[All
quotes
in this article, unless otherwise specifically noted, are from the book
"The Sufi Orders in Islam" by J. Spencer Trimingham, published by
Oxford University Press, © 1998. This book is a work of extensive
scholarship that shines an eye-opening light on the origins and
practices of many of today's most established and famous Sufi Orders.
The author of this article in no way implies that the opinions and
analyses expressed in J. Spencer Trimingham's work "The Sufi Orders in
Islam" are the same as those of the author of this article.]
Some of this author's readers are members of an established Sufi Order.
Some readers are considering joining one. Frequently, aspiring Sufis
feel that their choices are limited in terms of how they should
properly study Tas?awwuf. Most aspiring Sufis eventually end up
belonging to one of the major Sufi Orders. There they are told that
they belong to a tariqa with a silsila that has an unbroken lineage
('golden chain' as called by some) reaching back to Imam Ali (a.s.) or
Caliph Abu Bakr (r.a.). In reality, no tariqa exists with an unbroken
lineage that reaches back before the 13th century CE.
These days, a Sufi is told that if he or she does not have a Sheikh, he
or she has Shaitan as a master. It is made very clear to the Sufi of
today that this Sheikh must currently be living in the physical world.
This flies directly in the face of the clear, historical record of the
development of the dervish Orders. Thousands of times, Sheikhs have
received their ijazet (authorization to teach) from a Sheikh, Saint, or
Pir dwelling in the spiritual worlds. This connection is in essence
unaffected by their passing from life on earth to life in barzakh. Does
the reader think that a Sheikh ceases being a Sheikh when he or she
leaves the cage of his or her physical body and soars to the Realm of
Divine Beauty? Moreover, there is substantial evidence, which we shall
produce in this paper that the tariqa that the reader belongs to is
made up of many Sheikhs who did not have any direct, earth-plane,
connection with the preceding Sheikh in the lineage.
If one simply takes a careful look at any silsila, and adds up the
number of Sheikhs in the lineage, then divides the number of years your
tariqa has been said to be in existence by the number of Sheikhs you
have in your lineage, you will see an enormous number of individuals
who have life spans that stretch way beyond the normal human lifespan.
Why? Because certain members of your tariqa, throughout history, knew
that there were huge gaps between certain Sheikhs, and therefore to
make it seem that there was always a direct hand-to-hand transmission
between Sheikhs, they deliberately fudged the dates of these Sheikhs
lives. It is not a pleasant fact to learn; but there you have it. To be
a Sufi, one needs to stop being false. Speaking the truth, done for the
sake of Allah, is an act of worship. Hazreti Rasulullah (Sallallaahu
Alayhi Wasallam) said, "Let not respect for people prevent a person
from speaking the truth when he knows it." (Tirmidhi)
Many times in the history of the reader's tariqa, the Pir or Grand
Sheikh ceased his breathing practices without leaving a Khalifa. We
will prove this in this article. Frequently, an individual in any part
of the world would have a spiritual visitation from the Pir or Grand
Sheikh of such-and-such a tariqa that lacks a living leader, and tell
the individual that the mantle of the Order was being passed onto them.
After that, the individual would let it be publicly known that he was
the new Sheikh of the such-and-such Order.
Let us consider the 'Golden Naqshbandi Chain.' This is the chain of
sheikhs through which the Naqshbandi secrets and tariqat have
supposedly been handed down from one generation to the next. The chain
is actually broken in at least two places. Jafar as-Sadiq is listed as
the fifth sheikh in the chain. We are told that he lived between 83-148
A.H. and that he "passed on the Secret of the Golden Chain to his
successor, Tayfur Abu Yazid al-Bistami. The naqshbandi.org site
mentions that Abu Yazid al-Bistami was "over seventy years old" when he
died in 261 A.H. (actually, from al-Bistami's statement at the end of
his biography it is clear that he was 74 years of age when he died).
This means that al-Bistami was not born until around 187 A.H., some 39
years after Jafar as-Sadiq had already passed away. The other break
relates to al-Bistami's successor, Abul Hassan al-Kharqani. We are told
that the "secret of the Golden Chain was passed from Bayazid al-Bistami
to Abul Hassan al-Kharqani." Al-Kharqani died in 425 A.H. and we have
already seen that al-Bistami died in 261 A.H. Their dates of death are
therefore separated by 164 years. It is impossible that al-Kharqani
physically met al-Bistami unless al-Kharqani himself lived for over 164
years. We will again discuss the meeting of these two saints later in
this paper. Kwaja Baha' al-Din Naqshbandi himself is recorded as having
not only a living master, one Kwaja Kulal [d.1371], but also a dead
Uwaysi elder, Kwaja Abd al-khaliq Ghujdawani [d.1179-80]. Before
Naqshband, there had been a line of 'Masters' (Khwajagan).
Another reason why so many contemporary Sufis feel that their choices
are limited, or are being limited without their knowledge, is that most
dervishes, even the truly dedicated ones, are often only aware of a
handful of tariqas. They know of the Mevlevi, Naqshabandi, Rifa'i,
Nimatullahi, Chisti, Bektashi, Ruhaniat, Qadiri, Jerrahi, and that is
about the extent of their familiarization with Sufi tariqas. This
narrowing of their knowledge of other tariqas, and the resultant focus
on a few, make the few seem to have some kind of super-authority and
premium on truth. The author believes that many new Sufis would be
amazed if they knew that tens of thousands of tariqas have existed
since the 12th century, and that even today many hundreds of tariqas
exist throughout the world. An analogy might be in order here. The
United Nations Security Council consists of only a few countries. Five
powerful countries sit as 'permanent members' along with ten other
member states, elected for two-year terms. Should one infer from this
information that the countries that sit as 'permanent members' are the
best countries? What if your nation is not a permanent member of the
Security Council but instead is a member of the United Nations General
Assembly? Many member nations of the General Assembly are great
nations, peopled with heroic, bright and wise men and women, with more
ancient and extraordinary civilizations than many nations in the
Security Council. The well-known permanent members of the 'United
Nations Security Council' are not inherently superior to other nations.
Possibly what you need or what you are looking for, is to be found in a
lesser-known tariqat, that is just as valid, and just as important as
the well-known tariqas.
While oftentimes nations gain power and authority because of their
military might, so too many Sufi tariqas gained legitimacy and
authority because they became bedfellows with the mighty military
powers of their times. In addition, these tariqas let it be known that
they followed every dot and iota of the Shariat, in order to garner a
legitimate status from the ruling Islamic authorities. Finally, these
tariqas connected themselves with the Guilds of the middle ages, in
order to find acceptance from the common people. However, not all
tariqas were so willing to compromise their beliefs in return for being
accepted by all strata of society. Antinomian tendencies were strong
among vagrant dervishes (Malamatis and Qalandaris), found usually in
Khorasan and central Asia, who were unattached to any recognized master
or line. They still exist today, however by their very nature, they are
quite unknown for the most part, and will make contact with the student
when they perceive (through assistance from their Guides in the spirit
realms) that the student is ready. Allahu ta'ala has a beautiful sense
of humor, for it is ironic that those individuals who are dismissed as
not being 'Sufis' are the very 'cup bearers' of authentic Sufism.
"Since legal Islam tolerated the secret character of the initiation and
oath of the guilds, it had to accept the implications of the act of
allegiance to the Sheikh at-tariqa . . ." It really was only with the
growth of the Ottoman Empire, especially in the 15th century, that the
organizational aspect of the tariqas took shape. "To justify their
teachings and practices, the leaders derived it from the Prophet
himself or his immediate companions to whom their chains are traced
back. In addition, the founders of all Orders from the 15th Century,
when they acquired their definitive form, claim to have been commanded
by the Prophet in a dream to found a new Way, an actual tariqa."
Here then is how the 'self-appointed authorities of Sufism' explain the
universal occurrence of branching that has become known in Sufi
history. More specifically, this is the way the authorities justify the
fact that their Pir broke rank from his Order to found a new Order. As
with the Shi'ite Imams, Sufi Sheikhs did not always have a single
successor, one whose authority was recognized by all devotees of that
order. The result was branching off of sub-lineages. Each branching off
is the acknowledgment of multiple authorities within a Sufi order. Yet
each individual representation of the order will consider itself and
its silsila as a single uncontested chain of mastery.
While the genealogical tree (the silsila, also called the 'chain') is
probably the most elemental representation of a Sufi order, it is
subject to varied, and intriguing, elaboration. Some tree documents
(chains) contain brief biographical notes, often showing circles of
minor disciples emanating from the major masters. Not all are presented
in book form. A simple document may be only one page long and easily
presented by itself or as part of another document. There are shrines
in India and Pakistan where the genealogical scrolls of Sufi tariqas
extend to hundreds of feet. There exist more complicated diagrams
requiring oral commentary to be understood. Eminent masters of other
orders are juxtaposed alongside the chief representatives of the
tariqa; the relationship of the branch to the trunk is suggestive but
remains enigmatic. What is clear is that each document represents a
principal line of transmission, one that eventually reaches the
disciple whose name is inscribed at the bottom.
You, the reader, are welcome to benefit from all the treasures of the
great Sufi Orders in existence today; but do not ever feel that you
must be a member of a Sufi Order to receive transmission. While you are
welcome to benefit from all the wisdom and baraka to be found in these
Sufi Orders, remember that a great deal of what you are taught by the
representatives of these Orders is affected by:
¢ the culture in which the tariqa dwells
geographically
¢ submission to religious, political and legal
authority
¢ the historical time in which the tariqa
developed
You do have choices. The whole concept of the well-organized tariqa is
an invention of the Middle Ages, with their extensive hierarchies,
secrets and pledges of allegiance. For many hundreds of years, after
the transition of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh), Sufism was more
concerned with sharing methods and techniques which worked, and which
brought the seeker to his or her destination: Union, or as some more
correctly believe, Annihilation, in Allah. Only later, did there grow
up an entire system of rules, elaborate costumes, and etiquette taken
to extremes, Sheikh worship, and the teaching that 'our' tariqa is the
best tariqa. As René Guénon wrote: "Beyond al-fanaa there
is fanaa' al-fanaa' the extinction of the extinction, and, by this
'extinction' the 'divine station' is reached (al-maaqam al-ilaahii),
which is the central point where all the distinctions inherent in the
more outward points of view are surpassed and where all the oppositions
have disappeared and are resolved in a perfect equilibrium."
New students are always told the founder of their Order was a great
saint. Most of the aulia whose names are connected with Orders, never
actually founded anything. This is as true of the four Madhabs as it is
of many Pirs. The four Madhabs never had any idea that their writings
would be taken as the 'final word' in all things Islamic by succeeding
generations. Something similar occurred with many Sufi saints. First,
it must be understood that frequently these 'saints' were only known as
Holy Men or Women, Teachers or Sheikhs during their lives, and only
after they ceased their breathing practices, did others begin to regard
them as saints. During their lives, they never stated that they
intended to branch off from the Order to which they belonged. They
never indicated that they wished to sever completely all ties with the
Order to which they were a member and to begin a new tariqa. Oftentimes
several generations passed after the saint's completion of his work,
before anyone started a tariqa in his name. It is clear, these aulia
did not leave khalifas who they instructed to teach and transmit a new
tariqa. An individual, usually a khalifa would decide on his own, first
that their Sheikh was a Waliullah, and then from that decision,
conclude, or become aware, that he (the khalifa) needed to branch off
from the main line. The author is not implying that anything scandalous
was going on . . . but he wishes to point out that Pirs were frequently
very dedicated to their tariqa and expressed no wish to form a new
branch, and that those truly great and brave individuals who realized
that their teacher was a walyullah never had any 'official papers' or
'official authorization' from anyone to start a new tariqa. Quite the
contrary, they were often branded schismatic.
