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ARCHIVEbahai-library.com/caton_sacred_refrains
AU1_1STMargaret
AU1_2NDCaton
DATE_THIS2024
COLLECTION1Music
COLLECTION2Book
TAGSMusic;Dhikr (Remembrance);Repetition;Words and phrases;Invocations;Greatest Name;Allah-u-Abha;Healing prayer, Long;Healing prayer, Short;Mustaghath;Meditation;Prayer;God, Names of;Arabic language;Persian language;Songs;Singing;Interfaith dialogue;Islam;Sufism;Congregational prayer;Mashriqul-Adhkar (House of Worship);Obligatory prayer;Exemption;Ya Bahaul Abha;Ya Aliyyull Ala;Hu (He is);Thankfulness;Thanksgiving and gratitude;Praise;Protection;Tests and difficulties;Remover of Difficulties (invocation);God sufficeth all things;Fasting prayers;Hurufat-i-Aliin (Exalted Letters);Nearness to God
TITLE_THISSacred Refrains
SUBTITLE_THISArabic and Persian Dhikrs in the Bahá'í Community
BLURBintroduction to dhikr (remembrances) and the use of music in Bahá'í spiritual practices; 74 recordings from 58 sacred texts, including original Arabic and Persian languages with English translation, music transcription, and historical context.
CONTENT
Contents
  1. Introduction
  2. Download music files
  3. PDF

1. Introduction

Dhikr is an Arabic word meaning an act of remembering, a reminder, or a practice that engenders remembering or reminding. Dhikr could refer to a spiritual service, an invocation, the Qur’an, or even a religious prophet, all acting as reminders of the divine. Dhikr is also the term used for a type of repeated invocation found in the Islamic and Bahá’í sacred traditions. Although the term refers particularly to Islamic practices, dhikr practices are similar to spiritual practices in other cultures, such as chanting mantras in Hindu traditions. The use of repeated phrases and invocations that includes chanting or singing of sacred phrases has been considered as a form of concentrative meditation.

The purpose of this present work is not as a scholarly treatise per se or analysis of dhikr, but rather to make available and accessible a selection of recordings of dhikrs using Bahá’í sacred texts in Arabic and Persian languages. These particular dhikrs can be sung individually or in groups, as they are rhythmically measured and melodically composed. In this work, the presented recordings, texts, and musical transcriptions are included primarily for purposes of learning the dhikrs themselves, as well as for learning something about them and their historical contexts.

2. Download music files

Download individual mp3s here: bahai-library.com/caton_music/ and bahai-library.com/caton_music/sacred_refrains_demos/

Or download compressed folder of all files: caton_sacred_refrains_complete.zip [294 MB].

3. PDF

LOCATIONSIran (documents)
POSTED2024-02-05 by Jonah Winters
VIEWS904
LASTEDIT2024-03-09 14:22
PERMISSIONauthor
LG1_THISEnglish
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