Religion:Muhammad al-Tijani

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Short description: Tunisian Shia Scholar

| religion = Islam | region = North Africa | image = File:Muhammad al-Tijani al samawi.jpg | era = Modern era | name = Muhammad al-Tijani al-Samawi | birth_date = (1943-02-02) 2 February 1943 (age 81) | birth_place = Gafsa, French protectorate of Tunisia | death_date = | death_place = | denomination = Shia | school_tradition = Usuli Twelver | influences = Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr, Abu al-Qasim al-Khoei, Muhammad Husayn Tabataba'i | influenced = | native_name = السيد محمد التيجاني السماوي | honorific prefix = Sayyid }} Sayyid Muhammad al-Tijani al-Samawi (Arabic: محمد التيجاني السماوي; born 2 February 1943) is a Tunisian ex-Sunni Twelver Shi'i scholar, academic and theologian.

Personal life

Al-Tijani was born in Tunisian Sunni Muslim family of Maliki creed. Previously, his family added “al-Tijani” to their name after adopting Tijaniyyah Sufi tariqa of Ahmad al-Tijani. He was eighteen years of age when the Les Scouts Tunisiens agreed to send him as one of six Tunisian representatives to the first conference for Islamic and Arab scouts which took place in Mecca. He used the opportunity to perform mandatory pilgrimage. He stayed twenty five days in Saudi Arabia, during which he met many prominent Salafi scholars, listened to their lectures and became heavily influenced by Salafiyya. Upon returning to Tunisia, al-Tijani started actively promoting and spreading Salafiyya during the religious classes and sermons that he gave, including in the Great Mosque of Kairouan. He then traveled to Egypt’s al-Azhar. On the way back to Tunisia, Al-Tijani met a Shia Iraqi lecturer from the University of Baghdad named Mun'im. He came to Cairo to submit his Ph.D. thesis at al-Azhar University. Mun'im invited him to Iraq. Al-Samawi spent several weeks with Mun'im; visited Baghdad and Najaf, and met with several leading Shi'a scholars. These included: Abu al-Qasim al-Khoei, Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr and Muhammad Husayn Tabataba'i, who taught him about Shia Islam. After long debates with the Shia scholars, he became a Shia muslim, following the Jafari Madhab.[1]

Works

Al-Tijani's books are banned in some countries, such as Saudi Arabia and Malaysia. He has written six books:

References

  1. Note: Most of this information is from Al-Tijani's own work, available in the English translation of Then I Was Guided. See al-Islam.org

External links