The Manual for Novices: PREFACE

We are preparing  a new book for  use by Tariqa members and  over the  coming months we hope to  post first drafts of this book here.  This  Preface to the  book is   more or  less complete as it stands.  

On the  website  sidebar you will find  other materials under the  heading  THE MANUAL FOR NOVICES.  Some  of  the texts (marked with an asterisk) are almost complete chapters, others are merely texts already posted on the  website but whose contents  will be  part of the  manual. Other chapters  are still being  written.  But for  anyone   wishing  to join us (or  just seeking  to understand our Path)  these links  will indicate  the core of  who we are and  what we do.


PREFACE 

     Many years ago, when I was  on extended solitary retreat and  living in a cave-house in Spain, it occurred to me that it might  be  beneficial for other Jewish solitaries  (and kindred spirits) to unite in  some form of community. This, after all, was an established Jewish  practice precedented in the biblical Schools of  the Prophets as well as by the fringe Jewish group known by Josephus  as the  Therapeutai.

In our era, Jews who are also dedicated solitaries do exist—but they are a  distinct and  tiny minority.*[i] This is  not surprising given Rabbinic Judaism's insistence on communal and family-based practices, so I was not imagining for  one  moment that a geo-physical community might attract a flood of applicants.  Consequently my focus was on outreach to Jews living far from Jewish synagogues and on a spiritual form of community.  

In 2004, I  decided to form  such an online and spiritual  community of Dedicated Jewish Contemplatives (Mitkarevim) with a public website and  a private  website  as its online  bases.*[ii]  At the same time, fortuitously, Christine  Gilbert introduced me to the  writings  of Professor Paul Fenton on  R. Abraham ben HaRambam and  his  son Obadyah, both of whom envisaged Jewish communal eremiticism  as a possibility to be  encouraged.

   Over the years that followed, I read some of  the history and  the texts of their Maimuni descendants and of the group that we now call the "Jewish-Sufis" or “The Mediaeval Egyptian Hasidim”.  I realised, with some  excitement,that this Jewish-Sufi "path" promoted the  same  kind of solitary contemplative  practice I had described in my book “The  Cave  of  the  Heart/ Kuntres Maarat Ha-Lev”—a book which was written in 2005 but which was only published recently  in 2022.

In a  nutshell—

This  Mediaeval Egyptian Jewish group  believed that Khalwa/Hitbodedut was the  key to preparing Israel for  the  return of prophecy—and  the path by which a contemplative might receive the kind of inspirational gnosis that we  might call devekut  through  Gilui Eliyahu.

Professor Fenton describes the  term  Khalwa-Hitbodedut (as it  was used by this  group) when he writes: “the term not only designates the physical retreat and the ritual technique but also the ensuing spiritual state, a sort of "evacuation of the physical senses" or "vacuity of the mind." *[iii] It is precisely this state that I was describing in Kuntres Maarat HaLev.

After making aliyah to Safed in Northern Israel  in 2019 (and paradoxically aided somewhat by the  quarantines imposed by the Corona  epidemic) I returned to the solitary life  as a Mitkarev (Jewish Hermit) for  a further three years. Those years (spent  in a log-cabin in southern Safed)  were a blessed time of almost total seclusion. My principal contemplative practice became the silent recitation of Hebrew  and  Judeo-Arabic Dhikr  mantras. 

During that period I deepened my understanding of Sufism, spurred on by a totally  unexpected visit to my hermitage by Paul Fenton himself.  Professor Fenton introduced me to the Murshid of R. David ben Joshua Maimuni and answered so many of the questions that I had stored up over the years about the Egyptian Hasidim.  

Encouraged by that very special meeting,  I returned to the  practice of solitary Judeo-Sufic  retreat and  there considered the  way forward:

The first "Community of Jewish Contemplatives" had by then attracted more supporters than practitioners and eventually became  the Facebook Jewish Contemplatives page *[iv] and  so—in the  midst of this  period of transformation—I  decided to search for more active and  formally dedicated participants to create a second contemplative  community that might  respond  to the  call I first made in  Kuntres Maarat HaLev—but this time under the Elijan mantle of  Jewish-Sufism.

The  first stage  of that process  was to (somewhat brazenly)  found  a completely new Sufi Tariqa (in 2022) to renew and  develop  the  work begun by the  Egyptian Hasidim and in the  manner described in  Kuntres Maarat HaLev

This group is called Tariqa Eliyahu HaNabi  [The Sufi  Order of Eliyahu HaNabi].  

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ABOUT THE  TARIQA

Tariqa Eliyahu HaNabi is a global Jewish-Sufi group for religious Jews who wish to renew and develop the contemplative practices of the Mediaeval Egyptian Pietist Movement—a group that flourished in the 13th to the 15th centuries. 

In the  mediaeval era, the  Egyptian Pietist Movement’s  leaders included R. Abraham He-Hasid (d.circa 1223), and several members of the  Maimonides dynasty: R.Abraham ben HaRambam (1186–1237), R.David ben Abraham Maimuni (1222- 1300), R.Obadyah Maimuni (1228–1265),and  R. David ben Joshua  Maimuni (1335–c.1414).

They believed that the ascetic and contemplative practices of the Biblical B’nei ha Nevi’im  (Schools of the  Prophets) had been lost to Judaism but had been preserved in Islamic Sufism—and they sought to restore, renew, and develop those practices in Judaism.  Paramount among those practices was Khalwa/Hitbodedut: expressed in solitary retreat and in silent contemplation.  Their devoted reinstitution of this particular ritual and meditational practice spread throughout the Levant region and flourished there as part of contemplative  Jewish practice for over three hundred years. In later times ( and in various modified formats) it became a key element in the praxis of several other schools of Jewish mysticism during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

According  to the Maimuni authors, their  restoration of  the   "forgotten" traditions  of isolated solitary retreat and  its  associated  contemplative activities had a very significant and special tachlit:

 The Maimuni’s aim was to prepare the Egyptian Hasidic Movement’s members to attain a personal and intimate state of   ma'rifa/intuitive gnosis and contemplative ‘nearness to G-d’ that would hasten the return of prophecy to Israel.

