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Islamic Mysticism (Tassawuff)
By Maulana Manzoor
Naumani (RA)
A very special branch of the Faith,
through which it is carried to perfection, is Ehsan, as the Prophet's (Peace be
upon him) Tradition describe it, or Tasawwuf, as it is known in common parlance.
In plain words, it means the creation of a real, living consciousness of God a
consciousness so strong and vivid as if one had actually seen him, sweeping
aside every trace of doubt and uncertainty. When this consciousness becomes
complete, it forges a bond of loyalty with God that fills the heart with his
remembrance, his love and an intense awareness of his night; it becomes the
essence, the ruling spirit, of one's existence, of all one's thought and action,
in prayer, in morality, in social behavior, in monetary dealings, and, so forth.
All that one does then is inspired, governed and regulated by this all embracing
faith and overpowering realization. One's external life gets completely pervaded
by this internal feeling.
Ehsan or Tasawwuf, thus, represents the very pinnacle of faith. It is the
supreme standard of one's spiritual state. One is perfect in his faith. Or not
according to the measure with which he is blessed with this wealth. The famous
Tradition of the Prophet (Peace be upon him) consisting of the dialogue between
him and angel, Gabriel, is a pointer in this direction. The manner in which the
term Ehsan occurs in it after Imam and Islam testifies to the truth of the
assertion that Ehsan marks the ultimate stage in the evolution of faith.
Briefly, the Tradition says that one day the Prophet (Peace be upon him) was
sitting with some of the Companions that Gabriel came in disguised as a traveler
from a far-off place. He took his seat close to the Prophet (Peace be upon him)
and began to ask him some questions. The first was, "What is Islam (Faith)?"
And, the second, "What is Islam?. The Prophet (Peace be upon him) gave suitable
replies to his questions. Then he asked, "What is Ehsan" The Prophet (Peace be
upon him) answered, "Ehsan means to worship God as if one is actually seeing him
or is being seen by him."(In other words, the stage of Ehsan is reached when the
awareness of God becomes the greatest reality of one's life and one's every act
is performed under a constant sense of his presence for although man cannot see
God it is just not possible in this material world God does see him all the
time).
This state of sublimity can exist only when faith has worked itself out to the
highest degree and become one's life-breath. It was for the attainment of this
state that the Prophet (Peace be upon him) would beg fervently to God. "O God!
he would say, "Let such be my state that I may fear Thee and revere Thee as if I
was seeing Thee constantly till (at last) my time came and I went up to join
Thee."
This condition is known among the Sufis(Muslim mystics) as Huzoori (presence)
and Yad-Dasht (remembrance) and Nisbat (affinity), and when anyone is described
by them as Saheb-i-Nisbat, it denotes that he has arrived at it in a
considerable way. When this state of spirituality is reached, a person gets
permanently attuned to God and becomes immune to all kinds of doubts and
misgivings concerning his being. Setting forth his own experience in one of his
letters, Hazrat Mujaddid Alf-Sani says: "Acting on the postulate: 'Acknowledge
publicity the boons conferred by God,'a Dervish of his (Naqshbandi) school
narrates about himself that all doubts and fears have totally disappeared from
his heart, so much so that even if he lives for a thousand years like the
(Hebrew). Prophet, Nooh (Alai-hi-Salam), not a single doubt or temptation can
creep into it may, it cannot creep into it even if he himself strives for it for
many a long year".
As a natural outcome of this all-pervading effulgence of faith, this
all-engulfing sense of Divine presence, all other ties and attachments are
merged and lose their identity in the one great allegiance to Almighty, and all
internal and external acts, such as, love, friendship, enmity and social and
business intercourse begin to be gone through and carried out for his sake
alone. A Tradition of the Prophet (Peace be upon him) on the subject of Ehsan
tells that " A person whose state may be that when he loves, he loves for the
sake of God and when he hates, he hates for the sake of God, and when he gives,
he gives for the sake of God and when he withholds his hand from giving, he
withholds it for the sake of God he has attained perfection in his faith.
