<p>Bullet holes scar the minaret of the Sufi mosque in Libya's Zliten, but followers of the Muslim mystical tradition are working to renovate and preserve their heritage.</p>.<p>A handful of students sit cross-legged on the floor of the mosque in the Asmariya zawiya, transcribing on wooden tablets as their teacher chants Koranic verses.</p>.<p>Elsewhere in the complex, named for its 16th-century founder Abdessalam al-Asmar, scholars pore over old manuscripts on theology and Islamic law.</p>.<p>The zawiya -- an Arabic term for a Sufi institute offering a space for religious gatherings, Koranic education and free accommodation to travellers -- also includes a boarding school and a university.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/hopes-for-free-media-dashed-in-post-kadhafi-libya-964553.html" target="_blank">Hopes for free media dashed in post-Kadhafi Libya</a></strong></p>.<p>Historian Fathi al-Zirkhani says the site is the Libyan equivalent of Cairo's prestigious Al-Azhar University, a global authority in Sunni Islam.</p>.<p>But despite Sufism's long history across North Africa, Libya's plunge into chaos after dictator Moamer Kadhafi was ousted in a 2011 revolt gave a free hand to militias.</p>.<p>They included hardline Islamists, who are deeply hostile to Sufi "heretics" and their mystical nighttime ceremonies aimed at coming closer to the divine.</p>.<p>"(Previously) dormant ideological currents, with backing from abroad, took advantage of the security vacuum to attack the zawiyas," Zirkhani said.</p>.<p>In August 2012, dozens of Islamist militants raided the site, blowing up part of the sanctuary, stealing or burning books and damaging Asmar's tomb.</p>.<p>But today, craftsmen are busily restoring terracotta tiles and repairing damage caused by the extremists.</p>.<p>The tomb is surrounded by scaffolding but still bears its green silk cover, delicately embroidered with gold.</p>.<p>The zawiya hosts several hundred students, including many from overseas, who enjoy free food and lodging.</p>.<p>"I came to Libya to learn Koran here," said Thai student, Abderrahim bin Ismail, in faltering Arabic.</p>.<p>Houssein Abdellah Aoch, a 17-year-old from Chad wearing a long blue tunic, said he was working hard to commit verses to memory.</p>.<p>"I'm hoping to memorise the entire Koran then go home and become a religious teacher," he said.</p>.<p>When the call to prayer rings out, all rise and head through an arcaded courtyard to the mosque for noon prayers.</p>.<p>It is a scene repeated daily for hundreds of years, but the zawiya has had a turbulent few decades.</p>.<p>Kadhafi, who ruled Libya with an iron fist for four decades after seizing power in a 1969 coup, was suspicious of the Sufis.</p>.<p>"He infiltrated the zawiya with his secret services, creating a climate of fear and mistrust," said an employee, who asked to remain anonymous.</p>.<p>"Kadhafi chose to divide the Sufis to control them better."</p>.<p>But Kadhafi's authorities "loosened the stranglehold in the mid-1990s, which allowed the zawiyas to regain their autonomy," he added.</p>.<p>After Kadhafi's overthrow in 2011, another danger emerged. The attack in Zliten, on the Mediterranean coast east of Tripoli, was echoed across the country.</p>.<p>Islamist militants used diggers and pneumatic drills to destroy numerous Sufi sites across Libya -- attacks echoed in Iraq, Pakistan and elsewhere.</p>.<p>Zirkhani says the people who attacked the complex in Zliten were "extremists known to the state".</p>.<p>But in the chaos of post-revolt Libya, they have never been held to account.</p>.<p>The zawiya has also suffered from a lack of funds as it seeks to rebuild and restore its treasures.</p>.<p>Zirkhani showed AFP dusty old manuscripts he wants to preserve for posterity.</p>.<p>"We have neither the means nor the know-how to restore them," Zirkhani said. "We need help from (UN cultural agency) UNESCO and European institutions."</p>.<p>But there are some signs of hope for Sufis in Libya.</p>.<p>The zawiya was closed for six years following the 2012 attack. But in 2018 it discreetly reopened, and Sufis have been able to exercise their customs more publicly.</p>.<p>Last October in Tripoli, they took to the streets of the old city to celebrate the birthday of the Prophet Mohammed -- a festival frowned upon by more austere currents of Islam.</p>
