Enacting Mysticism in the World: Practical Sufism in the Tariqa Karkariyya and Alawiyya
Religions January 22, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.3390/rel16020111 via OpenAlex
Summary
The article explores the ethical and moral dimensions of Sufism, particularly how experiences of the divine can foster ethical relationships with oneself, others, and the divine. It connects ascetic practices with Sufi mysticism through the concept of tarbiya. By examining two Sufi orders in Morocco, the Karkariyya and the Alawiyya, the work aims to define an active inner-worldly mysticism that engages with social change, challenging traditional distinctions between mysticism and asceticism.
Study at a glance
| Population | members of the Karkariyya and Alawiyya Sufi orders in Morocco |
|---|---|
| Key finding | The article investigates how direct experiences of the divine can lead to active ethical engagement and social change within Sufi practices. |
Abstract
In this article, I will touch on the ethical and moral possibilities of mysticism. On the one hand, I discuss the kinds of ethical work required to open and cultivate experiences of the divine. On the other hand, I look at how those experiences of the divine create new opportunities for kinds of ethical relationships to oneself, to others, and to the divine. In doing so, I connect the practices of asceticism—zuhd—with the types of experience characteristic of Sufi mysticism through the concept of tarbiya. Understanding taṣawwuf as an ongoing process in which experiences of the divine are a part, not an end, helps us grasp the intransitive nature of the term taṣawwuf itself. The goal in doing so is to think through what an ‘inner-worldly’ mysticism might look like—a category noticeably absent from Weber’s analysis. Part of its absence, I would suggest, is due to the fact that it does not map onto the passive–active distinction between mysticism and asceticism he tends to draw. But rather than merely critique Weber’s model, which, of course, is grounded in ideal types, and therefore nothing ever fits solely into one of his categories, my goal is to consider what an active inner-worldly mysticism might look like. In other words, what are the modes of ethical engagement and action made possible by those experiences which are considered to be direct experiences of the divine and how are those direct experiences in turn made possible by different kinds of ethical work? In this article, I will consider each of these in relation to two Sufi orders based on my fieldwork in Morocco—the Karkariyya and the Alawiyya. These are two closely related orders that are part of the Shadhiliyya, and they share several members within their spiritual lineages, with the split dating only to the 20th century. Through an analysis and comparison of the two groups, I investigate what an active mysticism could look like in the world today and hope to create new spaces for comparative mysticism that would see mystics as deeply concerned with changing their social worlds.