indebted to your presence. -
Book Reviews
International Journal of Transpersonal Studies Volume 29 | Issue 1 Article 14 1-1-2010 Book Reviews Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.ciis.edu/ijts-transpersonalstudies Recommended Citation (2010). Sotillos, S. B. (2010). [Review of the book Christian gnosis: From St. Paul to Meister Eckhart, by Wolfgang Smith]. International Journal of Transpersonal Studies, 29(1), 135–136. Sotillos, S. B. (2010). [Review of the book Hinduism and its spiritual masters, by William Stoddart]. International Journal of Transpersonal Studies, 29(1), 136–138. Sotillos, S. B. (2010). [Review of the book Frithjof Schuon and the perennial philosophy, by Harry Oldmeadow]. International Journal of Transpersonal Studies, 29(1), 138–142.. International Journal of Transpersonal Studies, 29 (1). Retrieved from http://digitalcommons.ciis.edu/ijts- transpersonalstudies/vol29/iss1/14 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. Book Reviews Christian Gnosis: From St. Paul to Meister Eckhart is something divine, something that belongs, not to a by Wolfgang Smith (Sophia Perennis, 2008). $19.95, man, but to God himself.” ISBN 978-1-59731-092-5 Readers can also note that nondualism is an essential theme presented throughout the entire work Reviewed by Samuel Bendeck Sotillos and can be found in every authentic sapiential tradition. Although nondualism is often associated with the esoteric “Woe unto you, lawyers! for ye have taken away the key or “inner” dimensions of religion, it is correspondingly of gnosis: ye entered not in yourselves, and them that inseparable from exoterism or its “outer” dimensions: “in were entering in ye hindered.” – Luke 11:52 fact, the first finds its consummation in the second.” In Dr. -
ALCHEMY, Science of the Cosmos, Science of the Soul
Book Review ALCHEMY Science of the Cosmos, Science of the Soul By Titus Burckhardt, (Stuart and Watkins, 35s.) Translated from the German by William Stoddart Review By Seyyed Hossein Nasr Studies in Comparative Religion, Vol. 2, No. 2. (Spring, 1968) © World Wisdom, Inc. www.studiesincomparativereligion.com INTEREST in alchemy has been greatly enhanced during this century through studies and research carried out in this field by historians of science and also by psychologists. The historians of science have thought in their studies to discern in alchemy a primitive chemistry and the roots of the modern science whose name derives from alchemy. The psychologists, beginning with C. G. Jung, who devoted two works to the subject, regard alchemy as a psychology couched in the language of metallurgy. Rarely has a study been made of alchemy as a science of the soul in the light of a spiritual principle that manifests itself at once in the soul and in the cosmos and therefore relates soul and cosmos, or the microcosm and the macrocosm, intimately to one another. In fact one can say that the book under review is the first work in which integral alchemy, as a spiritual science of the soul but related both in language and inner correspondence to the cosmos, has been elucidated both with precision and in depth. As the author says, "spiritual alchemy was not necessarily involved in outward metallurgical operations, even when it made use of them as similes. It is nevertheless to be supposed that originally the inward and outward work went hand in hand, for, within the framework of an organic civilization orientated towards man's highest goal, a craft can only have meaning when it serves a spiritual way" (p.