All through the ages, there have been men and women Sufis who met a
Saint, either in body or spirit, and then started a Sufi tariqa based
on that saint's name. Much later elaborate silsilas were composed that
try their best to construct an unbroken succession of teachers from the
present teacher all the way back to the 'founding' saint. However, the
problem is that the saint never 'founded' anything. There is no
unbroken succession in most Sufi Orders, and no founding of anything.
Nevertheless, there most certainly are new and subtle spiritual
transmissions that are vouchsafed to the right dervishes at the right
time throughout history. It is understandable that holy men and women
who connect with these new spiritual currents should want to start a
formal method and center for this 'current.' Allah in His Munificence
may open a channel to a particular Sheikh, and the waters of life can
flow through this channel. However, the effulgent Majesty of Allah
Almighty can never be confined to a particular tariqa, no matter how
much that tariqa insists that it follows all the rules, and no matter
how much that tariqa acts in seemingly 'holy' ways.
Abu'l Fad'l al-Allamani in "A'in Akbari" writes, "There are references
to ta'ifas bearing the names of famous early Sufis. These may sometimes
have arisen through a teacher bearing the same nisba, or more commonly
through the desire of a master to relate himself with a particular
tradition of the past, receiving confirmation in a dream." The Prophet
Muhammad (pbuh) is recorded as saying, "The dreams of the believer are
1/46th a part of prophecy (nubuwah)." Spiritual investiture through
vision was common. Because of the result of a progressive movement by
tariqas toward courting respectability in all its forms: religious,
political and the prevailing winds of public opinion, tariqas have
unwittingly squeezed the very life out of themselves in order to fit
into these 'acceptable' categories. Therefore, those who might dare say
that their spiritual investiture was "through a vision" would be
laughed out of most 'reputable' Sufi conferences and forums. This is
why this author believes that the dervish of today is frequently given
only limited choices by the major, accepted tariqas of today.
Professor Michael Sells writes: "Al-Nabulusi wrote out the chain of
transmission (silsilah) of Muhammad al-Susi (d. 1682) of Damascus in
the 'Muhammadan Handclasp' (musafahah muhammadiyah). The chain begins
with al-Baghurawi, who saw the Prophet in a dream. 'Clasp my hand,' the
Prophet said, 'for anyone who has held my hand will enter Paradise.'
When he awoke, al-Baghurawi could feel the imprint of the Prophet's
fingers in his hand. The next person to receive the hand clasp from
al-Baghurawi was Ibn 'Arabi, who gave it to his stepson and disciple
al-Qunawi."
Yet, one must remember that the 'founding saints' of the various
Orders, never personally founded any Orders. We consider the case of
the great and famous Sufi waliullah Abd al-Qadir. He "left no system,
let alone Path, to be introduced. Even the Bahja, as Margoliouth has
pointed out, does not support the claim that his sons propagated his
Way throughout the Muslim world." Furthermore, "in the course of time a
body of rules, teaching, and practice was formed, and some Sheikhs
began to initiate their pupils into his name because his fame as an
intercessor was spreading."
Sheikhs today speak about the tradition of silsila in hushed tones, as
if this is an undisputed fact about which the dervish must show
complete faith. Yet, we have innumerable examples of how silsila was
repeatedly interrupted and broken, and furthermore, sometimes there
wasn't even the remotest connection between one Sheikh and the next in
a 'chain', for example, Abd al-Qadir and the Sheikhs who created out of
thin air a body of rules, teaching, and practice, and even initiated
dervishes in Abd al-Qadir's name! This author is not implying that
there is anything wrong with recognizing the value of a particular
saint, making contact spiritually with the saint, and transmitting his
baraka. Nor is there anything wrong with attempting to preserve a
saint's teachings through a formal system of initiating khalifas.
However, this author is stating that it is appalling to lead innocent
and naïve dervishes to believe in a fantasy of a pure and
unblemished 'unbroken line.' Because this fantasy directly leads the
new dervish to believe that transmission cannot happen, as Allahu
ta'ala wills at times, through a purely spiritual connection.
Let us go back to the very beginnings of Sufism. "Two contrasting
tendencies came to be distinguished as Junaidi and Bistami, or Iraqi
and Khurasani (but most not be taken too seriously or called schools of
thought) after the two men, Abu'l-Qasim al-Junaid (d. 910) and Abu
Yazid Taifur al-Bistami (d. 874), who captured the imaginations more
than any other of their contemporaries. These two are held to embody
the contrasts between the way based on tawakkul (trust) and that on
malama (blame), between intoxicated and sober, safe and suspect,
illuminate and conformist, solitude and companionship, theist and
monist, guidance under a this-world director (with a chain of
transmitters to regularize in conformity with standard Islamic
practice) and guidance under a spirit-Sheikh."
Here we see, that reaching back to the very origins of Sufism, equally
competing with those who demand a chain of transmitters, was another
form of Sufism that honored a form of guidance that emanates from the
spirit worlds. However, over time, the Junaidi path gained precedence.
"Because he won the approval of orthodoxy as relatively 'safe',
al-Junaid comes to be regarded as the Sheikh of the Way', the common
ancestor of most subsequent mystical congregations, even though many
followed heterodox teaching; his inclusion in their genealogies was a
guarantee of orthodoxy, for a sound isnad can support a multitude of
heresies." Isnad means 'chain.' Here we perceive that 'sober' Sufism
gained ascendancy primarily because Junaid (more properly his
followers) won the approval of the Islamic orthodoxy. The stamp of
authority was gradually given to those who would make the least waves,
those who (at least outwardly) conformed to the prevailing
interpretations of the meaning and purpose of the life of Muhammad
(pbuh) and the Holy Qur'an.
Before this official imprimatur descends upon the Junaidi way, let us
examine how the Sufis conducted themselves. "There were no
self-continuative Orders, but groups of people possessing similar
spiritual aspirations who had become disciples of an honored master
with whom the bond of allegiance was purely personal." It must be
remembered, that the "institution is a means of control." Those from
the right and the left would agree to this and even the proponents of
the institution believe that 'control' is a good thing. "The earlier
groups had been linked by enthusiasm, common devotions, and methods of
spiritual discipline, with the aim of stripping the soul and
eliminating self to attain the vision of Reality. They were, therefore,
integrated by spirit and aim rather than by any formal organization,
and were, in fact, very loose organizations." Authentic Sufism is not
intellectual. You can read book after book, and attend conference after
conference, but you know you have not really done your work. You need
direct experience.
The exploratory Sufi spirit was viewed with suspicion. "The
dissociation of Sufis from recognized religious leaders had always been
suspected and resented by the ulama (doctors of Islamic law), and
provided a reaction to which Shihab ad-din Yahya as-Suhrawardi fell
victim. This Suhwardi is to be distinguished from the tariqa leader
bearing the same nisba by the epithet al-Maqtul, 'the Martyr'. He
taught in Anatolia at the court of Qilij Arslan II and his son, and
wrote a number of remarkable theosophical works before he was tried and
executed, martyr to the fanaticism of the orthodox ulama of Aleppo, by
al-Malik az-Zahir at the Order of Saladin at the age of 38 in 587/1191.
However, it was the formation of esoteric and mystical congregations
outside the regular organization of Islam, together with the liturgical
organization of the sama, or spiritual concert for inducing ecstasy,
which was more likely to provide the reaction of the orthodox than
suspect ideas. By the end of the fifth century A.H. the change in the
attitude of Islamic legalists towards a grudging and qualified
acceptance of Sufism, begun by as-Sulami and his disciple al-Qushairi,
had been brought to a conclusion by al-Ghazali."
Consider Sheikh Ahmad al-Ghumari's book al-Burhan al-Jali on the nisba
(affiliation) of all Sufi Tariqas to Ali ibn Abi Talib and the Manaqib
of Ali - RadiyAllahu`anh - in which al-Ghumari claimed that the
Naqshbandi chain is broken because it contains three spiritual 'Uwaysi'
links, and that it is impossible that al-Qasim ibn Muhammad, for
example, can receive khilafa from Salman since the latter died when
al-Qasim was only five years old. There is near consensus among the
hadith Masters that al-Hasan al-Basri never heard any hadith directly
from Imam Ali (r.a.), much less took the Sufi cloak (khirqa) from him.
Yet the chain of all the major Sufi paths claim this link, such as the
Shadhili, Rifa`i, Qadiri, and others. Al-Sakhawi said, "This chain is
broken, but I narrate it for its baraka." His teacher Ibn Hajar, his
colleague al-Suyuti, the latter's student al-Haytami, were all
Shadhilis. Al-Dhahabi was Suhrawardi. Ibn Taymiyya was Qadiri. They
boasted of these affiliations although they knew that in external terms
they were broken-chained.
The dissenting opinion is often the correct one. Societal evolution
does not always produce the best effect, e.g., the masculine default
(men, mankind, etc.). As someone who at one time was very involved with
Freemasonry and attained the level of 3rd Degree Master Mason, this
author can attest to the great similarities between the organizational
aspects of the Masonic Lodge and the Sufi Lodge, as well as the heavy
emphasis on hierarchy, secrets and etiquette that exist in both. Again,
the Sufi who is new to Sufism and is being subjected to pressure from a
Sheikh or Murids of a particular dergah or tekke, may now realize that
it is Sufism which has borrowed from the Guilds (such as the Masonic
Guild). Therefore, there must have existed at one time a Sufism that
did not need, require or desire the pomp and circumstance of the Sufi
Orders as we know them today. Do any pre-guild Sufi teachings exist
today? Does anyone, or any Order, carry on this unadorned Sufism? What
are their veiled secret methods? They are given quite explicitly in
many places, but people rebel at the difficulty of some of the methods
(note: we did not say "complexity"). Other people rebel because the
methods appear too simple, and hence (as people expect the methods to
be quite arcane and mysterious) they disregard and pass over the
authentic revealed methods. The Light is Supremely Obvious, yet
dervishes are constantly asking for flashlights while they stand bathed
in direct sunlight. Do you expect to find genuine craftwork in any
Major Department Store? Do you expect to find truly delicious food at
any of the Major Restaurant Chains? Do you expect to find political
wisdom in any of the Major Political Parties? Why this need of
'caché' when it comes to affiliation with a Sufi Order? Most
people go to major department stores and major restaurant chains
because they fear encountering the strange and the unexpected. People
go places where they will be COMFORTABLE! That is why true Sufism has
always been taught to each dervish in a unique way. Allah is not in any
way like His creatures. The unique ones each travel a unique path to
the Unique One. A Sufi was martyred for uttering, "There are as many
ways to Allah, as there are people on earth."
"From the beginning of the thirteenth century certain centers (if we
think of the center as being a man, not a place) became the sees of
tariqas, mystical schools or teaching centers." Therefore, here then is
the true beginning of the notion of tariqas, and not some uninterrupted
chain of men stretching back to the time of the Prophet (pbuh). Five
hundred years after the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) completed his mission
as Rasulallah, do we first see the beginning of the process whereby the
"creative freedom of the mystic was to be channeled into an
institution." Up until this time, pupils traced their madhhab (method)
or tariqa (course) to their revered teacher, for "he was their
guarantee of validity and training."
In Order to lend credence to the tariqa of a Master (in other words, a
revered teacher, a Sheikh, or Pir), the names of certain previous
masters "were incorporated into the mystical isnads of the tariqas. The
key figure in most tariqas is Abu'l Qasim al-Junaid (d. CE 910), yet
Dhu'n-Nun al-Misri, though continually quoted in support of mystical
thought, is missing from the isnads. Similarly, Husain ibn Mansur
al-Halaj is not normally found in them (though a Way was later
attributed to him), where al-Bistami is found in the chains of many
Orders (for example, the Naqshabandiyya). Al-Wasiti, writing around CE
1320 when the Ways were fully established, says that there were two
distinct primitive sanads to which all the then existing khirqas went
back, the Junaidi and the Bistami." It was not unusual for completely
artificial tariqas to be invented, like that attributed to al-Hallaj,
complete with "specific esoteric doctrines, dhikrs, and rules . . ."
