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Topic: Ibn al-Arabi


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In the News (Fri 25 Dec 09)

  
 Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi Society - Muyhiddin Ibn 'Arabi 1165-1240
Ibn 'Arabi's spiritual attainments were evident from an early age, and he was renowned for his great visionary capacity as well as being a superlative teacher.
Ibn 'Arabi wrote at least 350 works, ranging from the enormous Futuhat al-Makkiyya, which fills thousands of pages of Arabic, to innumerable small treatises no more than a few pages long.
Ibn 'Arabi: towards a universal point of view, by Peter Young, was given at the Symposium in 1999, in which the necessity for a new paradigm for the generality of mankind is proposed.
www.ibnarabisociety.org /IbnArabi.html

  
 Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society
Ibn 'Arabi wrote important poems in the metre, and an edition of the 30 religious muwashshahât by Prof.
Ibn Sawdakin wrote commentaries on a number of Ibn 'Arabi's works, but these questions and answers bring us the voice of the Shaykh among his close friends.
The tour will be led by Stephen Hirtenstein, author of the biography of Ibn 'Arabi, The Unlimited Mercifier.
www.ibnarabisociety.org

  
 Ibn al-Arabi, Muhyi ad-Din Muhammad bin Ali al-Hatimi at-Tai. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
Ibn Arabi viewed human spiritual progress as a series of three journeys, away from, toward, and within the Divine.
Ibn al-Arabi viewed the knowledge acquired through reason or through mystic states as inferior to that coming from God and acquired through a profound mystic training.
Ibn al-Arabi, Muhyi ad-Din Muhammad bin Ali al-Hatimi at-Tai.
www.bartleby.com /65/ib/IbnalAra.html

  
 If ibn Arabees words are not kufr then there is no kufr in the world.-[salaf.indiaaccess.com]Allaahuakbar......An Invitation to Discover True Islaam [Salaf][Quran][Hadith][Islam] [sunnah][allaahuakbar.net].
Ibn Sayyid an-Naas and ibn Daqeeq al-Eid and other scholars all mention from their shaykh al-Izz bin Abdis Salaam (who was contemporary to ibn Arabee) that he said about him, “an evil shaykh, a liar.” This was mentioned by adh-Dhahabee via many routes.
Ibn Arabi said concerning the worshippers of the cow at the time of Moses (AS) as in his ‘Fusoos’ (pg.
Ibn Hajr says in his biography to ibn al-Faarid in his ‘Lisaan al-Meezaan,’ “I asked our Shaykh Siraaj ad-Deen al-Balqeenee about ibn al-Arabee and he promptly replied that he was a kaafir.”
www.allaahuakbar.net /sufism/the_takfeer_of_ibn_arabi.htm

  
 ibn Arabi
IbnArabi can rightly be regarded as the greatest mystical thinker in the history of Islam and as might be extrapolated from this study, perhaps some future global mysticism that is inter-sectarian.
IbnArabi proposes unique formulations of divine reality which when understood in depth may radically transform world theological discourse, not only in Islam but also in liberal and conservative Christian and Jewish hermeneutics.
www.sirreadalot.org /islam/sufibnarabiR.htm

  
 MSN Encarta - Search Results - Ibn al-NafÄ«s
Ibn al-Nafīs (1205-1288), also known as Al-Quarashi, ancient Islamic physician and expert on the Shafi’i school of Islamic law.
Important among Arabist physicians was al-Razi, who was the first to identify smallpox and measles and to suggest blood as the cause of infectious...
MSN Encarta - Search Results - Ibn al-Nafīs
encarta.msn.com /Ibn_al-Naf%c4%abs.html

  
 Ibn al-`Arabî
Ibn `Arabî considered Jesus the “Seal of Universal Sanctity.”   He himself, at least in certain passages, claimed to be the “Seal of the Particular, Muhammadan Sanctity,” so his early encounter with Jesus certainly suggests something about how he understood his own calling.
Ibn `Arabî constantly returns to this issue of the status of created things, because it is the crux of our own existential situation.
In it Ibn `Arabî discusses the divine wisdom revealed to each of twenty-seven prophets from Adam to Muhammad.
www.cis-ca.org /voices/a/ibnara~1.htm

