Thursday, January 08, 2026

Peter Lamborn Wilson on Frithjof Schuon

This blog already has several posts on the anarchist Peter Lamborn Wilson (1945-2022), also known as Hakim Bey, one of the most remarkable former Traditionalists. See here. One (here) reports an assurance that although Lamborn Wilson was definitely “in the circle of Nasr,” he was not actually a Maryami.

Daoud El-Alquist Bey of the Moorish Orthodox Church has drawn my attention to an interview conducted shortly before Lamborn Wilson's death in which he discusses the Maryamiyya. It is with Tamas Panitz, in Conversazione (Autonomedia 2022), pp 91–97. In this interview, Lamborn Wilson makes it clear that he was indeed a Maryami.

Lamborn Wilson said he followed Frithjof Schuon because he (LW) followed Seyyed Hossein Nasr, and Nasr followed Schuon. When he met Schuon, he found him charismatic. “He was overwhelming. He'd blow you away with his absolute assurance that he was god on earth.” He became disenchanted, however, because there seemed to be one rule for “soldiers” like himself, and another rule for Schuon “and his inner circle.” “Soldiers” had to be “orthodox” and pray and fast and abstain from alcohol, but as Schuon was an avatar (divine incarnation), these rules did not apply to him. One evening in London, where Lamborn Wilson moved after leaving Tehran, he was walking across a bridge over the Thames and “I just had this vision of one of the Ismaili lmams… who told me to go drink a bottle of wine, and quit being Orthodox. So I did.”

Another moment of disenchantment came when he was talking to the British painter Cecil Collins (1908–1989) after having tea with the Neoplatonist poet Kathleen Raine (1908–2003), who “was one of the people who inspired me to get away from the Schuonites” and lived in the same house as Collins. Collins “had seen [Schuon’s paintings] and he said to me you know everything that Frithjof Schuon believes in is the exact opposite of what he does in his paintings. They're sentimental, they're like Hallmark greeting cards. Suddenly my eyes were opened, I said by god Cecil you're right, they're like Hallmark greeting cards. You can be under a spell with things like that, and not see them.”

Wednesday, January 07, 2026

René Guénon and the East: Call for contributions

A forthcoming edited volume entitled René Guénon and the East invites contributions.

Guénon famously placed ‘the East’ at the center of his intellectual project, conceiving it as the primary point of access to "the primordial tradition." Although his interpretations of Asian religious traditions have been highly influential, they have only rarely been examined critically by specialists in the relevant fields. This volume aims to address that gap.

The book welcomes historically, philologically, and theoretically informed contributions, including (but not limited to): critical analyses of Guénon’s readings of specific religious traditions; studies of the reception and practical use of Guénonian interpretations; reflections on the political, ideological, and Orientalist implications of Guénon’s concept of ‘the East’; and examinations of exceptional or contested cases such as Japan, Judaism, and Buddhism.

Contributions should not exceed 9,000 words, including notes and bibliography. A first draft is expected by September 2026. Further details regarding the timeline and formal requirements will be provided in due course. Interested scholars are invited to contact the editors for further information. Contact Roberto Corso and Davide Marino, davide.marino@theologie.uni-goettingen.de.

Friday, January 02, 2026

Spiritualism in defense of Islam

Mattias Gori Olesen recently covered the debate between René Guénon and the Egyptian intelelctual Muḥammad Farīd Wajdī (1875-1954) over modern spirituality in Al-Maʿrifa (see post here). A new article, “Taming the Animal within in Cairo: Muḥammad Farīd Wajdī and ‘Temperate Vegetarianism’” by Mariam Elashmawy (Alif 45, 2025), here, open access) revisits this debate and adds more to our understanding of Wajdī. “It is important to understand that he [Wajdī] sees spiritualism through an Islamic lens,” argues Elashmawy. Spiritualism was not an import from the modern West, as Guénon thought, but a long-standing part of Islam. “As for us Muslims,” wrote Wajdī, “the matter of the appearance of spirits is one of the most common occurrences for those close to Allah” [ie. saints/awliyāʾ]. Spiritualism, as a scientific endorsement of one aspect of Islam, could serve as a defense against the growing threat of materialism and atheism. Wajdī agreed with Guénon regarding the threat, then, but not regarding the remedy.

