- Sufi poetry
Sufi poetry has been written in many languages, both for private devotional reading and as lyrics for music played during worship, or
dhikr . Themes and styles established inArabic poetry and mostlyPersian poetry have had an enormous influence on Sufi poetry throughout the Islamic world.Some of the most famous works, both poetry and prose, in Sufi literature are:
*The "Mathnawī" and "
Diwan-e Shams-e Tabriz-i " of Rūmī
*al-Buṣīrī's "Qaṣīdat-ul-Burda "
*Shaikh Abū Sa`īd Abū-l-Khair's "Asrār-ut-Tawḥīd" ("The Secrets of Unity")
*Farid al-Din Attar 's "The Conference of the Birds "
*Ibn Arabi 's "Fuṣūṣ-ul-Ḥikam" ("The Bezels of Wisdom") and "Tarjuman al-Ashraq" ("The Interpreter of Desires")
*Al-Ghazali 's "Kimiya-yi sa'ādat " ("The Alchemy of Happiness")
*Muhammad Tahir ul-Qadri 's "Dala’il al-Barakat"
*Gohar Shahi's "Turyaaq-e-Qulb" ("Cure for Heart")Bibliography
*Khan, Inayat: "The Hand of Poetry" Omega Publications.
*Schimmel, Annemarie: "As Through A Veil, Mystical Poetry in Islam".
*Wilson, Peter Lamborn and Nasrollah Pourjavady: "The Drunken Universe - An Anthology of Persian Sufi Poetry" Omega Publications.
*Dunn, Philip: " The Love Poems of Rūmī" Andrews McMeel Publishing.ee also
*
Sufism
*History of Sufism
*Islamic poetry
*Islamic music
*Persian literature
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