Masters would initiate students into these completely artificial
lineages. Nevertheless, were they "artificial" or, in actuality, the
way most tariqas originated? "At any time a Sufi might be told in a
dream to convey al-Junaid's Way. We read, for example, that Yusuf
al-'Ajami al-Kurani (d. 768/1366) was the first to revivify the tariqa
of al-Junaid in Egypt after its obliteration."
A great change came when a shift happened from the relationship of
teacher-pupil, which had prevailed thus far, to the fuller one of
director and disciple. In other words, when a great waliullah died, the
students did not go looking for another teacher, but they began to
venerate the memory of the dead master. Murshids appeared, guiding
their own pupils along the way of the deceased master, along his Way,
and in his name. "A new aura emanates from the master as a wali
(protégé) of God, which eventually . . . was to become
belief in his mediumship and intercessory status with God." Now, Sufism
was no longer focused on the immediate teacher-pupil relationship, but
an added 'super relationship' was superimposed on this relationship,
that of the overseeing, disincarnate, founding wali of the particular
Way being taught. "The change came with the development of such a
collegium pietatis into a collegium initiati whose members ascribed
themselves to their initiator and his spiritual ancestry, and were
prepared to follow his Path and transmit it themselves to future
generations."
The entire concept of isnad is not inherently a Sufi concept, nor does
it inherently hold importance for Sufis. It is an Islamic ideal that
was supposed to convey a sense of guarantee and authority. Sufis,
through their close connection with Islam, noticed how Islam utilized
this concept to demonstrate the authenticity of sayings of the Prophet
Muhammad (pbuh). Sufis seized upon this idea and incorporated it,
believing that isnad could also convey a sense of guarantee and
authority for their individual tariqas. A significant feature of the
change is that the groups, about the time of Saladin, took over the
Shi'ite custom of bai'a, initiation with oath of allegiance to the
Sheikh.
In his book "Sahar (Dawn)", Hazrat Moulana Shah Maghsoud describes
how people, having destroyed the stone-carved idols of the previous
generations, have continued to worship the idols they have created
by their imagination. "It is true that people broke the existing
idols in the temples, but they have practically replaced them with
bigger idols in their mind and thought, and worshiped them in
pagodas, synagogues, churches, and mosques."
Might we also add tekkes and dergahs to the list of pagodas,
synagogues, churches, and mosques? What are the idols being worshipped
within Sufi Orders today? This is a weighty question as it goes to the
very heart of Islam. This author is certainly not on the side of those
who deify the shariat and thus condemn Sufism. It is appropriate to
follow the Way of the Prophet (pbuh); it is inappropriate and sinful to
make the "Way of the Prophet" into a monolithic stone idol.
Nevertheless, there are aspects of the way that Sufism is practiced in
many places today that approach idol worship. One example is the icon
of closed mindedness. A kind of badly informed Islam is practiced
within some of these dergahs that completely ignores the role of the
'People of the Book' (The Jewish people and the Christians), and the
honor and respect that Allah and His Messenger (pbuh) afforded them.
These dergahs also sadly lack an informed awareness (substantiated by
recent academic research) of the major teaching role that women
Sheikhas have played in many saints lives.
Hazrat Moulana Shah Maghsoud is a 20th century Sufi and one of the
members of the caravan of the Uwaysi Robe. Safa Ali Michael Newman, an
American student of two students of Hazrat Maghsoud, and himself under
the Robe of the Uwaysi, writes the following in his book "The Gift of
the Robe": "For Sufis following the Uwaysi 'mashrab' (style or way of
belief), no knowledge can be received except from the heart of their
inner teacher, who is a mirror of the divine light, nor can knowledge
be understood except in the realm of the heart. As Uways himself said,
'Be with your heart.' Indeed, if we carefully study the way of the
Sufis and the principles of Sufism, we can see how the method of Uways,
the receiving of knowledge in the heart as understanding, is the only
way to be a Sufi. All Sufis, whether they call themselves Uwaysi or
not, have become knowledgeable only by receiving the knowledge in their
hearts by the Divine guidance of an unseen teacher. A Sufi receives
this guidance even if he or she has a
physical teacher."
Thus, even today, a major Sufi Order, the Uwaysi, still believes in the
"unseen teacher."
Ibn Khallikan writes, "Yunus ibn Yusuf ibn Musa'id ash-Shaibani, Sheikh
of the fuqara known after him as the Yunusiyya, was a holy man. I asked
a group of his followers who was his Sheikh and they replied, 'He had
no Sheikh, he was a majdhub.' By this word they designate one who has
no Sheikh but has been attracted to a life of piety and sanctity . . .
He died in 619 (CE 1222-3) in his village of al-Qunayya in the province
of Dara, where his tomb is well known and attracts pilgrims."
For a certain period of time, the Sufi meeting house was not the home
of a particular Sufi Order, but rather a temporary stopping place for
traveling Sufis, and a gathering place (a 'garden of delight') for
those following the Path. In one sense, Sufism was becoming a
profession, in the sense that a profession is a calling that requires
specialized knowledge and often long and intensive training and
specialized study. "Sufism had now become a profession and the period
is characterized by a great growth of unspecialized Sufi
establishments. Saladin welcomed Asiatic Sufis to Egypt and he and his
followers founded and endowed many khanaqahs, ribats, and zawiyas of
which al-Maqrizi gives a long list. Mujir ad-din has accounts of these
places in Jerusalem, Hebron, and Damascus. Saladin in 585/1189 endowed
a Khanaqah Salahiyya in Jerusalem, diverting for this purpose the
palace of the Latin patriarch." Today, Sufism has become, in many
quarters, again a profession (but now a profession in the sense of an
'occupation'). Individuals enroll in Middle Eastern Studies or Islamic
Studies programs in universities, acquiring advanced degrees. They then
seem to feel qualified to lecture and write books about Sufism, as well
as acquiring tenured positions in colleges in the United States and
around the world in which they teach Sufism to naïve college
students.
During these early years of Sufism, a bright light shown.
Unfortunately, the male domination culture has largely
snuffed this light out. Mystics, who were also women, had the
opportunity during this time to practice together. "Mysticism was the
only religious sphere where women could find a place. There were many
women Sufis, of whom Rabi'a al-'Adawiyya (d. CE 801) is the best known.
During this period, there are references to convents for women.
Al-Irbilli uses the term khanaqah for convents for men and ribat for
those of women. There were seven convents for women in Aleppo alone,
all founded between CE 1150 and 1250. In Cairo there was Ribat
al-Baghdadiyya, built by a daughter of al-Malik az-Zahir Baibars in
684/1285 for a Sheikha called Zainab ibnat Abi'l-Barakat, known as Bint
al-Baghdadiyya, and her followers, which still exists in ad-Darb
al-Asfar." Hints of these Sufi convents, and their Sheikhas, still
exist today. However, traditional male Sufi Sheikhs still teach that a
woman cannot give baiat. What about the teachers of the Greatest
Sheikh, Ibn al'Arabi? Were they not women? Camille Adams Helminski
writes, "Ibn Arabi, the great 'Pole of Knowledge' (1165-1240 CE), tells
of time he spent with two elderly women mystics who had a profound
influence on him: Shams of Marchena, one of the 'sighing ones,' and
Fatimah of Cordova." Helminski continues, "Someone once asked the great
Egyptian Sufi master Dho'n-Nun Mesri, 'Who, in your opinion, is the
highest among the Sufis?' He replied, 'A lady in Mecca, called Fatimah
Nishapuri, whose discourse displayed a profound apprehension of the
inner meanings of the Qur'an.' Further pressed to comment on Fatimah,
he added, 'She is of the saints of God, and my teacher.'" Perhaps this
is why no one wanted to link their silsila to Dho'n-Nun Mesri
(Dhu'l-Nun). Nevertheless, the more pertinent point: how many great
Sufi Sheikhas might there be today if only the Sheikhs and Sheikhas
living today would make more of their female disciples Khalifas?
It does appear that a very small amount, maybe only one or two, tariqas
did actually start with the founding saint. However, even in these
cases, what later manifested as 'The Order' (as we know of it today)
bears little resemblance to what the founding saint taught. Ibn Battuta
writes in 1939 about the city of Konya, "In this city is the tomb of .
. . Jalal ad-din, known as Mawlana. An organization (ta'ifa) exists in
the land of Rum whose members derive from him, and are known by his
name, being called the Jalaliyya, similar to the derivation of the
Iraqian Ahmadiyya [= Rifa'iyya], or the Khurasanian Haidariyya. Around
his tomb is a large zawiya in which food is provided for all migrants."
These, therefore, were Sufi ta'ifas in the full sense. However, while
the Mevlevi's may have started with Mevlana, one may reasonably ask if
the Mevlevi's have actually continued to exist into the present era (as
they are more of a tourist attraction than an actual tariqa). Here,
with Rumi, some might vouch that his true tariqa is now being
transmitted (sans lineage), but through such the assistance of Sheikhs
from other Orders who have a direct spiritual linkage with Jalal ad-Din
Rumi. This author has reliable information that this is, in fact, what
has been occurring for at least the last thirty years.
While the Jalaliyya, or as we know them - the Mevlevis - may have had a
direct descent from Mevlana, there is yet something astonishing to be
revealed. Students in all Orders are routinely told never to enter into
debate or dispute with their Sheikh. This is proper adab. However, many
Sheikhs take this a step too far and imply that any thoughtful scrutiny
on the part of the disciple is infidelity. Therefore, clear-headed
reflection and investigation into the legitimacy of an Order and an
Order's practices are almost unheard of. In addition, trust is very
important on the Sufi path, and again because of this, the atmosphere
is not conducive to asking probing questions of the authorities of the
Order. Truly, the situation for the novice Sufi-in-training, is a
difficult one. He or she must develop trust in the Sheikh, yet at the
same time, he or she must not betray his God-given intelligence. It
does not occur to dervishes to ever question anything they have been
told. As the student is indoctrinated into a point of view of complete
submission to the Sheikh, gradually the student will not risk losing
the love of his or her Sheikh by openly investigating and challenging
what he or she has been told is the history of his or her Order. Trust
must be earned, not given blindly just because a Sheikh sports a
gleaming white turban, a long beard, and claims to have an unbroken
silsila stretching back to Imam Ali (r.a.) himself. While, it is true,
adab must be maintained between Sheikh and disciple, there should be
nothing to prevent the disciple (or for that matter the teacher) from
independent exploration (in a scholarly sense) of the earlier times of
the Order. Only very recently have individuals been researching the
development of Sufis Orders, in a dispassionate historical manner,
rather than just accepting the fantastical fictitious accounts that so
many dervishes have just accepted as 'gospel.'
For example, only now is it becoming known that it was not until the
17th Century that the outer turning of the Mevlevis, known as the
whirling of the dervishes, began to develop and take hold. Prior to
this time, Rumi's teachings evoked turning and whirling of an inward
nature, a turning to the heart. Lesser students are often attracted by
stories of miracles and great feats performed by their Pir and Sheikhs.
However, most of these reports are pure fiction. Moreover, the person
who manipulates and seeks to manipulate this 'apparent' world, has
completely missed the point of Sufism, which is to "die before you
die."
Freemasonry enthralls its members with talk of its direct and
continuous line that traces back to the time of Solomon's Temple. Most
Sufi Orders also enthrall its members by the same method of telling
stories of how ancient the Order is. Nevertheless, the truth is
gradually being revealed, due to thorough scholarly research, and
because individuals no longer feel intimidated into believing without
question the stories of their Sheikhs. One of these truths is that
while there was a great Sufi renaissance in the 13th Century, many of
the Orders that we know today, only took their present form around the
17th Century.