  
 Shaykh ibn Arabi
Ibn `Arabi said in the beginning of his `Aqida that that text is his final belief and that every reader of this `Aqida is responsible to convey it on his behalf, which al-hamdulillah we have done.
As a result it is my belief that the likes of Shaykh Muhammad al-Madkhalee and their endorsers will stand accused of grave calumny of Muhyi al-Din Ibn `Arabi on the Day of Judgment.
Notice also that his statement suggests that it is an obligation on the whole Community to believe that Ibn `Arabi and his followers are disbelievers, otherwise they will all be declared disbelievers - and no one thinks likes this.
www.sunnah.org /history/Scholars/ibn_arabi.htm

  
 Ibn al'Arabi: Sufi mysticism and pantheism.
Ibn al-'Arabi was born in Murcia, Spain, in AH 560 [AD 1165].
However, Ibn al-'Arabi believed that God had a transcendental as well as an immanent aspect.
One source of Ibn al-'Arabi's panentheism is Sufism, which seeks to efface the self in mystical union with God.
members.aol.com /heraklit1/ibnarabi.htm

  
 Ibn al-'Arabi by William Chittick
most comprehensive and best documented account of Ebn al-'Arabi's life is C. Addas, Ibn 'Arabi ou La quête du Soufre Rouge, Paris, 1989; tr.
Ibn al-'Arabi, by William C. Chittick (State University of New York)
Testament of Ibn 'Arabi's Foremost Disciple and Some Notes on its Author,"
www.arches.uga.edu /~godlas/ibnarab.html

  
 The Mystic Tide
Ibn Arabi was above all the disciple of Khidr...
Ibn Arabi was, and never ceased to be, the disciple of an invisible master, a mysterious prophet figure...
'Ibn Arabi was to die in Damascus in 1240, exactly sixteen years before the capture of Baghdad by the Mongols announced the end of a world.' * Later, when the Ottoman sultan Selim II took Syria, he built a lavish tomb upon his grave on the Qasiyun mountain which overshadows Damascus from the west.
www.shunya.net /Text/Islam/MysticTide.htm

  
 Amazon.com: Books: Ibn-Al-Arabi: The Bezels of Wisdom (Classics of Western Spirituality Series)
One of the greatest saints to bless this earth, the emminent Ibn' Al Arabi, peace be with him, delves into the innermost realm of the human soul.
Arabi's deep knowledge of philosophy allowed him to describe many aspects of the experience of gnosis and prayer in a rare form that could be comprehended by the rational mind of only someone who has been there even to some small degree.
ibn Arabi was the first of the Sufis to write openly about a knowledge closly held by mystics of old.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/ASIN/0809123312

  
 Asia Times - Asia's most trusted news source
Then you could make a lot of parallels with Ibn al-Arabi's [Sufi mystic, 1165-1240] writing about the intimate experience of God's love and the meaning of prayer.
These two wrote a lot about experience of prayer and God's love.
www.atimes.com /atimes/Front_Page/FD20Aa01.html

  
 Arabi.html
This audacious statement can only be made in Ibn 'Arabi's words in a methodically paradoxical manner.
Abu Bakr Muhammad Muhyi al-Din Ibn al-Arabi was born in Murcia into a very pious and cultured milieu.
If, in order to know God, man must first know himself in his spiritual essence, he can only come to know himself in God and through Him.
www.geocities.com /ganesha_gate/Arabi.html

  
 Ibn Arabi
Muhammad Ibn 'Arabi commonly known only as Ibn Arabi (born 1165 in Murcia, Spain - died 1240 in Damascus) was an Arabic philosopher commonly identified with the Sufist school.
He is mostly known for his idea that every living person must find his own way to Allah.
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/I/Ibn-Arabi.htm

  
 Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn al-`Arabi: Frames version
You can read about Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn al-`Arabi, or browse quotations organized by subject which have been drawn from these works.
www.digiserve.com /mystic/Muslim/Ibn_Arabi

