It is hard enough for murids to satisfy the requirements of the Tariqah. Nevertheless the Ismaili Namaz is available for those who can do both. Hence there is a complementarity between the Shariah practices and Tariqah practices. You may argue about the degree and the nature but there is a complementarity. Significant number of Ismailis fast during Ramadhan. Many Ismailis including Pir Sadardeen performed Hajj although it is not a Tariqah practice.
Ismailis don’t satisfy the requirements of the sharia’ (i.e. salaat/namaz) not because they have ‘commitments in life’ but because
they don’t believe they are required to. It is not obligatory on them. I’ve encountered countless Ismailis who, when asked about their ‘dua’ believe it to be obligatory, but when asked about salaat/namaz, don’t think they’re required to perform it. You keep on referring to this ‘Ismaili Namaz’ that’s supposedly available for them, but anytime I (or any other Muslim) asks them about the question of salaat/namaz, they don’t say that ‘oh we have other commitments in life, so we can’t perform it, but rather say that they don’t have salaat/namaz, they have their dua’ in its stead. Kmaherali, why do you keep insisting that there is one, when it’s so clear that there isn’t? In fact, Ismailis are so well-known for this, that is, not having a sharia’ that is common to all Muslims (i.e. praying the salaat/namaz). Btw, can you show me the text of this ‘Ismaili Namaz’? After all, it is an ‘Ismaili sharia’ practice’ (according to you), so I’m sure you wouldn’t have a problem with it.
Some Ismailis fast during Ramadan, but do they believe to be an obligatory part of Ismailism? No, they don’t. Their view of fasting is the same as their view of salaat/namaz. Do they believe that the performance of Hajj is an obligatory part of Ismailis? No, they don’t. Instead, they believe that what is obligatory for them is seeing the ‘didar’ of their Imam, which is their Hajj. All this i.e. the fact that they don’t believe these basic sharia’ rules (that are common to all Muslims) to be obligatory is problematic. Again, I’m not denying any complemetarity between Ismaili (sharia and tariqa) practices. I’m denying any complementarity
between the sharia’ practices that are common to all Muslims and Ismaili practices. I’ve made that clear several times. There isn’t any because the two practice very different things.
Most Muslims do not belong to a tariqah and hence they have a greater capacity to perform the Shariah practices in comparison to Ismailis. The fact that Ismailis have a lesser capacity to perform the Shariah practices does not mean that complementarity does not exist.
So their (Ismailis) tariqa practices are getting in the way of their sharia' ones or making it had to perform them? What nonsense and what a lame excuse. The only reason why Ismailis don’t practice the sharia’ (that is common to all Muslims) is because they believe they are not required to. Ismailis have been/and are infamous for this and every Ismaili that I have come across has confirmed it. You know this.
They established the basis for trust within the communities in which they preached through exemplary lives, persuasive arguments and/or supernatural powers developed through spiritual elevation. Hence whatever they told the people about the interpretation of faith and Imamat in particular convinced them. This led to the tradition and doctrine of the Imam as the Perfect Man.
But their perceptions of the imam remain subjective regardless. This means that
the doctrine of the imam as the ‘perfect man’ is also subjective. In other words, it is not that your imam is the ‘perfect man’; it is that he is the ‘perfect man’
to someone (i.e. the dai). So why is it that you believe in someone’s subjective perception of your imam (i.e. that he is the perfect man) and not, let’s say, someone else’s, who perceives him as an imperfect man? Since both are subjective, you can’t choose one and deny the other. If you do that, why would you when the imam is perceived as perfect or imperfect to that particular individual who perceives him (as one of the two) since it is true
only to him? If this is a bit difficult to follow, let me try and simplify it:
• You stated that all perceptions of your imam are subjective.
• If there are two men, one of whom perceives your imam as the perfect man and the other perceives him as the imperfect man, and since both of their perceptions are subjective, would you choose one and deny the other i.e. believe him to be perfect and not imperfect? If so, why? Or would you say they are both right? If so, why? If one of them perceives him as perfect, then the imam is perfect
to that person (subjective). But if the other perceives him as imperfect then the imam is imperfect
to that person (subjective). Is one of them right and the other wrong? If so, why, when all perceptions of him are subjective (i.e. one is as good as the other) since there is no criterion except individual subjective perceptions? Or are they both right? If so, the imam is then both imperfect and perfect at the same time. But that is a contradiction. How would you try and explain it?