Doctrine
The primary doctrinal sources of Noorbakhshi teachings are encapsulated within three key things: "Al-Fiqh al-Ahwat" and "Kitab al-Aitiqadia," created by Muhammad Nurbakhsh Qahistani, and "Dawat-e-Noorbakhshia".Bashir, S: "Messianic Hope and Mystical Vision: The Nurbakhshia Between Medieval and Modern Islam (Studies in Comparative Religion)," University of South Carolina Press. These works serve as foundational repositories of Noorbakhshi doctrines, providing comprehensive insights into matters of Islamic jurisprudence, belief systems, and spiritual practices within the Noorbakhshi tradition.", October 2003History
In its country of origin, Iran, the Noorbakhshia underwent a transition towards Shia Islam, particularly Twelver Shi'ism, several decades after the Safavid dynasty officially established Twelver Shi'ism as the state religion in 1501. A similar transformation occurred in Kashmir, either during the lifetime of Shams ud-Din Iraqi, who died in 1527, or in the subsequent decades, coinciding with the brief reign of the Chak dynasty. In regions such as Baltistan and Purig in the Kargil district, the Nurbakhshia persisted as a distinct sect with its own doctrinal framework, blending elements of both Shi'ism and Sunni Islam although much of its teaching, law and doctrine is derived from Imami Shia doctrine.Reick, Andreas. "The Sofia Nurbakhshis of Baltistan - Revival of the Oldest Muslim Community in the Northern Areas (Gilgit Baltistan) of Pakistan." Paper presented at the International Conference "Karakurum-Himalaya-Hindukush-Dynamics of Change," Islamabad, National Library, 29.9-2.10.1995, and published in The Monthly Nawa-i-sufia Islamabad, Issue No. 28, March 1997. Muhammad Nurbakhsh Qahistani, a Sufi master of the 15th century, has received relatively little attention from researchers despite his significant influence. Although Nurbakhsh had numerous scholar-disciples, such as Shaikh Asiri Lahiji, none of them undertook substantial efforts to document Nurbakhsh's biography or to preserve his teachings. Nurbakhshis believe that the practices are not an assemblage of his personal views but were originally conceived by him fromIn Baltistan and Ladakh
The Noorbakshia order persists in Baltistan andSee also
* Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani * Mir Sham ud-Din IraqiReferences
{{reflistExternal links
* https://www.noorbakhshia.com/ — Official website * The Tarikh-i-Rashidi of Mirza Muhammad Haidar, Dughlát : a history of the Moghuls of Central Asia — Mirza Muhammad Haidar Dughlat mentions the Nurbakhshis in his History. Sufism in India Sufism in Pakistan Mahdism