The 'tomb' of the walyullah becomes extremely important at this point
in time. The tomb now becomes part of the physical structure of the
Sufi meetinghouse. "Iranian regions do not seem to have developed the
officially sponsored khanaqah and the change of their Sufi hostels to
representation of a holy line was not marked by any change of name but
by the addition of an honored tomb, though more commonly the later
khanaqahs were new foundations in association with a tomb. Later Turk
and Mongol rulers rebuilt the tombs of famous saints and associated
convents on more magnificent lines." The presence of the tomb creates
an intensifying of the baraka present in the Sufi meetinghouse. The
tomb's benefits are immense: it lends an ever-present awareness to the
dervishes that their own deaths are right around the corner. Moreover,
the symbolical 'presence' of the saint, helps the dervishes to be aware
that Allah is always watching them.
Subtle branching from an Order occurred for several reasons in the Sufi
world, none of the reasons being disreputable. "Sufis trained in these
institutions founded daughter lodges in their own countries or in
entirely new pasture grounds, especially in India. They rarely
maintained direct contact with the mother institution and became
independent schools with their own characteristics and tendencies."
Perfectly respectable Sufis were initiated and came out of these lodges
as khalifas.
It seems that it is a particular characteristic of the latter part of
the 20th Century and the first part of the 21st Century, to:
¢ question a Sufi's right to call him or herself
a Sufi
¢ question a Sheikh's or Sheikha's right to use
that title
¢ question the validity (or right to exist) of a
Sufi Order
While, as we said before, we must use our intelligence for matters that
our intelligence can help with, there seems to be an obsessive
compulsion to tear down anything that does not have all the 'official'
stamps. Dear reader, when has authentic Sufism ever had anything to do
with 'official stamps'? These are the concerns of the minor public
official, not the friend of Allah. Officialism takes the place of
annihilation. Control, regulation, manipulation, and official paper
work are hallmarks of Sufi bureaucracy.
One of the truly remarkable and astonishing (at least to this author)
facts concerning the evolution of Sufi Orders was the discovery that
their organization is directly copied from the ancient system of
medieval Guilds. "The organization of the Orders, however, owes much to
that of the guilds. These guilds had flourished under the Fatimid and
other Shi'ite states and with the triumph of the Ayyubids and Seljuqs
over political Shi'ism, the necessity for recognizing them was accepted
by the Sunni doctors. From then, when defined lines of mystical
tradition had emerged, the organization of the khanaqahs, which were
also secular associations in some aspects of their relationship to the
life of the community, drew more and more features from guild
organization. As the latter had a grandmaster ('arif, amin, or Sheikh
al-hirfa) and a hierarchy of apprentices, companions, and
master-craftsman, so the religious Orders acquired a hierarchy of
novices, initiates, and masters. Since legal Islam tolerated the secret
character of the initiation and oath of the guilds, it had to accept
the implications of the act of allegiance to the Sheikh at-tariqa when
Shi'i practice was maintained."
"And now we find manifestations of spiritual power becoming associated
with the Orders. No clear distinction can henceforth be made between
the Orders and saint-veneration, since God's protégés
(awliya li'llah) are within the Orders. Not merely the great Sheikh but
his successors who inherited his baraka (spiritual power) were mediums
of his power. With this was associated ziyara (visitation) to saints'
tombs. The mystic carries out a ziyara for the purpose of muraqaba
(spiritual communion) with the saint, finding in the material symbol an
aid to meditation. Nevertheless, the popular belief is that the saint's
soul lingers about his tomb and places (maqams) specially associated
with him whilst he was on earth or at which he had manifested himself.
At such places his intercession can be sought."
The blending of the saint-cult with the Orders and a new reverence for
the Prophet is one aspect of the changes that happened with Sufi Orders
in the early 1200's CE. "With this development is associated a new
reverence for the Prophet, which not merely brought him into the
category of wonder-workers at the popular level, but also led to the
popular equivalent of the belief in the Spirit of Muhammad as the
Logos, guardian, and preserver of the universe." In addition, at this
time, something significant happened which many of our readers may be
taking for granted: membership in Sufi Orders was extended to lay
adherents. These 'working people' took the oath with the Sheikh or more
usually his representative (khalifa). These lay members continued to
follow their ordinary mode of life. Most members of Sufi Orders today,
including the khalifas, hold regular jobs and are, in a sense, lay
adherents. Only the Grand Sheikh in the larger Orders, is presently
afforded the privilege, or right, of not living a lay existence, in
other words, working a job in the mundane world, and so forth and so
on. Significant, however, is the fact that in certain more undisclosed
Orders, it is the Sheikh who serves the disciple and not the other way
around.
This paper seeks to make the Sufi of today more conscious and aware of
the way that Sufism has been practiced since the time of Muhammad
(pbuh). Sometimes what the reader learns is inspirational, and
sometimes what the reader learns is shocking. However, shock is often
very helpful in spiritual development. Trimingham discusses the very
prevalent study of the occult sciences amongst Sufis. "Along with the
development of new forms of devotion and their acceptance parallel to
ritual prayer went the process of accommodating the sciences of
astrology, divination, and magic - techniques which professed, not
merely to reveal the secrets of the unseen world, but to control them.
This development is especially associated with the name of Ahmad ibn
Abdallah al-Buni (d. 622/1225), who put the seal to the work of his
predecessors operating less openly by finally systematizing the
sciences of divination, astrology, and magical invocation. Popular
works brought all this within the range of the ordinary practitioner
and became part of the equipment of the Sheikhs and brethren."
While some Sufis may find this shocking, a perusal of many of the books
written by famous Sheikhs about the 99 Names of Allah, will reveal that
they are often filled with all sorts of mundane uses for which these
names can be employed. Examples of these mundane uses are: protection
from violence, free from need of others, honor, riches, making people
obey you, protection of crops, protection from fire, finding lost
objects, destroying one's enemy, enlightenment, a long life, all the
way to promising that any desire will be granted to the one who recites
a particular divine name.
"The Orders stressed the power of the Word of God, and hundred of
booklets have been written on the virtues and properties of the names
of God, of phrases like the Basmala, or Qur'anic verses (Ayat
al-Kursi), or chapters (sura Ya Sin). The association of these 'words',
as in ash-Shadhili's Hizb al-Bahr or al-Jazuli's Dala'il al-khairat,
gives these magical properties."
"All the same, the ideals of the Orders were maintained, however much
they were compromised in practice." Moreover, this seems to be an
ever-present situation. Sufi Sheikhs will flatly state that Sufism has
nothing whatsoever to do with magic. So too, devout Muslims will deny
any involvement with magic. Yet many Muslims, with no affiliation with
Sufism whatsoever, utilize the magic for personal gain. Islamic magic
bowls appear suddenly in the 12th Century (metal, engraved with
figures) which were inscribed with the names of diseases and
afflictions for which they were said to be useful and from which the
patient or the patient's proxy drank water. There are reports that when
the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) was asked about the use of incantations, he
said that one should use the Qur'an, for otherwise it would be a
dubious procedure.
In some countries, Europe and the United States included, Muslims walk
around with numerous 'magic squares' on scrolls attached to their
bodies. Magic squares play an important role in Islamic talismanic
designs. The first appearance of such a square (called a wafq in
Arabic) in Islamic literature occurred in the alchemical writings
attributed to J?bir ibn ?ayy?n. This early magic square was recommended
as a charm for easing childbirth. So, let not the traditional Muslim
fault Sufis for what they themselves practice! Much of the 'Islamic
magic' used in Muslim countries concerns the Jinn (protection spells
against them, or spells to call them up). Magic in the form of Qur'anic
numerology (in relation to letters), amulets, scrolls carried on the
body, and the repetition of various Names of Allah a specific number of
times, is still widely practiced by some Sheikhs and women Sufi healers
throughout Eastern Europe, the Middle and Near East. A favorite
contemporary Muslim amulet consists of a square-inch miniature of the
Koran enclosed in metal and worn around the neck. Another great
favorite amulet is the 'Hand of Fatima' which is also known as the
'Hand of Miriam' in the Jewish religion. Much of Islamic amulet lore is
based on the need to use all possible means to protect oneself against
the 'evil eye.' A popular internet Islamic jewelry store sells 'silver
effect' cylindrical taweez lockets. Diameter 7 mm. You can purchase
pure silver taweez lockets also.
Islam has had a notable tradition of alchemical writers. Renowned
Islamic alchemists such as al-Iraqi, Rhazes, Maslamah al-Majriti, Bakr
b. Bishrun, Ibn as-Samah, and Jabir Ibn Hayyan, have often performed
alchemical transformations. However, the author would like to note that
Islamic Alchemy used in its purest sense it practiced to expand the
soul so that the consciousness of the Prophet Adam ('Alaihi Assalam),
the pure and harmonious interconnection of Humanity and Nature, is
known. The author is not suggesting that one or the other form of
practice is good or bad. However, the author would like to see the
emphasis placed on annihilation rather than the acquiring of benefits
in the 'apparent' world. "Earlier Sufis had been concerned with
ascetic-mystical theory, or, if they were poets, with illuminating
their search and the states they experienced." What reason does the
reader have for asking for anything, since the reader does not exist?
At this time, greater systematization now was seen in the prayer and
ritual manuals now being produced as guides for the director and his
pupils. "These manuals show that the ritual is now a traced-out Way, a
rule of life, by following which the novice may attain union with God,
founded upon a series of observances additional to the common ritual
and duties of Islam. It involves a novitiate, during which he receives
guidance from a Sheikh, and it is now that the saying that the novice
must be in the hands of his director like the corpse in the hands of
the washer of the dead becomes popular. This culminates in initiation,
which includes investment with a khirqa, mantle, and headdress
[turban]."
Now, this brings up some fascinating points. Some traditions have been
kept within Sufi Orders, when it seems that these traditions have
suited those in authority, and other traditions discarded, when it
seems that the traditions threatened (in some way) those in authority.
For example, while the khirqa, mantle, and headdress [turban],
traditionally were granted after a period of study (usually three
years), today, only very rarely is someone granted these symbols of
recognition. Rather, Sheikhs will keep pupils, as pupils, for decades,
or even for their entire lives, without ever granting them the khirqa.
This has resulted in a dire lack of qualified Sufi teachers in the
world today! Major cities, states, and even countries, do not have any
properly recognized Sufi Sheikh or Khalifa. Because of this lack of
khalifas, we now have been seeing for last twenty-five years the
invasion of pseudo-Sufis, who have little or no training (formal or
otherwise). They may have read a few books and have gone to a few 'Rumi
Whirling' weekend workshops. They are purveyors of 'Sufi Lite.' These
pseudo-Sufis, who put out a shingle billing himself or herself as a
'Sufi Teacher' or some such thing, attract the innocent, spiritually
starved public who knows no better! These shysters often charge
exorbitant amounts of money for lessons, or 'conferences,' in Sufism.
Of course, they cannot teach Sufism as they try to pass off grape juice
in place of wine. Sufi Masters never charge money for training a
student.
However, who is ultimately to blame for this terrible state of affairs?
Sadly, astagfirullah, power-hungry Sheikhs want to keep their disciples
in a perpetual state of discipleship, and themselves in a perpetual
state of authority and power. A terrible result of holding back
competent dervishes from investiture as Sheikhs or khalifas is that the
few authentic Sheikhs in the world begin to acquire thousands and
hundreds of thousands of disciples. This is unfortunate, as the
disciple of such a Sheikh may never get a private audience with his or
her Sheikh in his or her entire life! The Sheikh is unable to provide
individual guidance to each individual disciple; the disciple is
deprived of private spiritual instruction. Of course, this can be
transmitted spiritually, but how many dervishes-in-training can receive
direct instruction via the spirit realms? A quick glance around the
Sufi world today, reveals that there are several of these 'mega'
Sheikhs. A kind of 'Sufi Stardom' is the result; and millions are the
poorer for it (spiritually and financially).