The most exalted position in this respect was that of the Prophet (Peace be upon
him). He operated on the highest level to which a man can evolve his destiny
from the point of view of faith and Ehsan. In his life there was contained the
most ideal blending of knowledge and awareness, and piety and the fear of God.
He used often to say of himself, "No one among you fears God more than me, no
one reverses him more intensely than me, and no one possesses a greater
knowledge and a more complete awareness of him than me."
From the Prophet (Peace be upon him) his Companions had received their share
aptitude and circumstances, and the possess-
ion of this very commodity has remained throughout the high merit of the
Sufi-saints of Islam. All their special spiritual exertions remembrance,
meditation and acts of self-purgation have had no other aim than the acquirement
of it. As Hazrat Gangohi, a Sufi-saint of the Current century, writes, "This is
the ultimate goal of all systems (of Sufism)......... Why had the holy
Companions sacrificed all that they had life, family, property and everything?
What had they seen? It was simply because of the fact that they had acquired
absolute faith in God through their association with the Prophet (Peace be upon
him). This was, with them, the measure of all things. How did Sheikh Abdul Qadir
Jilani, Moinuddin Chishti and Bahauddin Bukhari climb to greatness? Through this
very faith". A few lines later, the great Sufi goes on to observe: " This
forging of link (with God) is called Ehsan. The raising up of the Prophet (Peace
be upon him) was for its sake alone and all the Holy Companions were endowed
with it in different degrees. The saints of the Ummat than produced it through
another way."
The real thing, therefore, is the acquirement of the light of faith and the
inner feeling of Ehsan. The holy Companions had realized this state through the
fullness of their love for and devotion to the Prophet (Peace be upon him),
through the intimateness of their association with him, and through dedicating
themselves to life of virtue under his advice and direction, and the making of
utmost sacrifices in the case of God. After the death of the Prophet (Peace be
upon him), the Companions, both individually and as a body, functioned as his
successors and representatives in the line, and as long as they remained in the
world the exalted state of Ehsan could be gained by sitting at their feet.
When the Companions, too, were gone and symptoms of moral and spiritual
degradation began to make themselves manifest in the Muslim society with the
laps of time, a stage came when the high should men in the Ummat, who still
cherished in their hearts the heritage of Ehsan and occupied the same elevated
position in their branch as the Mujahids in Figh, stirred themselves into
activity. Seeing that the inspiring society of the Prophet (Peace be upon him)
and the Companions was available no more and the Muslim Millet was moving down
steadily from the ideal of righteous-doing to corruption, they evolved certain
methods for the kindling of the flame of faith in the hearts and the generation
of that feeling of God realisation which is the essence of Ehsan. These methods
included excessive remembrance of God, meditation, and the control and
discipline of the desires and impulses of the self. Their utility is
self-evident and their is a clear proof also of their correctness and
effectiveness in the original sanctions of the Faith and Shariat. The bulk of
the Ummat has consistently reposed its trust in the sounded of these methods and
in the integrity of the holy men who had worked them out, and they have,
further, received the greatest of sanctions the sanction of time. These last two
factors, more than anything else, place the worth and merit of the practices
indicated above beyond the realm of controversy.
