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Tales from the Land of the Sufis

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Take a magic carpet ride into the delightful world of Sufi storytelling with these best-loved tales from Persian literature and lore, in which images of madness, passionate love, and self-sacrifice convey the inner experiences of the soul that has surrendered to the Divine Beloved. The tales are retold from the celebrated works of Sufi poets and spiritual masters such as Rumi, Attar, Nizami, and Jami, as well as anecdotes about these famous masters.

192 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2001

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Mojdeh Bayat

10 books2 followers

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5 stars
28 (28%)
4 stars
51 (52%)
3 stars
12 (12%)
2 stars
5 (5%)
1 star
1 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for John Dishwasher John Dishwasher.
Author 3 books54 followers
October 11, 2024
I’ve read the principal texts and commentaries on all of the world’s main religions. One thing I noticed is that the mystics in all the different traditions describe the same Ultimate; and they describe mostly the same way of arriving at and experiencing that Ultimate. The exception to this rule (until I read this book, anyway) was Islam. I had not delved into the Sufis yet; and I’ve always wondered how they would reconcile what I would crudely call the proscribed unapproachability of Allah with the mystic experience, which by its nature, purports to be a oneness or dissolving into the Ultimate, or, Allah. Well, they do it in the same terms all the rest do, through Love and a dissolving of the self. And they definitely caught some flack for it as some of the background given here describes. But the Truth follows no worldy rules. Philosopher types who like to slice all these traditions into a million different slivers notwithstanding, the basic thrust is the same from mystic tradition to mystic tradition. IMHO.
Profile Image for Aurimas  Gudas.
222 reviews85 followers
September 13, 2022
Kažkoks nevykęs bandymas pavaiduoti sufijus kaip pakilusius aukščiau religijos.
Profile Image for Ali Shahab.
58 reviews13 followers
January 5, 2018
کتابی شیرین و نغز درباره‌ی زندگی و آثار هفت ادیب صوفی ایران بزرگ: حلاج، ابوسعید ابوالخیر، عطار، نظامی، مولانا و جامی. ترجمه‌ی سلیس خانم میترا معتضد بر لذت خواندن این کتاب افزوده است. بخش مهمی از کتاب را یک نفس خواندم.
Profile Image for Mary.
907 reviews7 followers
May 26, 2024
I'm rounding this up from a 3.5. I have read several books on Sufism and love learning about it. This book was interesting, but it felt like the authors couldn't commit to a genre. They do tell you the structure at the beginning of the book, but the longer it goes, it just feels like it gets bogged down. It was intriguing but lacked the depth and richness I was looking for.
Profile Image for Fernando.
17 reviews2 followers
July 6, 2017
It was an amazing reading expirience that gave me a large and great opinion about the Islamic authors. As a religious researcher it bring me new approaches about the relation bettwen the Cristianism and the Islamis.
Probably on of the most amazing books about the true love.
Profile Image for Faisal.
146 reviews2 followers
May 12, 2024
Excellent retelling of the beautiful love stories I listened to in my childhood
Profile Image for James Duffy.
7 reviews2 followers
September 21, 2016
I bought this book in 2003 and it took me 13 years to sit down and finally read it.
Religion can be so divisive amongst people and turn to such ridiculous violence- It astounds me the many parallels and teachings they all have within them.

This book really taught me more about the meaning of joy, love, faith, and how we view others. I also enjoyed how the the Author described the Sufi's life and how they came to be the Masters they turned into.

I enjoyed all of the stories in the book but the ones I enjoyed most were:

This Too Shall Pass
Layla and Majnun (very similar to Romeo and Juliet)
The Great Secret of Alexander
The Grocer and His Parrot
The Philosopher and the Skipper
Yusuf and Zulaykha
139 reviews21 followers
August 10, 2012
When I picked up this book, I assumed it would simply be texts attributed to Sufi masters. The authors inserted some of their own biographical materials about those Sufi masters and some historical background to Sufism and their own beliefs. I thought these insertions were too much in the first third of the book, but overall they struck a good balance.

Keep in mind that the narrations in this book are focused on the Sufi masters from Persia or whose Persian books survived. It is not a comprehensive list of all of Sufi masters.

I enjoyed the tales very much. Would that I abandon my attachments to this impermanent world so that I could better understand them!
Profile Image for Sowmya.
124 reviews2 followers
December 23, 2015
A whirlwind of opinions,
Love-hate-love-hate saga for a while.
Puzzled by stories of unions & reunions,
Amused and captivated, the stories worthwhile.

One star rating, had I stopped after chapter one,
I would have missed the book, not sharing with anyone.
Now I know about persistence and broad mind,
That even a small thing can teach you how to be open and kind.



16 reviews
August 1, 2007
This is written in such an easy form, that even I can understand it. I really didn't know too much about Sufi literature, but I was fascinated... and even wrote notes.
Available in most public libraries
Profile Image for Artemisa.
2 reviews1 follower
April 16, 2012
A good starting place to learn about Sufism and tale telling within sufism traditions.
Profile Image for Amyna.
3 reviews2 followers
April 23, 2019
Amazing book! I have read it twice already. I really liked the story of fakir by nizami. Every time you read this book, it broadens your horizons. <3
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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