Saturday, July 31, 2010

Sufi Reading of Jesus' Teaching Parables


~ Aleph ~

I called through your door,
"The mystics are gathering
in the street. Come out!"

you say: "Leave me alone.
I'm sick."


"I don't care if you're dead!"
Jesus is here, and he wants
to resurrect somebody!"

- Jelaluddin Rumi


 ~ Beth ~

Isa ibn Maryam (Jesus son of Mary), peace be upon his blessed soul - to the Muslims universally - is a Divine Messenger (Rasul), Sign (Ayat), Word and Spirit of Allah (Ruhu'Llah). Just as every verse of the Quran is called Ayah (Sign); before the earthly unveiling of the Quran, in the previous cycle of messengership, Jesus himself was 'a Sign' embodied. For the Sufis, the Mystics of Islam - the station of Jesus is adorned as the Seal of Saintly Station, the Great Guide of Hearts (Murshid al-Akbar fil Qulub) and Teacher of the Sacred (Mu'allim al-Muqaddas).

The Seal of Saintly Station (Khatam al-Maqam al-Quddusin) refers that none among the Sons of Man will ever again surpass the holiness of Jesus, his God consciousness and his saintly attributes. The divine pattern of transmission of sacred knowledge (al-marifat) is such that it is transmitted unbrokenly from one heart to another heart. Thus the role of the Murshid (one who guides) is so sincerely preserved in Sufi Path and the Sufi Mystics who receive that unbroken baraka from God sent messengers and their disciples, companions and successors, consider Jesus as a great Murshid who's pattern (sunnah) reached kamaliyat, holy perfection.

Jesus' instruction of initiation is this, 'as I have loved you, that ye also love one another.' - John 13.34. This is the transmission of love which not all can achieve and those rare beings who achieve become the successor of the master in loving other as the master embodied and taught. Such is the transmission. That transmission from one heart to another, which Sufis called baraka is a continuation of love from, and for the fully Awakened Human Beings. And Jesus, in the eye of the Sufis is one such fully Awakened Human Being, one who, by the grace of Allah, has become a Beauteous Blossom of Love. May Allah perfect our love for him and for our own spiritual guides.

Some Sufis directly inherited the station from Jesus by God's will and perfumed themselves in the color of Christ. Ahmad al-Alawi was one of such well documented Sufi Saint in not-so-distant-past who even on physical level resembled Christ. Shaykh Ibn Arabi, one of the greatest gnostic, received initiation from Jesus. Ibn Arabi later recorded how his conversion (tawba) took place between the hand of Jesus, his Shaykh of inner plane. He said about Jesus: "He has prayed for me in order that I might persist in the religion... and has called me his beloved. He ordered me to practice zuhd (renunciation) and tajrid (the stripping away of all that is unnecessary)". Ibn Arabi and Ahmad al-Alawi, may Allah be pleased with them, are two prominent ones among many know and unknown examples that the Sufis continue to carry the nisbat of love with Christ. Allow me to give you a very simple example. If in the present world if one wish to discover Christ-like human beings, one will be extremely disappointed if one venture to seek such ones among the Christian pastors, priests , bisops or even among the Popes (past or present) - even though they are suppose to be the vanguard of Christ's teaching and hence supposedly be embodying Christ like characters. This is not to say there are none, but you would think and naturally expect that from the Great Tree, the fruits would bear more resembling attributes of their Source. Since the Source Tree is What it Is, the fruits must have been cut off their nourishment long time back.

What an irony you may say! Yet, God be our witness, such Christ-like personalities who live in holy poverty and simplicity, a hallmark of Christ's asceticism, who live in spotless purity when it comes to morality and honoring God's limits and imbued in the love of God, like Christ who often practice itikaaf (retreat) in solitude to be alone with the Alone, like Christ who often prostrate with their face on the ground, who are humble and yet shine with wisdom of kingdom of heaven and who perform healing like Christ - such personalities can even be found among Sufi Masters, even in this age, if you only knew how to seek them.

There are even Sufi branches called Isawyi. This poor servant was fortunate enough to see and listen from one such Isawyi Sufi Shaykh and the temperament, energy, and the combination of peaceful innocence and fierce wisdom reminded none but our noble master, Isa Masih (Messiah Jesus).

~ Gimel ~



In Jesus, the Sufis trace the quintessential quality of a Murshid or a Shaykh, a Guide of the Soul.

While describing how a true Spiritual Guide be recognized, Sufi Master Abu Said ibn Abul Khayr said, at least ten characteristics if found in a guide, is proof of his authenticity. These are:


First: he must have become a Goal, to be able to have a disciple.
Second: he must have traveled the mystic path himself, to be able to show the way.
Third: he must have become refined and educated, to be able to be an educator (murabbi).
Fourth: he must be generous and devoid of self-importance, so that he can sacrifice wealth on behalf of the disciple.
Fifth: he must have no hand in the disciple's wealth, so that he is not tempted to use it for himself.
Sixth: whenever he can give advice through a sign (parables, metaphors, mithals), he will not use direct expression.
Seventh: whenever he can educate through kindness, he will not use violence and harshness.
Eighth: whatever he orders, he has first accomplished himself.
Ninth: whatever he forbids the disciple, he has abstained for himself.
Tenth: he will not abandon for the world's sake the disciple whom he accepts for God's sake.

Abul Khayr continues to say that, "If the spiritual guide is like this and is adorned with these character traits, the disciple is bound to be sincere and a good traveler, for what appears in the disciple is the quality of the spiritual guide made manifest in the disciple."

If one truly try to understand the perfumed qualities of Jesus Christ, one will know that these ten characteristics in perfect perfection were truly manifest in him and certainly Allah blessed him with more than what we can enumerate.

~ Daleth ~

Lets return to the subject matter of this post: the Parables of Jesus that he used in his teaching. It is one of the hallmark of Illuminating Masters that when they speak about higher reality, of the unseen, they avoid speaking it directly. There are many wisdom behind this, but its worth explaining it using a parable as well: "Looking at the sun directly and with naked eye is not profitable, either this temporarily blinds the onlooker, or if done severely, this causes permanent blindness."

Parables also perform multiple functions: which is allowing the seeker 'to drink gradually', opening like many petaled flower 'layer by layer' and also parables continue to unveil its meaning transcending limitation of age or time and open its meaning according to the 'readiness' of seeker. Further more, subject matter of the unseen, as the name suggest are often unknown, and hence mind has nothing to compare or contrast against, there are no likeness of, for example the terms such as the kingdom of heaven, the garden beneath which rivers flow, Sakar - which are of reality of the afterworld and unseen for those who are earth bound.

The parables were a key part of the teachings of Jesus. He was fond of parables in conveying his message so much so that in the canonical gospels, the parables forms approximately one third of his available teachings. And we of course have lost, many of the private conversations of the Teacher with his disciples.

The sahabis (intimate companions) came to him and asked, "Why do you speak to the people in parables?"

He replied: "The knowledge of the secrets of the kingdom of heaven has been given to you, but not to them. Whoever has (such sacred knowledge) will be given more, and he will have an abundance (kausar). Whoever does not have, even what he has will be taken from him. This is why I speak to them in parables: Though seeing, they do not see; though hearing, they do not hear or understand."  
- Matthew: 13:10-13


~ Ha ~

With your contribution, God willing, in a series of upcoming post, we would like to share some posts on the teaching of parables of Jesus. It could well turn out to be a PDF ebook if we gather enough material. We shall try our best to incorporate insight and wisdom from the Sufi Path to appreciate  these universal and timeless teachings of Christ. 

I would really be grateful if you could also share with us what are your favorite Parables from the New Testament and how do you read / interpret them in a brief manner. You may access the New Testament and compare translations / search easily via Bible Gateway: Matthew, Mark, Luke and John's Gospel. But its best to read with reverence from a printed copy.

You may send via email [mysticsaint@gmail.com] or share in the comment section of this post as well.


Allahumma salli ala Saiyyidina 
wa Murshidina Isa.
Qad hubbana lahu aiyyakunal kamal.

O Allah, send Your blessings upon our Noble Master,
our Murshid Jesus.
May our love for him be perfected.


