Abdul-Rahman al-Tha'alibi
Abdul-Rahman al-Tha'alibi was an Algerian Islamic scholar, Imam and Sufi wali. Born near the town of Isser, he was raised in a very spiritual environment with high Islamic values and ethics. He had great interpersonal skills and devoted his entire life in service of the most deprived, to dhikr of Allah, and to writing of over 100 books and treatises.
He has become a symbol of Algiers, which has become known as the "city of sidi Abder Rahman."
Birth and Lineage
Abdul-Rahman al-Tha'alibi was born in the year 1384 CE/785 AH in Isser in modern-day Boumerdès Province into a pious family with a lineage going back to Ja'far ibn Abi Talib. His Arab Maqillian Bedouin tribe, the Tha'aliba, had long dominated several regions of Algeria from 1204 CE to 1515 CE. In 1378 CE, their nomadic dominance had been broken up by Abu Hammu II, the Sultan of the Kingdom of Tlemcen.His full lineage is Abu Zaid Abdul Rahman bin Muhammad bin Makhlouf bin Talha bin Amer bin Noufal bin Amer bin Mussour bin Muhammad bin Saba'a bin Makki bin Thalabah bin Musa bin Saeed bin Mufaddal bin Abdul Bar bin Fisi bin Hilal bin Amer bin Hassan bin Muhammad bin Ja'far ibn Abi Talib.
Biography
When 15 years old, Abdul-Rahman, with his father Mohamed Ben Makhlouf, went to Morocco for studies where he met the Muslim scholar Mohamed Ibn Marzoug Al Adrissi.In 1392, he made another trip to Bejaia seeking knowledge where his father died. He stayed in Bejaia for 7 years studying Islamic sciences. There he learned from disciples of Abdurrahman El-Waghlissi, such as Abû al-Husayn al-Mangalâtî.
Then 24 years old, he travelled to Tunis in 1406 where he stayed for eight years. He met the sheikhs Mohammed Ibn Khalf al-Ubay and Abû al-Mahdi al-Ghabrînî who introduced him to Sufism and tafsir.Then traveled to Cairo in 1414 where he stayed with Walî Eddîn al-'Irâqî. Then he traveled to Bursa in Turkey. He returned to Tunisia.From Tunisia at the age of 32, Abdul-Rahman went to perform Hajj to Mecca, then returned to his native Algeria.
He taught in the Djamaa el Kebir mosque until he died on the Friday of 23rd of Ramadan 875 AH, the 15th of March 1479 and was buried in Thaalibia Cemetery next to his sheikh Abi Djamaa Al Maknassi in the Casbah of Algiers.
Disciples
Abdul-Rahman taught several murids and tolbas in Algiers, as:Zawiya
The zawiya contains his tomb, though it is a misnomer since it does not contain any Sufi order in the building. Currently the location houses the tombs of several Algerian historical figures. The first construction dates to 1611 CE and has gone through several changes and additions since, with little left of the original today. In 1696 Dey al-Hadj Ahmed al-Euldji decided to turn it into a funeral mosque. More tombs have been added over the years. Today the mausoleum is often visited by locals of Algiers, especially on Fridays and religious holidays.Legacy
He left a legacy of more than 100 books, of which the most important was Al Jawahir Al hassān fi Tafsir Al Koran.In his lifetime the region was split into three states whose legal schools stood out: Tunis, Tlemcen and Fez. The city of Algiers offered little in comparison in terms of religious and cultural pull. It had very few religious schools for teaching the Qur'an, hadith, and legal texts. Economically it also waned in comparison to other cities in the region. Abd al-Rahman al-Tha'alibi's founding of the Tha'alibiyya school attracted many students from all over the world. Families moved into the surrounding area which turned into a place of religious education and training. From then on, Algiers became known as "The city of Sidi Abd al-Rahman."
He is not to be confused with Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Thalabi.
Works
His works cover nearly every aspect of the Islamic sciences.Exegesis">tafsir">Exegesis and Qur'anic sciences (al-tafsîr wa al-qirâ'ât)
- The brilliant jewels in the exegesis of the Koran
- The stories of the Koran
- The precious gold in the strange verses of the noble Koran
- The chosen sources
[Islamic Law] ([fiqh])
- The Book of Rites
- The great compilation
- The Garden of Lights
- The Garden of Lights and the Walk of the Righteous
- Commentary of Ibn Hadjeb's breviary
- Commentary of Ibn Khalîl's breviary.
- Commentary by Ibn Haroun
- Commentary on the main questions of Mudawwana
[Hadith]
- The selected sources
- The Forty Hadiths of Morality
- Commentary on the wisdoms of Ibn Arafa
[Sufism]
- Truths about Sufism
- The Gardens of the Pious
- The gardens of the company in the science of subtleties and the journey of people of truth
- The direction of the traveler
Theology ([Aqida])
- The noble sciences in the states of the other world
- The Book of Dreams
Morals (al-wa'z)
- The Direction for the Interest of the People
- The compilation of wisdoms.
- The book of advice
Sira and History
- The lights in the signs and miracles of the chosen Prophet
- The summary of the stories of the nations
- The journey to Allah
Arabic Language
- The embellishment of the brothers in the conjugation of verses from the Koran.
- The lexicon and its summary
Prayers and litanies ([Dua])
- The precious jewel.
- The very precious oath
- The compilation of benefits.