To quote Shams-i Tabrizi in "Me & Rumi: The Autobiography of
Shams-i Tabrizi", "Beware, do not be satisfied with the sheikh just
because of this beautiful form, beautiful words, and beautiful acts and
character traits, because beyond all these is something else. Seek
that."
It must also be said that being a disciple of one of these 'mega'
Sheikhs permits one to hide behind the many books, videos and
recordings of these Sheikhs, while never having to experience a
personal encounter with the Sheikh. Whether in the apparent world, or
in the spirit realms, one must encounter the Sheikh, as frightening as
that may be.
While many Sheikhs, who court authority, love to quote the saying that
the dervish should be "like a corpse in the hands of the Sheikh," the
origin of this saying has nothing to do with Sheikhs. The original,
which is attributed to Sahl ibn 'Abdallah at-Tustari (d. CE 896),
referred instead to Allah: "The first stage in tawakkul (trust in
Allah) is that the worshipper should be in the hands of Allah like a
corpse in the hands of the washer, he turns it as he wills without
impulse or initiative on its part." Isn't this interesting? Somehow, a
teaching about the need for the dervish to put his or her complete
trust in Allah is twisted into meaning that the dervish should
completely submit to his or her Sheikh!
The 14th Century saw the proliferation of Zawiyyas. "The Moroccan Woman
and Tasawwuf in the Eleventh Century" by Mustafa 'Abdu's-Salam
al-Mahmah states: "Zawiyyas were built by Sufis when they took a
residence for worship, retreat and spreading tasawwuf among the
individuals of society who desired to learn religious knowledge. They
used to try to provide food and drink and provide them with a place to
spend the night. They encouraged them to build zawiyyas on roads and
places where people could stay either temporarily or permanently so
that the message of teaching tasawwuf would continue and knowledge
would be continued to be taught." For many centuries it was considered
of great importance that the message of Sufism be disseminated as
widely as possible. It was normal and desirable that students, after
completing a certain course of study with a Sheikh, would be granted
the mantle of authority to teach. These new Sheikhs would travel on
foot throughout the world. The sword did not spread Islam; it was
spread by traveling Sufis. Today, Sheikhs make it so difficult for
anyone to be invested with the khirqa (mantle) that these Sheikhs are
in effect, blocking the spread of Islam. The virtual Sheikh has stepped
in to fill this role. These are the 'TV Evangelists' of the Sufi
movement, the 'mega-Sheikhs' who have huge professionally designed
websites. These 'mega-Sheikhs' have large public relations departments
that constantly, ad nauseam, post speeches of these 'mega-Sheikhs' in a
variety of text, audio and video formats all over the internet. These
'PR Dervishes' also constantly upload pictures of these Sheikhs on
nearly every Sufi and Islamic website on the internet. They create web
sites that are quasi-official and also web sites that are subtly
deceptive, confusing the viewer into thinking that the site is about
one subject and later the viewer discovers it is a disguised
advertisement for the 'mega-Sheikh.' It seems that everywhere one
looks, one sees the face of these 'mega-Sheikhs. This spreads a 'kind'
of Sufism.
As the reader can see, however, that this form of dissemination of Sufi
ideas is limited to the teachings of a very few Sheikhs. Some of these
'mega-Sheikhs' seem to be 'losing it,' in other words, they seem to be
intoxicated by their fame and are starting to preach very bizarre and
questionable teachings. Again, the fault lies foursquarely at the feet
of the Sheikhs who block their doors so that their disciples never
"graduate."
However, let no one think that during the great age of Sufism that
there existed a basic understanding and teaching, underlying
everything. "There were great variations too between the Sufi
establishments. Some were rich and luxurious, favored by authority,
whilst others followed the strictest principles of poverty and
unworldliness; some had no Sheikh, others were under the authority of
one leader and had become attached to one silsila; whilst others were
governed by a council of elders. Then there were wandering dervishes
such as the qalandars who made use of these hostels, and had their own
rules and linkage but no organization."
If today, a dervish were to say that his Sufi group was run by a
council of elders, snickers would erupt from his audience. If the
dervish said that his Order had no Sheikh, he would promptly be told
that he then had Shaitan for a Sheikh. If the dervish said that his
fellow dervishes did not believe in organization, quiet inquiries would
be made into the suspected anarchist leanings of these individuals. Yet
during a great age of Sufism, all these were perfectly valid Ways of
practicing Sufism. Who can say that he or she knows that this was not
Sufism? Allah knows best.
According to Sheikh Fadhlalla, a renowned Islamic jurist and himself a
Sufi, in his book "The Thoughtful Guide to Sufism," "Generally, Sufi
Orders tend to be cyclical in nature, and last for about two to three
hundred years before weakening and decaying. Whenever a need is felt, a
Sufi Order arises, and reaches its climax and eventually disintegrates."
Branching of Orders has always been the norm and tradition within
Sufism. There are many valid ways to practice Sufism, therefore, do not
let anyone attempt to force you into believing there is only one, or
that their way is the best way. Some Sufi Orders, who may only be a few
hundred years old, and who exist because their Pir branched from some
other Order, will try to make you believe that they are the best.
Spiritual seekers all want to make sure that they are studying with the
best and most authentic teacher and Sufi Order. Unfortunately, seekers
often are most influenced by what they see around them and what they
are told, rather than listening to their deepest inner feelings for
inner confirmation. If you hear 'we are the best' enough times, maybe
you begin to believe it. However, sometimes the 'best' is found in
humble and unexpected places. The question is: do you have the courage
to follow your heart rather than the firm advice of men who seem to
have your best interest at heart?
No intellectual discussion leads to enlightenment, yet everywhere we
find Sufis who relish the long and involved sobhets of their Sheikhs.
Sufism is transmitted from heart to heart. No talking is necessary. No
talking at all! Just sitting with your Master in silence and love is
enough. So again, beware of the tendency to be 'wowed' by the Sheikh
who is an impressive speaker. More importantly, ask yourself, "Can I
sit with my Sheikh without talking for several hours?" This last
practice wildly frustrates intellectual disciples. Also, disciples who
believe that the Sheikh exists to 'answer questions' and to 'clarify
matters' are also frustrated and annoyed by the suggestion that just
sitting quietly with one's Sheikh is sufficient for complete Sufi
transmission. It is the Sheikh's 'being' that you need to be in contact
with, not his or her words (answers).
Now, to hear some people tell it, Abd al-Qadir, formed a great tariqa.
Yet, Taqi ad-Din al-Wasiti wrote, "Abd al-Qadir was renowned during his
lifetime for his sermons and courses or religious instruction, but he
never at any time propagated any kirqat at-tasawwuf." Amazing! He never
at any time propagated any kirqat at-tasawwuf.
"Because it was suspect Abd al-Qadir's silsila rarely figures in other
than Qadiri lines, for instance, in the attributions in Sanusi's
Salsabil (we read of fuqura tracing themselves to Ahmad ar-Rifa'i, but
no such attributions to Abd al-Qadir). The Order attributed to him
produced few famous Sufis or Sufi works; the award, teaching and other
material found in Qadiri manuals, being largely borrowed. His later
followers attributed to him a line of mystery teaching he could not
possibly have taught. An inspired Qadiri would attribute to his master
the miracles he ought to have done . . ." Sheikh Ilhan Aydoner
al-Jerrahi recently said to this author, "Our Sheikhs don't fly. We are
realistic. Dervishes of other Orders say their Sheikhs fly. Our Sheikhs
don't fly." This is an amazing and extremely helpful teaching coming
out of the Jerrahi Order. Rather than trying to impress students with
stories of miraculous feats, Sheikh Ilhan Aydoner al-Jerrahi brings the
listener back to what is really of importance.
"Abd al-Qadir left no system, let alone Path, to be introduced. In the
course of time a body of rules, teachings and practice was formed, and
some Sheikhs began to initiate their pupils into his name because his
fame as an intercessor was spreading." Again, if you are stuck in your
tiny slice of time you call your life, it is sometimes difficult to see
the larger picture. The fact is, that probably the students of these
Sheikhs were being told that all these rules and so forth, were the
sacred and true teachings of Abd al-Qadir. This author is sure these
students faithfully accepted their Sheikhs teachings. Yet, many of
these Sheikhs knew that this whole Path was an invention. Does that
necessarily make it un-fruitful? No. Does that necessarily make it
lacking in puissance? No. Any effort that is performed in sincerity
with beautiful intentions bears spiritual fruit. However, please, dear
reader, disabuse yourself of any sense that your tariqa is the one true
tariqa, or that there was (or is) any kind of rational tidiness in the
development (past and present) of Sufism.
The Mevlevi's continued and preserved the teachings of their Pir
faithfully. "Ibn Battuta, whose visit to Qonya in 1332, refers to the
Way as the Jalaliyya. The Way developed as a self-perpetuating
organization immediately after Jalal ad-din's death in 1273." Other
revered and well-respected Orders, like the one fabricated after the
passing of Abd al-Qadir, were also completely artificial. For example,
the Chishtiyya, is more a work of fiction than reality. Mu'in ad-din
Hasan Chisti, born about 1142 CE, was attracted early to the errant
Sufi life and served his master, Uthman Harvani, during some twenty
years of wanderings, and then continued them on his own. Nothing
reliable is known about his life. His biographers (late and
untrustworthy) claim that he met and was given initiatory authority by
most of the celebrated Sufis of this formative age, including not only
Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani but others who were dead before he was born."
Rarely do students check out the authenticity of the stories told to
them by their Sheikhs, accepting them on face value. If the Sheikh says
that the founding Pir was received and given initiatory authority by
various Orders, this is just accepted with blind faith. People spend
more time and effort investigating the best car to buy, the best house
to buy, the best financial investment, then they do to investigate the
fantastic claims of their spiritual teachers!
"Whilst tariqa is the method, ta'ifa is the organization, and though
khanaqahs were correctly described as tawa'if (plural of ta'ifa), since
they were organizations of separate groups, they were still not the
Orders as we know them. The completion of their development as ta'ifas
or Orders in this specialized sense during the fifteenth century
coincided with the growth of the Ottoman Empire."
"During the Seljuq and early Ottoman periods heterodoxy was the evident
characteristic of many representatives of Islam, especially in eastern
and southern Anatolia. Another Turkish tendency arising out of the haze
from the Tabriz region, displaying strong malamati inspiration, became
distinguished as the Khalwatiyya and Bairamiyya. These remained
decentralized and fissiparous, spawning many distinctively Turkish
Orders."
It is of particular interest to this author that by its very nature,
the Khalwatiyya was fissiparous. Now in the 21st Century, when we are
again seeing this nature (of breaking away from a main body) manifest
itself, many are running around acting as if this is an outrage that
has never happened in the history of the Khalwatiyya line. Branching in
the Khalwatiyya has been the norm, not the exception.
"In Turkey under the Ottomans relative harmony was achieved through
toleration of three parallel religious strands: official Sunni
legalism, the Sufi tekke cult, and the Folk cult. Shi'ism, which was
not tolerated, was forced to seek asylum within Sufi group, among whom
the Bektashiyya gave it its fullest expression."
The student must beware of something: the country from which your Sufi
Order originates is not an intrinsic part of the value of spiritual
transmission. So often, students gradually and subliminally start to
think that the politics, language, customs, and 'aura' of a country are
as important as are the teachings of the tariqa! These students listen
with rapt attention to anyone who has the correct foreign accent of the
country in question, and who affects an air of authority.