# References:
. The Significance of Restoration of True Image of Christ
. Resurrection of Jesus | Gnostic Perspective and Beyond
. Ephphatha | Healing of Christ and Sufi Invocation
. Jesus Washes His Disciples' Feet | loving the creation for the sake of loving the Creator
. Quran on Jesus Christ (Isa Masih)
. The Spiral Dance and Hymn of Jesus Christ
. Ahmad al-Alawi: a Sufi Saint who resembled Christ
. Jesus, the Murshid
. Confirmation of Islamic Teachings Regarding Our Master Jesus (as)

Thursday, July 29, 2010

knowledge of the part vs. the whole

1.
Can you read?

Scan over the lines in the paragraph below and see if your mind can read them:

"I cdnuolt blveiee taht I cluod aulaclty uesdnatnrd waht I was rdgnieg. The phaonmneal pweor of the hmuan mnid aoccdrnig to rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer in waht oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoatnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be in the rghit pclae. The rset can be a taotl mses and you can sitll raed it wouthita porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as awlohe"

- From the work of Ph.D. candidate at Nottingham University, Graham Rawlinson's thesis 'The significance of letter position in word recognition' (unpublished) in 1976

2.
'en ar-KAY ayn ha LOH-gohs'
In the Beginning was the Word

As you can understand, most of us could perfectly read the above paragraph and make sense of it, even though the letters are random inside each words. The way human mind interpret words, it doesn't read every letter in a word, but the word as a whole. Is it too much of a coincidence that in the New Testament the likeness of the Creative Consciousness is referred as "Word" (Logos)?

If we take such unveiling from the field of brain science in terms of how mind interpret words as whole (the meaning surfacing / transcending the apparent), rather than arrangements of individual letters - as a metaphor and compare it for "knowledge derived from science" and "knowledge derived from spiritual realm" - secular science tends to be involved / pre-occupied in paying attention to the individual letters whereas spiritual wisdom is about the "whole reality" which can and does supersede the logical and still explains the reality and provide meaning.

The secular / materialistic science is often so pre-occupied to each individual letters, if we continue with the parable, that it typically lose track of the whole. And this has become the disturbing trend of our time where we are over-emphasizing materialism to such extent through the dazzling discoveries of ours that we are becoming so arrogant in our ignorance that we are abusing almost every aspect of our connection, be it the sacredness of earth (through industrial pollution and tremendously damaging policy) and the sacredness of human bond (through dissemination of pornography, destroying innocence of children by exposing them to nudity, sex and violence, immorality with no regard of long term collective effect of it to the whole of human society). 

Shaykh Abdal Qadir al Murabit calls the secular science as kafir science because of its inert tendency to cover up the Truth, i.e. denial of Creator by becoming caught up with the dazzle of creation. Kafir comes from the root K-F-R which gives rise to the meaning "to cover up". It cover up what is essential and eternal, it covers up what give us eternal peace and harmony for the sake of what give us more and more temporal stuff and more speed, haste.

There has been an irreversible damage done by the Christian Church in the middle age with its harsh conflict with science and scientific inquiries, from which the western mind has not recovered yet. Had it recovered from that bitter taste, then it will come to appreciate the complementary aspect of Religion / Spiritual Knowledge and Science - which both are uncompromisable heritage of humanity and neither of them can be divorced fully if humanity is to progress. Through our over obsession of material science we tend to think that Science prevails over everything else, including Spiritual Traditions and sacred wisdom of elders in the Path.

But like the example before, the grander meaning prevails over individual letters and their arrangement. So it is true for Science and Spirituality. In the debate of Science Vs. Religion / Spirituality, "Spiritual Truth" prevails over science, not science over spirituality. Yes, Science is "complimentary" only, because the world of matter, solid & form (the physical existence) came later. The matter is like 'dead earth' without the grace, through which it produces new life, a metaphor again and again used in the Revelation (Quran) as Sign of Spirit's role.

3.
The elegantly encrypted universe

Modern mind has lost all capacity to wonder. It has lost all capacity to look into the mysterious, into the miraculous, because of knowledge, because it thinks it knows. - Osho

The universe is encrypted. Sometime the signs are not always so obvious. Like the letters in the paragraph they might be placed in unexpected orders. You have to have an expansive and inclusive understanding in order to be enlightened with the meanings of life (just as your mind already has the intuitive knowledge of the words that it can transcend the exact order of  letters and make sense perfectly of the sentence and the whole paragraph).

This is not to say that the knowledge of the part is not important. Of course it is important. And interestingly enough when we zoom in more and more into the part, when we reach at the lowest possible divisible part, we find with amazement that it is an exact mirror reality of the whole or grander reality.

Take for example, when we keep dividing matter, no matter what the object is, whether its tissue of a cat, a chair or an apple, when we get to the atomic and sub-atomic level we find that its all become unity, the same atom, proton, neutron, quarks, leptons and meson that constitute everything in the universe. Its all made of the same reality, the Unity of Being is stamped upon every traces of the creation. Similarly scientists are bewildered to discover that the brain cell neuron network and the network of galaxies in the universe are so similar, even though their scale is gigantically different.


And this encryptic nature of reality, this illusion placed in the universe has its perfect place in grand scheme of things which has to do with free will. The Master Illusionist in His Infinite Wisdom have encrypted the Matrix in such a way that it gives Man two choices (i) either to believe (iman, yaqin or certainty) in Divine, Or (ii) not to believe in Divine (this tendency in the Quran is called kufr or 'covering up' of the already manifest Truth).

And did We not show him the two highroads?
- The Quran 90:10

Indeed We created man from a mixed sperm-drop, to try him, and so We made him capable of hearing and seeing. We showed him the way, whether to be grateful or ungrateful (rests on his will). - 76:3

So, in that process Man have all the justifications, reasoning and arguments to believe in Him. Equally, man can have all the apparent arguments / justifications not to believe in Him (if he choose to delude himself that science will provide all answers).

And while I stood there
I saw more than I can tell,
and I understood more than I saw;
for I was seeing in a sacred manner
the shapes of things in the spirit,
and the shape of all shapes as they must
live together like one being.
- Black Elk, Black Elk Speaks


I do not think the measure of a civilization
is how tall its buildings of concrete are,
But rather how well its people have learned to relate
to their environment and fellow man.
- Sun Bear of the Chippewa Tribe

PS. In this post, 'the whole' is not meant to be a or the brain function but meant as the Self-Sustaining Reality, the unbroken reality that is. Perhaps we may quote Osho who spoke about this when he said, "Sufi (Path) is not concerned with knowledge. Its whole concern is love, intense, passionate love: how to fall in love with the whole, how to be in tune with the whole, how to bridge the distance between the creation and the creator."

4. 
From 'that which vanishes' to 'that Which is Eternal'

There is a story in Rumi's Discourse, "Fihi Ma Fihi" about a king who entrusted his son to a group of skilled men, with whom the boy remained until they had taught him total mastery of various field of science such as astronomy, geomancy, and other, despite his utter stupidity and ineptitude. One day the king took a ring in his fist and, by way of testing his son, said, “Come, tell me what I am holding in my fist.”

“What you are holding,” he answered, “is round, yellow, and has a hole in the middle.”

“Since you have described it correctly,” said the king, “tell me what it is.”

“It must be a millstone,” he said.

“You have given its characteristics so precisely that the mind is boggled. With all the education and knowledge you have acquired, how has it escaped you that a millstone cannot be held in the fist?”

So it is now that the learned of our time miraculously fathom the sciences! They have learned perfectly to comprehend all sorts of extraneous things that do not concern them. What is truly important and closest of all to a man is his own self, but that our learned do not know.

If I may interject with Rumi's story, in our time the scientists, the so called men of knowledge are most busy in creating the next micro-wave oven which will cook your meal even more faster, they are more concerned in inventing the next mathematical algorithm that will predict the stock market more accurately for the corporates to profit more, they are busy in lab creating the next HIV medicine which will be sold at a higher price and denied to the poorest in Africa if anyone else made at cheaper price. The are busy creating the next unmanned drone and how to make it more sophisticated to distinguish between a goat and a black turban from sky and to drop bombs at the next village in the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan at a wedding feast where there might be "some" future terrorist hiding.

Rumi's story continues: However, the hollowness, yellowness, design, and roundness of the king’s ring are coincidental, for if you cast it into the fire none of those things remains. It becomes its essence, free of any of these characteristics. All the sciences, acts, and words that they put forward are likewise: they have no connection with the substance of the thing, which will abide after all these others. Likewise are all these attributes of which they speak and upon which they expound. In the end they will render a judgment that the king is holding a millstone in his fist, since they know nothing of that which is the principal thing. (credit)


Certain things catch your eye,
But pursue only those
that capture your heart.
- ancient native indian saying

5.
“The One Thing You Must Do”

There is one thing in this world that you must never forget to do. If you forget everything else and not this, there's nothing to worry about; but if you remember everything else and forget this, then you will have done nothing in your life. It's as if a king has sent you to some country to do a task, and you perform a hundred other services, but not the one he sent you to do. 

So human beings come to this world to do particular work. That work is the purpose, and each is specific to the person. If you don't do it, it's as though a priceless Indian sword were used to slice rotten meat. It's a golden bowl being used to cook turnips, when one filing from the bowl could buy a hundred suitable pots. It's a knife of the finest tempering nailed into a wall to hang things on. You say, "But look, I'm using the dagger. It's not lying idle." Do you hear how ludicrous that sounds? For a penny, an iron nail could be bought to serve the purpose. You say, "But I spend my energies on lofty enterprises. I study jurisprudence and philosophy and logic and astronomy and medicine and all the rest." But consider why you do those things. They are all branches of yourself. 

