Posts Tagged ‘Rumi’

Drawing the Prophet's Face (AS) : What You Are Robbing Us Of

Drawing the Prophet’s Face (AS) : What You Are Robbing Us Of

May 20, 2010  |  Thoughts  |  5 Comments

One of a Muslim’s greatest hope and reward of spiritual accomplishment is to see the Prophet’s (AS) face in their best dreams, when they have arrived at a station of purity.

This message is to those with a heart.

Don’t rob of us of this hope and emotion by forcing your politics on our spiritual experiences.

Don’t shatter and intrude upon our dreams with your violent messages.

To those without a heart, I leave you to your fate.


LOOKING FOR YOUR FACE

From the beginning of my life
I have been looking for your face
but today I have seen it

Today I have seen
the charm, the beauty,
the unfathomable grace
of the face
that I was looking for

Today I have found you
and those who laughed
and scorned me yesterday
are sorry that they were not looking
as I did

I am bewildered by the magnificence
of your beauty
and wish to see you
with a hundred eyes

My heart has burned with passion
and has searched forever
for this wondrous beauty
that I now behold

I am ashamed
to call this love human
and afraid of God
to call it divine

Your fragrant breath
like the morning breeze
has come to the stillness of the garden
You have breathed new life into me
I have become your sunshine
and also your shadow

My soul is screaming in ecstasy
Every fiber of my being
is in love with you

Your efflugence
has lit a fire in my heart
for me
the earth and sky

My arrow of love
has arrived at the target
I am in the house of mercy
and my heart
is a place of prayer

Maulana Rumi (ks)
——————–

If the face of Muhammad is reflected on a wall, the heart of the wall will become alive.

The wall, through his blessed reflection, will have such great happiness that even the wall will be rescued from hypocrisy.

It was a shame for the wall to have two faces while the pious and the pure had only one.

Maulana Rumi (ks)

Circles of Dignity

October 26, 2009  |  Thoughts  |  13 Comments

“O people, by Allâh I have visited kings. I went to Caesar, Chosroes and the Negus, but by Allâh I never saw a king whose companions venerated him as much as the companions of Muhammad venerated Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him). By Allâh, whenever he spat it never fell on the ground, it fell into into the hand of one his companions, then they wiped their faces and skins with it. If he instructed them to do something, they would hasten to do as he commanded. When he did wudû’, they would almost fight over his water. When he spoke they would lower their voices in his presence; and they did not stare at him out of respect for him.” ( al-Bukhârî, 3/178, no. 2731, 2732; al-Fath, 5/388).

Muhammad ibn `Umar said: “(Imam) Malik’s circle was a circle of dignity and courtesy. He was a man of majestic countenance and nobility. There was no part for self-display, vain talk, or loud speech in his circle. His reader would read for all, and no-one looked into his own book, nor asked questions, out of awe before Malik and out of respect for him.”

Is it possible to take the typical second, third, fourth generation Muslim and shoehorn them into the circles described above? What would be their experience?

More than likely it would be filled with boredom, confusion, and criticism all stemming from how very different this circle is than any other gathering they have participated in earlier in the day.

Sitting cross legged is already difficult enough for us, much less being surrounded by air which is infused with odd things such as ‘awe’, ‘nobility’, ‘dignity’, ‘respect’. We don’t know how to handle or envision such words in literature, and we certainly are unprepared to be faced with the practical reality of them.

Which movie prepares us for this environment? Which show? Which video game?

None.

In this void, awkwardness fills us and most peoples chests are pressed with an instinctive reaction to remove ourselves from the heat of uncomfortably.

Surrounded by people that are genuinely devoted to another individual on the basis of their superior knowledge and religious practice is disturbing in a culture which raises us towards complete self-reliance and the total equality of all men in all aspects.

Add a dash of some form of group expression of faith that we are unfamiliar with, and the field is ripe for the ego to rebel.

There are just so many ‘outs’.

