Rabia al basri biography of barack
Hazrath Rabia Hasan Basri RA - fundamentalbelief.blogspot.com
- Rābiʼa al-ʼAdawiyya al-Qaysiyya (Arabic: رابعة العدوية القيسية; c.
Wali Allah: Hazrat Rabia Basri
- Rabia Al Basria is the most famous and perhaps the first female Sufi saint of Islam.
Rabia al Basri biography on
Rabia Basri - New World Encyclopedia
- Sufi Biography: Rabia Basri (Rabe a al-Adawiya) Rabia bint Esmail al-Adawiya, born in humble circumstances and sold into slavery as a child, later settled in Basra where she attained great fame as a saint and a preacher and was highly esteemed by many of her pious contemporaries.
The story goes that Basri (642-728 CE) was born in Medina and settled in Basra as a gem merchant before he converted to Sufism. | |
Rābiʼa al-ʼAdawiyya al-Qaysiyya (Arabic: رابعة العدوية القيسية; c. | |
(Rabia al-Adawiyya) Born in year 717 to a poor family in Basra, Rabia al-Adawiyya, was the fourth daughter to her parents. |
Rābiʻa al-ʻAdawiyya al-Qaysiyya (Arabic: رابعة العدوية القيسية) or simply Rabiʿa al-Basri (– C.E.) was a female MuslimSufi saint, considered by some to be the first true saint in the Sufi tradition. Little is known of her life apart from her piety, popularity with men and women followers of the Sufi path, and her refusal to marry. The birth and death dates given for her are only approximate. She was orphaned then sold as a slave in her youth then set free by her Master to practice devotion and to engage in prayer. Many stories of her life were later told by Farid ad-Din Attar. She is associated in legend with Hassan of Basri as his pupil or even as his teacher, although it is unlikely that they met, since he died in , when she was still a child. The numerous stories of her piety, love for God, of people and of her ascetic life-style attest to the significance of her life in the story of the development of mystical Islam. Among women, perhaps only the wives of Muhammad, known
Rabia al Basri - Science and Nonduality (SAND)
Rabia Basri - Wikipedia
- Rabia Al Basria is the most famous and perhaps the first female Sufi saint of Islam.