Remember the deep root of your being, the presence of your Lord. Give your life to the One Who already owns your breath and your moments. If you don't, you will be exactly like the man who takes a precious dagger and hammers it into his kitchen wall for a peg to hold his dipped gourd. You'll be wasting valuable keenness and foolishly ignoring your dignity and your purpose.

- Jalal ad-Din Rumi, Translation by Coleman Barks

One of the most important teaching of Isa Ibn Maryam (Jesus, son of Mary) was: "Seek the Malakuth (Kingdom of Unseen, Kingdom of God, Ghaiyb) first, and God's righteousness; 
everything else will be given to you."
- Matthew 6:33
 
6.
Inna salatee wa nusukee 
wa ma hyaya wa mamatee 
liLlahi Rabbil 'Aalameen.

Indeed my prayer, my sacrifice
my living and my dying
is for Allah, Lord of the Multiverse.

- an Islamic invocation (6:162)

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Blessings of the Month of Sha'ban and and Remembrance on the Night of Deliverance


The 8th month in Lunar Calendar is known as the Month of Sha'ban. We are presently swimming in this month. This month precede Ramadan, the most intense and spiritually supercharged month in the entire yearly cycle. Sha'ban which connects to the Ramadan, itself have a night specially assigned in it which comes on the 15th. The night of the 15th starts at sunset on the 14th and ends at sunrise. On the rising of the full moon marks the Night of Deliverance or Lailatul Barat as its known in Arabic (Shab e Barat in Persian).

In the celestial realm, which operates in perfect order of harmony and arrangement, on this special night the divine Decree is established for every living beings on earth. Laila or Shab means night and Baraat means assignment or commissioning. On this holy night everything that is provided / decided until the next year, the provision of all sentient beings, their life and death, destiny are recorded in the Grand Akashic Record, the Mystical Tablet in which every decision and every action is recorded and preserved until the Day of Reckoning.

There is nothing that does not have its stores with the Divine Source and We only send it down in a known measure.
(Qur’an, 15:21)

There is no creature on the Earth which is not dependent upon God for its provision. He knows where it lives and where it dies. They are all clearly recorded in a Mystical Record (Kitabin Mubeen).
(Qur'an, 11:6)

And We put livelihoods in it both for you and for those you do not provide for.
(Qur'an, 15:20)

The keys of the unseen are in His possession. No one knows them but Him. He knows everything in the land and sea. No leaf falls without His knowing it. There is no seed (sprouting) in the darkness of the earth, and nothing living or dead which is not in a Mystical Record.
(Qur'an, 6:59)

Say: “My Lord expands the provision of anyone He wills or restricts it. But the majority of humanity do not know it.”
(Qur'an, 34:36)

Because of the celestial significance of the night, prayer, contemplation and meditation is specially blessed on this night. The Messenger of God, upon him be peace and blessings, transmitted, "Happiness is (stored) for him who is immersed in worship on the 15th Night." Transmitted by the closest companion Abu Bakr, the Prophet said, "O ecstatic believers! Stay awake on the night of mid Shaban because this is such a blessed night. On this night the Divine Grace descend to the lowest heaven and announces, "Is there any among who seek forgiveness that I may forgive. Is there any asking sustenance that I may grant sustenance? Is there any under trial that I may relieve from? And this announcement goes on till the end of the night."

Muslims across the world keep vigil on this night, some pray privately, some pray in the mosque in great number.

On this night innumerable members of the community of the Prophet is forgiven upon their night long worship. If some one's sin amount like a mountain, eve then the person is forgiven on this night upon asking forgiveness (and become like a new born). The Prophet used to fast in great number in this month and specially recommended to fast on the day of 15th Shaban. In one hadith he mentions, "man sawma yaomal khamisi ashara min Shabana lam tamas-sa-s-hu naru abada." 'one who fast on the 15th Shaban, hell fire shall not touch that person.'

In another transmission the Prophet said, "Honor the Night of Deliverance (Lailatul Baraah) and that night is on the sun down of 14th Shaban. Those who are engaged in worship and contemplation of their Lord, Holy Spirit descends upon them. God forgive their lesser and greater shortcomings."

Its transmitted by the Prophet that on this night seventy million angels descend upon the earth to observe the worshipers and they engaged in the record of the blessings given to the worshipers. Whosoever keep this night alive (by keeping their heart attached to their Lord), God will keep their counts of blessings alive even after their death until the Day of Resurrection.

In a hadith the Prophet said, one who send durood (blessings to the Prophet) upon me hundred times on the night and day of Shab e Barat, hell shall be forbidden upon him and God will make him enter the paradise. Durood is essentially an invocation and blessings of love to the Messenger of God., may Allah perfect our love for the Habib Allah. It is essentially consist of the following salutation: "O my God (Allahumma), bless our Spiritual Master Muhammad, Thy Servant ('abd) and Thy Messenger (Rasul), the unlettered Prophet (an-Nabi al-ummi), and his spiritual family and his holy companions, and send salutations upon his noble soul." The durood contains many esoteric significance and the greatest secret of it that it establishes glorious nisbat (connection) with the one for which this supplication is sent in the world of unseen.

On this night all who ask forgiveness are forgiven except the two acts: First is associationism (shirk) and second is to keep malice in the heart toward others.  Associationism is to associate partner with Allah, with the Unity of Divine Being. First act is violation of adab towards the Creator (Khaliq) and the second is violation of adab towards the creation (makhluqat).

So in this night, clear the heart from any trace of ascribing any partner to God. Refresh by reciting, Laa ilaha illa Allah. God is One and there is no partner in Divine Reality. And also its a work of saintly station to sweep clean the heart of any malice towards anyone. Love for all, malice towards none is a motto of the Sufi Path as well. 

This night is the Blessed Night of Forgiveness / Atonement / Night of Emancipation and Night of Deliverance where the Forgiveness of the Divine is invoked and its worthy remembering the Boundless Merciful Attribute of the Divine Being. Its narrated in a precious Hadith Qudsi where God speaks through the tongue of His Messenger:

"O son of Adam, so long as you call upon Me and ask of Me, I shall forgive you for what you have done, and I shall not mind. O son of Adam, were your sins to reach the clouds of the sky and were you then to ask forgiveness of Me, I would forgive you. O son of Adam, were you to come to Me with sins nearly as great as the earth and were you then to face Me, ascribing no partner to Me, I would bring you forgiveness nearly as great as it." (credit)


Dream Transmission Regarding Special Prayer

Abul Kashem Affar said, one night I dreamt Venerable Fatima, the most beloved daughter of the Messenger and I asked in my dream, 'O daughter of Prophet and lady of Paradise, what gift if I send upon your soul, will please you the most?'

Fatima replied, 'O Abul Kashem! I love supererogatory prayer (nawafil) on the Month of Shaban. Pray eight cycle of extra prayer. Intend for eight cycle together, after two cycle read only tashahud without durood and on the last sitting with tashahu and durood say salaam. In each cycle with Surah Fatiha read Surah Ikhlas 11 times. Whosoever worship thus and send the blessings upon my soul, I shall not enter paradise on the Day of Resurrection until I intercede for that person."

Recommended Prayer and Zikr

And the end of this post, there are further references of the prayer and supplication of the Prophet. For those who have not learned Salaat (Islamic way of worship) yet, specially for western friends, here are few recommended invocation / zikr / remembrance prayer that you may act upon.

Send Durood to the Messenger by praying: "O my God (Allahumma), bless our Spiritual Master Muhammad, Thy Servant ('abd) and Thy Messenger (Rasul), the unlettered Prophet (an-Nabi al-ummi), and his spiritual family and his holy companions, and send upon his soul salutations."

You may also send blessing prayer to Jesus, Moses and Abraham, upon them all be peace, who all were God sent Messengers and invoking blessing upon their spirit on this holy night does not go unrewarded, Inshallah.

Also recite "la ilaha illa-Allah", there is no divine reality but Allah. Uneven times, for example, 3 or 7 or 11 or 33 or 99 times, followed by this supplication, "Ya Rabbi! Anta maqsudi taraktud dunya wa akhirata daka wa atmeem alayya ni'matika war zukni wa mudakattam."

'O My Lord! You are my Goal. I am turning away from this passing world and the world to come, for Your sake. Complete your ni'mat (gift) to me. Grant me complete union of You.'

