Sufi dhikr...

gbrlax3

π•»π–”π–œπ–Šπ–— π–Žπ–˜ 𝖆𝖓 π–Žπ–‘π–‘π–šπ–˜π–Žπ–”π–“.
where all my sufi's at? πŸ’€





 

gbrlax3

π•»π–”π–œπ–Šπ–— π–Žπ–˜ 𝖆𝖓 π–Žπ–‘π–‘π–šπ–˜π–Žπ–”π–“.

gbrlax3

π•»π–”π–œπ–Šπ–— π–Žπ–˜ 𝖆𝖓 π–Žπ–‘π–‘π–šπ–˜π–Žπ–”π–“.

gbrlax3

π•»π–”π–œπ–Šπ–— π–Žπ–˜ 𝖆𝖓 π–Žπ–‘π–‘π–šπ–˜π–Žπ–”π–“.

Omar del Sur

RETIRED
VIP
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They are remembering Allah and praising the Prophet (ο·Ί), I personally don't see anything wrong with this apart from their weird dancing and screaming gibberish.

This is what I like to see:


We do digris in my family too and praise the prophet and recite duas together. I think their are other aspects which people confuse as being common practice such as grave worshipping but that has nothing to do with dhikr.
 

Recon Expert

cranking 90s πŸ₯Ά
Problem with Sufi is the siyaaro they perform which Sh Umal called shirk, some of them also believe in mythological power from their Imam.

For example there was a story that an Imam revived a man that was slayed by reading dhikr on his dead body.

But other than that the Somali sufi is not really different to the average muslim in Somalia.

Although you have the timoweyne who are interesting folks. They rock pre colonial Somali hairstyle but they also take part in praising dead saints.
 
y not do as the Prophet (PBUH) taught... use the fingers to count your dhikr, it's the best way and you get blessings on them the DOJ
 

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