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Openai/690e264c-c9e4-800c-ae44-f3cf949de7b4
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==== Because hadith wasn’t a theology; it was a technology of authority. ==== It served whoever controlled orthodoxy — first Arabs, then the Persianized Abbasids. It’s not that Persians didn’t bring their local flavor; they just channeled it through formality rather than rebellion. Hadith science became their career in the empire — while Isma‘ilism and Sufism became their voice of dissent. If you want, I can map the social genealogy of early Persian religious thought — showing how Khurramite → Isma‘ili → Sufi → philosophical currents (like Suhrawardi) evolved side by side with Sunni hadith orthodoxy. Would you like that next?
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