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According to several medieval chronicles, Elbadawi hailed from an Arab tribe of Syrian origin. [3] A Sufi Muslim by persuasion, Elbadawi entered the Rifaʽi sufi order (founded by the renowned Shafi'i mystic and jurist Ahmad al-Rifaʽi [d. 1182]) in his early life, [3] being initiated into the order at the hands of a particular Iraqi teacher. [3]
The Ahmad al-Badawi Mosque (Arabic: مسجد أحمد البدوي) is a Sufi mosque and shrine complex in Tanta, Egypt. The name of this mosque is derived from the Sufi mystic Ahmad al-Badawi, the founder of the Badawiyya Sufi order, who is buried in the shrine of the building. The mosque is also the largest and most-visited mosque in Tanta.
In Arabic onomastics , Al-Badawi (البدوي) or simply Badawi (بدوي) denotes a relationship to or from Bedouin areas (and may consequently imply 'rustic'). It is both a given name and a surname. Notable people with the name include: Ahmad al-Badawi, a saint in Islam; Al-Baydawi, philosopher and mufassir
The Badawiyyah, Sufi tariqah, was founded in the thirteenth century in Egypt by Ahmad al-Badawi (1199-1276). As a tariqah, the Badawiyyah lacks any distinct doctrines. [1]It was, however, extremely popular during both the Mamluk and Ottoman periods of Egypt.
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El-Badawi taught Arabic at the University of Chicago from 2006 to 2010 and served as a lecturer in religion at Temple University from 2003 to 2005. [2] He also chaired the Department of Modern and Classical Languages at the University of Houston as Associate Professor and Program Director of Middle Eastern Studies. [3]
Badawi also attended the University of Alabama, President Stuart R. Bell said in a statement Wednesday. "I grieve alongside family and friends of Kareem in their heartbreaking loss," Bell said.
Al-Badawi al-Mulaththum (Arabic: البدوي الملثم, "The Veiled Bedouin") was the pen name used by Ya'qoub Al Oudat, a pioneer of thought and literature in Jordan, writer, thinker, scholar, historian, storyteller and a translator.