For a thousand years and more, the finest
elements in the community, from the point of view of faith, have affirmed that
the system in vogue among the Sufis for spiritual self-evolution and the
creation and strengthening of God-consciousness is fundamentally correct and
efficacious in practice. Who can deny that hundreds and thousands of men have
derived an immense benefit as a result of their spiritual association with each
of the leading Sufi-saints like Khwaja Maroof Karkhi, Bishar Hafi. Siri Saqati,
Shafiq Balakhi, Bayazeed Bustami, Junaid Baghdadi, Abu Bakr Shibi, Sheikh Abdul
Qadir Jilani, Sheikh Shahabuddin Suhrawardi, Sheikh Amed Rifai, Sheikh Abul
Hasan Shazli, Khwaja Osman Harooni, Khawaja Moinuddin Chishti, and Khawaja
Bahauddin Naqshband, and the saints of the last three centuries of the present
Millennium of the class of Khwaja Baqi Billah, Imam Rabbani, Mujaddid Alf-Sani
Sheikh Ahmed Sarhindi and their deputies, and Shah Waliullah Dehlavi and syed
Ahmed Shaheed, and countless of other devoted men of God, who like them, were
adorned with the virtue of Ehsan and functioned as the leaders of this feild
during their time? Anyone who possesses the briefest acquaintance with these
luminous links in the chain of Sufistic achievement will agree that what they
had attained had come to them through no other channel. How, then, can it be
possible to doubt the soundness and efficacy of a system that has produced such
exquisite specimens of religious perfection, so many splendid men of faith and
conviction, who may justly be described as the spiritual blossom and glory of
Islam?
Of course, some sections of the Ummat have been guilty of error and folly in
varying measures and both of a conceptual and a practical nature in the feild of
Tasawwuf, as in the other fields of the Faith. But just as the process of the
caution and correction has been kept in operation steadily in the other fields
through the Ulema and the Mujahids, in this field, too, it has been the same way
with Sufis of deep learning and penetrating vision coming up from time to time
from God to straighten its curves and to remove its impurities. Furthermore, it
does not become any one to reject a whole structure of belief and practice
simply because some sections of its followers have some mistakes.
Such in brief, is the meaning of Ehsan and the place it holds in Islam. The path
by which it is reached is known popularly as Sulook or Tareeq. It is an accepted
fact that to undertake a journey along this path one must place oneself in the
hands of an expert guide who can show the way and furnish lead at each step in
the correct direction. One cannot start treating oneself (or others) for
physical ailments by reading books of medicine. The same is true of the feild of
spiritual well-being. For spiritual treatment it is necessary to go to spiritual
physician, i.e., to a man who has attained the goal by going all the way himself
and knows all its ups and downs, and follow his directions faithfully. The first
duty of the pilgrim should, therefore. Be to seek out a guide and a leader who
in addition to his religious and spiritual accomplishments. Must also be suited
to his natural disposition and to commit himself to his charge ungrudgingly.
This is called Iradat.
Tragically true, as it is, that such accomplished men of God are becoming scarce
day by day, the world is not quite empty of them. There do exist men about whom
it can be said, subject to the limitations of human judgment and understanding,
of course, that to their lot has fallen the heritage of God-consciousness which
is the goal and destination of Ehsan and under their guidance and with requisite
enthusiasm and perseverance one can successfully traverse the path of Sulook.
It is, surely, not that any one who flourishes himself as a peer is worthy of
being taken as a guide and a mentor. The world knows that there are both fake
and genuine among religious teachers and spiritual masters, as among political
leaders and physicians, and so forth. We admit that the proportion of imposters
in the religious, and so forth. We admit that the proportion of imposters in the
religious and spiritual sphere is far greater than elsewhere. But, as elsewhere,
the true can be distinguished from the false here as well without much
difficulty. The experts who are blessed also with a keen understanding of the
Shariat, like Shah Waliullah and Kazi Sanaullah of recent times, have laid down
in the light of the Quran and Sunnah and their own knowledge and experience,
certain suggestions for recognizing men with an awakened heart and an evolved
soul who can be looked up to for spiritual guidance. The elementary test is that
besides piety and a strict observance of the Shariat their state should be such
that in their company people may be reminded of God. The hold of material
aspirations may weaken, and the love of God, and the solicitude for the
Hereafter may grow stronger as a result of associating with them, and these
qualities may also be clearly manifest in their adherents and disciples.
