The Kinship Activity is one of seven activities within the Inayatiyya. This activity was created by Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan in 1923 to help disseminate the Sufi Message of divine unity—of all peoples, all religions, and all existence—and the religion of the awakened heart. The Kinship Activity was designed to bring inspiration and peace to societies distraught by a lack of an ideal and an absence of understanding. Kinship is open to all.
Murshid Inayat Khan inspired the formation of Brotherhood meetings (now Kinship Circles) in the beginning of the 20th century. These groups were open to all people where they could discuss issues that were important to their lives in a safe way. Topics included social reforms (moral, not political) and comparative religion (without any criticism of any religion). The meetings were to be free of jargon, and to include the reading of the Three Objectives of the Sufi Movement:
- To realize and spread the knowledge of unity, the religion of love and wisdom, so that the bias of faiths and beliefs may of itself fall away, the human heart may overflow with love, and all hatred caused by distinctions and differences may be rooted out.
- To discover the light and power latent in the human being, the secret of all religion, the power of mysticism, and the essence of philosophy, without interfering with customs or beliefs.
- To help bring the world’s two opposite poles, East and West, close together by the interchange of thoughts and ideals, that the universal brotherhood-sisterhood may form of itself, and people may meet beyond the narrow national and racial boundaries.
Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan took up the mantle of Kinship in several ways. In the 1970s he encouraged murids to be involved in Amnesty International, seeing a direct connection between the freedoms that organization works for and the freedom his sister, Noor-un-Nisa Inayat Khan, sacrificed her life for during the Second World War. In addition Pir Vilayat spent years collecting funds to support the creation and expansion of The Hope Project adjacent to Murshid Inayat Khan’s dargah in the Basti Hazrat Nizamuddin in Delhi, India. The Hope Project, now an independent NGO, strives to provide people, especially the poor and vulnerable, with opportunities and resources, so that they can realize their hidden potential and determine their own future.
“In America, no doubt, I found that there is one thing which appeals to an American, whatever be his occupation or position, and that is the idea of brotherhood, it being a place where in this ideal the national constitution has been built. Any other problem might divide their intentions, but in the idea of brotherhood they will unite.”
– Hazrat Inayat Khan
Pir Zia Inayat Khan, President
Pir Zia, familiarly known as Sarafil Bawa, is a teacher of Sufism in the lineage of his grandfather, Hazrat Inayat Khan. He received his Ph.D. in Religion from Duke University. His books include Saracen Chivalry: Counsels on Valor, Generosity, and the Mystical Quest and Mingled Waters: Sufism and the Mystical Unity of Religions. Pir Zia is president of the Inayatiyya, an organization devoted to awakening the reality that we are all one family, united in the parenthood of God, and founder of Suluk Academy. He is also, as president of the Order, President of the Kinship. Now based in Richmond, Virginia, Pir Zia travels frequently. His schedule can be found at pirzia.org/calendar.
Abdul Hakim Oerton
Abdul Hakim Oerton is a Representative and Siraj living in the leafy Adelaide Hills of South Australia. He was initiated into the Ziraat activity twenty years ago and participates in the Oceania Ziraat events while ploughing in the inner and in the family garden. His work background includes many years as a registered psychiatric nurse and then as a spiritual care provider in mostly institutional settings. He and his partner share a love of nature’s abundance and divine immanence in all its manifestation.
Khatidja Rodriguez-Ruiz (Council Member)
Khatidja Rodriguez-Ruiz was initiated into the Inayatiyya in 2008 and is a graduate of the Suluk Academy (Naubahar). She currently serves on the North American Board of Trustees as chair of the Fundraising Committee. Khatidja received her Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Sociology and Public Policy from the University of Virginia. Professionally, she works as a fundraising strategist in higher education philanthropy where she works to expand accessibility and inclusivity in higher education. In her volunteer life, she uses improv music and theater as a conduit to support local grassroots organizations and the arts, in order to amplify their message and spread it to a wider audience. She is motivated by the philosophy that our diverse outlooks can make us stronger, if we work collaboratively to weave a unifying ideal of love, harmony, and beauty. She lives in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Majid David Vowells (Council Member)
Majid David Vowells is the Kinship representative for Aotearoa New Zealand and discovered the Sufi path when he moved here over twenty-five years ago. The Maori, Pacifica, and African cultures he has met have shown him much about the living experience of kinship. He has taught in culturally diverse schools and seen the challenges refugees face. He shares the experience of being an immigrant with his Ethiopian wife and her extended family. They have two teenage children, and Majid has grandchildren in England and Japan. He has found that the message of Hazrat Inayat Khan, and particularly the teachings on kinship are a potent way for the human family to work toward unity and peace in these times.
Nur
Azad Jack Mangold, Member Emeritus
Nur Azad, along with his wife, Zarifah Kadian, is a co-director of the Baraka Center of Washington, DC. The Center offers teachings on Sufi principles and practices, meditation for individuals and groups and he participates as a Reverend Cherag during the regular offering of the Universal Worship, a celebration of the world’s great religious traditions.
He is also a psychotherapist in private practice in Bethesda , MD. His primary work is with couples, families in crisis and young men and women who lack a clear and purposeful direction in life. He works closely with parents developing effective parenting styles.
Until recently, Nur Azad taught Couple and Family Therapy and Advanced Asian Mediation at Johns Hopkins Graduate School of Education for 10 years. He also enjoys the birds, animals and plants in his backyard and loves to participate with his grown children in sprint triathlons.
Raqib Jonah Yakel was initiated into the Inayati Order in 2000. He was an active member of the Baraka Center in Washington, DC, for many years and is a graduate of both the Suluk Academy (Gulzar/2015) and the Raphaelite Program with Himayat Inayati. Raqib spent ten years in Kansas City, where he led a Sufi center and has more recently served as a mentor for the Suluk classes of Naubahar and Na-koja-abad. Raqib first began service in the Kinship Activity as a rider for the “Spirit Rides the Wind” fundraiser, a 5-day bike ride from Washington DC to the Abode of the Message in 2010. He led early kinship circles in Kansas City. After several years focused on health and healing, he recently returned joining the Kinship Council in 2023. Currently, Raqib resides in Scottsdale, AZ, with his wife Jeni, and two children, Jacob and Amalie, where he practices as a functional medicine practitioner specializing in brain health, chronic inflammatory conditions, and mold related illness.
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Mikail Davenport, († 03/10/2021)
Mikail has been a servant-leader in the Inayatiyya Sufi path for over 30 years as a Reverend Cherag (minister), Healing Conductor, and Representative. He was the focalizer of the Prison Book Project that sends requested books on spirituality to inmates. He also has been the Mentor Training Director of the Prisoner Interaction Project and did counsel and spiritually directs 25 inmates from various faiths around the country. Michael passed away on March 10th, 2021. May he rest in peace.
