tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8449546921951236231.post5560337365827298105..comments2012-11-30T10:14:02.919-08:00Comments on even unto china: Chinese Sufis in YemenTommy Widehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14804335971814216564noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8449546921951236231.post-5889883676074170932012-11-30T10:14:02.919-08:002012-11-30T10:14:02.919-08:00How we can have this book?How we can have this book?El'Şifahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04677266065448538441noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8449546921951236231.post-15926573491860198302012-11-23T01:10:26.694-08:002012-11-23T01:10:26.694-08:00Interesting picture and engineering examples. I wo...Interesting picture and engineering examples. I would love to see them, especially the China Pavilion. <a href="http://www.studyinchina.co/" rel="nofollow"> for more info</a><br /><br />Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11886568889566346939noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8449546921951236231.post-30422360558333408502011-07-05T07:44:13.093-07:002011-07-05T07:44:13.093-07:00Joseph Fletcher already expresses some kind of res...Joseph Fletcher already expresses some kind of reservation abut Ma Laichi's study with Zaid (?) in Yemen. I would add Kasharia as another important region for Chinese Muslims to seek religious aspirations.<br /><br />Minshar in Chinese is also associated with the "afterworld," indicating that the book is about life and death. <br /><br />It is possible that many Muslim Chinese went to the Islamcates including Hindustan (as late as 17th)and many Muslim scholars went to China, too, such as Ashige of India at the end of the Ming dynasty (17th). <br /><br />In the same century, a Qadiriyya Sufi from Mecca or Medina went to Gansu and Sichun provinces of China and his Chinese disciples finally formed Qadiriyya Sufism in China (I am working on a paper about his Confucian disciples,。。。)<br /><br />www.xinjiangreview.com<br />www.xinjiangreview.wordpress.comXinjiang Reviewerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10324865951653720473noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8449546921951236231.post-65586858238150815392011-06-22T12:08:05.755-07:002011-06-22T12:08:05.755-07:00The role of the Nestorian Church in taking Christi...The role of the Nestorian Church in taking Christianity to China in the C6th and C7th is well known, as is the Jesuit mission in the C16th. The impact of the Protestants (James Legge, for example) - and their interaction with Confucianism - is, perhaps, less well understood.<br />Can we hope that evenuntochina will address this topic, especially in the context of the present difficulties experienced by Christians in China and the phenomenal growth of evangelical Christianity elsewhere in Asia.Philip Doddridgehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11048555769889013177noreply@blogger.com