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I Traveled Around Sudan Exploring, And Photographing The Country’s Thriving Sufi Community (40 Pics)
In the spring of 2017, I traveled around Sudan exploring the country’s thriving Sufi community. I attended massive Sufi gatherings, multi-day-long festivals, and Sufism’s holy sites, as well as private Sufi meet-ups in villages and people’s backyards. What I discovered were majestic locations, soulful songs, passionate dances, and most importantly kind and generous people, who welcomed me as if I was one of their own. Before long, I was singing and dancing with them.
Sufis, known as Tasawwuf in the Arabic-speaking world, are the mystics of Islam. They believe in reincarnation and a mysterious world between heaven and earth, which can be visited through deep meditation and the performance of “Zikr”. Sufis believe that their Sheikhs (religious leaders of Sufism) and saints are immortal and can hear their songs and music even in their graves, therefore, Sufi rituals usually take place in or around cemeteries. Sufism is spread out in virtually every Islamic country, however, it compiles only about 5% of the world's Muslim population. Sudan boasts a particularly strong and influential Sufi community which is said to be the largest in the world. A popular Sudanese saying only confirms their strong presence in the country - "If there is a family in Sudan, of which at least one member is not a Sufi, they are not Sudanese".
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Participant in a Sufi gathering. Omdurman, Sudan.
Young Sufi devotee sports a tiger-print mantle at the weekly Sufi gathering in Omdurman, Sudan.
People perform Zikr – a religious Sufi ritual that involves dancing and chanting religious texts. Omdurman, Sudan.
A man walks in Hamad El Neel cemetery where the weekly Sufi gatherings take place. Omdurman, Sudan.
People arrive from all corners of Sudan to take part in the Sufi festival in Kasala, Sudan.
Sufis gathered around Hamed El-Nil mausoleum listen to the songs echoing from the inside. Omdurman, Sudan.
Again, a colorful country with colorful people, rendered in black and white. Why? It washes something out for me.
There is a separation between the sexes in a lot of Muslim countries, meaning that the areas of worship for men and women are separated. If the photographer was a man then he would not be allowed to enter the female areas and take photos.
Load More Replies...Again, a colorful country with colorful people, rendered in black and white. Why? It washes something out for me.
There is a separation between the sexes in a lot of Muslim countries, meaning that the areas of worship for men and women are separated. If the photographer was a man then he would not be allowed to enter the female areas and take photos.
Load More Replies...