If you are seeking relief from sickness, invoke the Divine Name, "Ya Allah Ya Shaafi" (O God, the Sole Healer). If you are praying for increase of your provision, invoke, "Ya Allah Ya Razzak" (O God, the Sole Provider). If you are praying for trial and tribulation to be removed, invoke, "Ya Allah, Ya Samad" (O God, the Satisfier of all Needs, the Eternal).

Prayer of Glorification or Salatul Tasbih is recommended for those who can pray it. Those who are unable, recite the Tasbih itself by focusing upon its meanings:

The Tasbih (repeatable divine remembrance and glorification):

"Subhaan Allahi 
Wa al-Hamdulillahi 
Wa Laa ilaha illal Laahu 
Wa Allahu Akbar"

There are four levels in it.

Subhaan Allahi - refers to the Absolute Glory and Perfection of the Divine. While saying, the seeker contemplate in his or her inner heart the Divine Perfection for which all true Glory is reserved. When we say Subhaan Allahi - we give that glory to the Most Deserving of all Glory, Glorious is Hu.

"wa" means 'and'.

al-Hamdulillahi - means all praise is for Allah. While saying this the seeker invoke genuine gratitude for everything in the universe and also about himself or herself, for the sheer joy of existence, the bliss of existence of now and for all moments of existence.

Laa ilaha illal Laahu - is the essence of Divine Unity that encapsulate all that can be said and that can not be said about the Reality. The gnostic formula. On literal level it says, "There is no other god but One God", go deeper, it says, "None exist but God". While reciting this, the seeker's mind discard all other thoughts, all other object of attention and stay focused only on God, the Source, the Singularity, the Reason of Existence upon which all Subsist including this same-self of the seeker.

Allahu Akbar - It says, God is Greatest, also inner meaning is "God is Beyond the idea of beyond".  Ever Transcending in Greatness. After rising with glorification (Subhaan Allahi), praise (al-Hamdulillahi) and witnessing divine reality (Laa ilaha illal Laahu) - the seeker now descends and while descending it acknowledges that the Divine, the Beyond Being is worthier  than any glorification that comes from the seeker, is worthier than any praise that comes from the seeker, and our witnessing falls short of His true witnessing of Himself.

That is the also the significant of the Messenger's ma'arefatic (gnostic) supplication of Mid-Shaban which he made in a long sujud (prostration) before his Lord, saying: 

'I seek refuge of Your forgiveness from Your punishment, 
and I seek refuge of Your pleasure from Your annoyance, 
and I seek Your refuge from Yourself. 

I cannot praise You as fully as You deserve. 
You are exactly as You have known Yourself.'


May Allah forgive us all, make us drink from the cup of unbound grace and forgiveness on this special night which is by God's Will, on the sundown of 26th (Night of Monday) or 27th of July (Night of Tuesday), 2010. wa Allahu Akbar.


# Reference:
Some of the content in this post are partially translated from the Book The Blessings of Twelve Moons and Acts of Worship by Mawlana M. Enamul Haque Nizami

# Further:
. Special Night of Turning Inward | Shab e Baraat
. Laylatul Baraah (Shab-e-Barat) | The Blessed Night of Deliverance
. The Month of Shaban via ISRA

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Inadequacy of scientific terms, where language of precision annihilates













The beauty of a living thing is not the atoms that go into it
But the way those atoms are put together.
The cosmos is also within us,
We're made of star stuff.
We are a way for the cosmos to know itself.
- Carl Sagan

 "The Quran is expressed in language which many people - myself included - find (it) sublime....But of course no language can do justice to the ineffable : words will never be a substitute for experience..."
- a comment made in the post, Sufi Understanding of Cosmology

Precisely, it was in that context that I was making, as an exception, to the inadequacy of Scientfic terms, (a language of precision) - nor all of the human language at all - that can ever describe the Experience of such Mystical Illumination, which is the "unveilling" itself (Kasf), that when, if by the Will of God, it happens, it will be simply "Known".

Having said that, I am taking the parallel line of expressing the same kind of awe and wonderment, as did Albert Einstein, or Sir Isaac Newton and others, in the Scientific quest on this exotoric plane relating to the physical reality of the Universe - with the exception perhaps that I may put it from my perspective.

Science without religion is lame. Religion without science is blind.
- Albert Einstein

We've begun at last
To wonder about our origins
Star stuff contemplating the stars
Tracing that long path.
- Carl Sagan

Taken from the point of view of Sufistic discernment, to me they are not contradictory, not at animosity, but complimentary perhaps. For, the path of knowledge both the esotoric through spirituality, and the exotoric of the scientific mode leading upwards to the pinnacle would end up or merge at the point of Singularity - In Islam, that is Al-Tawheed, the convergent point on the top.

For, not only Spirituality, through esotoric knowledge that leads to the highest stage of God-consciousness, but also "evidence" is emerging in the Sciences to the effect that through the domain of Quantum Physics/Quantum Mechanics - at their minutest level right down to the indivisible particles of Energy, Atoms & the sub-atomic particles, - is the "gate-way" or "door-way" into "spirituality". Like for example, the X-Ray, Gamma-rays, Ultra-violet rays, Infra-reds or other red lights, these are all made up of energies, the same primordial "radiance" that winks in and out of existence from this physical Universe. (Reference has to be made to Deepak Chopra's - in the quantum physics level Energy winks in and out of this physical reality at the speed of light - if we ask the Scientist they will say they do NOT know what exactly " Energy" is AND say that Energy is the only matter/wave that has DUAL-EXISTENCE, winking in and out at speed of light)

Sir Isaac Newton, in his Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica, in discovering the forces of gravitational attraction, was stumped to discover that Space with all its contents of our planetary-system, andromedas, constellations stars & galaxies... (matter) is infinite and limitless, that he termed it as "Second Divinity"

There's a larger universal reality
of which we are all a part.
- Brian Greene

A still more glorious dawn awaits
Not a sunrise, but a galaxy rise
A morning filled with 400 billion suns
The rising of the milky way

The Cosmos is full beyond measure of elegant truths
Of exquisite interrelationships
Of the awesome machinery of nature.
- Carl Sagan

In Quranic Revelation, God says "I am the outwardly Manifest, and the Inwardly Hidden.." alluding to both His Immanent and His Transcendent Attributes, at one and the same time, hidden, yet Manifest - all of Creation so vast and magnificent, no wonder the Scientist is in awe!


Matter flows from place to place
And momentarily comes together to be you.
Some people find that thought disturbing,
I find the reality thrilling!
- Richard Dawkins


We are all connected; To each other, biologically; To the earth, chemically; To the rest of the universe atomically. I know that the molecules in my body are traceable to phenomena in the cosmos. That makes me want to grab people in the street, and say, have you heard this?? - deGrasse Tyson

The conclusion is inevitable that all of Creation are His Manifestations (His Signs), Transcending to the Physical level of Existence, such that wherever that the Scientist can achieve in their research, fixated upon "matter" then human language become "definitive" and precise... What we all, including Scientists, should now be in wonderment, is the emergence through scientific evidence that Science is converging back (going into, or "returning" if you will, for which Sufis use the term Tawba, turning back to the Divine Source Reality) into Spiritual realm through the Quantum Domain of Physics - that minutest level of the indivisible matter of Energy. atoms or sub-atomic particles at the quantum physics level (it is the "key-hole" through which "matter" is returning to its "Source", so to speak....then of course, one cannot go deeper to "know" the Source in scientific language, simply because it is in the next or "other" dimension for which there are no verifiable experiments, reproducible tangible evidences, there are no mathematical formulae to capture its ineffable sublimity and there field of duality collapses and annihilates to allow any proving or disproving even.

At the Grand Court of the Sublime King, all must enter humbled,
even the furthest reach of human knowledge and understanding.

Wa lam yakun laHu kufuwan ahad.
And there is none comparable unto Hu.
- Revealed as the Surah of Unity

AllahHu Alam
God is the One Who knows the Best.

- guest post by ABNIZAR
may Allah be pleased with him



# Enjoy them:
. Symphony of Science - 'We Are All Connected' (ft. Sagan, Feynman, deGrasse Tyson & Bill Nye)
. 'Our Place in the Cosmos' (ft. Sagan, Dawkins, Kaku, Jastrow)
. 'The Unbroken Thread' (ft. Attenborough, Goodall, Sagan)
. Poetry of Reality (An Anthem for Science)
. 'The Case for Mars' (ft. Zubrin, Sagan, Cox & Boston) 
. Feynman :: Inconceivable nature of nature
. Symphony of Science
. The Elegant Universe

Friday, July 23, 2010

Ahmet Kayhan | A Tribute to the Grand Master of Sufism

Shaykh Ahmet Kayhan, Allah be pleased with him
by invocation of the secret of al-Fatiha


Preface

Know that amid the sea of cares
my Companions are like guiding stars.
Fix yours eyes on the stars and seek the Way.
- The Last Prophet

Henry Bayman, no matter how much or how little is he known to the world, no doubt to me, is one of the best writers who write on the Sufi Path from an authentic place of being in the Path. Recently I came across this excellent tribute that he wrote about his master, who was one of those rare human being, rare and hidden luminaries about whom people interested in sufism, in spirituality talks about so often, but few get a chance to meet and become witness. We have in Henry Bayman the gift of being a western writer, a sincere seeker of the Sufi Path and a witness of an Insan al-Kamil, a Human Being who is so close to that 'Image' in which man is Originally Willed and Fashioned.

