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  2. Dhikr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dhikr

    The Islamic prophet Muhammad is reported to have taught his daughter Fatimah bint Rasul Allah a special manner of Dhikr which is known as the "Tasbih of Fatimah". [36] This consists of: 33 repetitions of subḥāna -llah i (سُبْحَانَ ٱللَّٰهِ), meaning "Glorified is God". This saying is known as Tasbih (تَسْبِيح).

  3. Zikar-e-Qalbi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zikar-e-Qalbi

    Zikar-e-Qalbi which is also known as Zikar-e-khafi or silent zikr, is being practiced by Naqshbandi Sufi followers. This way of zikar, Dhikr ذکر, focuses on remembering Allah in one's heart. One has to feel that his heart is saying Allah, Allah, Allah, all the time day or night, standing or sitting, talking or while doing any work. [1]

  4. Zikrism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zikrism

    Zikr Khanas were often built on Astanas, places deemed holy by the Zikri community. This could be a place a Murshid meditated or the former home of a community leader. [3] Unlike Mosques, Zikr Khanas have no Mihrab (there is no need to mark the direction of prayer because God is everywhere), nor Minarets. [19]

  5. Kunta-Hajji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kunta-Hajji

    Kunta-Ḥājjī al-Iliskhānī (Kishiev) (Chechen: Киши КӀант Кунт-Хьаж, romanized: Kishi K'ant Kunt-X́až; [b] c. 1800 – 1867) [2] was a Chechen Muslim mystic, [3] the founder of a Sufi practice of loud Zikr, and an ideologue of nonviolence and passive resistance.

  6. Sufism in Bangladesh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sufism_in_Bangladesh

    The participants of zikr do not perform any other sama (Suif music), qawwali, or dance. The only music performed with the verbal zikr is Na`at, written and sung with rhythm and melody but without any musical instrument, by the poets (performers of zikr). [18] The anniversary of the birth and death of a Sufi pir is observed annually.

  7. Islamic rituals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_rituals

    Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... move to sidebar hide. Islamic rituals may refer to: Common rituals Aqiqah, an Islamic animal ...

  8. Urs festival, Ajmer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urs_festival,_Ajmer

    This Urs festival is held over six days and features night-long dhikr (zikr) qawwali singing. The anniversary is celebrated in the seventh month of the Islamic lunar calendar . Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims, many from foreign countries, visit the shrine from all over India.

  9. Eleven Naqshbandi principles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eleven_Naqshbandi_principles

    The Eleven Naqshbandi principles or the "rules or secrets of the Naqshbandi", known in Persian as the kalimat-i qudsiya ("sacred words" or "virtuous words"), [1] are a system of principles and guidelines used as spiritual exercises, [2] or to encourage certain preferred states of being, in the Naqshbandi Sufi order of Islamic mysticism.