Recently an individual posted the following on a Sufi newsgroup,
"Historically, Naqshbandi Master teachers with Divine super
consciousness have assimilated useful elements from diverse sources,
sometimes quoting the Hadith, 'Seek knowledge even in
China.' " What sort of education might one receive if one only reads
the works of a single author? What kind of cook is it who cooks the
same recipe repeatedly, and never tries to vary and improve the recipe
by incorporating herbs and spices from faraway places? What kind of
cook is it that is afraid to experiment with new seasonings? The cook
does not believe in changing the recipe for change sake, but change for
the sake of perhaps improvement or perhaps just to remind the guest
what he or she is eating.
From the beginning, Khanaqahs have been defined and regulated by the
state. This is the price they paid for official recognition and
patronage. This capitulation to the authorities compromised the true
teachings of Sufism. Over time, "the Way became paved and milestoned.
From this period, except in Persia, Sufi writings cease to show real
originality. They become limited to compilations, revisions and
simplifications, endless repetition and embroidery on old themes, based
upon the writings of earlier mystics." There is great truth in this.
Any unique and original Sufi teaching today is met with outrage or
denial. Often the Sufi community pretends that the original work does
not even exist.
Many ta'ifas began in the 15th Century. From these, quite a few
branched out into hundreds of derivative ta'ifas. "One aspect of the
change, even if not an integral one, was the tendency for the headship
of many Orders to become hereditary. Formerly, the superior designated
a disciple to succeed him, or failing this, he might be elected by the
initiates, but now his successor was increasingly designated or elected
from within his own family." In addition, gradually the Head Sheikh
ceased to teach directly "but delegated authority both to teach and
initiate to representatives (khulafa, sing. khalifa). A special cult
surrounded the Sheikh's person, associated with the power emanating
from the founder-saint of the ta'ifa; he becomes an intermediary
between God and man. If we characterize the first stage [of the
development of Sufism], as affecting the individual, as surrender to
God, and the second as surrender to a rule, then this stage may be
described as surrender to a person possessing baraka, though of course
embracing the other stages."
The wisdom of the Sufis does not always fit comfortably into a
religious matrix. "The difficulties of reconciling these ideas with the
dogma and law of Islam had long been evident; the Orders had been
bitterly attacked by zealots like Ibn Taimiya, but now a parallel
developed in practice. The founder and his spiritual heirs affirmed
their loyalty to the sunna of the Prophet as a necessary first stage in
their code of discipline." Thus, they protected themselves from the
violent and murderous attacks of the Islamic jurists. "To justify their
teaching and practices, the leaders derived it from the Prophet himself
or his immediate companions to whom their chains are traced back. In
addition, the founders of all Orders from the fifteenth century, when
they acquired their definitive form, claim to have been commanded by
the Prophet in a dream to found a new Way, an actual tariqa. Such a
tariqa acknowledges its dependence upon the parent silsila and is
distinguished from it in only minor aspects, a different way of
carrying out the dhikr, and, more important, a new wird delivered to
the founder by the Prophet." According to the widely-accepted hadith,
Muhammad (pbuh) declared that one who sees him after his death, it as
if one has truly seen him, "because the devil cannot 'wear my shape'"
(Bukhari, Sahih, "Ta'bir" ).
"In Turkey proper, the most important Orders were the Khalwatiyya,
Bektashiyya, Mawlawiyya, and the Naqshabandiyya, though, since 'the
ways to God are as manifold as the souls', there are many thousand ways
and religious Orders." However, in an effort to "affirm their loyalty
to the sunna," (in response to contemporary spiritual trends), the
Orders are today saying that while there are as many ways to God as
there are human souls, all these souls must enter by the 'Door of
Muhammad.' New Sufis, most living in the West, are hearing this saying
about the 'ways to God' for the first time. Sheikh Muzaffer 'Ozak'
Ashki al-Halveti al-Jerrahi phrased it this way: "There are as many
ways to the top of the mountain as there are humans on earth." American
Sufis are taking Sheikh Muzaffer's words at face value and
understanding the meaning correctly. However, now the traditionalist
Sheikhs jump in, who are so afraid that this might open the door to the
realization that perhaps Allah has bestowed his wisdom on peoples other
than the Muslims, and so add the proviso, "but they must enter by the
door of Muhammad."
"The Khalwatiyya was a popular Order, based on reverence for the leader
with power, a reputation for strictness in training its dervishes, and
at the same time its encouragement of individualism. Consequently, it
was characterized by a continual process of splitting and re-splitting.
It is regarded as one of the original silsilas, or source-schools. Its
origins are obscure, for it had no original teaching personality behind
it like the other Ways, but rather an ascetic association in the
Malamati tradition." From this, we understand that the Khalwatiyya (or
Halvetiyya or Halveti Order) never had a founder, head, or center. In
addition, we see from scholarly investigation that 'splitting' or
'branching' has been the norm, and not the exception, in the Halveti
line.
"There came into existence a mystical school which placed it main
emphasis on individual asceticism (zuhd) and retreat (hkalwa). The
Khalwati tradition initially had strong links with the cult of Ali -
the Ithna'ashari or Twelver form, as is shown by the legend that Umar
al-Khalwati instituted the twelve-day fast in honor of the twelve Imams
- but finding their strongest support in Anatolia the leaders had to
reconcile themselves to a Sunni dynasty and their 'Alid teaching was
modified or relegated to their body of secret teaching."
There were many Khalwati (Halveti) ta'ifas, but the principal ones were:
¢ Ahmadiyya
¢ Sunbuliyya
¢ Sinaniyya
¢ Ighit-Bashiyya
¢ Sha'baniyya
¢ Shamsiyya
¢ Misriyya
¢ Jarrahiyya (also called Nuraddinis) founder:
Nur ad-din M. al-Jarrah (d. 1146/1720) in Istanbul.
¢ Jamaliyya
"The complete integration of saint-veneration with the Orders
characterizes this stage. The ta'ifa exists to transmit the holy
emanation, the baraka of its founder; the mystical tradition is
secondary."
Unfortunately, the repression and tyranny of Islamism, prevented subtle
exploration, development and dissemination of the techniques of
illumination. "What really happened is that the clamp placed on the
exercise of the mind was effective in suppressing speculative Sufism,
so that little genuine insight is to be expected from Sufi writings,
but official condemnations had no effect upon popular practices of the
Orders and especially the cult of saints."
We are taught today within the tariaqas that Shi'ism was (and is) a
movement engaged in by a very small, misguided minority, and that the
dervish-in-training needn't concern him or herself about Shi'ism. This
is another example of how the tariqas deliberately withhold information
from their members, and by design veil the record of olden times.
"Shi'ism under a Sufi cloak formed a powerful undercurrent within the
Kubrawi, Khalwati, Bektashi, and Bairami Orders. In the Ottoman Empire,
it had to remain under cover, but in Persia there were various Shi'i
Sufi movements, though with the formation of Shi'i states Sufi Orders
and their Sheikhs did not in fact fare very well. Sunni Orders were
naturally resented by the Shi'i mujtahids as having abandoned the Imam
for the murshid/qutb, but Shi'i Sufis also suffered."
It is a veritable and unexpected fact that often, quite accomplished
and brilliant Sheikhs are so caught up in their particular world, that
they are unaware of the activities and interests of other official
parts of their Order. Frequently, the activities of those who are
present at the Headquarters (the main dergah of the Grand Sheikh, where
the Pir is entombed) are amazingly diverse, including frequent visits
to other Orders dergahs, and participation in numerous ceremonies
honoring Sunni and Shi'a holy days. In other words, it is possible to
receive an incomplete vision of the scope of a Sufi Order, merely by
attending the meetings of one Sheikh of the Order. As travel is
essential for the Sufi, the author states that travel to the head degah
is mandatory, for each Sheikh is a particular flavor, but to taste the
soup one must go to the kitchen.
Let us briefly look at the Tijaniyya Sufi Order. Abu'l-Abbas Ahmad b.
Muhammad b. Al-Mukhtar at-Tijani was born in 1150/1737 at Ain Madi in
the south of Algeria. He became affiliate to many Orders and a muqaddam
of the Khalwatiyya. He received the call the found his own independent
Order: "The Prophet gave him permission to initiate during a period
when he had fled from contact with people in order to devote himself to
his personal development, not yet daring to claim Sheikhship until
given permission, when in a waking and not sleeping state, to train men
in general and unrestrictedly, and had had assigned to him the wird he
was to transmit." At first, he adopted the Khalwati line for his chain
of succession, but this was eventually discarded. "His followers were
strictly forbidden, not merely to pay the ahd of allegiance to any
other Sheikh, but to make invocations to any wali other than himself
and those of his Order: 'When the Prophet had given him permission to
found his apostolic Way and he had received divine power through his
mediumship the Prophet told him, "You owe no favor to any of the
Sheikhs of the Path, for I am your medium and provider in very truth.
Abandon all that you have taken in anything concerning the Path."
Tijanis consequently have only one silsila going back to the founder.
Sufism is wild with diversity. Repeatedly, innocent students are
attacked with the club of coercion that claims, "Ours is the best way.
Our Saint is the best Saint." Some Orders claim that they are
comprehensive, and invent various ways to state that they are the
culmination of all the other major tariqas, or that all the other major
tariqas have honored them by sharing major aspects of these other
Order's formal practices (such as permission to whirl).
For example, Muhammad Uthman who lived during the early 1800's, not
even one hundred years after the death of Nureddin Jerrahi, claimed
that his tariqa is comprehensive, embracing the essence of the
Naqshabandiyya, Shadhiliyya, Qadriyya, Junaidiyya, and the Mirghaniyya
of his grandfather; "therefore anyone who takes the tariqa from him and
follows his Path will link himself on to the chains (asanid) of
these tariqas." Muhammad ibn 'Ali (1787-1859) claimed "that all the
silsilas of existing Orders had been brought together and unified in
himself, and in his book Ar-Salsabil al-ma'in fi t-tara'iq al-arba'in
he describes their dhikr requirements to show how his Way fulfills them
all."
The novice is then faced with the question: which Pir/Sheikh/Khalifa is
telling me the truth? Is there truly one Order that is superior to all
other Orders and subsumes the essence of them all? On the other hand,
is this just another example of the boasting of human beings, and their
need to be 'number one' at any cost? The author strongly suggests that
the would-be Sufi shop around, with a humble, God-fearing attitude,
while at the same time praying earnestly to Allah to guide him or her
to the 'Spring of Enlightenment.' Just as some students fair best in
illustrious universities like Harvard or Cambridge that boast of their
distinguished histories, other students advance better in schools such
as Hampshire College, a school that has a new educational paradigm that
emphasizes each student's curiosity and motivation; broad,
multidisciplinary learning; and close mentoring relationships with
teachers. Living cannot easily be separated from learning at Hampshire.
The house system is designed to encourage participation by residents in
a variety of social and intellectual activities. Students who share an
academic interest may create informal study groups that develop into
friendships; one's social or political involvements often surface as
substantive intellectual questions in one's academic work. This
integration of academic and community concerns is part of what makes it
unique among liberal arts colleges.
"With Muhammad, Khatim al-anbiya (Seal of the Prophets), the cycle of
prophecy was closed, but God did not thenceforth leave His people
without guidance on the way of Himself. For the majority, the guide was
the revealed Law (Shar) which is for the whole community, and the ulama
were the inheritors of the prophets as the guardians and interpreters
of the Law. For others, those who came to be known as Sufis, direct
communion with God was possible. Their mission, though an individual
search, was to maintain among men a realization of the inner Reality
that made the Shar [Shariat] valid. This Way normally involved a guide,
but of these there were many . . ."
Behind innumerable spiritual transmissions, one perceives the 'Servant
of the Fatiha' al-Khadir (a.s.) himself. "The Sufi guides, like the
Imams, also possess esoteric knowledge, but, unlike the Imams, their
esoteric knowledge has come to them, not by genealogical, but by
spiritual progression. In fact, it came to them by a twofold action of
God: by transmission from Muhammad, through a chain of elect masters,
and also by direct inspiration from God, often through the mediation of
al-Khadir, like Gabriel to Muhammad."
