Ahmad al-Rifa'i
c. 1118 CE–c. 1182 CE · Wasit
Ahmad ibn 'Ali al-Rifa'i was a jurist, preacher, and Sufi (Muslim mystic) of southern Iraq, traditionally remembered as the figure from whom the Rifa'iyya — one of the oldest Sufi orders (tariqas, "paths" of spiritual discipline) — takes its name. Biographical sources are mostly later devotional accounts (manaqib), so many details are traditionally held rather than firmly documented. He is reported to have been born around 512 AH (c. 1118-19 CE), with some traditions placing his birth earlier (c. 500 AH); the dates are uncertain. His home was Umm 'Abida, a village in the Bata'ih, the marsh country between Wasit and Basra. Tradition holds that his father died when he was about seven and that he was raised and trained by his maternal uncle, the Sufi shaykh Mansur al-Bata'ihi, studying jurisprudence of the Shafi'i school (one of Sunni Islam's four legal traditions) and Qur'an interpretation under Abu al-Fadl Ali al-Wasiti. He is said to have succeeded his uncle as head of the marshland community around 1145-46 CE, drawing followers known for poverty, humility, and service to the poor. He died around 578 AH (1182-83 CE) at Umm 'Abida, where his shrine became a pilgrimage site. The dramatic feats later linked to the order in popular imagination — handling fire and serpents, self-piercing — are not credibly traced to al-Rifa'i himself; observers and Britannica associate them with a later, post-Mongol period and they were contested within Islam.
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Wasit
What they did here
Al-Rifa'i is given the nisba 'al-Wasiti' in some accounts and his teacher Abu al-Fadl Ali al-Wasiti is associated with Wasit, the regional center adjoining the marshlands where he was raised. His training in Shafi'i law and Qur'an interpretation is tied by tradition to this Wasit area; the precise stops are not firmly documented. Included as the nearby regional study center; his life was otherwise sedentary in the marshes.
About Wasit
Wasit, in central Iraq between Kufa and Basra, was a garrison-city founded around 702 by the Umayyad governor al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf; its name ('the middle one') reflects its position midway between the two older cities. It became a centre of hadith and law; the mystic al-Hallaj (executed 922) and the Sufi Ahmad al-Rifa'i (d. 1182), eponym of the Rifa'iyya order, are connected to its district.
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