Sunday, September 30, 2007

800 Years of Mawlana Rumi

The roar of Rumi - 800 years on
By Charles Haviland BBC News, Balkh, northern Afghanistan

For many years now, the most popular poet in America has been a 13th-century mystical Muslim scholar.
Translations of Mawlana Jalaluddin Rumi's - better known as Rumi - verse are hugely popular and have been used by Western pop stars such as Madonna.
They are attracted by his tributes to the power of love and his belief in the spiritual use of music and dancing - although scholars stress that he was talking about spiritual love between people and God, not earthly love.
Rumi, whose 800th birth anniversary falls on Sunday, was born in 1207 in Balkh in Central Asia, now part of Afghanistan.
I came here to see whether he has much resonance in his native country which, under the Taleban, went so far as to ban music.
Still standing
A young Afghan archaeologist, Reza Hosseini, took me to the ruins of the mud-and-brick-built khanaqa - a kind of madrassa or religious school - where Rumi's father taught and the young boy is believed to have studied, lying just outside the old mud city walls and probably within yards of his birthplace.
It is a quiet and melancholy place, the structure eroded and encroached on by shrubs and bushes.

An amazing amount of the madrassa is still surprisingly intact
But an amazing amount of it is still standing - the square structure, its four arches with pointed tops, in the Islamic style, and half of the graceful dome.
Mr Hosseini says the floor was originally constructed of baked bricks and lined with carpets donated by those who came to share the learning.
Sufism - or Islamic mysticism - was already enshrined here before Rumi's time and Mr Hosseini imagines that this corner of the town, by the madrassa, would have echoed to the sound of Sufi singing and prayer.
But, he says, it is unclear how widespread, or acceptable, practices such as music and dance were in the wider population.
When Rumi was barely out of his teens, Balkh was reduced to rubble by Genghis Khan's marauding Mongol invaders.
Rumi had fled in advance with his family and settled in Konya, now in Turkey.
After the murder of his close friend, a Persian wandering dervish called Shams-i-Tabriz, he was depressed for years but later wrote his greatest poetic work, the Mathnawi.
It describes the soul's separation from God and the mutual yearning to reunite.
With his injunctions of tolerance and love, he has universal appeal, says Abdul Qadir Misbah, a culture specialist in the Balkh provincial government.
"Whether a person is from East or West, he can feel the roar of Rumi," he says.

To Read Entire Article, Click Here

The Wisdom of Creation

In his intimate conversation with God, one of the early Sufis said:

'My Lord, what is the wisdom behind my being created?' He replied, 'It is so that you may behold Me in the mirror of your soul, and have love for Me in your heart."
(Tamhidat, 272).

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Ramadan Mubarak!

Ramadan Mubarak!


I just wanted to take a few minutes to wish you all a joyful and heartfelt Ramadhan Mubarak. May Allah Most High open for each one of you the doors of mercy, forgiveness and reward in the month we all cherish and look forward to. May we emerge with enlightened hearts, refined characters and experience an ever-increasing closeness to Him. May He grant you all a forgiveness from today to the last day....and may the doors of Janaah be opened for you and may you all be granted eternal bliss in the company of those whom you love. May Allah accept and increase in a measure only He can all your works this blessed month and may you all be granted the taufiq to continue your works for the rest of your lives.

I ask those who know me to forgive me for my shortcomings and mistakes and please remember me and my family in your dua's.

Saturday, September 01, 2007

UK Suhba Notes

Alhamdulillah, some of the UK murids compiled their suhba notes and posted them online. Excellent for those of us who couldn't be there.

Click here to read them.