Abstract
This article delves into the spectral and affective reserves of Zikr, the Sufi exercise of godly remembrance. It explores how performances of religious longing broaden the moral experience of a post-migrant Berlin by offering contemporary believers critically thin zones of hypersocial contact with Islamic holy figures. Zikr emerges as a key interface of felt and material worlds: through acts of remembrance, subliminal figures and migrant inheritances are made contemporaneous while suppressed civic-political matters find a spectral, more-than-visual presence in Berlin. Sufi haunting thus achieves, amid enduring conditions of migration, a provisional positioning of the not-here and the not-now as an also-here. Such remembrance affords migrants a greater awareness of being distinctly historical as well as the critical means to look past conditions of the present.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Kasmani, O. (2021). Haunting Sufis and the Also-Here of Migration in Berlin. Religion and Society, 12(1), 56–69. https://doi.org/10.3167/ARRS.2021.120105
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.