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Jam'iyyah Ahlith Thariqah al-Mu'tabarah an-Nahdliyyah (JATMAN; Arabic: جمعية أهل الطريقة المعتبرة النهضية, romanized: Jam‘iyyah Ahl al-Ṭarīqah al-Mu‘tabarah al-Nahḍiyyah, English: the Association of Recognized Sufi Orders of Nahdlatul Ulama) is an Indonesian religious organization whose members focus on practicing the teachings of the tariqa.
Nasir al-Fahd (born 1968) Rabee al-Madkhali (born 1931) Saad al-Ateeq (born 1969) Saad al Ghamdi (born 1967) Safar al-Hawali (born 1950) Salah Al Budair (born 1970) Saleh Al-Fawzan (born 1933) Saleh Al-Maghamsi (born 1963) Saud Al-Shuraim (born 1964) Saleh Al-Talib (born 1974) Sulaiman Al-Alwan (born 1969) Sheikh Mahmoud Khalil Al-Qari (death 2022)
[1] [2] The creation of the Ministry of the Religious Affairs was re-proposed for the third time to the Working Committee of the Central Indonesian National Committee on 11 November 1945 by K.H. Abudardiri, K.H. Saleh Suaidy, and M. Sukoso Wirjosaputro. This proposal was also supported by Mohammad Natsir, Muwardi, Marzuki Mahdi, and Kartosudarmo.
Dar al-Ifta was established in 1895. [3] As with Al-Azhar, it operated with state support but also had a degree of autonomy. [4] It began advising state agencies in various Islamic matters, a role that was previously held by the Hanafi chief mufti. [5] Egypt's Dar al-Ifta started as one of the divisions of the Egyptian Ministry of Justice.
On June 1, 2007, Syarif Hidayatullah State Islamic University Jakarta celebrated its fiftieth anniversary. For half a century, the university has carried out its mandate as an institution of learning and transmitting knowledge, a research institution that supports the process of nation building, and as an institution devoted to the community that provides programs to improve social welfare.
Qudusiyah [1] (Arabic: الْقُدُسِيَّةُ) is a tariqa (Arabic: الطريقة) or Sufi order in Indonesia which was founded in 1968 in Cilegon, Banten.. The murshid (sheikh, spiritual teacher) of the Qudusiyah Order was Suprapto bin Kadis Darmosuharto (1929–2011), known as Suprapto Kadis by his disciples.
Atharism (Arabic: الأثرية, romanized: al-ʾAthariyya / al-aṯariyyah [æl ʔæθæˈrɪj.jæ], "archeological") is a school of theology in Sunni Islam which developed from circles of the Ahl al-Hadith, a group that rejected rationalistic theology in favor of strict textualism in interpretation the Quran and the hadith.
A tariqa (Arabic: طريقة, romanized: ṭarīqa) is a religious order of Sufism, or specifically a concept for the mystical teaching and spiritual practices of such an order with the aim of seeking haqiqa, which translates as "ultimate truth".