Yoga and the “Pure Muhammadi Path” of Muhammad Nasir ‘Andalib

This article addresses the question of how early modern Sufis dealt with yoga. Some scholars have argued that a movement of Sufi reform occurred in South Asia during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, representing a shift towards legal Islam, which would call for the rejection of non-Islamic p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Soraya Khodamoradi, Carl Ernst
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-03-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/15/3/359
Description
Summary:This article addresses the question of how early modern Sufis dealt with yoga. Some scholars have argued that a movement of Sufi reform occurred in South Asia during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, representing a shift towards legal Islam, which would call for the rejection of non-Islamic practices. This explanation overlooks the rhetorical construction of Sufi claims of spiritual status and <i>shari‘a</i> legitimacy, and it fails to distinguish eighteenth-century examples from the very different reform movements created in the nineteenth century in response to European colonialism. This article considers as a case study <i>Nala-yi ‘Andalib</i> (“The Nightingale’s Lament”), the central text produced by the pre-colonial founder of the “pure Muhammadi path”, Muhammad Nasir ‘Andalib (d. 1758), with the help of intertextual references to the masterpiece of his son, Khwaja Mir Dard (d. 1785), <i>‘Ilm al-Kitab</i> (“Knowledge of the Book”). The consequence of their evaluation of yoga was not the systematic rejection of non-Islamic practices, but a guarded acknowledgement of their efficacy within a framework that used Indic references as a straw man for intra-Islamic debates.
ISSN:2077-1444