As a part of the general population (Religious but non-cleric), Sufism is barely known. Of course some Ulama in our friday prayers include aspects of Sufism in their pre-prayer preach. read more
Raka Sidik, lived in Indonesia Answered Oct 18, 2016 · Author has 90 answers and 66.9k answer views As a part of the general population (Religious but non-cleric), Sufism is barely known. read more
Broadly speaking, one strategy for repositioning Sufism in the modern world is to promote, in the words of Hamka (one of Indonesia's most prominent modernist reformers of the twentieth century), tasawwuf tanpa tarekat, that is, Sufi teachings and (some) Sufi practices (tasawwuf) without recourse the Sufi orders (I. tarekat). read more