Ahmad ibn Ajiba

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Moroccan literature

List of writers
Literature of Morocco
Moroccan Arabic
Berber

Moroccan authors

Novelists
Playwrights - Poets
Essayists - Historians
Travel writers - Sufi writers
Moorish writers

Forms

Novel - Poetry - Plays

Criticism & Awards

Literary theory - Critics
Literary Prizes

See also

El Majdoub - Awzal
Choukri - Ben Jelloun
Zafzaf - El Maleh
Chraîbi - Mernissi
Leo Africanus - Khaïr-Eddine

Morocco Portal
Literature Portal

Ahmad ibn 'Ajiba (1747 - 1809) was an 18th-century Moroccan saint in the Darqawa Sufi Islamic lineage.

He was born of a Hasani sharif family in the Anjra tribe that ranges from Tangiers to Tetuan along the Mediterranean coast of Morocco. As a child he developed a love of knowledge, memorizing the Qur'an and studying subjects ranging from Classical Arabic grammar, religious ethics, poetry, Qur'anic recitation and tafsir. When he reached the age of eighteen he left home and undertook the study of exoteric knowledge in Qasr al-Kabir under the supervision of Sidi Muhammad al-Susi al-Samlali. It was here that he was introduced to studies in the sciences, art, philosophy, law and Qur'anic exegesis in depth. He went to Fes to study with Ibn Souda, Bennani, and El-Warzazi, and joined the new Darqawiyya in 1208 AH (1793), of which he was the representative in the northern part of the Jbala region. He spent his entire life in and around Tetuan, and died of the plague in 1224 AH (1809). He is the author of a considerable number of works and a Fahrasa which provides interesting information concerning the intellectual center that Tetuan had become by the beginning of the 19th century.

[edit] Sources

  • The Autobiography (Fahrasa) of a Moroccan Soufi: Ahmad ibn 'Ajiba, translated from the Arabic by Jean-Louis Michon and David Streight, Fons Vitae, Louisville KY USA,1999 ISBN 188775220X

[edit] External links


Languages