Because they are not Naqshabandiyyin nor are they Khufiyyin; they are Jahriyya Tariqah who draws their lineage from the Naqshabandiyy, yet form their own tradition based on the local custom. The Jahriyya vocalises their Dhikr out loud; unlike the more traditional and Naqshabandiyy aligned teaching of Khufiyyah Tariqah.
From what I understand, the Naqshbandi have two branches in China. The Khufiyya which first rose in the Ming Dynasty who practice silent Dhikr and the Jahriyya which was founded by Ma Mingxin in 1761, who practice loud Dhikr. Based on this video I think that they are Jahriyya.
Beautiful, subhanallah. It’s incredible how a poem of Ibn al-Farīd has reached such parts of the Muslim World
If you notice any problems with the picture or audio for this video, please reply to this comment letting me know.
Brother "la Ilaha Illallah" translation should be "There is no god but Allah", is'nt it?
@@alfarabi4128yes
ماشاءالله
Masha Allah
❤
MachaAllah
Well, as far as i know Naqshbandi known for silent dhikr and qadiri or others known for loud dhikr.
Theese sufis making dhikrullah loudly…
The naqshbandis have many different groups
Because they are not Naqshabandiyyin nor are they Khufiyyin; they are Jahriyya Tariqah who draws their lineage from the Naqshabandiyy, yet form their own tradition based on the local custom.
The Jahriyya vocalises their Dhikr out loud; unlike the more traditional and Naqshabandiyy aligned teaching of Khufiyyah Tariqah.
From what I understand, the Naqshbandi have two branches in China. The Khufiyya which first rose in the Ming Dynasty who practice silent Dhikr and the Jahriyya which was founded by Ma Mingxin in 1761, who practice loud Dhikr. Based on this video I think that they are Jahriyya.
@@MuslimTemplar never heard of, gonna check it rn, thank you for sharing
salamualaykum please check facebook messages i sent a message with a question