The convenient (yet arbitrary) distinction between religious life and the life dedicated to this world, especially when it is intertwined with the buzzword of ‘innovation’ gives us the most convenient of explanations to categorize our reaction.

*I don’t like it, because it feels weird.*

Self knowledge tempers this.

When one realizes the weakness of ones own faith, prayer, worship, it makes it more difficult to come to grandiose conclusions condemning people who dedicate themselves to the same. Humility dictates to us that we aren’t good judges, much less good prosecutors of others.

It is only when one confronts their own bias, in which one finds the reflection of sworn self-esteem and pavlovian pride, that one get past this haze which limits spiritual awakening.

The arbitrary categorization of ‘innovation’ when applied to worldly life vs religion, contains within it the supposition that life is separate from religion. A conclusion which has far hitting impacts.

In this model, watching TV feels quite alright, at least if you try to avoid some ‘bad scenes’. And watching 25 pictures per second on a wall mounted LCD screen is for some reason, so much harder to complain about than having a picture of a holy man who reminds us of prophecy, faith, improvement.

Under this mentality we think: Rock groups haraam? Let us have Islamic pop stars. Let’s have Muslim comedians. Muslim fiction writers. Muslim movie studios. Muslim news channels. All the while, we don’t exclude ourselves to the ‘Muslim’ version of these institutions of mimicry. So they do not help in creating a Islamic culture in the West, what they do is create a bridge of acceptance.

To watch a ‘Muslim pop star’, you still have to enter a concert hall. And to see a ‘Muslim film’ you still have to sit on a couch. There is still a stage for the ‘Muslim comedian’.

These issues reflect the implicit approval by the Muslim community of dramatic shifts away from the cultures which underwent a millenia of Islamization. Instead, we’ve accepted the inclination towards that which has challenged those cultures at every turn.

Islam was so much more than a filter of existing cultures, it brought something new. And these accomplishments are written in sand swept stone of Mughal architecture to the grand prayer halls of the Ottomans, to the poetry of Mevlana Rumi (ks) and the ironic statements on humanity from Nasruddin Hoja (ks).

This system has put the final wall up between knowledge and practice. It’s done this by actually turning Islam away from traditional values and a culture in which people of dramatic faith and unique characteristics were raised and nurtured.

Modern institutions catering to Muslims have been continuing the century old transition from Muslim culture and values to Western ones, all under the name of preaching Islam. And its not always so obtuse and obvious as the recent Azhari ban on niqaab. Pay-as-you-go ‘Islamic classes’ have cloaked an entirely foreign idea of Western style instruction in the mantle of religiosity.

And when examining this issue of cultural adoption, what we have chosen is not hamburgers over curry. We have settled for abandoning circles of dignity.

Closeness to the Quran

October 21, 2009  |  Thoughts  |  No Comments

Jalaluddin Rumi (ks) compared the Book (Holy Quran) to a bride, unwilling to lift her veil before a rough and importunate lover; and most importunate of all are those who seek to plumb its depths without effort, patience, or humility. It is no mere figure of speech to say that those who wish to win the Quran must indeed woo it, and the illiterate man who wears a verse around his neck as a ‘talisman’, and who lovingly kisses the Book he cannot read, may be closer to the truth than is the casual reader.

(ref: Islam and the Destiny of Man, Eaton)

Maulana Rumi (ks) – Mispronunciation of Hazrat Bilal (R)

August 19, 2009  |  Thoughts  |  3 Comments

Explaining that in the sight of the Beloved a fault committed by lovers is better than the correctness of strangers.

The veracious Bilal (R) in uttering the call to prayer, used, from ardent feeling to pronounce ʜ\ayya as hayya,

So that they (some people) said, “O Messenger (of Allah), this fault is not right (permissible) now when ’tis the beginning of the edifice (of Islam).

O Prophet and Messenger of the Creator, get a muezzin who speaks more correctly.

