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Azrael

Encounters with the Angel of Death in Islamicate Thought and Culture
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The archangel Azrael enforces the divine command that all living things must return to God in death. The very word islam implies submission to God's will, and yet Muslim saints, prophets, and sorcerers used charisma, magic squares, and their bare hands to defy Azrael and extend their lives on earth. Their efforts reveal tension between the necessity of submitting to God's will and the human yearning to transcend death. With particular attention to the writings of Mu?yi al-Din Ibn ?Arabi (d. 1240), Dunja Rasic explores the time-honored rites and practices of defying death in Muslim cultures and societies. Ibn ?Arabi, one of the most influential Sufi scholars, poets and philosophers, claimed among his many spiritual accomplishments the subjugation of Azrael himself. His pursuit of mastery over death was rooted in his extensive knowledge of angelology, prophetic traditions, and thanatology, and his works preserve striking accounts of his encounters with the angel of death. Drawing on these texts, Rasic delivers an in-depth study of Islamic angelology that challenges our understanding of the status and functions of angels, human (dis)obedience to God, and (im)mortality in Islam and Akbarian Sufism. An original and pioneering work, Azrael contributes new insights into how Muslims have imagined angels, death, and immortality. It will appeal to scholars of Sufism, Islamic studies, comparative religion, and medieval philosophy, as well as general readers interested in spirituality, esotericism, or the teachings of Ibn ?Arabi.
Dunja Rasic is a specialist in philosophical Sufism and the school of Ibn ?Arabi at Tampere University and the Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society PRISM Project. She is the author of The Written World of God: The Cosmic Script and the Art of Ibn ?Arabi, Bedeviled: Jinn Doppelgangers in Islam and Akbarian Sufism, and The Nightfolk: Ibn ? Arabi Behind the Veil of Night.
"With remarkable precision, Rasic's Azrael situates death not merely as an event but as a form of knowledge-one that has shaped Islamic intellectual history. The exploration of the angel of death, especially, marks a pioneering contribution, as this is the first to treat this figure's legacy in Islamic writings and, to a lesser degree, art. As with her previous books, Rasic's monograph breathes new life into Ibn ?Arabi studies." -Cyrus Ali Zargar, author of Religion of Love: Sufism and Self-Transformation in the Poetic Imagination of ?A??ar
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