The seek after Ehsan should, therefore, provide himself first of all with a
guide of the above caliber, and if he cannot do so on his own, he may take the
advice of those who are expected to be helpful in the making of the choice. If
after listening to their advice he finds himself drawn to a saint and this
feeling increases further when he comes to know him personally, he ought to turn
towards him with faith and confidence, seek guidance from him and carry out his
instructions loyally as a wise patient does the instructions of his physician.
In such a case there will arise no occasion for disappointment and God will
surely reward him in some degree or another with the radiance of faith and the
feeling of Ehsan by means of which one's religious state is brought to
perfection, faith in the unseen becomes as clear and firm as faith in the
visible phenomena, and obtaining full riddance from all manner of spiritual
doubts and misgivings, one's existence truly becomes a saga of undivided love
and devotion to God.
But, the path of Tasawwuf is a hard path. One who treads it has to pay dearly in
terms of suffering and sacrifice. Only a devotee who can make it the sole object
and mission of his life and is ready to forgo his desires, his comfort and even
his life for the sake of it can hope to do it successfully. No wonder,
therefore, that the travelers along this path have always been few.
There is however, a lesser grade of Ehsan which lies in the endeavor that on
conjunction with loyalty to the fundamental articles of faith, one's worship and
remembrance of God may attain a standard so no impart a real heavenly joy to the
heart, the moral and practical spheres of one's life may become reasonably clean
at the least, and repugnance to evil and the longing for good deeds may come to
one almost habitually. They yearning for these ends are present in a fair amount
in our religious circles and most of the devotees now a days go to spiritual
masters with the promotion of these ideals as their object.
The present writer is not at all competent to tender advice towards the
realisation of the higher ideal embodying the true concept of Ehsan. For that
one will have to go to an enlightened teacher, and a real saint. There, however,
seems no harm and taking the liberty here of advancing some suggestions
regarding the lesser grade of that spiritual state, specially when they do not
contain anything apart from what he has learnt from the masters and are
representative solely of the general principles of the Divine faith and the holy
law. The writer is further persuaded by the hope that should the reader be
encouraged to put the suggestions to his advantage by acting on them, he will
become entitled to as much share in the Divine reward as the latter for it is a
merciful law with the providence that " A person who guides another to virtue
will be recompensed equally with him". It is in this hope and in this spirit
alone that the following suggestions being offered.
(1) the most important thing is the soundness and integrity of faith. If there
is a defect in the basic structure of a person's faith, for example, if there is
a trace of polytheism in his spiritual outlook, all his endeavors will come to
nothing. Even if he fasted during the day devoted his nights to prayer
throughout the year, it would avail him nothing. Hence, the initial condition is
doctrinal purity and wholesomeness. What has been said in this connection in the
preceding chapters of the book should be enough by way of general guidance.
(2) Care should be taken to learn the teachings and postulates of the religion,
whether they appertain to matters like Namaz and Roza, which are obligatory for
every one, or to the general conduct of life. The course that may be best suited
to one's peculiar needs and circumstances should be adopted for this purpose.
(3) It is necessary to offer earnest repentance for sins of omission and
commission committed in the way of God and for the life spent thus far in
neglect and folly. It should also be resolved with all one's heart and the
strength of will to carry out in future the Divine Commands scrupulously and
lead a life of loyalty and devotion to God.
It should be remembered that God demands
of his servants only what lies within them to do, and that, too, without
involving themselves in any great difficulty. He never calls upon man to do a
thing that may be beyond his capacity or endurance. There is, in fact, so much
regard for convenience in religion that if it may be hard for a person to stand
up for prayer due to illness, he is permitted to offer it up in the sitting
posture or even while lying in bed. In the same way, he is allowed to forego the
fasts Ramzan if he be ill or in a journey. The same is the case with the other
duties of religion also.........It is, as such, totally wrong to suppose that to
live unto the requirements of the faith is a highly taxing business. This belief
is due wholly to lack of will and absence of habit. If a person makes up his
mind and lets the observance of religious postulates sink into himself as a
settled tendency, he will soon see that there will be no peace for him
otherwise.
