Rafea Muhammad Rafea (born 1903, Tahta, Upper Egypt; died 1970, Egypt), also known as Master Rafea, was an Egyptian spiritual teacher and social activist. He is known for starting the Spiritual Islamic Society in Egypt in the 1950s. His teachings were about Sufism, Islamic spiritualty, and the spiritual teachings of Hannen Swaffer's spiritual circle in London.[1]
Rafea Muhammad Rafea | |
---|---|
Born | 1903 |
Died | 1970 Egypt |
Occupation(s) | Religious teacher, lawyer, political and social activist |
Spouse | Hazami Rifaa |
Children | 10 |
Parent(s) | Muhammad Rafea and Aisha Al Sharif |
Early life and education
editRafea was born on May 13, 1903, in Egypt and was the eldest of four siblings. He attended public primary school in Tahta, Upper Egypt. Rafea graduated from law school at Cairo University.[2]
Career
editPolitics
editRafea became interested in politics during his university years and joined the Wafd Party. He specifically campaigned for his brother Abdel Halim. He joined the National Movement in Egypt during the 1920s. After graduating, he worked as an independent lawyer for twenty years.[1]
Sufism
editRafea later alienated himself from politics and joined Sufism, and started becoming interested in religions, including Islam, Far Eastern spirituality, as well as contemporary religious spirituality.[2]
He met a follower of the Abu El Hassan el-Shazli Order, and they established a Sufi community with people from various backgrounds.[1] Rafea also established a spiritual Islamic community in Egypt.[3][4]
Islamic spiritual teachings
editRafea's teachings as a Sufi spiritualist were the basis of establishing the Egyptian Society for Spiritual and Cultural Research, drawing on ideas of European and American spiritualists of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The basis on which the concept and guidance of Rafea was built is that Sufism and spirituality do not contradict each other, but rather harmonize and agree, because both address the inner human being and the essence of man. Rafea's Islamic spiritual teachings are founded on understanding the diverse levels of fitra, which points to the Divine's working laws in all the cosmos.[5]
Workers' rights
editRafea advocated the cause of workers' social rights. He was part of the National Movement in Egypt during the 1920s, and was involved in the youth Egypt's 1919 revolution against the British occupation.[1]
Personal life
editAfter marrying Al Sayeda Hazam, the granddaughter of Refa'a Rafi' al-Tahtawi, Rafea withdrew from politics and moved to the Helmia al Gedida of Al-Darb al-Ahmar district, in Cairo. He has ten children, including his son Ali, who is continuing his father's religious teachings.[6] His children include Dr. Ahmed Rafea (also known as Ali Rafea), Hanaa Rafea, Aliaa Rafea, Dr. Mahmoud Rafea, Muhammad Wael Rafea, Iman Rafea, Aisha Rafea, Zahraa Mawel Rafea, Hoda Rafea, and Maaman Rafea.[1]
Death
editRafea died in 1970 in Egypt due to diabetes.[1]
Bibliography
edit- Memoirs of Khabarides: the Future of Spiritualism (1990)
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f Aliaa, Redah, R. (2017) (ed.). Islam's Wisdom as Revealed in the Life of A Muslim: Biography of Rafea Muhammad Rafea, (Hikmat Al Islam Fi Sirat Muslim), حكمة الإسلام في سيرة مسلم; ed. Aliaa Redah Rafea. Human Foundation for Publishing. ISBN 978-977-85005-9-2
- ^ a b Hanaa, R. (2012). Ayyam Bayn Albashar (Days Among People), أيام بين البشر. Cairo: Alfa Publications [ISBN missing]
- ^ Hoffman, Valerie J. (2020). "A Sufism for Our Time: The Egyptian Society for Spiritual and Cultural Research." In Routledge Handbook on Sufism, p. 474–86. Routledge.
- ^ Aisha, R. (2020). "Assayed Rafea Muhammad Rafea: Glimpses of His Life and Teachings." In: Sufism: An Inquiry. Purity, Peace, and Equality, Volume 18, 4, pp. 53-54
- ^ Rafea, Muhammad Rafea (1990). Memoirs of Khabarides: the Future of Spiritualism, Vantage Press. ISBN 0-533-08586-1
- ^ Aliaa, Redah, R. (2016). Insight, Vision, and Contentment: A Path and A story, عينٌ رؤية وإرتواء: سيرة ومسيرة. The Human Foundation. ISBN 978-977-85005-7-8