"The developed silsila of the Orders embraces two divisions: silsilat
al-baraka (chain of benediction), connects the present Sheikh through
the founder of the ta'ifa with the founder of the tariqa; whilst
silsilat al-Wird (chain of initiation) connects the tariqa-founder with
one of the first khalifas and the Prophet."
A sense of awe and veneration in one's soul is important if one aspires
to become a dervish. The greater the sense of awe, the greater the
degree of disappearance of the self. Therefore, for some aspirants,
stories of the venerableness of a Sufi Order serve the purpose of
developing these qualities. However, for others who have already
developed these qualities, the stories are completely useless. One
person requires one medicine, another person requires a different
medicine. Some aspirants need to hear the truths spoken by a Sheikh in
a foreign accent, so that by virtue of the foreign accent, the aspirant
truly hears what is being said. The aspirant thinks that because a
foreign Sufi expert is uttering these words, they must be important, so
he or she listens more carefully than he or she might otherwise listen.
Others will listen without the need for someone to speak in a foreign
accent. Some people require all sorts of 'stage effects': thunder,
lightening, rain, wind, clouds, angels, Deus ex Machina, and so forth.
While others have no need for such appearances, and prefer to go
directly to the heart of the matter.
It is thought by some, that to be a Sheikh, one needs an ijaza
(license). "There are three types of ijaza. The first is that given to
a dervish or adept giving his qualifications and permitting him to
practice in the name of his master; the second is given to a khalifa or
muqaddam authorizing him to confer the wird, that is, admit others into
the tariqa; whilst the third type simple affirms that the holder has
followed a particular course of Sufi instruction. The fact that Sufis
claimed several initiations and possessed a number of ijazas has caused
confusion and misunderstanding, for many ijazas were only concerned
with announcing that the recipient had followed a course, perhaps
absorption of a Sufi book, and been given a license to teach it, or to
recite a word of power, such as ash-Shadhili's Hisb al-Bahr with power.
In India even choirmen (qawwals) were given a singing license."
Sir Richard Burton translated a ijaza which, he said, gave him
authority as "Darwish Abdallah" to act as a murshid in the Qadiri
Order, but in fact it simply says that he has been given instruction in
the Saying of Unity with authority to recite it 165 times after each
farida (obligatory ritual prayer) and on any other occasion according
to his ability. This ijaza was four feet five inches long and about six
and a half inches broad. The length of this ijaza is not at all
extraordinary, nor perhaps the very flexible way Sir Burton utilized
his ijaza for his own personal purposes.
Many Sheikhs never wrote an ijaza-nama for anyone. So their statements
gained crucial importance after their death. For example, Munis Ali
Shah, the great Nimatullahi Sheikh, also known as Dhu'l Riyasatayn
'Lord of the Two Masteries' for his knowledge of both exoteric and
esoteric Islam, did not write an ijaza-nama for anyone. He refers in
one of his writings to Dr. Javad Nurbakhsh as my "sole spiritual son."
Published five years before his death, the words "my sole spiritual
son" in fact, today provide the only indication or announcement as to
whom Munis Ali Shah wanted to inherit the Ni'matullahi mantle.
Therefore, contrary to popular opinion, one does not need an ijaza
(license) to become a Sheikh, as no one can possibly call into question
Dr. Javad Nurbakhsh's qualifications or claim to the title.
We are not claiming to have been commanded by the Prophet in a dream to
found a new Way. We are only pointing out that transmission occurs at
all levels in Sufi training, and that this transmission of 'heart
knowledge' occurs by the Divine guidance of an unseen teacher or
'spirit-sheikh'. In addition, the bestowal of a physical ijaza, has
been impossible throughout the history of Sufism, when the invisible
teacher initiates a khalifa. The entire notion of an ijaza was
non-existent for saintly and pious Sufis for hundreds of years after
the Prophet's passing, until Sufism took on most of the practices of
Guilds. The new student of Sufism may choose to ponder why he or she
may place such a strong emphasis on something visible like an ijaza,
when he or she is in the business of searching for the invisible.
When Jalaludin Rumi started to recite his couplets of wisdom, it is
reported, people had not had enough time to form any opinion of him.
Some were interested, some were not. Others, following an inevitable
human pattern, resented him. They said, "We hope that you do not think
that you are a second Æsop or something." Many members of
traditional Sufi Orders absolutely refuse to believe that any
improvements can be made in their Order, and consider it unthinkable
that another waliullah might appear within their ranks. Yet, of course,
where did all the Sufi aulia appear since the 13th Century? They
appeared, for the most part, precisely within the ranks of dervish
Orders.
The author asks that you permit him to pose a few questions. Do you
feel immersed in love within your tariqa? Do the people in your Sufi
group go out of their way to befriend you, to get to know you without
judging you? Do the members make you feel comfortable and included in
group activities? Does a sense of ease and spontaneity pervade your
gatherings? Do people from the group contact you and come visit you
when you are in need or are sick? Does the fellowship of the group
extend beyond the confines of the weekly meetings? Is the Sheikh's
presence the only reason you gather? Even if the Sheikh is not present,
do you still feel in your heart a desire to spend time with the group
members? Do you actually visit with them, going out for a coffee
together, for example? Do you feel your fellow Sufis want to add to
your knowledge and take the time to explain what they know to you? Most
important, does your heart feel joy when you are with the group?
On the other hand, is your tariqa filled with tension, rigidity,
jealousy, guarded behavior, and jockeying for position? Do you feel a
constant gnawing fear of not doing something you should be doing or
doing something you should not be doing? Do people frequently tell you,
in a grouchy way, that you have done something incorrectly? Do people
question you about whether or not you are faithfully performing your
religious practices? Do you notice that there are certain cliques of
dervishes who are invited certain places (sobhets, jumma, etc.) with
the Sheikh, events which are not made known to the general community of
dervishes before the event? Do you wonder where everyone goes after the
group meeting? Do you only concern yourself with whether or not the
Sheikh loves you? Are you only mildly interested in the community's
love? Shams-i Tabrizi said, "When something needs to be said, I'll say
it even if the whole world grabs me by the beard and tells me not to.
Even if it be after a thousand years, these words will reach those for
whom they're intended." In the spirit of Shams-i Tabrizi, this author
continues to say what needs to be said, even though he may earn the
contempt of certain sheikhs, tariqats, and dervishes for his
outspokenness. What needs to be said is that the above warning signs
indicate that your group is spiritually dead. They thirst not and would
not be called people like us. These warning signs indicate that you are
not sitting among the Table of Lovers. In short, your group is not
teaching you love, they are teaching you separation, the principle of
negation. If you notice these warning signs in your group, the author
strongly suggests that you have nothing to do with these people.
Many Sheikhs from various Sufi Orders require a great deal, in terms of
respect, attendance and obedience, from their dervishes. Yet, the
author asks, what is given in return? It seems that, in recent times,
many tariqas have a poor record of accomplishment with regard to
helping their students achieve illumination and enlightenment. It is
easy to fail to notice this all-important fact because the
dervish-in-training is quickly caught up in the hubbub of activity
taking place all the time in these groups. People invest so much time,
and become so involved in an Order, that psychologically they reach a
point of no return, and then they do not want to delve into the issue
of enlightenment. They come to an Order seeking the waters of life, and
amazingly, end up satisfied with honoring others in the past who have
found the waters of life.
If your intention is to join an 'official' Sufi tariqat, then it is
reasonable to insist on superior personal instruction from this Order,
for this Order will require a life-long commitment from you. After all,
in spite of all the ways tariqas deflect the student today from his or
her true purpose, the reason you join a tariqat is transmission.
What does the author mean by an 'official' Sufi tariqat? Such a tariqat
is a traditional, conservative, and established Sufi Order that
features:
¢ a vast body of rules and regulations
¢ an extensive hierarchy
¢ exceedingly meticulous adab
¢ much formal pageantry
¢ various robes, mantles, turbans, hats, belts,
boots, walking sticks, and other accoutrements, all according to one's
position in the organization
¢ rituals for all sorts of occasions
¢ initiations and the swearing of allegiance
¢ an observed adherence to all the rules of
Islamic shariat
¢ a requisite that one be a Muslim for
admittance to the Order
Yet, in actual practice, the dervish-in-training receives very little
superior personal instruction, precisely because while everyone is so
involved with performing nonessential activities, the essential is all
but forgotten. The author believes that these nonessential activities
are also a smokescreen, in other words, they are a way that a Sheikh
can make his or her disciples feel that they have received something
valuable, thus permitting the Sheikh to successfully hide the fact that
he or she knows nothing about how to enlighten his or her disciples.
The most personal instruction some dervishes receive for years is to
practice tesbih (repeating the names of God on a rosary) a certain
amount of times each day. Being handed a book of devotions, or a manual
about meditation, is not a substitute for the heart-to-heart
transmission that takes place between Sheikh and Disciple.
Through fasting, retention of the breath, remembering Allah (Zikr), and
conscious suffering, one opens the heart to receive the keys to
Ma'rifat (Gnosis). Transmission occurs through Allah's permission and
within Allah. Sufis say: "By the Light of Allah I see Allah."
Transmission, or knowledge of the light of the heart, may occur
through:
" a direct vibration from HU, the God-force, example:
majdhubs
" a visitation by the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh),
example: Pir Muhammad Nureddin al-Jerrahi
" a visitation by any of the Prophets of Allah (upon
whom be peace), example: There are Sufis who are said to be upon the
foot of Jesus (Isawi) like the first physical teacher of Ibn al-'Arabi,
others are upon the foot of Moses (Musawi), but as they are
following the Islamic shariah they are having their specific emphasis
(Isawi, Musawi) because of Muhammad (pbuh).
" the Friends of Allah, example: Jalal ad-Din Rumi
received transmission from Shams-i Tabrizi
" Pirs, Saints and Sheikhs in the Spirit Realms,
example: Abu al-Hasan Kharaqani (may Allah be pleased with him)
[d.1034] was initiated by the spirit of Bayazid Bistami; the
nonphysical binding of two likeminded Sufis shows up with particular
force in the Sabiri branch of the Chishtiyya. It is Sheikh Abd
al-Quddus (d. 1537) who declares himself to be the beneficiary of an
Uwaysi initiation through the spirit of the deceased Sheikh Abd al-Haqq
Rudawlavi (d. 1434). Al-Nabulusi firmly believed that initiation in a
Sufi order could be given by the spirit of a deceased Sheikh during
sleep.
" al-Khadir (a.s.)., example: a number of famous
Sufis who have been initiated by the deathless Prophet Khadir (a.s.).
He figures in the silsilas (chains of authority) for many Sufis. Rahman
Baba (1650 - 1715 CE) wrote, "On the path which I travel to see my
love, make holy Khizer and Ilyas my guides." Makhdum Ali Mahimi
(1372-1431 CE) acquired knowledge from al-Khadir, whom he met in secret
on the Mahim seashore every morning (al-Khadir is regarded as patron
saints of travelers and is a mysterious figure connected with
initiation and the highest sources of mystical inspiration ).
By seeing Allah's Nur (Light) in the depths of one's heart, the soul is
drawn like a magnet back to the Place of the light. In this precious
jewel that is called the heart, the Sufi has found that which is more
effulgent than the sun.
What does it mean to be fully enlightened? Do we measure perfection
with a human yardstick or a divine yardstick? Elizabeth Lesser writes
about her work at Omega Institute, "I have met thousands of people from
all walks of life. I have yet to meet a 'normal' one, if normal means
consistently sane, contented, and capable. And yet most of us hold
ourselves up to an unattainable standard of human perfection. The
12th-century Sufi poet Rumi called this phenomenon the 'Open Secret.'