The article is featured under the sub-title THE FLAWLESS HUMAN BEING in the book, The station of no station: open secrets of the Sufis by Henry Bayman. I have quoted with slight omission for the sake of brevity. For full text refer to the Credit at the end.

Its said that "when friends of the Friend are mentioned, Divine mercy descends." May your reading of the account of such an elect friend of the Friend become a source of divine mercy and may such mercy be our companion. Read it carefully, and I repeat, read it with presence and openness of your heart - every word of it and perchance you may receive such wisdom which would not be possible to obtain in any other ways.  Allah is the Giver of True Wisdom.

"O Lord, grant me Your love, grant me that I love those who love You; grant me, that I might do the deeds that win Lour Love. Make Your love dearer to me than the love of myself, my family and wealth."  
- Prayer of the Prophet (Transmitted in Tirmidhi)

From this point onward, all is written by Henry Bayman.


An Impossible Task

I have been asked to describe the late Sufi Master, Ahmet Kayhan. This leaves me in something of a quandary. I, who am rarely at a loss for words, am this time muted into agonizing silence - agonizing because, as I tell the truth, I shall strain people's credulity and may be accused of exaggeration.

How shall I begin to tell the story of a man who literally defies description? If there is one thing all the thousands of people - from the most diverse backgrounds - who have been graced with his presence would probably agree upon, it is that the Master ("Effendi," in Turkish) is indescribable. I have consulted some friends who knew him, and they all shook their heads sadly, knowing that the attempt was impossible.

The reason is that all language presupposes a common base of human experience. Suppose I tell you, for instance, that I have drunk the juice of a South American fruit, guanabana. If you have drunk it, too, you will immediately know what I am talking about. But suppose you haven't, and I'm trying to describe it to you. "It's sweet," I say. Now that's nice, it gives you something to work on. But cookies are sweet too, and so is candy. "Its color and texture resemble those of milk," I next add. That gives you some further clues. And I can keep on elaborating details until you have a pretty good approximate idea of what guanabana tastes like. But unless you have actually tasted it, you will never really know what I'm talking about.

And the same thing goes with Effendi. The reason is that he was unique--one of a kind, even among Sufi masters--and so, incomparable. Having rushed in where angels fear to tread, I find myself saddled with the thankless job of describing him to a world scarcely equipped with the tools necessary for an adequate comprehension of such a person. Many will say my description is too good to be true, and with them I sympathize entirely--in their shoes, not having seen what we all saw, I too would have found such an account unbelievable.

The task that stands before me, then, is to assume the role of a Fair Witness (as described in Robert Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land: "The house looks yellow on this side") and submit my account as truthfully and sincerely as I know how. To those who disbelieve, let me say in advance that I don't blame them one bit.

The question might also arise as to how reliable, how objective and impartial, a humble and devoted student of the Master may be, a person who also happens to be his grandson-in-law, has known him for two decades, and has been able to observe him at close quarters, under the closest circumstances, for 15 years. The answer is: more reliable than you might think. For it is not only a privilege for me to write about the Master; it is also a duty, and this duty can brook no untruth. The slightest deviation from the truth--the slightest misrepresentation--in explaining such a person to the world at large would, to my mind, be fraught with dire consequences. I shall do my best to abide by the ideal of a fair witness, and with the help of God I hope to be as successful as I am humanly able to. But do not forget: what I am going to tell you is an almost illegible replica of the truth, watered down, as it were, to the concentration levels of a homeopathic solution. I doubt that the scarcely discernible traces on this paper will give you much more than the barest inkling of that staggering reality. And I fully accept in advance that the failure to communicate is my shortcoming, not yours.

Perhaps, in the future, others who have known the Master will come forth to tell their respective stories. Until then, this account will have to suffice as an introduction to the man--pardon me, the Man--and his teachings.

A Hidden Master--In this Day and Age?

The question immediately arises: if a person such as I claim really existed, how is it possible that he remained hidden from public knowledge until his death? How, in this age of instant communications and the Internet, was he able to remain obscure? We have immediate knowledge of a previously undiscovered tribe of primitives in Indonesia; how can a person of such stature manage to avoid detection so completely to the end of his life?

The answer is that this is possible if the person in question shuns the limelight, and if those who know him consider him so precious, and know him to be so indescribable, that they clam up whenever prying eyes rove by. It can happen if his devotees respect their Master's aversion to exposure so much that he remains free to cultivate his garden--themselves--in peace. And it can happen if they consider everything connected with him as a different reality, an enchanted realm that is simultaneously in this world and out of it.

The humility of Grandpa (as those who loved him called him3/4 other epithets were "Father," "Father Ahmet," or "Grandpa Kayhan") is the reason why he did not like to advertise himself. I've been told, for example, that in 1982, he was visited by a Canadian journalist who was so impressed by what he saw that he said to the Master: "Let me publicize you. To the Jews, let me go and say: 'If you're looking for Moses, here he is.' To the Christians, let me pronounce: 'I've discovered Jesus.' And to the Moslems let me say, 'Here is Mohammed.'" The Master refused, and the journalist respected him enough to comply with his wish to remain unexposed. He could have become world-famous, had he so wished.

Also, Turkey is a country that has undeservedly remained obscure to the outside world. Despite the fact that it is a staunch ally of the United States, there are people who wouldn't be able to locate this country on a world map. And the Master hasn't remained entirely unknown. Brief references to him have appeared in the Turkish press, whether veiled or naming him by name. Further, there are Americans, Britons and people of other nationalities who have gained his acquaintance.

Many are the gurus and enlightened masters, of whatever religion, who ceaselessly labor to make the world a better place to live in, and to them all I extend my best wishes--may they see the fruits of their efforts. Many of them are in the public eye. It appears, however, that the greatest masters always remain hidden from view, and are deciphered only after they pass away. This, perhaps, accounts for the Tibetan legend of Agartha (or Agarthi).

Who Was He?

So, what kind of person was Effendi (pronounced exactly like the letters F-N-D in English)? This is the hurdle I feared. Well, here goes:

Up to this day, you have met many human beings. Some of them have struck you as having exceptional qualities. Some are more intelligent, some more compassionate, some stronger in moral fiber than others. Some people excel in courage, others in honesty--and so on.

Now, bring together all the admirable traits you have ever seen in any human being. Next, multiply the sum by a thousandfold. That, approximately, will give you what people lovingly referred to as "Effendi."

This is exactly the point where incredulity, and consequently my predicament, is bound to set in. But this is also the point on which I must remain adamant. The Master cannot be described in any terms, except by superlatives.

I can well understand the consternation of the disciples of Jesus in their attempts to describe him to others. The same goes for the followers of the Buddha or the companions of Mohammed. One has to be faced with a difficulty of a similar order to comprehend what they were trying to cope with.

The problem is compounded when you find out that the Master was basically unschooled. He learned to read and write only during his military service, in his twenties. But that has to be set against the fact that he was trained by the greatest Master of them all: Hadji ("Pilgrim") Ahmet Kaya Effendi, his own master, who was called "Keko" (Kurdish for "Father") by his followers.

But what about the warts, the feet of clay? The short answer is: there were no warts. And I am not concealing anything here. All right, the Master, being human, was prone to the afflictions of humanity. He was sick most of the time in his old age, and suffered from a badly healed broken leg and failing eyesight in his final years. But this is not what we usually consider to be warts, blemishes of the human personality. In all those fifteen years, I saw him really angry only once, and his only response was the softly spoken word, "Quiet." Those are the "worst-case characteristics."

A Visit to Effendi

Suppose, then, that you had had the good fortune to meet the Master face to face, and I or someone else had elected to take you there. What would you have encountered?

We would have approached a four-story apartment building on a major road in Ankara, climbed the stairs to the top floor, and rung the bell of one of the apartments. We would have been ushered in by a person opening the door and led into a large living room. In no time at all, if he wasn't resting or otherwise occupied, you would have had the audience of the Master. Of all gurus and masters, he was the most accessible.

You would find yourself in the presence of a gracious old gentleman. He was a lean person--he once told me he never weighed more than 55 kilograms--perhaps 6 feet tall, but stooped in his old age. Despite his great age, his graying hair and beard, which were originally black, made him appear no more than 65 or 70.

