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![]() | This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Arabic. (January 2012) Click for important translation instructions.
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Desouki, also known as the Burhani order, is a Sufi order primarily found in Desouk in Egypt. It was founded by Ibrahim El-Desouki, whose resting place in the Nile delta is a major place of pilgrimage for Sufi Muslims from all over Egypt.[1] Originally from Egypt, there is a significant population of memberes in Khartoum.[2]
During the Ottoman times, this order, along with the other native Egyptian Sufi order, the Badawiyyah order, had several tekkes in Istanbul. These tekkes, along with all others, were closed when Turkey became a republic.
See alsoedit
- Muhammad ibn 'Arafa ad-Desouki (prominent late jurist of the Maliki school).
- Ibrahim El-Desouki
- Desouk
- Dessouki
- Desouk SC
Referencesedit
- ^ Ladjal, Tarek; Bensaid, Benaouda (2014-06-10). "Sufism and Politics in Contemporary Egypt: A Study of Sufi Political Engagement in the Pre and Post-revolutionary Reality of January 2011". Journal of Asian and African Studies. 50 (4): 468–485. doi:10.1177/0021909614534170. ISSN 0021-9096. S2CID 55254450.
- ^ "The Sufis of Khartoum". Qantara.de - Dialogue with the Islamic World. Retrieved 2022-02-04.
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