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  2. List of Sufi saints - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Sufi_saints

    Habib al-Ajami (d. 738, buried in Basra) Abu Bakr al-Aydarus (1447–1508, buried in Aden, the patron saint of Aden, credited with introducing Qadiri Sufism to Ethiopia and coffee to the Arab world) Ahmad al-Badawi (1200–1276, buried in Ahmad Al-Badawi Mosque, most popular saint in Egypt)

  3. Haji Bayram Veli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haji_Bayram_Veli

    Muslim leader. Influenced by. Somuncu Baba. Influenced. Akshamsaddin. Haji Bayram Veli or Wali ( Turkish: Hacı Bayram-ı Veli) (1352–1430) was an Ottoman poet, Sufi saint, and the founder of the Bayrami Order. [1] He also composed a number of hymns ( ilahi in Turkish ). [1] Part of a series on Islam.

  4. Wali - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wali

    Wali. A wali ( Arabic: وَلِيّ, romanized : walī; plural أَوْلِيَاء, ʾawliyāʾ) is most commonly used by Muslims to indicate a saint, otherwise referred to by the more literal "friend of God ". [1] [2] [3] When the Arabic definite article al ( ال) is added, it refers to one of the names of God in Islam, Allah – al-Walī ...

  5. Islamic State in Kurdistan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_State_in_Kurdistan

    Later in 2010, the Kurdistan Brigades disbanded, and the Islamic State of Iraq also disbanded in April 2013. [12] The Islamic State was founded on April 7, 2013, as a successor of the Islamic State of Iraq, and it became an enemy of Al-Qaeda and its affiliated groups. [13] [14] After the Islamic State was founded, Ansar al-Islam began fighting ...

  6. Wali (administrative title) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wali_(administrative_title)

    Mehemet Ali Viceroy of Egypt, by Auguste Couder, 1841. Rostom (Rustam Khan), Safavid viceroy of Kartli, Georgia.. Wāli, Wā'lī or vali (from Arabic: والي Wālī) is an administrative title that was used in the Muslim world (including the Rashidun, Umayyad and Abbasid caliphates and the Ottoman Empire) to designate governors of administrative divisions.

  7. Sufi literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sufi_literature

    Sufi literature. Sufi literature consists of works in various languages that express and advocate the ideas of Sufism . Sufism had an important influence on medieval literature, especially poetry, that was written in Arabic, Persian, Turkic , Sindhi and Urdu. Sufi doctrines and organizations provided more freedom to literature than did the ...

  8. Yunus Emre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yunus_Emre

    Yunus Emre has exercised immense influence on new formed Turkish literature, which was a combination of Persian and Arabic languages from his own day until the present, because Yunus Emre is, after Ahmed Yesevi and Sultan Walad, one of the first known poets to have composed works in the spoken Old Anatolian Turkish of his own age and region rather than in only Persian or Arabic.

  9. Bektashi Order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bektashi_Order

    Bektashi Order. The Bektashi Order or Bektashism is an Islamic Sufi mystic order originating in the 13th-century Ottoman Empire. It is named after the saint Haji Bektash Veli. The Bektashian community is currently led by Baba Mondi, their eighth Bektashi Dedebaba and headquartered in Tirana, Albania. [6]