Galibi Order
Part of a series on |
Islam |
---|
Related topics |
|
The Galibi Order of Sufism is a descendant of the Qadiriya and Rifa'iya orders – the integration of the earliest and the most popular orders established in Islam. It has been called as Qadiriyyah-Rufai order until the order branched off its ancestor school in 1993, and began to be called after the name of its sheikh, Galip Hasan Kuşçuoğlu. The Order's central dargah is in Ankara and it has various branches throughout Turkey (e.g., Istanbul, Çorum, Adana, Gaziantep, Kütahya, Isparta, Antalya). The Galibi are Hanifi in fiqh and Alevi in disposition.
See also
- Ashurkhana
- Jamatkhana
- Imambargah
- Khalwatkhana
- Khanaqa
- Mejlis
- Musallah
- Hussainia
- Tekkes
- Malamatiyya
- Mawlawiyyah
- Hurufiyya
- Rifa'iyya
- Qadiriyya
- Qalandariyya
- Bektashiyyah
- Naqshbandiyyah
- Zahediyya
- Khalwatiyya
- Bayramiyya
- Safaviyya
References
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/11/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.