Even if you were an ant, he would treat you like a king. Pleasantries would be exchanged over a cup of tea. Whether or not you had arrived in the middle of a serious discussion with other people present, you would slowly realize a peculiar sensation. It was as if all your troubles and sorrows were ebbing away, and you were being filled with a quiet joy. If you were psychically sensitive, you might also feel a tingling in the middle of your forehead. And, regardless of whether you had only engaged in small talk, you would leave the apartment with a great feeling of elation. And this would continue to occur each time you visited him. Many were those who dropped in for five minutes to investigate, and stayed a lifetime.

If you continued your visits, you would have come to the conclusion that the Master had the uncanny ability to read minds. This was alarming to some; others took it for granted. The Master never laid claim to such an ability, of course, and he was always discreet in such matters. But suppose you went to visit him with a specific question in mind. And suppose others were present, so that you weren't able to voice your question. As he talked, you would by and by realize that he was answering your question without even speaking to you.

It goes deeper. I have seen people tell me that on some occasion when they were alone together, Effendi told them the innermost secrets of their lives, memories never disclosed to anyone and known only to themselves.

And deeper. A British friend visited him one day. The Master was unavailable, my friend intended to go to a seaside resort on the Aegean coast, and while he was waiting for the Master, he kept repeating over and over in his head the Turkish phrase for "Should I go?" which he had just learned. As he was pondering this thought, the house servant came in and, for no apparent reason, turned on the TV set. There, on the screen, my friend saw the fleeting words: "Go, you can go" in Turkish--a fortuitous display from whatever TV channel the set happened to be tuned to at that moment. The servant turned off the TV set, again for no apparent reason, and left the room. Coincidence? You tell me.

A sage cannot be known from his external appearance. Many people who came could not see beyond his hair and his beard--at first. Later, as they became better acquainted, they would begin to understand something of Effendi.

If you continued your visits, you would learn many things you had never known before. And finally, you would come to realize that here was the most lovable, the most adorable, absolutely the most wonderful person on earth.

His Life

The bare bones of the Master's biography are quickly told. The closest I can make out is that he was born in December 1897 or January 1898. Since he died on August 3, 1998, he was a hundred years and seven months old when he passed away. His birthplace was the small village of Mako (Aktarlar, as it is now known) near Poturge in the province of Malatya.

He lost his father when he was only a year old. His mother remarried, but died when he was seven. After that, he stayed with an aunt for a while. Even at an early age, stories are told that indicate he was brave and under divine protection, perhaps supporting the claim that sages are born and not made. (They're both born and made, actually; we can't neglect either face of the nature/nurture coin.) He was only 4 or 5 years old when he first met, and was extremely impressed by, his Master (Baba).

When the last Sultan departed from Istanbul on a ship (November 17, 1922), he was there by chance to witness the occasion. From then on, he would shuttle often between the large cities of Istanbul in the west or Ankara in Central Anatolia and Malatya in the east, for it was in the village called Ali Bey near Tillo (in Malatya) that Keko resided.

Ahmet Kayhan settled in Ankara in the 1930s and married Hajar (March 25, 1937), who remained his wife until his death. Keko passed away on May 7, 1944. He was a very great master, routinely visited by hundreds of people, and when he died the task of enlightening the people fell to Musa Kiazim, who had been Keko's fellow-disciple during and after the First World War. With the death of Kiazim Effendi in 1966, Grandpa Kayhan "donned the Mantle."

The best years of his life were spent in stark poverty. Not that he earned badly, for he worked harder than anyone else. Rather, the country itself was poor. As he himself once remarked, it was only after the Second World War that the nations of the world besides the West began to emerge from poverty, and the task is not finished yet.

Up to this time he had taken odd jobs in Ankara, opened three shops, finally settling down as a government employee at the State Waterworks, from which he retired for reasons of health. All this he did in order to support his family. He had four children, two girls and two boys, from Mother Hajar. They, in turn, have lived to see their grandchildren.

From the sixties onward, Grandpa conducted the activity of enlightening the people. Since he was retired, he was able to devote his full time to this effort. I once counted 47 visitors on an average day, but in recent years this number increased substantially as more people came to know him.

The facts of a Sufi saint's life, however, rarely tell us much about who he was. I have related the above only because it is necessary, not because it is helpful for an appreciation of Effendi.

His Line of Descent

Master Kayhan's chain of transmission is traced through the Prophet, his close associate and first Caliph Abu Bakr, Abdelqader Gilani, Bahauddin Naqshband, Ahmad Sirhindi, Abdullah Dehlewi, Mawlana Khalid, Sheikh Samini, Osman Badruddin, and Ahmet Kaya Effendi. I have omitted most of the names in the Golden Chain from the list and concentrated only on the most illustrious.

It is said that the line of Prophethood started as a light in the forehead of Adam. Down through the ages this light was transferred from the forehead of one prophet to another, until it reached Mohammed, the last prophet. Mohammed combined the attributes of Prophethood and Sainthood within himself.

Now although prophethood had come to an end, the light of sainthood again continued down through the ages, passing from one great master to another. It emerged from Mecca with the Prophet, passed on to Baghdad with Sheikh Gilani (founder of the Qadiri Order), traveled to Bokhara in Central Asia and devolved on Shah Nakshband (founder of the Naqshbandi Order), went south to India with Imam Rabbani (Sirhindi) and Abdullah of Delhi (later to be known as New Delhi), returned to Baghdad with Khalid Baghdadi, finally traveling north to find itself in Eastern Anatolia." This circuit of the light of sainthood continued for hundreds of years, and will be completed only at the end of time--so it is said.

The Sufi Orders are, in Effendi's words, "spiritual schools"--a fact recognized by Peter Ouspensky. Of course, the fact that the Saintlight moves on doesn't mean that its former abode is left neglected. The Naqshbandi (Naqshi for short) Order's spiritual schools and training continued after the departure of the Saintlight. It was to the tail end of these that George I. Gurdjieff latched on towards the end of the 19th century, and many of the unique elements in his teachings are imported direct from the Central Asian Sufi schools. John G. Bennett, a student of Gurdjieff, traced the migration of the schools to Turkey, but died on the verge of discovering the precise whereabouts of the Saintlight.

The long and short of it is, the Master was squarely at the center of the highest expression of traditional Islamic Sufism, in the line of the Samini Branch of the Naqshbandi Order. Yet at the same time, there was no one more modern or more open-minded than he. (I must again stress that this is not simply my personal opinion. Rather, I am quoting from a follower, this time a modern-minded lady.)

Although this was Grandpa's spiritual pedigree, yet he was beyond all orders, sects, or schools. And though he was a devout Moslem, he embraced people of all religions.

Another point is that we are usually accustomed to seeing Islam only in its exoteric aspect, and calling the esoteric aspect "Sufism." In Effendi, the exoteric and the esoteric were a single whole--Sufism was Islam and Islam was Sufism. In no other person have I seen the two so seamlessly fused.

How I Met Him

The circumstances of my life conspired to bring me in contact with the Master in early spring, 1978. (I still kick myself for not having written down the precise date, but it was probably early March.) By then, I had been undergoing Sufi training with a master for three years, and it was he who took me to Effendi. We entered his presence together. There are nonverbal ways in which Sufi masters convey what they want to people, and within a few moments I became aware that I was in the presence of an exceptional human being. (This is not intended to imply any great legerdemain on my part, for the Master could introduce himself to anyone with equal ease.)

After 1980, I began to attend the Master's discussion groups more frequently. It was during this period that I met his granddaughter, who was attending on her grandparents. We were married in May 1983, and from the beginning of September 1983, excluding normal working hours or vacations, I had the incredible good fortune to be almost continually in the presence of the Master until his death.

The Views of Others

I could draw on many accounts from eyewitnesses, and perhaps in the future I shall do so. For now, however, I have confined myself to the following excerpts.

An American friend who is attached to another Sufi master: "Ahmed effendi is certainly unique and special, but it is a uniqueness which has nothing foreign about it and nothing that separates. ... For me it is a quality which I can only call intimacy. I do not know any other more respectful term for the quality. What I mean is the degree to which effendi seems to be within one's own self, one's own being and the complete ease and directness of his communication, literally transcending speech and language and culture and time and history, while at the same time establishing, confirming and justifying them. ... there was never a need to speak, and my increasing knowledge of Turkish, which did add immeasurably to the relish of conversation with effendi, never seemed to increase the intimacy of the presence of effendi in my heart, or the hearts of any of my friends who love him. ... Although I am upset... I feel a deep and profound joy and happiness in knowing that I can not be separated from his love in any way whatsoever."

