Qadiriyya = To attained Qudrat, Qadiriyya channels raw divine power. The ego is shattered to become an empty vessel for Qudrat,
Naqshbandiyya = To create and embodied in Noksha, internal technology. The name of God is silently engraved (Noksha) directly onto the physical heart.
Mujaddidiyya = Political struggle and power, weaponizes spirituality. It shifts focus to political struggle. It keeps kings and societies strictly aligned with divine law.
Chishtiyya = Creation Mystery, Vhaki, Ritual. Runs on ecstatic love. It entirely bypasses the intellect. It uses music and ritual to experience the creation mystery directly.
| Ṭarīqa | Foundations | Geography | Core Engine & Ritual |
| Qādiriyya | ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Jīlānī (d. 1166). Late 12th c. Link via ʿAlī to Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ). | Baghdad origin. Global spread. Socially embedded. | Attain Qudrat. Shatter ego into an empty vessel to channel raw divine power. Audible dhikr, strict Sharīʿa, veneration of baraka. |
| Naqshbandiyya | Bahāʾ al-Dīn Naqshband (1318–1389). 14th c. Link via Abū Bakr to Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ). | Transoxiana/Bukhara. Elite-networked. State interfaces. | Embodied Noksha. God’s name silently engraved onto the physical heart. Silent dhikr, extreme sobriety, solitude in crowds. |
| Mujaddidiyya | Aḥmad Sirhindī (1564–1624). Late 16th c. Sub-branch of Naqshbandiyya. | North India (Sirhind). High proximity to governance and courts. | Weaponized Spirituality. Political struggle. Counsel of power to enforce Sharīʿa-centered reform. Rejects ecstatic excess. |
| Chishtiyya | Muʿīn al-Dīn Chishtī (d. 1236). Origins 10th c. Link via ʿAlī to Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ). | Afghanistan to Indian Subcontinent. Popular, civic, hospitable. | Creation Mystery. Ecstatic love bypasses intellect. Uses samāʿ (music/poetry) and wajd (ecstasy) for direct, Bhakti-style devotion. |
| Shādhiliyya | Abū al-Ḥasan al-Shādhilī (d. 1258). 13th c. Link via ʿAlī. | North Africa/Egypt. | In the world, not of it. Sobriety, worldly engagement, famous ḥizb litanies. |
| Suhrawardiyya | ʿUmar al-Suhrawardī (d. 1234). 12th c. Link via Abū Bakr. | Baghdad. | Institutional discipline. Ethics, structured initiation, scholarly integration. |
| Rifāʿiyya | Aḥmad al-Rifāʿī (d. 1182). 12th c. Link via ʿAlī. | Iraq. Popular piety. | Humility and service. Highly visible, dramatic, public audible dhikr. |
| Mevleviyya | Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī (d. 1273). Late 13th c. | Konya (Anatolia). | Disciplined artistic spirituality. Beauty, love, samāʿ (whirling ceremony). |
| Tijāniyya | Aḥmad al-Tijānī (d. 1815). Late 18th c. | North/West Africa. | Mass mobilization. Strict liturgical rule, fixed daily wird, hard identity boundaries. |
| Khalwatiyya | Multiple shaykhs. 14th c. | Iran/Anatolia. Ottoman networks. | Retreat discipline. Khalwa (seclusion) as the core training mechanism. |
| Niʿmatullāhiyya | Shāh Niʿmatullāh Walī (d. 1431). 14th c. | Iran. | Persianate metaphysics. Sustained poetic and devotional culture. |