Those same spiritual perspectives and aims are the core principles of our own century’s ‘Tariqa Eliyahu’­—The Mediaeval Egyptian Hasidic  movement is  very much our movement too.  We can claim this distinction because, at the time of writing, we are the only Jewish-Sufi  Tariqa in existence that aims  to renew the  Egyptian Hasidic tradition in a specifically  Jewish and  observant  manner.   Both the Israeli Tariqa Ibraham and R. Shachter-Shalomi's Inayyati-Maimuni Order are Inter-religious,cultural, and Universalist Sufic organisations, whereas our Tariqa Eliyahu  is interdenominational, but nevertheless exclusively Jewish in a  religious  sense.

Thus, although we practice and preach universal coexistence and work for healing inter-religious dialogue: we are the only Jewish-Sufi Tariqa that has a stated relationship to Halacha (called Sharia in the Kifaya) in approaching contemplative deveykut (intimacy with G-d).  Though each member's denominational allegiance will influence their personal interpretation of  the  halacha, we nevertheless  follow the  Egyptian  Hasidic  Movement's insistence that  one  must walk the  "Common Path" of  religious observance and  obligation before attempting to walk the  "Special Path" of Jewish-Sufism.

ABOUT THIS  MANUAL

   One  of  the  most famous manuals of instruction for aspirants new to the  Sufi Path is  the Kitab Adab al Muridin  (Manual for  Novices) of Abu Al Najib Suhrawardi (1145-1234). The  work  has a  focus on practice rather than theory or theosophy, and  so we have  borrowed both its  title and, hopefully, something  of  that  practical character in this  volume.

In both Suhrawardi's book and in  this  one, the  terms arifun and salikun that we translate as "Novices" might  also be translated as "Aspirants"—and the  term  does not describe  the spiritual  status or abilities  of  our applicants for  membership. 

In Tariqa Eliyahu, for  example, many of those who apply to join us  have  already experienced decades of contemplative practice, some  with Sufic experience that is already mature—and some with  a wealth of academic or scholarly knowledge  that many Sufis themselves do not posess. The  Judeo-Arabic terms arifun and  salikun refer to all of us for, as the  Islamic Sufi tenet reminds us, we are all "aspiring Sufis" because even one  who has attained gnosis would not claim to be a Sufi who has "arrived".

Our  Manual for Novices is a guide for  the murids (novices/aspirants] who are new to Tariqa Eliyahu HaNabi. Its aim is to lay out the adab (code of  practice) of the  Order and  also to provide a little guidance  and  encouragement to the  salikun (seekers) on the Suluk Al-Khass (Special Path).

We admire the  work of the mediaeval Judeo-Sufis, but we exist to develop as well as to renew their  work. As the  Order's founder and  its Murshid (in an administrative  sense) I can state that the essence of our  Order's  specific ethos is actually to be found  in  Kuntres Maarat HaLev

It presents a Derech HaTemimut (Simple  Path)—and  one  who walks  on it hopes  to attain a particularly sufic  form of knowledge  (ma'rifa/wusul) *[v]

Its claims are the  same as that of classical Sufism, namely: 

*that such knowledge  can lead to some  manner of  intimate union  with the  Divine (wusla); 

*that such intimacy  cannot  be attained merely by our own efforts; 

*that the gnosis we seek consists in an influx of Divine  activity.

 

Our order's  practice attempts  to prepare  the way for  that state of ma'rifa/wusul to be possible.  In that practice we are principally  concerned with our Order's very specific types of  Khalwa and  Dhikr, both of which may lead to the development of  our capabilities in deeply receptive contemplation.

In addition to these we also recommend a particular practice known as Hegyon HaLev, that may expand  our members' intuitive ability and open the  door to the  Torah of  the  Heart.

Therefore this Manual's  focus will be  on those three practices: Khalwa, Dhikr, and  Hegyon HaLev.

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Like  all Sufi Orders, we have a unique ethos and a  very distinct praxis but  our ultimate  focus is on developing an intimate personal contact  with the Divine—and that tachlit is  not  only shared with many other Jewish contemplative  practitioners, it is  also shared with Islamic Sufis and  with mystics  and  philosophical contemplatives in many other traditions.

Consequently, although this  Manual is  written for  the  muridin of our Tariqa, we  nevertleless hope that much of what is  written here will also be  of interest and  relevance to all true contemplatives and  seekers in any religion or none.

May G-d grant success to the work of our hands.

 

אברהם   אהרון-נחמן בן

(Nachman Davies)

Safed

November 12 2025

 

 



[ii] See our  essay "SOLITUDE IN JEWISH CONTEMPLATIVE PRACTICE" for  more on this  subject

 [ii] https://jewishcontemplatives.blogspot.com/

[iii] Fenton. Review of P. Idel, , "Studies in Ecstatic Kabbalah",JQR, LXXXII, Nos. 3-4 (January-April, 1992. Page 526

[iv] https://www.facebook.com/jewishcontemplatives/ (Though the organisation has around 1500 online  followers, we never quite  made a minyan of people  actually living  the  life of  a  Mitkarev as  dedicated contemplative Jewish solitaries)

[v] Ma'rifa is the  term most often used in Islamic Sufism. Wusul and  wusla are the  Arabic  terms  most often used by R.Abraham ben HaRambam.