Shafique Virani: The ismalis in the Middle Ages

Books on Ismailism, reviews etc..
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Shafique Virani: The ismalis in the Middle Ages

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“None of that people should be spared, not even the babe in its cradle.” With these chilling words, the Mongol warlord Genghis Khan declared his intention to destroy the Ismailis, one of the most intellectually and politically significant Muslim communities of medieval Islamdom. The massacres that followed convinced observers that this powerful voice of Shi‘i Islam had been forever silenced. Little was heard of these people for centuries, until their recent and dramatic emergence from obscurity. Today they exist as a dynamic and thriving community established in over twenty-five countries. Yet the interval between what appeared to have been their total annihilation, and their modern, seemingly phoenix-like renaissance, has remained shrouded in mystery. Drawing on an astonishing array of sources gathered from many countries around the globe, The Ismailis in the Middle Ages: A History of Survival, A Search for Salvation is a richly nuanced and compelling study of the murkiest portion of this era. In probing the period from the dark days when the Ismaili fortresses in Iran fell before the marauding Mongol hordes, to the emergence at Anjudan of the Ismaili Imams who provided a spiritual centre to a scattered community, this work explores the motivations, passions and presumptions of historical actors. With penetrating insight, Shafique N. Virani examines the rich esoteric thought that animated the Ismailis and enabled them to persevere. A work of remarkable erudition, this landmark book is essential reading for scholars of Islamic history and spirituality, Shi‘ism and Iran. Both specialists and informed lay readers will take pleasure not only in its scholarly perception, but in its lively anecdotes, quotations of delightful poetry, and gripping narrative style. This is an extraordinary book of historical beauty and spiritual vision.

“This is a masterful reconstruction of the history of the Ismailis of Iran, a minority Shi‘i community that was forced underground in the thirteenth century by intense persecution. Reliable data on the Ismailis has been hard to come by - their libraries were destroyed and their reputations besmirched by hostile propaganda. Through painstaking archival research and careful readings of previously unknown sources, Shafique Virani has significantly revised the traditional accounts of this community’s history.”
-Ali Asani, author of Ecstasy and Enlightenment: The Ismaili Devotional Literatures of South Asia

“In order to show how the Ismaili Shi‘is survived the Mongol onslaught of the thirteenth century, Shafique Virani employs a wide variety of sources in many different South-and South west-Asian languages. Some of these sources provide historically useful information only in the most oblique ways, and Virani’s great achievement is to tease out meaning from what appear to be intractable materials. The resulting reconstruction of medieval Ismaili history is both scholarly and tender, subtle as well as moving.”
-Robert Wisnovsky, Director, Institute of Islamic Studies, McGill University

“The book offers a discerning and sensitive portrayal of the struggle for survival and the spiritual life of a religious community that endured severe persecution and extreme defamation during much of its history. The author in particular succeeds in bringing to light the esoteric spirituality and profound devotion to the living Imam prevalent in the centuries of concealment following the catastrophic Mongol attempt to annihilate Nizari Ismailism, relying on the evidence of fragmentary source material that has only recently been recovered.”
-Wilferd Madelung, author of The Succession to Muhammad

“Drawing on an exhaustive array of Arabic, Persian and South Asian sources as well as the scattered results of modern scholarship on the Ismailis, Virani has produced a comprehensive and readable account of the complex, and often obscure, medieval history of the Nizari Ismailis. This book represents a major contribution to modern Ismaili studies.”
-Farhad Daftary, author of The Ismailis: Their History and Doctrines

More here: www1.utm.utoronto.ca/shafiquevirani/ima/
ng070758
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Post by ng070758 »

I was fortunate enough to be be present at  the book launch by the author in Atlanta a few weeks ago.I believe half of the audience was in tears at the end of the presentation.His presentation gave me a boost to go to Syria for darbar and learn more about our history.This trip has changed me totally and want to get a masters in education so I can go back to Syria and contribute a little and give back for I have been so blessed .The book is an eye opener,especially for me.I am a fifty year old REC teacher and am well read but this book shines a different Great reading.
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In Nairobi, the Jamat was so moved that he got standing ovation for 10 long minutes.

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In lieu of an abstract, here is a preview of the article.

The pre-modern history of the Isma'ili Shi'i sect of Islam has typically been shrouded in mystery or distorted through fantasy. This is as true of its origins in dispute over the rightful successor to Ja'far al-Sadiq, the sixth in a genealogical line from the Prophet's family of imams or divinely guided religious and political leaders of the early Shi'ah community, as it is of medieval Isma'ili history after the fall of the Fatimid dynasty's rule in Egypt and the Levant. At that time the Nizari Isma'ili branch maintained their resistant challenge to Sunni Muslim political powers and crusaders alike through the covert network of faithful agents and missionaries, the 'assassins' of medieval legend, deployed from a dispersed group of mountain fortresses ruled by the imams from Alamut, the Eagle's Nest. But no period has been as obscure as that between the destruction of Alamut in 1256 by Hulegu Khan, grandson of Chinggis and lord of the Mongol Il-Khanate in Persia, and the re-emergence of the imams in Anjadan two and a half centuries later, after the Safavid dynasty consolidated its conquest of Persia and conversion of it to Shi'ism (albeit a different branch, known as the Imami or Twelver sect). For some

https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/universit ... usain.html
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