A British friend: "One visit I made to Effendi symbolizes something I think is essential to what I experienced each and every time I was lucky enough to be in his presence. A lady arrived to that amazing house where the door was always open (except for those rare occasions where his health precluded any conversation) and where the Turkish custom of taking off your shoes took on a whole new dimension of meaning. She was greeted with the customary courtesy, served tea and asked how she was. At this she said, 'Dear Effendi, when I come into your presence I feel as if all of my cares and troubles have been lifted from me and left at your door!' He smiled (that indescribably beautiful smile that seemed to light the whole room!) and said affectionately, knowing full well that she had voiced what the majority of the people in that crowded apartment on a busy Saturday morning were experiencing, 'Yes, you are right, my dear, but how much better it would have been if you had left your self at the door.'

"Utter selflessness. Had I not witnessed it I would be unable to comprehend it. And for literally thousands of people he did the same: beckoning them to step through that door into that space of the purest light and grace."

A Turkish newspaper columnist: "Where he lived was, for us, like a place where the sun never set. We would go there whenever we were down or blue. We would return to our dark world with feelings of great peace, as if bathed inside and outside in fountains of light. ...

"Was he Qadiri? Was he Naqshi? I don't know. I never asked his disciples. Nor did I find it necessary. What difference does it make what Order's Sheikh he was? Without a doubt, he was a great saint of God. His door was open to everyone. Like Rumi, he embraced all sinners."


The Master's Teachings

Hadji Ahmet Kayhan (for he, too, performed the Pilgrimage to Mecca, or Hajj) was a Man of Knowledge, or a Man of Wisdom. With him there was no distinction between Moslem, Christian, Jew, or Buddhist. He was far beyond drawing distinctions in the ordinary manner. For him there were only human beings, and to all he counseled the same teaching: God exists, and God is One. Abide by the Divine Law. Work for the establishment of peace on earth, love one another, and devote yourself to serving your fellow-(wo)men. Feel compassion for all creatures, for even a fly.

As you can see, his teachings were independent of time, space or geography, and so, truly universal. His pamphlets on world peace aroused favorable responses from a former French president, from the Pope, and from both the then-president and prime minister of Israel. If he had survived longer, his intention would have been to continue to call men to peace on earth. He was against all weapons of mass destruction, because these are against all forms of life.

Just yesterday (Sunday, September 6, 1998, midday), one of his rank-and-file followers described to me what he had personally understood from the Master's teachings. "Law and justice exist," he said, "because of conscience, and conscience exists because of love. If you love someone, you cannot violate that person's rights. And that's what the Divine Law is all about. It gives you the guidelines of how to behave as you would if you loved that person. I have seen no one else," he added, "who preaches this fundamental fact." I relate this because it reflects an average perception of what the Master taught.

But this was only the beginning. The Master's curriculum included everything in the spiritual field from kindergarten to university. It would be vain for me even to try to summarize all his teachings here, so I must refer the reader to two full-length books, Science, Knowledge, and Sufism and The Meaning of the Four Books, presently available on the Internet.

Methodology

The methods of the Master in teaching his students varied, yet there were discernible trends. He would not tax a pupil beyond the latter's capacity. In accordance with the saying of the Prophet, he would speak to the level of understanding of his listeners. He had the knack to explain the most complicated things in the simplest terms. If, despite this, the person didn't understand, he would repeat what he said. He would keep at it until the listener had understood, and once he saw he had communicated his message successfully, he would say no more about it. From then on, it was the listener's responsibility to heed the contents of the message.

The Master was an inexhaustible repository of Sufi teaching-stories and anecdotes. He would select the most appropriate suited to a given occasion, sometimes relating events from his life history. He had infinite love and respect for his own Master, and would sometimes fondly relate a memory of the times they had been together.

What was outstanding about the Master's use of teaching-stories, however, was his ability to string them together in the appropriate order to achieve exactly the desired result. In this respect, he had the virtuosity of a composer with them.

He would quickly discover the forte - the strongest virtue - of a person. He once told me that only a moment was enough for a true murshid (Islamic guru) to take the snapshot of a person--I'm inclined to call it a kind of spiritual X-ray. He would then cultivate that virtue of the person, also supplementing this with whatever "vitamins" were deficient in a student's constitution.

When a question was asked of him, he always answered it, even if he appeared to refuse at first. If something was insisted upon despite what he said, he might appear to give in, but it was always what he first said that counted.

At times, he left his students without explicit guidance. It might be surmised that some activity, some energetic effort, was expected of them during such periods.

The analogy has been suggested to me that the Master was giving each one of us a handful of seeds. It was our duty to plant these seeds, cultivate them, and see them through to maturity until they bore fruit. Another analogy is that he was giving us keys to unlock the secret chambers of our brains. We all know that a human being utilizes, say, 2 or 3 percent of the capacity of his brain. Suppose an Einstein uses 10 percent. What, then, are we to call those who utilize 50 percent, 75 percent? What are we to call a person who utilizes it to the full? That question is left as an exercise for the reader.

Formal Organization

The Master had no formal organization to speak of. Although he was in the Naqshbandi line of descent, there were no dervish convents (takkas), no ceremonies, no special rituals, and no formalities. The convents had been disbanded in 1928 by the newly-formed Turkish Republic, but with the Master I learned that there was no need of them. True spirituality could be exercised and conveyed without any formal structure at all - all that was necessary was acceptance on the part of the teacher, and devotion, sincerity and effort on the part of the student. Having served their purpose, the takkas had passed into history as defunct sociological institutions.

Instead there were ad hoc discussion groups, which came into existence on the spur of the moment with whomever might be present at that time. Visiting the Master and participating in these discussions were very important. A leaflet or pamphlet distributed by the Master might be read, which he might interrupt at any time in order to clarify or emphasize a certain point. Even this might not be necessary, as the baraka (spiritual action or power) of the Master could work even in total silence. When one's spiritual "battery" was "discharged," one could go back to the Master for a "recharge." If love can be defined as "giving without receiving--or asking for--anything in return," then the Master loved his following. They, in turn, tried to love him, but generally failed in this task.

A group could include people from widely diverse backgrounds, and the Master would find their lowest common denominator. In addressing one, he would address all. When everyone left, that was the end of that group.

The Mystery of Effendi

If one spent sufficient time with the Master, one might have come to the conclusion that he possessed a closely-guarded secret.

Some of the things he said and did were eminently logical and reasonable. Yet other things he said would be impervious to comprehension, no matter how hard one exerted oneself. Some of the things he said would become comprehensible some time later, as events took their course. Other things could take years before you were able to decipher them. As historian Paul Johnson has noted of Jesus' utterances in a similar context, the Master was a complicated man and sometimes spoke in a complicated way. His granddaughter and my wife, who had been with her grandparents almost from her birth, once told me that it was hard to figure out what made him tick. I don't believe anyone ever figured him out. Whatever this secret was, it went with him to the grave.

The phenomenon of the Master has prompted me to think that Jesus had a similar mystery to him, and this caused his followers to misinterpret what they saw as the Deity. Furthermore, I'm thinking that the Buddha also might have possessed this secret, due to which reason he cloaked it under the harmless and neutral-sounding terms of nirvana (extinction) and sunyatta (void). It was to avoid the fate of Jesus, perhaps, that he did not mention God. This is only my own personal opinion, of course, and has nothing to do with the teachings of the Master.

Whatever this mystery was, it gave the Master a charm. Of all human beings, he was the most charming. He attracted people as a magnet attracts iron filings. People found him irresistible, and the more everyone saw of him, the more they wanted to see. The reason was not curiosity. Once you have seen the truly wondrous phenomenon of a fully-realized human being, the respect and love you feel for him cause you to return again and again. Oh, I know the old adage: "Believe only half of what you see, and none of what you hear," but half of what I saw--a quarter, a hundredth of what I saw!--was already tremendous enough. And don't say here I go exaggerating again, because I'm not.

What inspired love in the thousands of people who knew him? What caused university professors to be the humble students of this unschooled man? He was not rich, so the reason was not economic. He was not a politician, so the reason was not political. Yet he knew things no one else knew, saw things no one else saw. This, however, is still not sufficient to explain the irresistible attraction this hundred-year-old man had on all those people.

His people themselves were an interesting lot. Some might have been inclined to view them as a herd, as an uncritical, imperceptive bunch of simpletons. As I got to know them better, I discovered that each had an exceptional ability--or even several--of which, sometimes, they were themselves unaware. These virtues the Master unfailingly discerned and cultivated.

The Perfect Man

The existence of a person like Ahmet Kayhan forced those who knew him to reconsider and redefine what it means to be human. Just as a single white elephant is enough to prove that not all elephants are gray, the existence of a human being like Effendi forces us to stop the presses and rewrite the books.

All these years, we've been talking about human potentials and possibilities. But what are they, really? What are their limits?

Suppose someone you don't know came up to you and said: "I have met the Superman, and he is Mohammed. In their time, Jesus and the Buddha were the supermen of their ages." It's almost the year 2000, and he's saying that. What would you think? And what would you say?

