Badawiyya
| Subclass of | Rifaʽi |
|---|---|
| Inditirde | الطَّرِيقَةُ الْأَحْمَدِيَّةُ، الطَّرِيقَةُ الْبَدَوِيَّةُ |
| Diina | Diina Lislaama |
| Named after | Ahmad al-Badawi |
| Founded by | Ahmad al-Badawi |
| Lesdi | Misra |
Badawiyya, woni tariqa suufiyaŋke, sosaa ko e teeminannde sappo e tataɓere to Ejipt, ko Ahmadu Al-Badawi (1199-1276). Ko ɗum tariqa, Badawiya alaa ko woni e mum so wonaa jaŋde ceertunde.[1]
Kono, nde heewnoo yiyeede e yontaaji Mamluk en e yontaaji Ottomaan en to Ejipt. Sultan en Mamluk en ina keewi wallitde ‘Mawlid’ laaɓtuɗo to nokku fooftorde Sheek Ahmed al-Badawi (walla Sayyid Badawi no o ɓuri anndeede nii) to wuro wiyeteengo Tanta, to bannge ŋoral Niil.
E jamaanu Ottomaan en, ndee yamiroore yaaji haa e nder leydi Turki kadi won Tekke walla zawiyaaji keewɗi e nder leydi Istanbul keewɗi heen nguuri haa nde laamu Turki sosaa.
Mawlid Sayyid Badawi ina mawninee haa jooni e nder leydi Ejipt hitaande kala ɗo yimɓe Tanta ɓeydotoo fotde laabi ɗiɗi. Tenteeji ina mbaɗee e laabi saraaji juulirde Sayyid Badawi ɗo janngugol Qur'aana e waajuuji annduɓe teeŋtuɓe ummoriiɓe juulirde al-Azhar mbaɗetee.
Tuugnorgal
[taƴto | taƴto ɗaɗi wiki]- ↑ el-Aswad, El-Sayed (July 13, 2012). Muslim Worldviews and Everyday Lives. Rowman Altamira. p. 77. ISBN 9780759121195. Retrieved 16 November 2016.