Sufis Some scholars argue that Ibn Taymiyya belonged to the
Qadiriyya tariqa (order) of
Sufism and claimed to inherit the
khirqa (spiritual mantle) of the founder of the Qadiriyya order
'Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani. and went to great lengths to state that Sufism is not a heretical innovation (
bid'ah).
Gibril Haddad, a contemporary
Naqshbandi Sufi scholar and critic of Ibn Taymiyya's doctrinal positions, argues that "insofar as the goal of
tasawwuf is the purification of the heart by progress through states (
ahwal) and stations (
maqamat), Ibn Taymiyya in ''al-Tuhfat al-'Iraqiyya'' (al-Zarqa’ Jordan 1978, p. 18) imitated Imam
al-Ghazali's
fatwa in
al-Munqidh min al-Dalal in considering
tasawwuf obligatory upon every Muslim, naming it ''a'mal al-qulub
." Scholar Arjan Post, in the introduction to the edition and English translation of Risālat al-sulūk'' (Epistle on the Spiritual Way) by al-Baʿlabakkī (d. 734/1333), a
Lebanon-born Hanbali Sufi and direct student of Ibn Taymiyya, talks of a "Sufi circle" among his students, notably through ʿImād al-Dīn Aḥmad al-Wāsiṭī, who "fulfilled the role of Sufi shaykh in the Taymiyyan circle until he passed away in 711/1311", and who was appreciated by other famous direct or indirect students of Ibn Taymiyya who became famous scholars, notably Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya,
Ibn Rajab and
Al-Dhahabi. Although Ibn Taymiyya was critical of some of the developments within
Sufism, he never rejected the practice outright, and actually enumerated a list of early Sufis whom he considered to be among the greatest Islamic saints. In this list, he included
Bayazid Bastami,
Junayd of Baghdad,
Abdul-Qadir Gilani,
Hasan of Basra,
Ibrahim ibn Adham,
Maruf Karkhi,
Sirri Saqti, and several other venerable personages who have always been venerated in mainstream Sunni Islam as being among the greatest saints of all. Ibn Taymiyya believed that all these Sufi saints shared creedal beliefs of the ahl al-hadith ("traditionalists"). He criticized one of the foundational Sufi texts, Abd al-Karim al-Qushayri's Epistle, for ascribing to the early Sufi authorities Ash'ari beliefs. He argued that neither the Ash'ari theologians nor the Sufi monists of his time have a historical or ideological connection with the authoritative Sufis of the first centuries of Islam. Ibn Taymiyya relies in his critique on the legacy of the traditionalist Sufis and historians––among them, Abu Mansur Ma'mar al-Isfahani (d. 418/1027), Abu Isma'il Abd Allah al-Ansari al-Harawi (d. 481/1089), Abu Bakr al-Kalabadhi (d. ca. 384/994) and Abd al-Rahman al-Sulami (d. 412/1021) –– contrasting their narratives against those produced by al-Qushayri and other Ash'ari scholars. An alternate view shared by many scholars and critics assert that Ibn Taymiyya totally rejected Sufism, both exclusively, as well as the general concept of Sufism. Scholars and researchers who propound this view argue that the notion of Ibn Taymiyya's alleged support towards Sufism were based on misinterpretations of his
Fatwas (legal verdicts). The words of Ibn Taymiyya in praise of
'Abd al-Qadir Gilani were simply respect of the latter in the scope of scholarly position, not the mystical
cult of personality or saint-veneration towards Gilani practiced by the Qadiryya order, which in effect also includes the view of
Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya's hostile view towards
Tariqa orders. This view of Ibn Taymiyya's total rejection of Sufism and
Tariqa concept of Mysticism were also supported by the Puritans during the era of
Ottoman Empire. According to Hamud at Tuwaijir, a
Hadith scholar, this view alone caused Ibn Taymiyya, and by extension, Ibn al Qayyim, and his spiritual successor,
Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab, being reviled so much by some of the communities that supported Sufism, such as
Tablighi Jamaat. In particular, Ibn Taymiyya rejected two views associated with some extreme Sufis. Firstly, he rejected
monism which he believed was similar to the
pantheistic belief that God "encompasses all things". Secondly, he asserted that the view that
