The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (695 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
2.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
D
shti-prav
da-a
ga
:
see
A
GA
.
Drugpa Künleg
or ’Brug-pa Kun-legs
(1455–1570).
Tibetan, best-known as one of the ‘holy fools’ of Tibet. He was trained in the Drugpa school of the
Kagyüpa
, but he adopted the ascetic life of a wanderer, which was nevertheless demonstrated in consumption of beer and women—in a quasi-Tantric style of non-attachment even in action. He is believed to be the reappearance in bodily form of Saraha and
avaripa, two
mah
siddhas
.
Druzes
(Arab., Dur
z). Members of a religious group numbering about half a million, mainly in S. Lebanon, SW Syria, and Hawran district of Israel/N. Palestine. A closely knit community, mainly landowners and cultivators, the Druzes practise a secret religion which conceals doctrines and practices from the uninitiated, a fact which has prevented until modern times a clear understanding of its origins, doctrines, and practices.
The Druze religion was derived from
Ism

l
ya
, and was established in the 11th cent. in Cairo, Egypt, around the cult of the F
imid
Khal
fa
al-
kim (disappeared in 1021 (AH 411)). Al-
kim was first recognized as incarnate reason by al-Daraz
, from whom the name Druze derives. The two most sacred books of the Druzes are
Al-Naqd al-Khafi
(Copy of the Secret) by
amza b. ‘Al

Other books

The Breakup by Brenda Grate
Hollywood by Charles Bukowski
Willow Smoke by Adriana Kraft
Windy City Blues by Marc Krulewitch
Broken Obsession - Part Two by Trisha Fuentes
When I Kill You by Michelle Wan
The Dark Valley by Aksel Bakunts
Bloodstone by Nate Kenyon