Birth Name: | Felice Pallavicini |
Birth Place: | Milan, Italy |
Death Date: | 12 November 2017 |
Death Place: | Milan, Italy |
Occupation: | Ulama, preacher, doctor |
Family: | Pallavicini Family |
Abd al Wahid Pallavicini, born Felice Pallavicini in 1926 in Milan (Italy) and died on November 12, 2017, in the same city, is a leading figure of Sufism in Europe.
In France, he founded the Institut des hautes études islamiques (IHEI) in Lyon, the Italian Islamic Religious Community (COREIS) and the Academy of Interreligious Studies (Accademia ISA).
Descended from a noble Lombard family (the Pallavicino family), Abd al Wahid Pallavicini was born in Milan in 1926. After studying medicine, his spiritual quest led him to convert to Islam in 1951 thanks to the teachings of Titus Burckhardt.
After a trip to Singapore, where he received authorization to lead an autonomous branch of the Ahmadiyyah Idrisiyyah Shadhiliyyah brotherhood that was inspired by René Guénon in Europe, Abd al Wahid Pallavicini, honored with the title of sheikh (teacher), founded a community of Muslims in Italy and France in the 1980s, linked to traditional Sufism.[1]
Very involved in inter-religious dialogue, he was chosen to represent “Italian Islam” at the first inter-religious meeting for peace organized in Assisi in 1986 by Pope John Paul II.[2]
At the 10th International Theological Conference held in 2003, he argued that his Muslim but non-Arab status was a bridge linking the three great religions connected to Jerusalem.[3]
His son Yahya Sergio Yahe Pallavicini, imam of the al-Wahid mosque in Milan, was one of 138 Muslim representatives who sent a letter to the Vatican in 2007 calling for a new dialogue on cohabitation between the two religions, and who subsequently spoke to Pope Benedict XVI on the subject in 2008.[4]