Niyama (personal observances) provides a yogic framework for the inner ethical commitments and spiritual disciplines that purify the nafs and strengthen intention toward Allah.
Patanjali's Niyama—comprising saucha (purity), santosha (contentment), tapas (heat/discipline), svadhyaya (self-study), and Ishvara pranidhana (surrender to the divine)—describes inner ethical practices that reshape consciousness from within. These directly parallel Islamic nafs purification: tahara (ritual and spiritual purity), rida (contentment with divine will), mujahada (struggle against base impulses), muraqaba (self-observation), and tawakkul (trust in Allah). Niyama teaches that external rules without inner commitment create hypocrisy; true transformation requires cultivating virtues as personal values. For Islamic seekers, this validates that nafs wellbeing depends not merely on outward compliance with shariah but on internalizing its spiritual purposes. Niyama practices develop the inner witness—the part of consciousness that observes the nafs without identifying with it. Through regular self-study (svadhyaya), practitioners discern the nafs's patterns and underlying beliefs; through disciplined practice (tapas), they strengthen the will; through contentment (santosha), they release the victim mentality that disempowers transformation. Integrating Niyama with Islamic practice deepens seekers' commitment to genuine inner change rather than merely performance.
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