At the commencement of religion and piety, it is a disgrace to mispronounce ʜayy ‘ala ‘l-falah”

The Prophet’s (S) wrath boiled up, and he gave one or two indications of the hidden favours (which Allah had bestowed upon Bilal (R))

Saying, “O base men, in Allah’s sight the mispronounced hayy of Bilal is better than a hundred hā’s and khā’s and words and phrases.

Do not stir me to anger, lest I divulge your secret – (both) your end and your beginning.”

If thou hast not a sweet breath in prayer, go and beg a prayer from the pure (in heart).

Mathnawi – Volume 4 (173)

Maulana Rumi (ks) – Trial of Allah and Men of Allah (Sheykhs)

August 18, 2009  |  Thoughts  |  1 Comment

One day a contumacious man, who was ignorant of the reverence due to Allah, said to Murtaza (Ali (R)),

On the top of an exceedingly high terrace or pavilion, “Art thou conscious of Allah’s protection, O intelligent man?”

“Yes,” he replied ; “He is the Protector and the Self-sufficient for preserving my existence from the time of infancy and conception.”

He said, “Come cast thyself down from the roof, put an entire confidence in the protection of God,

So that thy sure faith and thy goodly proven conviction may become evident to me.”

Then the Prince said to him, “Be silent, go, lest for this boldness thy soul be pawed (given over to perdition).”

How is it right for a servant (of Allah) to venture on an experiment with Allah by making trial of Him?

How should a servant of Allah have the stomach vain-gloriously to put Him to the test, O mad fool?

To Allah alone belongs that right, who brings forward a test for His servants at every moment,

In order that He may show us plainly to ourselves (and reveal) what beliefs we hold in secret.

Did Adam (AS) ever say to Allah, “I made trial of Thee in committing this sin and trespass,

That I might see the utmost limit of Thy clemency, O King?” Ah, who would be capable of seeing this, who?

Forasmuch as your understanding is confused, your excuse is worse than your crime.

How can you make trial of Him who raised aloft the vault of heaven?

O you that have not known good and evil, (first) make trial of yourself, and then of others.

When you have made trial of yourself, O such-and-such, you will be unconcerned with making trial of others.

When you have come to know you are a grain of sugar, then you will know that you belong to the sugar house.

Know, then, without making any trial, that (if) you are sugar, Allah will not send you to the wrong place.

Without making trial, know this of the King’s (Allah’s) knowledge: when you are a spritiual chief, He will not send you down to the vestibule.

Does any intelligent man let a precious pearl fall into the midst of a privy full of ordure?

Inasmuch as a sagacious and attentive man will nowise send wheat to a star barn,

If a novice has made trial of the Shaykh who is the (spiritual) leader and guide, he is an ass.

If you make trial of him in the way of religion, you will be tried( by tribulation), O man without faith.

Your audacity and ignorance will become naked and exposed to view: how should he be naked by that scrutiny?

If the mote come and weight the mountain, its scales will be shattered by the mountain, O youth;

For he(the novice) applies the scales of his own judgment and puts the man of God in the scales ;

But since he (the Shaykh) is not contained by the scales of intellect, consequently he shatters the scales of intellect.

Know that to make trial of him is like exercising authority over him: do not seek to exercise authority over such a spiritual king.

What authority should the pictures desire to exercise over such an Artist for the purpose of testing Him?

If it(the picture) has known and experienced any trial, is it not the case that the Artist brought that (trial) upon it?

Indeed, this form that He fashioned – what is it worth in comparison with the forms which are in His knowledge?

When the temptation to make this trial has come to you, know that ill fortune has come and smitten your neck.

When you feel such a temptation, at one, turn to Allah and begin the prostration.

Make the place of prostration wet with flowing tears and say, “O Allah, do Though deliver me from this doubt!”

At the time when it is your object to make trial of Allah, the mosque, namely, your religion, becomes filled with kharrub (carob)

Maulana Rumi (ks) – Mathnwai Volume 4 (353)