(4) Mere mortals that we are, we are a prey to numerous weaknesses. There is the
Devil, always on the look out to lure us into sin, and there is our own sensual
self. It is, therefore not inconceivable that in spite of our sincere desire to
observe the Divine ordinances and refrain from civil deeds, we may fail into
error in a situation like this our attitude should be to seek the forgiveness of
God as soon as we become morally aware of the infringement and resolve not to be
guilty of it again Repentance at the commission of a sin. Provided that it is
genuine, not only erases its effects altogether but also wins for one the love
and pleasure of God. As the Quran says. "God loves those who seek forgiveness
after committing a sin."
If the infringement be of a nature as to involve a sin against man also, like
cruelty; injustice, back-biting. Violation of or encroachment upon the rights of
others it will be necessary to make appropriate amends to the aggrieved for the
misdeed in addition to seeking the forgiveness of God. We have already referred
in the chapter on Monetary dealings and social conduct, to the Prophet's (Peace
be upon him) Tradition that on the last day there will be people with a huge
stock of Namaz, Roza, Zakat, and Hajj to their credit, but, side by side with
it, they will also be carrying heavy load of wrongs perpetrated on their
fellowmen. The good acts of such people will then be allotted to those against
whom they had transgressed, and, if the claims of the latter will still remain
unsatisfied, the transgressors will be thrown into the Hell, all their praying
and worshipping notwithstanding.
(5) The significance good morals command in faith and the crucial role they play
in the spiritual evolution of man have been amply discussed in a previous
chapter It should be a primary concern with all the votaries of God and religion
to adorn themselves with the best of morals. But since moral behavior is closely
related to one's inner disposition and personality, its cleansing and
reformation is more difficult than that of the other spheres of our activity. As
a general rule, one is to exert oneself to the utmost and assume deliberately
even though one might not be actually in possession of them the moral virtues,
such as, humility, mildness, affability, love, compassion, patience,
contentment, generosity, self negation and sincerity and good will towards
others, and avoided the opposite qualities like vanity, passion, stinginess,
greed, jealousy, rejoicing at the misfortunes of others, and selfishness. Insha
Allah, in due course. One’s personality will get cast into the new mould. A
Tradition of the Prophet (Peace be upon him) assures that, "He who will assume
chastity an effort. God will make him contented; he who will assume forbearance
with an effort. God will make him forbearing." It is said that once a Companion
complained to the Prophet (Peace be upon him) of his own hard-heartedness upon
which the Prophet (Peace be upon him) advised him to make a habit of stroking
gently the heads of the orphans. It was a remedial measure of identical style.
Other moral healers have also attested to the efficacy of this method.
(6) Care should be taken to observe the prescribed modes of worship, specially
the Namaz, in as ideal a way as possible, and also to keep up the Nafl Prayers.
Among the supererogatory prayers the Tahajjud is the most valuable. Worship,
whether it takes the physical or the financial form or be it a mixed one and
whether it is compulsory or supererogatory, is definitely the greatest source of
spiritual progress and access to God.
(7) The next thing is to make the recitation of the Quran and Zikr a part of
one's daily routine.
It is suggested that the confession, Subhan Allah wa Alhamd-o-Lillah wa La-Ilah-a-Ilallah
wa Allah-o-Akbar, and the Istighfar and Durood Shareef be recited a hundred
times each, morning and evening. During the recitation, attention should be
focused on the meanings of the words and phrases occurring in them, and the
heart should also be made to participate in the task. It should also be
confidently hoped during the act that, a part from the Divine recompense and
reward that would accrue from the deed, one's soul might as well permeated with
the radiance of God's name as a result of the auspiciousness of the phrases
recited.
