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Shaykh Sufi

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Title
  
Shaykh Suufi

Region
  
Islam

Died
  
1904

Religion
  
Islam

Ethnicity
  
Somali

Name
  
Shaykh Sufi

Era
  
19th century


Abd Al-Rahman bin Abdallah al Shashi (Arabic: عبد الرحمن بن عبد الله الشاشي‎‎) (b. 1829 - 1904), popularly known as Shaykh Sufi, was a 19th-century Somali scholar, poet, reformist and astrologist.

Contents

Life

Shaykh Sufi was born in Mogadishu, where he founded the Qadiriyyah congregation, an Islamic school of thought or tariqah whose disciples included colleagues of his such as Uways al-Barawi. He studied astrology and wrote extensively on the future of Mogadishu and religious sciences, and authored popular books such as Shadjarat al Yakim ("The Tree of Certitude").

Besides his scholarly career, Shaykh Sufi was known as a great mediator between merchants and shop keepers in the coastal cities. As a reformist, he is credited with having put an end to what he considered to be the urbanites' immoral dancing rituals. In private, he also wrote many poems, which would eventually be taken up by fellow scholars such as Abdallah al-Qutbi in their books.

Pilgrimage to his Mausoleum

After his death in 1904, Shaykh Sufi's resting place became a site of annual pilgrimage for the faithful from across Somalia and East Africa. A cemetery would eventually be constructed around his mausoleum, where prominent Somali ministers, entertainers and Presidents would also be buried.

References

Shaykh Sufi Wikipedia