divine illumination is of a greater importance than obeying the
sharia was a failure to properly follow the example of Muhammad. On Ibn 'Arabi, and Sufism in general,
Henri Laoust says that Ibn Taymiyya never condemned Sufism in and of itself, but only that which he considered to be inadmissible deviations in doctrine, ritual or morals, such as
monism,
antinomianism or
esotericism. However, scholar Jamileh Kadivar has reported that Ibn Taymiyya issued blatant
takfir (excommunication from Islam) on Ibn 'Arabi. This view was also supported by the official scholars committee from
Imam Mohammad Ibn Saud Islamic University, who issued a formal
Fatwa (legal verdict) maintaining that Ibn Taymiyya rejected any form of Sufism, whether they are structural, such as
Tariqa order, or non-structural, individual practice of Sufism. Furthermore, there had also been numerous incidents wherein Ibn Taymiyya physically confronted
Sufis. In 1301, Ibn Taymiyya had accompanied the
Mamluk army in its campaigns against the
Shia inhabitants of
Kasrawan town. After expelling the non-Sunni inhabitants of the town, Ibn Taymiyya returned to
Syria to attack the Sufi Ahmadiyya Rifawiyyan order of Damascus; accusing them of "
Mongol sympathies". After 1305, there would be a dramatic escalation in confrontations between Ibn Taymiyya and popular folk expressions of religion associated with Sufism. In one such incident, Taymiyyah would personally lead stonemasons and demolish a structure in the Naranja Mosque to physically prevent Sufi veneration of a popular religious site. Disparaging the various mystical and devotional exercises of the practitioners of esoteric Sufism, Ibn Taymiyya argued that such rituals only enable
Satan to possess their empty minds and corrupt their souls. Ibn Taymiyya vehemently denounced the doctrines of the Sufi masters
Muhyiddun Ibn ‘Arabī (d. 1240),
Al-Qunawi,
Ibn Sab'in, etc. who had advocated the concept of
waḥdat al-wujūd (Unity of Existence). Ibn Taymiyya believed that the emergence of Sufi
pantheist doctrines heralded the coming of
Masih ad-Dajjal (Anti-christ), blaming it as the main reason for the
Tatar invasions and the ensuing dismantlement of
Sharia (Islamic law). Condemning Ibn 'Arabi and his followers as a greater danger than the
Mongol invasions itself, Ibn Taymiyya writes:"Opposing (by word or deed) these (proponents of
waḥdat al-wujūd) is the greatest of religious obligations, for they have corrupted intellects and creeds of the people, including Shaykhs, scholars and rulers…their harm is greater in religion than harm of the one who corrupts the worldly affairs of the Muslims but leaves their religion untouched, such as the bandit of the Mongols who take away people’s wealth but leave alone their religion." Ibn Taymiyya was also known for his critique of influential
Asharite theologian
Abu Hamid al-Ghazali (d. 1111 C.E/ 505 A.H), whom he accused of being deviated from authentic
Sunnism, over his choice of embracing the Sufi path. On Ghazali's forsaking of
Kalam,
Esotericism,
Philosophy, etc. and eventual embracal of the Sufi path, Ibn Taymiyya writes:"he [Ghazali] soon discovered by means of his intelligence and devout inquiry, that the method of the theologians and philosophers was incoherent. .. so he began search for the exposition [of this faith]. Then he discovered in the discourses of Sufi shaykhs that which was nearer to the truth and more reasonable than what the theologians and philosophers had to offer... But, he did not gain access to the prophetic heritage, namely the sciences and spiritual states possessed by the elect of the community. Nor did he attain the proper knowledge and devotion achieved by the earliest generations and the forerunners [of the community]. [Both these groups] attained so much by way of cognitive discoveries and practical modes of service to God which those others [i.e. theologians, philosophers and Sufis] never attained. Hence, he [al-Ghazali] began to believe that the exposition of his concise faith could be obtained only through the [Sufi] way, since he knew no other path. [This happened] because the special path of the elevated prophetic example remained closed to him."
