Shaikh (شيخ, also rendered as Sheik, Shaykh or Sheikh) is a word in the Arabic language meaning an elder or a revered old man.
The term linguistically means a man who of old age, and is used in that sense in Quranic Arabic. Later it came to be a title meaning leader, elder or noble, especially in the Arabian Peninsula, where Shaikh became a traditional title of a Bedouin tribal leader in recent centuries. For example, it was the term used to refer to the leaders of Kuwait's royal al-Sabah dynasty until June 19, 1961, when Kuwait joined the Arab League, and the title Emir was adopted.
It also was used by sufi orders as an honorific for an elder sufi who has been authorized by the order to teach, initiate dervishes and otherwise lead a sufi circle or dergah. In this sense, it is not restricted to sufi elders, but to any learned man in religion, such as Faqihs, Muftis, and Muhaddiths.
In the Persian Gulf, the title is used for men of stature, whether they are managers in high posts, wealthy business owners, or local rulers.
The title is often more informally used to address learned men as a courtesy. As a general rule of thumb, one may call someone older than 60 years of age a Shaikh.
Shaykh Nazim moved back to Damascus in 1952, when he was wed to the daughter of one of the murids of Shaykh Abdullah Daghestani, Amina Adil (1929-2004), whose family came to settle in Syria after fleeing Soviet rule of their native Kazan.
In 1991 Shaykh Nazim visited the United States for the first time and made a nationwide tour, bringing several hundreds of individuals into the fold of Islam and in 1992 he sent one of his khalifahs, Shaykh Hisham Kabbani, to oversee the order’s activities in America.
Shaykh Nazim made his last trip to the United States in 2000, during which he was invited to speak at the United Nations.