Based on Muhammad al-Zawâwî's extraordinary diary of 109 dream conversations with the Prophet Muhammad, this study provides a rare, intimate view of 15th-century North African Muslim life.
The study reconstructs Zawâwî's lifestory over a critical ten-year period and examines his career as a sufi in the historical context of North Africa and Mamluk Cairo. Psychological aspects of Zawâwî's religious experience are thoroughly explored.
The concluding chapter provides an introduction to the role of dreams and visions in medieval Islam. Particular attention is paid to the way Zawâwî and his successors used their visions to legitimate claims to being awliya', or living saints.
Jonathan G. Katz, Ph.D. (1990) in Near Eastern Studies, Princeton University, is an Assistant Professor of History at Oregon State University. He has published many articles on dreams and visions in Islam.
'...Katz makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of the development of Sufi thought.â
Jamil M. Abun-Nasr, The Maghreb Review, 1997.
'Katz has opened an impressive window into a phenomenon rarely broached in Western religious life...Al-ZawÄwÄ« should be pleased that, with Katz's aid, he has now reached an audience befitting his own highly prized state: a walÄ« truly for the world.'
Earle H. Waugh, History of Religions, 1998.
'...an informative and often insightful treatment of this subject.'
Carl Olson, Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 1997.
All those interested in sufism, medieval Islamic society, the history of North Africa and Mamluk Egypt, religious studies, and the psychology of dreams.