Having met the Master, I don't wonder that his disciples confused Jesus with God or the Son of God. No man can be God, of course, and yet I can well understand their difficulty in groping for a label. What is amazing is that someone like the Master, who should ordinarily belong to the Age of the Prophets, could be found and encountered in the second half of the 20th century.

In order to describe the phenomenon of the total spiritual transmutation of a human being, the Sufis have developed the concept of the Perfect Human (al-insan al-kamil). One could also use the Nietzschean concept of the Superman, or the Chinese concept of the superior man or true man. I hasten to add, however, that Nietzsche failed at precisely the point where he succeeded, for he predicated his superman on Godlessness. To put it simply: no God, no Superman. One cannot become a superman by inflating one's ego. For it is God who confers on a human being the qualities that cause him to be regarded as superior. It is the love of God that attracts us toward Him, and the more we love Him, the more we submit to His commandments. By being meek, humble, and obedient to God, we make ourselves a window unto God's light. If you're familiar with the computer term, "user-transparent," we have to make ourselves transparent to God. Only then will we be invested with the qualities that will cause others to regard us as a superior human being. The slightest arrogance, and God will strip from us the qualities He had invested us with. For they are not ours, but on loan from God. The highest point of achievement, the Station of Praise which belongs only to the Prophet, is achieving perfection in being a humble servant of God--easier said than done.

Of course, there can be different degrees of God-realization. And at any given time there will be someone who is the most realized of them all. The lesser ones are then able to recognize him as perfect. One Sufi master, for example, said: "The fountain of spirituality gushes out from Effendi. We all fill our jugs from that source, and distribute it to the people." Said another, now deceased: "He is our [President]. Our electricity comes from him, from that great power station in Ankara."

Paranormal Events

Ouspensky called his book on Gurdjieff: "In Search of the Miraculous." Now what does "miraculous" mean?

When an event is sufficiently out of the ordinary that it stands in a class by itself, we call that event "miraculous." What, then, are we going to call that situation where miraculous events keep going on day after day, month after month, year after year? In other words, what are we to call that condition where the nonordinary becomes ordinary?

Skeptics will call it impossible. Others will call it highly doubtful. I call it the perfect flowering of Mohammedan sainthood.

Interview any one of the Master's followers and you will hear one or more such accounts. I, too, could relate any number of such interesting tales. Just as an example, let me relate what a friend of the Master told me yesterday while it is still fresh in my mind:

Years ago, he was a tenant in a house owned by Mother Hajar. The Kayhans themselves lived a distance away, say 50 or 60 meters. One evening, as he was performing his Prayer, he heard a few knocks on the door and Grandpa Kayhan calling out his name. However, he could not interrupt his Prayer, so when he was finished he went over to the Kayhans' house. Mother Hajar and Effendi were sitting. "I'm sorry I couldn't open the door to you," he said to the Master. Mother Hajar gave him a queer look. "What are you talking about?" she asked. "I was doing my Prayer and I heard Effendi knock on the door and call out my name," he answered. "You're a strange man," Mother Hajar told him. "Effendi hasn't left this room. He suggested to me that we should go over and visit you, and I told him it was late. 'Fine,' he said, 'then we'll call him and he'll come over.' And now here you are. He hasn't moved from his spot all this while." Effendi's only comment was to smile, and invite his friend to sit down.

The point, however, is that this is not the point. The point, as ever, was the Master himself, and not whatever secondary manifestations happened to be occurring around his vortex. People too often become fixated on such matters, not knowing that these are actually voices of the Sirens, hindrances to spiritual progress. The focus should be, not on the miraculous, but on the ethical.

His Death

For years and years, I was obsessed by one thought, and one thought only: death, and hence departure, being inevitable, I must do whatever I can to ensure that the Master survives as long as possible.

To this end I devoted whatever means were at my disposal. His devotees, humanity, the entire universe were all in need of this Man, I thought. At all costs, this unique phenomenon must be preserved, and if his life-span could not be extended indefinitely, then it must at least be stretched to the maximum possible. The Master was very old and sick. He needed his rest, and the constant stream of people coming to his door taxed his energies and his health. He never had a restful night, and yet, come morning, he would be at least partially rested.

The stream of visitors would start early in the morning. He would accept them all, forbid us from preventing their entry, and heed and try to help the slightest trouble of even an ant. He would resolve the most intractable problems with the greatest of ease. The grind would continue late into the evening. When the last visitor had departed, I would watch him prostrate on his bed, his frail frame utterly exhausted, lying as if dead. It was obvious that this routine could not go on forever. Yet we all refused to contemplate--to even consider--the inevitable.

As a result of this situation, I found myself on the horns of an excruciating dilemma. On the one hand I deemed the Master so important that I would have televised him and his teachings to the entire world, if I could. Yet on the other hand, he was so tired and ill that I did not want him to waste one breath, one word, to a single person. To this day, I have not found a solution, a way out. By now it is too late anyway.

The Master had been in ill-health for many years. Looking back now, we can see that in recent months he had been tidying up his affairs, telling far-off visitors that they would not be seeing him again, putting the finishing touches on his life's work. Of these he breathed nary a word to us, those close to him and in his attendance.

His death was preceded by a week's illness. He was taken to the hospital emergency ward on August 3, and passed away around 10 p.m. that same evening. We had all been hopeful that he would survive, for several months more at the very least, and at first I refused to believe he had died. When I was convinced, I knew that death had finally won, and I had lost.

The Funeral Prayer was performed with a minimum number of people the next morning (Tuesday) at 10:30 a.m., and the Master was laid to rest in his final resting place. As we carried his coffin, it was raised so high that I had to stand on my toes, and even then my fingertips could only barely touch it. This in itself is remarkable, for I am not at all short by Turkish standards.


The Lessons for Us All

Perhaps the first, the most significant, lesson for us from the Master's example is a message of hope. If he, a human being, could achieve this, any human being can do it. Perhaps not to the fullest extent. But to the limits that our individual constitution will allow. Every human being is born as an incredible gift, as a stupendous potential. So pacified have we become by the doldrums of everyday mundane life that we do not even stop to consider what business we have here on earth. Why weren't we created as birds? Or butterflies? If we were created as human beings, what role does a human being play in the vast design of the universe? What, for heaven's sake, are we here for?

If we can shake off the hibernation that has us in its grip, we will realize that a more magnificent destiny can be ours than are dreamt of in our philosophies. Perhaps not everyone can achieve it to an equal degree, just as not everyone can win the Olympic medal. But everyone can do something better than where they're at. If we've spent our lives in suspended animation to this day, at least from now on let us try to wake up.

The next lesson of Effendi is ethics, and herein lies the crux. He was the most ethical person of the highest morality I have ever known. And that, he disclosed to me, was the difference that made the difference. Morality was what set him apart from other gurus. This was the foundation on which all else rested; meditation techniques, psychospiritual exercises, specialized knowledge all came later, and were useless without morality.

This, of course, brings in the Sufi notion of "courtesy" (adab), which is a refinement of salutary conduct. Chris, a friend who has traveled far and wide and met masters of various religions, told me after the Master's death that no matter which Islamic Sufi master he visited, they all wore this same garment of courtesy. With other religions there was no standard--each guru was unique and different from the others. And Effendi possessed that courtesy to the highest degree.

Further, the Master had pinpointed what causes the ultimate ruin of one's ethics: illicit gain and illicit sex. Illicit gain and illicit sex--Effendi never tired of repeating that it was these two we had to be the most wary of, and that the final ruin of humanity, thermonuclear Armageddon, would be the end result of these two.

Illicit pecuniary gain is self-explanatory. Sexual relationships should occur only between lawfully married men and women. (Alcohol is bad because it clouds the mind's ability to reason and can easily lead to loss of control.) Even an atheist can benefit from this advice, provided he heeds it.

A person in control of his hand and his lust, and who in addition performs the Formal Prayer (salat or namaz) has, according to the Master, all the makings of a Sufi saint (a friend of God). From that point onwards, it would be the individual efforts of the seeker which would dictate the outcome.

In order to travel this course, three things are needed: a job, a spouse, and faith. Notice that these correspond to the three requirements above: a job provides honest income, a spouse means a home, a family and a healthy sexual relationship, and one wouldn't perform the daily Formal Prayers without faith. 

I have tried to tell the truth exactly as it happened. Whether, or to what extent, my account is credible, everyone will have to judge on their own, in the privacy of their thoughts.

I have only one more thing to say. Love one another, love even an ant. 


(Shortened | Full text and credit)

May Allah's peace and blessings be upon our Liege Lord Muhammad Mustafa and upon his blessed companions, his spiritual family and upon the righteous friends, the travelers of Sirat al-Mustaqim.


# Books by Henry Bayman

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