Moreover, what is popularly known as Tasbeeh-i-Fatima (Subhan Allah, 33 times;
Al-Hamd-o-Lillah, 33 times; Allah-o-Akbar, 34 times) may be recited, as for as
possible, regularly after each Namaz. It does not take more than two minutes,
and with a little care, every one can do it. On retiring to bed for the night
the above Tasbeeh may be said out once again, and three times the
Kalima-i-Istighfar,viz., Astaghfirullah-il-Lazi La-Ilaha-Illa Hual Hayul Qaiyum
wa Atoob-o-Ilaih.
A suitable time may be fixed for the daily recitation of the Quran. The length
of the recitation is not important; it may only be a section or two. What really
matters is the regularity and the correctness of the recitation and the feelings
of earnestness and reverence with it are done.
The aspirants are further advised to cultivate the habit of bringing the name of
God on their tongues, in one from or another, at brief intervals during their
hours of occupation, as for instance, by uttering Ya Allah, La Ilah-a-Illallah,
or the full Kalima or Istighfar every little while. After the period of
conscious finding a place in the select circle of those who have been spoken of
in the Quran in these words: Men whom neither traffic nor merchandise can divert
from the remembrance of God. (Nur , 5)
(8) After the Isha prayers in the night or at any other convenient hour, four or
five minutes may be reserved for what among the Sufis is called 'meditation of
death' . During these moments, a person should contemplate on what will occur to
him when death will strike him down, which is an absolute certainly ; then what
will his condition be when he will be buried in the grave after the necessary
rituals of bathing and shrouding have been gone through and the funeral service
has been said; what will he do in that dark, lonely call of the grave? How is he
to pass the long period of suspense and agony intervening between his death and
the day of final judgment if he does not prove worthy of Divine favor and
forgiveness? And, finally, on the Last Day, what will his state be when the
balance sheet of his conduct on the earth will be presented to God and He will
pass His judgment? (These events should be visualized mentally as if one was
actually going through them at the time.) Afterwards, he should pray to God with
urgent solicitation for forgiveness, for death in a state of faith, and mercy in
the life beyond.
(9) In worship, in Zikr and in all other acts of virtue, the eye should be
solely on Divine approbation and recompense, in the earning of which full trust
should be reposed. This, in religious terminology, is called, Iman-o-Ehtisab (i.e.Faith
and Censorship). Two Rakats of Namaz offered up in this spirit are more precious
than a hundred without it. With this as the permanent attitude of the mind, even
the minutest trifles of life, like eating and drinking and the carrying out of
the every day social and family obligations, get elevated to an act of prayer.
(10) The making of sulemn entreaties to God for one's spiritual as well as
legitimate worldly needs and aspirations is not only an effective means to their
realization, but also a high act of worship by itself. A Tradition reads "Dua is
the essence and marrow of worship. And another says." Upon whom the doors of Dua
have opened. upon him the doors of mercy have opened. A votary should make it a
point to supplicate to God with special care and ardency after each Namaz and at
other suitable times believing in it to be a most efficacious means of earning
Divine pleasure and gaining access unto him. Among the innumerable bounties
conferred upon the Prophet (Peace be upon him) by God, a most exclusive was the
endowment of his prayers with unique depth and fervor. Hundreds of his prayers
are preserved in the books of Traditions and they are imbued with an
extraordinary effulgence and auspiciousness . These Prayers have been assembled
together by the scholars to make a separate volume. The volumes compiled by
Mulla Ali Qari, called Al-Hizbul Azam, and Hazrat Thanvi,under the title of
Maqbool, have the special advantage of containing the Urdu Translation of the
prayers and can be obtained easily. Both of them have been divided into seven
sections to provide one section for each day of the week. A section from one of
these volumes may be read every day.
These ten suggestions will. Insha Allah,
suffice for the seekers of religious and spiritual correction and reform,
subject, of course, to the condition that they are acted upon diligently and
honestly. But there are people who are temperamentally incapable of being
profited by the mere reading of a book. For them the advice, again, is to give
themselves the benefit of the company of a living guide.
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