Sufi Healing invites us to return to the truth of who we are:
a soul created in Light, worthy of peace, clarity, and love.

A sacred lineage rooted in Divine Love, the Prophetic tradition, and centuries of spiritual practice.

Sufi Healing arises from the ancient spiritual tradition of Sufism, the inner, mystical dimension of Islam. While Islam teaches the outer practices of faith, Sufism focuses on the inner purification of the heart, the remembrance of God, and the cultivation of Divine Love. It is in this inner work that healing naturally emerges.

While modern life often pulls us into stress, trauma, and emotional heaviness, Sufi Healing invites us to return to the truth of who we are: a soul created in Light, worthy of peace, clarity, and love.

Between the 8th and 12th centuries, Sufi mystics developed structured paths to inner purification. These lineages—such as the Qadiri, Naqshbandi, Shadhili, Mevlevi, and others—taught:


The refinement of the heart

Healing emotional wounds through Divine remembrance

Practices that remove veils between the self and the Divine

Transmission of spiritual energy (baraka)


Nadia’s healing studies were shaped through the Shadhili Sufi Order, an 18th-century North African tradition centered on healing through Divine Light. Yet her spiritual lineage traces back even further, to the Naqshibandi Order of 14th-century Central Asia, known for its silent dhikr and deep integration of spiritual practice into everyday life.

Long before discovering her healing gifts, Nadia was already grounded in Naqshibandi practices. When her abilities began to emerge, she sought out the Shadhili path to refine, deepen, and strengthen her healing work—bringing together both traditions in a practice rooted in devotion, discipline, and light. 

walk an ancient path with a modern guide.