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d-15670House OversightOther

Historical overview of the Nusayri (Alawite) sect and its secretive practices

The passage provides a general historical and theological description of the Nusayri/Alawite sect with no specific allegations, transactions, or connections to contemporary influential actors or misco Describes the origins of Nusayri beliefs and founder Ibn Nusayr. Notes the sect’s syncretic theology blending multiple traditions. Mentions the use of taqiyya and secret initiation rituals.

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #030086
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides a general historical and theological description of the Nusayri/Alawite sect with no specific allegations, transactions, or connections to contemporary influential actors or misco Describes the origins of Nusayri beliefs and founder Ibn Nusayr. Notes the sect’s syncretic theology blending multiple traditions. Mentions the use of taqiyya and secret initiation rituals.

Tags

alawiteshistorycultural-backgroundsyriareligionhouse-oversightintelligence

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
2] Nusayris, after their eponymous founder Ibn Nusayr, who lived in Iraq during the ninth century. Taking refuge in the mountains above the port of Latakia, on the coastal strip between modern Lebanon and Turkey, they evolved a highly secretive syncretistic theology containing an amalgam of Neoplatonic, Gnostic, Christian, Muslim, and Zoroastrian elements. Their leading theologian, Abdullah al- Khasibi, who died in 957, proclaimed the divinity of Ali, the Prophet Muhammad’s cousin and son-in-law, whom other Shiites revere but do not worship. Like many Shiites influenced by ancient Gnostic teachings that predate Islam, they believe that the way to salvation and knowledge lies through a succession of divine emanations. Acknowledging a line of prophets or avatars beginning with Adam and culminating in Christ and Muhammad, they include several figures from classical antiquity in their list, such as Socrates, Plato, Galen, and some of the pre-Islamic Persian masters. Nusayrism could be described as a folk religion that absorbed many of the spiritual and intellectual currents of late antiquity and early Islam, packaged into a body of teachings that placed its followers beyond the boundaries of orthodoxy. Mainstream Muslims, both Sunni and Shia, regarded them as ghulta, “exaggerators.” Like other sectarian groups they protected their tradition by a strategy known as taqiyya—the right to hide one’s true beliefs from outsiders in order to avoid persecution. Taqiyya makes a perfect qualification for membership in the mukhabarat—the ubiquitous intelligence/security apparatus that has dominated Syria’s government for more than four decades. Secrecy was also observed by means of a complex system of initiation, in which insiders recognized each other by using special phrases or passwords and neophytes underwent a form of spiritual marriage with the naqibs, or spiritual guides. At this ceremony three superior dignitaries represent a kind of holy trinity of the figures who

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