He said each one of us is trying to hide the same secret from each
other-not some racy or evil secret, but the mere fact of our flawed
humanness. We expend so much energy trying to conceal our ordinary
bewilderment at being human, or our loneliness in the crowd, or that
nagging sense that everyone else has it more together than we do, that
we miss out on the chance to really connect, which is what we
ultimately long for." Beware of Sheikhs that pretend they are perfect
and deliberately make you think (and feel) that you should live up to
this impossible standard. The only result of this type of perfectionism
is a crushing sense of guilt, shame and repressed anger. Hazreti Pir
Nureddin al-Jerrahi prays in his 'Wird al-Sharif,' - "Heal our
brokenness and transform our impoverished consciousness into a wealth
of love." The Sheikh who openly admits his or her human frailties,
instead of expending huge amounts of energy to portray him or herself
as perfect, is the Sheikh you should choose as your Murshid.
Sheikha Fariha Fatima al-Jerrahi speaks about looking at the "innate
perfection within," and urges us "to be truly who we are." She teaches
that each human is innately perfect. Yet, part of being a dervish is to
take responsibility for the flaws in ourselves. The dervish takes
complete responsibility for his or her life, instead of blaming other
people. We do not wait around for the 'perfect master.' We can say with
certainty that perfection was achieved by one human being, the Prophet
Muhammad (pbuh), because he was called the insan kamil. There have
been, and are, others. The title insan kamil does not mean these human
beings are without error or fault; that title means they have realized
a certain station within Allah, so that their faults, their wrongs,
their defects become virtues, become mercies for other people. That is
the station of insan kamil. There is only one Master, that Master
is Allah, and so we are the servants. A Sufi Master, a Sheikh, is
actually a slave.
How can Allahu ta'ala manifest His Attribute of Mercy if people have no
faults? The Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) taught us to say astagfirullah
precisely so that Allah may manifest His Quality of Mercy to humanity.
Yet, how many disciples believe that their Grand Sheikh has no faults?
It is true, is it not? These Grand Sheikhs walk around in a very pious
manner that leads their disciples to believe they are perfect. Sheikha
Fariha al-Jerrahi teaches, "We are perfect as Allah permits humanity to
be perfect." To be a teacher, a Sheikh, does not mean that one is
perfect. A Sheikh makes a great mistake to act or pretend he or she is
perfect.
We need to seek for an Order that embodies the eternal realities but
which has teachings that show new trends and adaptations for life in a
changing world. What is of assistance and valuable from traditional
Sufism we hold on to tightly; what is merely cultural and political
accretion we discard. As Arthur Smith, Ph.D. writes, "Some of what
worked a hundred years ago is less effective now. To be of use Sufism
must operate in the time and culture in which the pre-illuminated find
themselves. This means, in part, that techniques must take into account
cultural bias and make use of current technology when helpful. Just as
we use e-mail as one way to communicate, we should not fear or discount
modern technology when useful to our endeavor." Allah Most High is
constantly renewing his own creation. Therefore, authentic Sufism
continues to renew itself and will appear in guises that are often
pleasantly surprising (to those who love Allah), threatening (to
established tariqas) and shocking (to those who look to Sufism as a
pleasant way to spend a Sunday afternoon).
The price of immortality is so cheap, yet so few people buy it.
As we were told by our Grand Sheikh Muzaffer "Ashki" Ozak Efendi
al-Halveti al-Jerrahi (rahmetullah aleyh), "We have to read our Qur'an
within ourselves."
All mistakes in this article are the fault of the author. All truths
that humans express are only partial truths. Allah knows best.
© 2005 Sheikh Abdullah Muzaffer Laurence Galian, except where
otherwise noted. All rights reserved.
GLOSSARY
A.H. - The Islamic calendar or Muslim calendar (also called
"Hijri calendar", Arabic ??????? ??????) is the calendar used to date
events in many predominantly Muslim countries, and used by Muslims
everywhere to determine the proper day on which to celebrate Muslim
holy days. Islamic years are also called Hijra years because the first
year was the year during which the Hijra occurred-Muhammad's emigration
from Mecca to Medina in 622 CE. It is a purely lunar calendar having 12
lunar months in a year of about 354 days. Because this lunar year is
about 11 days shorter than the solar year, Muslim holy days, although
celebrated on fixed dates in their own calendar, usually shift 11 days
earlier each successive solar year, such as a year of the Gregorian
calendar. Thus each numbered year is designated either H or AH, the
latter being the initials of the Latin anno Hegirae (in the year of the
Hijra).
Astagfirullah - "forgive me Allah"
Awliya - friends of Allah.
Baraka - blessings; sanctity or blessing, obtained through saints or
saints tombs; originating from Allah and then passed to the Prophets
and from them to the saints and Pirs; progress will not be made without
the attention of the Sheikh [living or spirit-sheikh] because the
baraka leading one along the Sufi path is transmitted only through him
or her.
Barzakh - A limit or boundary separating two things is called barzakh
in Arabic, which explains why the intermediate realm that separates the
temporary and evanescent life of this world from the eternal life of
the hereafter is also called barzakh. Definition courtesy of Sayyid
Mujtaba Musavi Lari.
CE - The Common Era (CE), also known as the Christian Era and sometimes
the Current Era, is the period of measured time beginning with the year
1 until the present. The term is used for a system of reckoning years
that is chronologically equivalent to the anno Domini (AD) (Latin for
"in the year of [our] Lord") system, but with less overt religious
implications. Although common era was a term first used by some
Christians in an age when Christianity was the common religion of the
West, it is now a term preferred by some as a religiously neutral, and
academically correct, alternative.
Dergah - "Royal court," the tomb of a saint and also the center that
serves as the headquarters of a particular branch of an order.
faqir - see 'fuqura'.
Fuqara - While the classical translation of fuqara` (Poor, sing faqir)
implies poverty, it is different for the word 'miskeen', which also
means poor, implying poverty but signifying an irreparable lacking of
means to recover. The Sufis use the word 'faqir' to signify one who is
acutely aware of his dependence upon Allah for all things, and in
another to signify a dervish, or one belong to a Sufi Order. In this
significance, the Sheikh, master or teacher of the order is the 'owner
of the house, the host at the table of whom sit the guests, the
'fuqara`'.
Hadith Qudsi - Hadith Qudsi (or Sacred Hadith) are a sub-category of
hadith, which are sayings of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh). Hadith Qudsi
are said to be the words of Allah, repeated by Muhammad (pbuh) and
recorded on the condition of an isnad (chain of verification by
witness(s) who heard Muhammad (pbuh) say the hadith). A hadith
containing words of Allah that were narrated by the Prophet (pbuh), but
which do not form part of the Qur'an.
Ikwan - brethren.
Isnad - chain.
Khalifa - Khilafath is the process in which a Sheikh identifies one of
his disciples as his successor (Khalifa). A Murshid (Sufi Teacher or
Sheikh) can have more than one khalifa.
Madhab - a method; a method of interpretation of religious material in
the three major areas: belief, religious practice and law. Formed
before the most authentic hadith (sayings of the Prophet) collections
like Bukhari and Muslim were gathered. The hadith, used by such madhab
founders as Abu Hanifa and Malik as a basis, are not always
satisfactorily authentic. The scholars of the madhabs living after its
founder sometimes significantly altered his rulings. Many were in
existence before 1300's, but afterward, only four remain official: the
schools of thought of Malik, ash-Shafi'e, Abu Hanifa, and Ahmad.
Maqamat - stages.
Mushahada - contemplation.
Mashrab - style or way of belief.
Nisba - affiliation.
Radiallahu an - means 'Allah's blessings be on him'; sometimes
abbreviated as 'r.a.'; blessings here means Allah's acceptance on
everything that they do.
Radiallahu anha - means 'Allah's blessings be on her'; sometimes
abbreviated as 'r.a.'; blessings here means Allah's acceptance on
everything that they do.
Rasulallah - literally this means 'envoy' or 'apostle' of God. Muhammad
(pbuh) was a rasul; Rasul is also an Arabic word that is derived from
the word, Risalat, meaning, to send. Thus, the meaning of Rasul is, one
who is sent from Allah; Rasul is a type of nabi (prophet).
Shariat - the Arabic word for Islamic law, also known as the Law of
Allah. Islam classically draws no distinction between religious and
secular life. Hence Sharia covers not only religious rituals, but many
aspects of day-to-day life, politics, economics, banking, business or
contract law, and social issues. Fascinatingly, the term itself refers
to 'way to water' or a 'break in a riverbank allowing access to water.
...'
Silsila - writing out the names of the masters of the order; what
resulted was a filial tree, or shajara.
Sufi - A devout follower of School of Sufism; Sufism is a mystical and
spiritual sect of Islam; the words 'fakir' (Arabic), '???? tas?awwuf'
(Arabic), and 'dervish' (Persian) are sometimes used to refer to Sufis.
Sufism develops an inner way to mystical union with God. It frequently
wears the cloak of Islam, and is sometimes seen as the esoteric
dimension of the Islamic faith. A Sufi may or may not embrace Islam,
but will be respectful of all faiths, seeing the path of truth that
lies within their core. A Sufi is a human being who seeks direct
experience of Allah.
Ta'ifa - this word has the specialist technical sense of a Sufi order.
Tariqa - Way or path; the path followed by mystical schools of
interpretation in Islam; the Arabic word tarika or Tariqa: ????? (pl.:
turuq: ???) means 'way' or 'path' and, in the Sufi tradition of Islam
is conceptually related to Haqiqa, or Truth, the ineffable ideal that
is the pursuit of the tradition. Thus, one starts at the Sharia, the
exoteric or mundane practice of Islam, and adopts a tariqa towards the
Haqiqa. The term has commonly come to be used to designate a Sufi
Order.
Tas?awwuf - Sufism (Arabic ???? tas?awwuf) is a system of esoteric
philosophy associated with Islam. In modern language, it might also be
referred to as "Islamic spirituality" or "Islamic mysticism." Some
non-Islamic Sufi organizations also exist, especially in the West.
Tekke - Literally "corner" (Turk.); lodge; synonymous with Khaniqah
(Pers.) and Zawiyya (At).
Ulama - doctors of Islamic law; Islamic legalists.
Uwaysi - Uways al-Qarani embraced Islam in Yemen, and greatly desired
to travel to Medina to meet Prophet Muhammad (pbuh). But his old mother
wanted him to stay home and take care of her. She gave him permission
to go on the condition that as soon as he got to the Prophet's house,
he would turn around and come right back without going anyplace else.
The Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) happened to be out when he reached there.
But Uways was obedient to the promise he'd made to his mother, so he
never did get to meet the Prophet. For his love for the Prophet and his
filial piety, he was raised to the same spiritual station as the
Sahabah, the Prophet's Companions. The concept is that he received his
initiation into sainthood in a purely spiritual way, without a
face-to-face meeting. So when a Sufi receives by the grace of God a
spiritual initiation without physical contact with a Sheikh, he is said
to be an "Uwaysi."
Wali - see Waliullah.
Waliullah - Arabic word, literally meaning protector or guardian. In
the spritual tradition of Islam, a Wali , or Waliullah/WaliAllah is a
friend of Allah. Usually these people are members of Sufi (mystic)
communities who are considered to have a special relationship with
Allah. Famous Walis include Ali (a.s.), son-in-law of Muhammed (pbuh);
Fatima (a.s.), daughter of the prophet.
Zawiyya - The term zawiyya appeared in the Maghrib around the
13th Century and was synonymous with ribat, i.e. the minaret
where the wali retreated and around which his students and murids
lived. Ibn Mazruq says, "This zawiyya is the term for what is called
ribats, khanqahs and khanaqat in the east." The terms dergah, ribat,
khanaqah, tekke, and zawiyya are so close in meaning, that anyone
should be excused for using them interchangeably.