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Ibrahim al-Desuqi

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Sidi
Ibrahim al-Desouki
Mausoleum of Saint Ibrahim El Desouki
TitleShaykh al-Islam
Personal life
Born633 AH, (1255 CE)
Died676 AH, (1296 CE)
EraIslamic Golden Age, (Later Abbasid Era)
Main interest(s)Sufism
OccupationImam
Religious life
ReligionIslam
DenominationSunni
SchoolShafi'i
TariqaDesouki (founder)
CreedAsh'ari
Muslim leader
Influenced by

'Ibrahīm Bin ʿAbd-El-ʿAzīz 'Abu al-Magd (Egyptian Arabic: إبراهيم بن عبد العزيز أبو المجد), better known as El Desouki (الدسوقي) (1255 in Desouk, Egypt – 1296), was an Egyptian Imam and the founder of the Desouki Order.

Life

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El Desouki was born in Desouk on the Nile delta and lived there his whole life, hence his attribution to it.[1] According to traditions and popular sayings, He is a descendant of Ali ibn Abi Talib from his paternal side through Ali al-Hadi.[2][3] El-Desouki was influenced by the Shadhili Sufi order founded by his uncle Abu al-Hasan Shadhili and was as well close to his contemporary Sufi Ahmad al-Badawi of Tanta.[4] He became Sheikh ul-Islam of Egypt during Baibars' rule.

His feast is celebrated twice a year: the first during April, and the second on October the 2nd.[5]

Shaykh Ibrahim bin Sheikh Abdul-Aziz, known as Abul-Majdi bin Quraish Addasuqi RA, was born in Dasuq-Egypt city on the last night of Shaheban 653H month which coincided with 1255M.

He was born on the eve of Syak, the scholars doubt the emergence of a tsabit month showing the entrance of Ramadan. Shaykh Ibn Harun Asshufi then said: look at this newborn child, does he drink his mother's milk? So his mother replied, "from the time of the call to prayer, he stopped drinking his mother's milk."

Thus Sheikh Ibn Aaron declared that the day was the first day of the month of Ramadan and the signs of the saintliness of Sheikh Ibrahim Addasuqi RA were revealed from the moment of his birth.

He is the fourth and final "Wali Qutub" after Sheikh Ahmad Arrifa'i RA, Sheikh Abdul-Qadir al-Jaelani RA and Shaykh Ahmad al-Badawi RA as believed by the Tashawuf scholars such as Sheikh Mahmud al-Garbawi in his book al-Ayatuzzahirah fi Manaqib al-Awliya 'wal-Aqthab al-Arba'ah, and Assayyid Abul-Huda M.bin Hasan al-Khalidi Asshayyadi in his book Farhatul-Ahbab fi Akhbar al-Arba'ah al-Ahbab and Qiladatul-Jawahir fi fi Zikril Gautsirrifa 'I wa Atba'ihil-Akabir.

He is the founder of the Thariqat known as Burhamiyyah or Dusuqiyyah. His heir as shariq Thariqat Dusuqiyyah Muhammadiyyah of this era is Maulanassyekh Mukhtar Ali Muhammad Addasuqi RA (hopefully long life, amen).

In the book of Thabaqat al-Kubara, you will find Sheikh Abdul-Wahhab Assya'rani RA talking about Sayyidi Abul-Hasan Assyazili's story in 12 pages, Sayyidi Ahmad Arrifa'i in 7 pages, Sayyidi Abdul-Qadir Al-Jailani RA in 9 pages and Sayyidi Ahmad al-Badawi RA in just 7 pages. While Sayyidi Ibrahim Addusuqi RA 25 pages ...!

See also

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Sources

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  1. ^ Jalāl al-Dīn Aḥmad al-Karkī, A definition of Wali Sīdī 'Ibrahīm al-Dosūqī, Taj 2006, page 8
  2. ^ True Knower of God Sīdī 'Ibrahīm al-Dosūqī. Archived 2013-05-29 at the Wayback Machine Municipality of Dessouk. (in Arabic)
  3. ^ Modarressi, Hossein (1993). Crisis and Consolidation in the Formative Period of Shi'ite Islam: Abu Ja'Far Ibn Qiba Al-Razi and His Contribution to Imamite Shi'Ite Thought. Darwin Press. ISBN 0878500952. See, for instance, Sha'riini, 1: 181 (the biography of the Sufishaykh, Ibriihim b. Abi 'I-Majd al-Dusuqi [d. 67611277-81, who descends from Ja'far as a twelfth-generation descendant of his, hence a thirteenth generation descendant of Ali-Al Hadi)
  4. ^ Fauzi Muḥammad Abu Zaid, Sheikh ul-Islam Ibrahīm al-Dosūqī, Life and belief house, Cairo, 2008, p.91.
  5. ^ About Desouk Centre Archived 2012-11-20 at the Wayback Machine Municipality of Desouk. (in Arabic)
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