This eloquent ethnography reveals the daily lives and religious practice
of ordinary Muslim men in Tajikistan as they aspire to become Sufi
mystics. Benjamin Gatling describes in vivid detail the range of
expressive forms-memories, stories, poetry, artifacts, rituals, and
other embodied practices-employed as they try to construct a Sufi life
in twenty-first-century Central Asia.
Gatling demonstrates how Sufis transcend the oppressive religious
politics of contemporary Tajikistan by using these forms to inhabit
multiple times: the paradoxical present, the Persian sacred past, and
the Soviet era. In a world consumed with the supposed political dangers
of Islam, Gatling shows the intricate, ground-level ways that Muslim
expressive culture intersects with authoritarian politics, not as artful
forms of resistance but rather as a means to shape Sufi experiences of
the present.