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Kristiane Backer and the Maryamiyya

In the 1980s and 1990s, Kristiane Backer, of German origin, was a glamorous MTV presenter. She was introduced to Islam by Imran Khan, and although her relationship with him ended, her interest in Islam did not. Her 2009 autobiography, From MTV to Mecca: How Islam Inspired My Life, tells of her first encounters with Islam, her meeting with Shaykh Nazim and her conversion in the Naqshbandi milieu, and then her involvement with the Maryamiyya. Imran Khan introduced her to Gai Eaton, who introduced her to Martin Lings, who after some time became her shaykh. She followed him until his death.

From MTV to Mecca is a very personal and honest account of its author’s experiences, difficulties (often related to gender), and triumphs. We meet not only Lings and Eaton but Seyyed Hossein Nasr and many other Maryamis, all referred to with respect, never judged. Schuon is mentioned only in passing; she never met him. Others who appear in the book are never judged either, but what we read of some of the men in her life (not of the Maryamis) may provoke more negative judgments in the reader.

Backer’s autobiography shows the Maryamiyya at its best: profound, inspiring, supportive. Theological issues are occasionally visible, but never noted.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Dugin, the Center for Geopolitical Expertise, and Russian intelligence

The Center for Geopolitical Expertise (CGE, logo to left), based in Moscow and directed by Alexander Dugin’s right-hand man Valery Mikhaylovich Korovin, has just (December 9, 2025) been sanctioned by the UK government, following the lead of the EU and US. As a result, “internet access services and application stores must take reasonable steps to prevent users in the UK from accessing content, sites or applications provided by” CGE.

According to the EU, the CGE has been “involved in creating and disseminating false information by utilising artificial intelligence tools to produce deepfake videos, and supporting a network of hundreds of fake news websites. CGE is alleged to have worked closely with Russia’s military intelligence agency.” The UK agrees, identifying the “network of hundreds of fake news websites” as Storm-1516.

This is hard to verify using open sources. The CGE exists as a legal entity, and Korovin is listed as its director, but it has no internet presence. Storm-1516 is the name assigned by the Microsoft Threat Analysis Center to a Russian network it detected that was involved in attempting to influence the 2024 US presidential election. The source for the connection between the two is Microsoft, according to an October 2024 NBC news report, but there is nothing about this online at the Microsoft Threat Analysis Center. One source for the connection between the CGE and Russian intelligence is a January 2024 public report by the Estonian Foreign Intelligence Service, according to which “Russian intelligence agencies have repeatedly used the Centre as a cover to get involved in organising press tours” of Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine.

An EU report gives two URLs for the GCE. One, cge.su, operated from 2017 to May 2024 with the CGE’s articles as a placeholder and no other content save the logo reproduced above. The other, cge.evrazia.ru, seems never to have existed, and may be a mistake for evrazia.su, which does exist and does organize tours of the “post-Soviet space,” which may well include occupied areas of Ukraine, but does not seem to be related to Korovin or Dugin.

The EU and UK information, then, may not be entirely reliable. There is certainly confusion when it comes to a related matter. Dugin’s daughter Darya was killed by a Ukrainian operation inside Russia in August 2022. She was sanctioned by the US in March 2022 and by the UK in July 2022, even though the UK had not then sanctioned Dugin himself, and did not do so until December 2025 (the EU sanctioned him in 2022, and the US in 2015). The UK then tightened its sanctions on her in 2023 and 2024, first imposing “trust services sanctions” and then a “Director Disqualification Sanction,” even though she had been dead for some time.