<p>Bullet holes scar the minaret of the Sufi mosque in Libya's Zliten, but followers of the Muslim mystical tradition are working to renovate and preserve their heritage.</p>.<p>A handful of students sit cross-legged on the floor of the mosque in the Asmariya zawiya, transcribing on wooden tablets as their teacher chants Koranic verses.</p>.<p>Elsewhere in the complex, named for its 16th-century founder Abdessalam al-Asmar, scholars pore over old manuscripts on theology and Islamic law.</p>.<p>The zawiya -- an Arabic term for a Sufi institute offering a space for religious gatherings, Koranic education and free accommodation to travellers -- also includes a boarding school and a university.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/hopes-for-free-media-dashed-in-post-kadhafi-libya-964553.html" target="_blank">Hopes for free media dashed in post-Kadhafi Libya</a></strong></p>.<p>Historian Fathi al-Zirkhani says the site is the Libyan equivalent of Cairo's prestigious Al-Azhar University, a global authority in Sunni Islam.</p>.<p>But despite Sufism's long history across North Africa, Libya's plunge into chaos after dictator Moamer Kadhafi was ousted in a 2011 revolt gave a free hand to militias.</p>.<p>They included hardline Islamists, who are deeply hostile to Sufi "heretics" and their mystical nighttime ceremonies aimed at coming closer to the divine.</p>.<p>"(Previously) dormant ideological currents, with backing from abroad, took advantage of the security vacuum to attack the zawiyas," Zirkhani said.</p>.<p>In August 2012, dozens of Islamist militants raided the site, blowing up part of the sanctuary, stealing or burning books and damaging Asmar's tomb.</p>.<p>But today, craftsmen are busily restoring terracotta tiles and repairing damage caused by the extremists.</p>.<p>The tomb is surrounded by scaffolding but still bears its green silk cover, delicately embroidered with gold.</p>.<p>The zawiya hosts several hundred students, including many from overseas, who enjoy free food and lodging.</p>.<p>"I came to Libya to learn Koran here," said Thai student, Abderrahim bin Ismail, in faltering Arabic.</p>.<p>Houssein Abdellah Aoch, a 17-year-old from Chad wearing a long blue tunic, said he was working hard to commit verses to memory.</p>.<p>"I'm hoping to memorise the entire Koran then go home and become a religious teacher," he said.</p>.<p>When the call to prayer rings out, all rise and head through an arcaded courtyard to the mosque for noon prayers.</p>.<p>It is a scene repeated daily for hundreds of years, but the zawiya has had a turbulent few decades.</p>.<p>Kadhafi, who ruled Libya with an iron fist for four decades after seizing power in a 1969 coup, was suspicious of the Sufis.</p>.<p>"He infiltrated the zawiya with his secret services, creating a climate of fear and mistrust," said an employee, who asked to remain anonymous.</p>.<p>"Kadhafi chose to divide the Sufis to control them better."</p>.<p>But Kadhafi's authorities "loosened the stranglehold in the mid-1990s, which allowed the zawiyas to regain their autonomy," he added.</p>.<p>After Kadhafi's overthrow in 2011, another danger emerged. The attack in Zliten, on the Mediterranean coast east of Tripoli, was echoed across the country.</p>.<p>Islamist militants used diggers and pneumatic drills to destroy numerous Sufi sites across Libya -- attacks echoed in Iraq, Pakistan and elsewhere.</p>.<p>Zirkhani says the people who attacked the complex in Zliten were "extremists known to the state".</p>.<p>But in the chaos of post-revolt Libya, they have never been held to account.</p>.<p>The zawiya has also suffered from a lack of funds as it seeks to rebuild and restore its treasures.</p>.<p>Zirkhani showed AFP dusty old manuscripts he wants to preserve for posterity.</p>.<p>"We have neither the means nor the know-how to restore them," Zirkhani said. "We need help from (UN cultural agency) UNESCO and European institutions."</p>.<p>But there are some signs of hope for Sufis in Libya.</p>.<p>The zawiya was closed for six years following the 2012 attack. But in 2018 it discreetly reopened, and Sufis have been able to exercise their customs more publicly.</p>.<p>Last October in Tripoli, they took to the streets of the old city to celebrate the birthday of the Prophet Mohammed -- a festival frowned upon by more austere currents of Islam.</p>