  
 Cheap sale price on Ibn Al Arabi
Authors: Afadrat Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi Al-Hatimi At-Ta'I, Shaikh Tosun Bavrak Al-Jerrahi Al-Halvet, Ibn 'Arabi, and Tosun Bayrak
Authors: Ibn Arabi, Ibn'Arabi, Fariha Al Jerrahi, and Lex Hixon
Ibn Arabi: The Mysteries of Bearing Witness to the Oneness of God and Prophethood of Muhammad
www.redtagcellar.com /search_author/1/books/Ibn+Al-Arabi/Ibn+Al-Arabi/%2Bsalesrank

  
 Anqa Publishing - Ibn Arabi, Sufism, ibn 'arabi
Anqa Publishing - Ibn Arabi, Sufism, ibn 'arabi
or by other prophets) recorded by Ibn 'Arabi
If you would like further information or help, you can contact us by clicking here: publishing@anqa.co.uk
www.ibn-arabi.com

  
 AllRefer Reference - Islam, Biographies Encyclopedia
• Muhyi ad-Din Muhammad bin Ali al-Hatimi at-Tai Ibn al-Arabi
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/categories/islambio.html

  
 Amazon.com: Books
Ask And It Is Given by Jerry Hicks, et al
Anita M. McGahan is Professor and Chairman of Strategy and Policy at Boston University School of Management, and a Senior Institute Associate at Harvard's Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness.
The Wizard (The Wizard Knight, Book 2) by Gene Wolfe
Amazon.com /books

  
 Hakam II, al- on Encyclopedia.com
Shaykh [ABD.sup.[subset]] al-[AZIZ.sup.[subset]] al-Mahdawi, Ibn al-[Arabi's.sup.[subset]] Mentor.(Tunisian sufism)
Publication: Middle East Policy; Author: Venter, Al J. ; Source: MAGAZINES
Publication: The Journal of the American Oriental Society; Author: Elmore, Gerald T. ; Source: MAGAZINES
www.encyclopedia.com /html/H/Hakam2-a.asp

  
 The Sufi Path of Knowledge -- IBN Al-'Arabi's Metaphysics of Imagination -- William C. Chittick
The Sufi Path of Knowledge -- IBN Al-'Arabi's Metaphysics of Imagination -- William C. Chittick
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www.frontlist.com /detail/0887068855

  
 About Dar Al Kitab Al Arabi!
Al Qabas Fi Sharhi Muwatta Malik Ibn Anas 1/3
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www.alkitab.com /main.asp?uri=1065&cat=1.123

  
 Walmart.com - The Sufi Path of Knowledge: Ibn Al-'Arabi's Metaphysics of Imagination by William C. Chittick, ISBN 0887068855
Walmart.com - The Sufi Path of Knowledge: Ibn Al-'Arabi's Metaphysics of Imagination by William C. Chittick, ISBN 0887068855
www.walmart.com /catalog/product.gsp?product_id=232499

  
 In Defense of Sidi Muhiddin Ibn ‘Arabi
“Muyiddin ibn al-‘Arabi is Muhammad ibn ‘Ali ibn Muhammad ibn al-‘Arabi, Abu Bakr Muhyi al-Din al-Hatimi al-Ta’i, The Greatest Sheikh (al-Shaykh al-Akbar), born in Murcia (in present-day Spain) in 560/1165.
The “Hashiya†of Ibn ‘Abidin notes that this has also happened to the “Fusus al- Hikam†of Ibn al-‘Arabi, the details being given in a promulgation by the Supreme Ottoman Sultanate exonerating the author of the statements of unbelief (kufr) it said that it was interpolated into the work.
One can see that Shaykh al-Akbar Muhyiddin Ibn al-‘Arabi was a great saint of Islam who adhered to the footsteps of the pious salaf us-salih.
www.amislam.com /ibnarabi.htm   (1253 words)

