Abstract
To compare Sufi regional cults across different places separated by thousands of miles of sea and land, and by radically different cultural milieus, is in many ways to seek the global in the local rather than the local in the global. Either way, charting difference and similarity in Sufism as an embodied tradition requires attention beyond mystical philosophical and ethical ideas to the ritual performances and religious organizational patterns that shape Sufi orders and cults in widely separated locations. We need, in other words, to seek to understand comparatively four interrelated symbolic complexes: first, the sacred division of labour — the ritual roles that perpetuate and reproduce the cult; second, the sacred exchanges between places and persons, often across great distances; third, the sacred region, its catchment area and the sanctified central places that shape it; and fourth, the sacred indexical events — the rituals — that coordinate and revitalize organizational and symbolic unities and enable managerial and logistical planning and decision making. Comparison requires that we examine the way in which these four dimensions of ritual sanctification and performance are linked, and are embedded in a particular symbolic logic and local environment.
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© 2007 Pnina Werbner
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Werbner, P. (2007). Sufi Regional Cults in South Asia and Indonesia: Towards a Comparative Analysis. In: Robinson, K. (eds) Asian and Pacific Cosmopolitans. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230592049_8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230592049_8
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