Aḥmad al-Badawī (Arabic: أحمد البدوى, Egyptian Arabic pronunciation:[ˈæħmæd elˈbædæwi]), also known as Al-Sayyid al-Badawī (السيد البدوى[esˈsæjjed elˈbædæwi]), or as al-Badawī for short, or reverentially as Shaykh al-Badawī by Sunni Muslims who venerate saints,[3] was a 13th-century Arab[3]Sufi Muslimmystic who became famous as the founder of the Badawiyyahorder of Sufism. Born in Fes, Morocco to a Bedouin tribe originally from the Syrian Desert,[3][4] al-Badawi eventually settled for good in Tanta, Egypt in 1236, whence he developed a posthumous reputation as "One of the greatest saints in the Arab world"[5][3] As al-Badawi is perhaps "the most popular of Muslim saints in Egypt", his tomb has remained a "major site of visitation" for Muslims in the region.[6]
History
According to several medieval chronicles, al-Badawi hailed from an Arab tribe of Syrian origin.[3] A Sunni Muslim by persuasion, al-Badawi entered the Rifaʽi sufi order (founded by the renowned Shafi'imystic and juristAhmad al-Rifaʽi [d. 1182]) in his early life,[3] being initiated into the order at the hands of a particular Iraqi teacher.[3] After a trip to Mecca, al-Badawi is said to have travelled to Iraq, "where his sainthood [is believed to have] clearly manifested itself" through the karamat "miracles" he is said to have performed.[3]
Eventually al-Badawi went to Tanta in the Sultanate of Egypt, where he settled for good in 1236.[3] According to the various traditional biographies of the saint's life, al-Badawi gathered forty disciples around him during this period, who are collectively said to have "dwelt on the city's rooftop terraces,"[3] whence his spiritual order were informally named the "roof men" (aṣḥāb al-saṭḥ) in the vernacular.[3] Al-Badawi died in Tanta in 1276, being seventy-six years old.[3]
Spiritual lineage
As with every other major Sufi order, the Badawiyya proposes an unbroken spiritual chain of transmitted knowledge going back to Muhammad through one of his Companions, which in the Badawi's case is Ali (d. 661).[7]
In this regard, Idries Shah quotes al-Badawi: "Sufi schools are like waves which break upon rocks: [they are] from the same sea, in different forms, for the same purpose."[8][9]
^Galin, Müge (1997). Between East and West: Sufism in the Novels of Doris Lessing. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. pp. xix, 5–8, 21, 40–41, 101, 115. ISBN0-7914-3383-8.
^Taji Farouki and Nafi, Basheer M., Suha (2004). Islamic Thought in the Twentieth Century. London, UK/New York, NY: I.B.Tauris Publishers. p. 123. ISBN1-85043-751-3.
Further reading
Al-Imām Nūruddīn Al-Halabī Al-Ahmadī, Sīrah Al-Sayyid Ahmad Al-Badawī, Published by Al-Maktabah Al-Azhariyyah Li Al-Turāth, Cairo.
Mayeur-Jaouen, Catherine, Al-Sayyid Ahmad Al-Badawi: Un Grand Saint De L'islam egyptien, Published by Institut francais d'archeologie orientale du Caire