  
 Twelve Successors
Then they supported the four sons of 'Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan; Walid, Sulayman, Yazid and Hisham.
Therefore we say about this sect that they believe in the first three Caliphs, then Mu'awiyah, then Yazid, then 'Abd al-Malik, then Sulayman ibn 'Abd al-Malik, then 'Umar ibn 'Abd al-'Aziz, then Yazid ibn 'Abd al-Malik, then Hisham ibn 'Abd al-Malik.
Then his son Mu'awiyah ibn Yazid, then Marwan bin al-Hakam, then 'Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan, then his son, Walid ibn 'Abd al-Malik, then Sulayman ibn 'Abd al-Malik, then 'Umar ibn 'Abd al-'Aziz, then Yazid ibn 'Abd al-Malik, then Hisham ibn 'Abd al-Malik.
www.al-islam.org /twelve/5.htm   (1253 words)

  
 Shaykh Muhyi al-Din Ibn `Arabi
At times, his discussions about Ibn `Arabi depend, as he puts it, on "whether these are his actual words" while at other times he attacks him outright on the basis of these unverified assumptions, or himself levels specific accusations against the Shaykh.
Muhammad ibn 'Ali ibn Muhammad ibn al-'Arabi, Abu Bakr Muhyi al-Din al-Hatimi al-Ta'i al-Andalusi al-Mursi al-Dimashqi, known as Ibn 'Arabi to differentiate him from Abu Bakr Ibn al-'Arabi the Maliki jurist.
The truth is that Ibn `Arabi and his group are the elite of the Umma.
www.abc.se /~m9783/n/iarabi_e.html   (9613 words)

  
 Ibn al-Arabi, Muhyi ad-Din Muhammad bin Ali al-Hatimi at-Tai on Encyclopedia.com
Ibn Arabi viewed human spiritual progress as a series of three journeys, away from, toward, and within the Divine.
Ibn al-Arabi viewed the knowledge acquired through reason or through mystic states as inferior to that coming from God and acquired through a profound mystic training.
IBN AL-ARABI, MUHYI AD-DIN MUHAMMAD BIN ALI AL-HATIMI AT-TAI [Ibn al-Arabi, Muhyi ad-Din Muhammad bin Ali al-Hatimi at-Tai], 1165-1240, a Muslim Sufi mystic b.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/I/IbnalA1ra.asp   (331 words)

  
 The Takfeer of Ibn Arabi .
Ibn Sayyid an-Naas and ibn Daqeeq al-Eid and other scholars all mention from their shaykh al-Izz bin Abdis Salaam (who was contemporary to ibn Arabee) that he said about him, “an evil shaykh, a liar.” This was mentioned by adh-Dhahabee via many routes.
Ibn Arabi said concerning the worshippers of the cow at the time of Moses (AS) as in his ‘Fusoos’ (pg.
Ibn Hajr says in his biography to ibn al-Faarid in his ‘Lisaan al-Meezaan,’ “I asked our Shaykh Siraaj ad-Deen al-Balqeenee about ibn al-Arabee and he promptly replied that he was a kaafir.”
islamicweb.com /beliefs/cults/sufi_takfir_ibnarabi.htm   (528 words)

  
 islam_hadith_melv.html
al-Ta'dil wa-al-tajrih li-man kharraja 'anhu al-Bukhari fi al-Jami' al-sahih / ta'lif Abi al-Walid Sulayman ibn Khalaf ibn Sa'd ibn Ayyub al-Baji al-Maliki ; dirasat wa-tahqiq Ahmad Labzar.
Shawahid al-tanzil li-qawa'id al-tafdil fi al-ayat al nazilah fi Ahl al-Bayt / ta'lif 'Ubayd Allah ibn 'Abd Allah ibn Ahmad al-ma'ruf bi-al-Hakim al-Haskani al-Hadhdha' alHanafi al-Nisaburi ;...
Bughyat al-ra'id fi tahqiq Majma' al-zawa'id wa-manba' al-fawa'id / li-Nur al-Din 'Ali ibn Abi Bakr al Haythami ; tahqiq 'Abd Allah Muhammad al-Darwish.
www-personal.umich.edu /~beh/islam_hadith_melv.html   (528 words)

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