Mutakallimun The mutakallimun are scholars who engage in
ilm al-Kalam (speculative theology) and they were criticised by Ibn Taymiyya for their use of rationalist theology and philosophy. Ibn Taymiyya was heavily hostile to
Kalam and believed it to be amongst the most severe
religious innovations that emerged after the first three generations. He asserted that the method of
kalam was used by the
Mu`tazilites,
Jahmites and
Ash`ari's. Blaming the jurists of speculative principles, especially those of the
Hanafite school for the decline of
Fiqh sciences; Ibn Taymiyya writes:"[they] do not provide for God any definite rule. In fact, they go so far as making a category of distinctions between a master-jurist (
mujtahid) who is correct and one who is wrong. Rather the legal rule (
hukm) for every person is whatever his intellectual exertion leads him to... [the theologians] excluded positive law (
fiqh), which all the [religious] sciences, from the discourse of science itself; on the basis of what they observed in terms of following authority (taqlid) and conjectural propositions.. jurists who rely on sharia texts (
ahl al-nusus) [instead of speculation] are far move capable of giving [correct] juridicial responses and are more beneficial to Muslims than the people of opinion (''
Ahl al-Ra'y) . . . This is because to solve real-life activities, Muslims need to know the source texts (nusus'')" Ibn Taymiyya's attempts to focus attention onto Qur'anic rationality was taken up by his student Ibn Qayyim, to the exception of his other followers.
Shi'sm Ibn Taymiyya was a proponent of the doctrine of
Takfir (excommunication) on adherents of various
Shia sects, the
Mu'tazilites,
Sufi mystics like
Ibn 'Arabi, etc.; declaring them as
apostates based on his religious interpretations. In particular, Ibn Taymiyya was extremely critical of
Twelver Shi'ism, and considered its adherents to be religiously bankrupt, among the most morally depraved people and the root cause of many ills plaguing the Muslim World. His severe critique of
Twelver Shia in his book,
Minhaj as-Sunnah an-Nabawiyyah, was written in response to the book ''
Minhaj al-karama fi ma'rifat al-imama'', by the Shia theologian
Al-Hilli. Among other things, he accused Shia (who he often referred to as
rafidha or rejectionists) of helping non-Muslim enemies against Muslims Many of the
rafidha (rejectionists) would favor the infidels within his heart more than he would favor the Muslims. That is why when the infidel Turks emerged from the east and fought the Muslims and spilled their blood, in the lands of Khurasan and in Iraq and Sham and in the Peninsula and elsewhere, the rafidha were there to aid them in killing Muslims. And the Baghdad vizier known as Al-’Alqami; it was he and others like him who greatly aided them against the Muslims, as well as those who were in Al-Sham’s Aleppo and other rafidha who were the fiercest collaborators in fighting Muslims. The same goes for the Christians (the Crusaders) in Al-Sham where the rafidha were their greatest helpers. And should the Jews get a state in Iraq or elsewhere, the rafidha will be their greatest helpers, for they are always supportive of the infidels whether they are idolaters or Jews or Christians... Regarding the Shia mourning for
Husayn on
Ashura, Ibn Taymiyya considered Husayn's martyrdom as a divinely bestowed honour—not a major tragedy. He also argued that such mourning was never instructed by Muhammad and that the Islamic response to recent (let alone ancient) loss is not extravagant mourning but to endure the loss with patience and trust in God. However, he also believed those who celebrated on Ashura were
anti-Shia zealots ("
an-Nāṣibiyyah") or ignorant people.
Fathi Shaqaqi, the
Sunni Islamist inspired by the
Islamic revolution of Iran who founded the
Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine, said that Ibn Taymiyya didn't consider
Twelver Shi'as, that is the majority of the Shi'as, to be heretics, but mainly sects like the
Ismailis, also precising that the geopolitical context of the day played a role in his thinking, and that, among Sunni scholars, "
fatwas such as his were not disseminated, despite the fact that the Shi‘a had by then been in existence for some 600 years."
Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi, one of the most influential modern jihadi ideologues, bases himself on Ibn Taymiyya to say that the laypeople among the Shi'as are not to be considered disbelievers. Ibn Taymiyya's relentless polemics against Shiism consolidated the orthodox
Sunni anti-Shia stances and has influenced numerous Sunni scholars, intellectuals and
Islamist ideologues. ==Views on non-Muslims==