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    3
    POPS
    Historical Dictionary of Sufism
    Yafi07
    by Yafi07  9-20-2009   
     By John Renard
    3
    POPS
    Eternity is Now
    Yafi07
    by Yafi07  8-30-2008    2
     No Remarks
    1
    POPS
    The Lord of the Rings and the Esoteric Symbolism of the Abrahamic Faiths
    Yafi07
    by Yafi07  8-17-2008    1
     Tolkien was a Roman Catholic and he delved deeply into the world of archetypes and symbols. Mahmoud Shelton demonstrates how Tolkien used many of these symbols in a distinctly Sufic, alchemical manner in the quest pursued by, and in the lives of, his characters. The mystical traditions of all three Abrahamic religions, while possessing their own distinct perspectives and practices, are nevertheless also very close in what one might term an Abrahamic symbolic pool which is shared by all three religions in varying alignments and semantic expressions, To speak in Sufi terms, the core of the quest is the journey of return to a realization of unity with the One. The path is love, the fuel is love, and the goal is love. Alchemy is the process of transformation that love ffects.
    3
    POPS
    Mystical Dimensions of Islam
    Yafi07
    by Yafi07  8-13-2008   
     This is an excellent book on the history and practices of the Sufi path.
    1
    POPS
    A book about the life and thought of Ibn 'Arabi
    Yafi07
    by Yafi07  8-5-2008   
     Ibn 'Arabi is also known as the Shaykh al-Akbar, the greatest Shaykh. He was born in Al-Andalus in the mid twelfth century and lived half his life there before travelling east. He wrote prodigiously and claimed never to write anything he had not experienced personally. His influence on the development of Sufism was immense. What I appreciate so much about this biography by Stephen Hirtenstein is the way he introduces the reader to the thought of Ibn 'Arabi and also describes the historical context in which he lived, wrote, and pursued his spiritual path. Many scholars see Ibn 'Arabi as being equally significant to our present day concerns alonside the work of Jalaluddin Rumi. To read this book is like stepping into the times of Ibn 'Arabi in Al-Andalus and bathing in his spiritual wisdom. Having lived in Andaluci I often had a sense of his presence in the places he had been whether in the mosque of Cordoba, the port of Adra, or under the mulberry trees in the Alpujarran mountains.
    — end of the list —

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