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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Tariqa – the Way of the Sufi

Islam and Spiritualism
26 Apr 2009, NewAgeIslam.Com

Tariqa – the Way of the Sufi

In the last few years of his life, Prophet Muhammad spent a lot of time with his companions teaching them ways of achieving exalted ranks with God. One day Hanzalah al Usaydi, a companion, confessed to Abu Bakr that he felt divided between contradictory feelings. While in the Prophet's presence he had the ability to see paradise and hell, but away from the Messenger he felt overpowered by worldly affairs. Hanzalah felt he might be counted among the hypocrites of Islam.

Abu Bakr confided to having similar thoughts and both decided to seek answers from the Prophet on their spiritual states.

Hearing their doubts, Muhammad replied, 'By He who holds my soul in his hands, if you were able to remain in the state in which you were in my company, and remember God permanently, the angels would shake your hands in the bed and along the path you walk. Hanzalah, there is a time for this and there is a time for that.'  Sufis describe Hanzalah's state as haal and maqaam, the spiritual state where God commands the angels to greet His friends -- Sadia Dehlvi

Photo: Sadia Dehlvi

 URL of this page: http://www.newageislam.org/NewAgeIslamArticleDetail.aspx?ArticleID=1359

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Tariqa – the Way of the Sufi

Sadia Dehlvi

April 24, 2009

 

At many stages in life I came close to giving up on the idea of God altogether. Growing up in the seventies one inherited a mixed bag of values. Progressive writers professed agnosticism and friends jeered at the idea of hell or heaven. Churches, temples, mosques and monasteries were simply not fashionable in the age of rebellion.

Growing up in an Irish convent boarding school, I regularly went to church, sang Christmas carols, baked Easter eggs and imbibed Christian values. During annual holidays a Maulana, religious teacher, came home to teach all the children the Quran. He instilled the fear of God in us, with the result that Fear remained the only emotion that the heart felt for the Creator. Somehow, this overwhelming fear kept me connected to Allah, despite often wanting to break away completely.

Traversing the Sufi path changed my attitude for it teaches that prayer rituals are worth little if not accompanied by love and sincerity.

On behalf of God, Prophet Muhammad declared: 'Heaven and earth cannot contain Me but the heart of my faithful servant contains Me.'

The mystic poet Fariduddin Attar illustrates the state of the lovers:

When you seek God, seek him in your heart

He is not in Jerusalem, nor in Mecca nor in Hajj

The Quran establishes imam, faith, as a state of the heart that is separate from Islam, which is a testimony of faith.

When the Bedouins declared Islam their faith, God said: 'The desert Arabs say, "We believe." Say, "Ye have no faith; but ye (only) say, "We have submitted our wills to Allah," For not yet has Faith entered your hearts. But if ye obey Allah and His Messenger, He will not belittle aught of your deeds: for Allah is Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful.' (49:14).

Hal, Kaifiyat and Maqaam

Islam contains a three-fold structure consisting of sharia, the outer law; tariqa the inward path; and haqeeqa, the arrival at the reality of Allah. The different stages of the Sufi path are called haal (state) and maqaam (station).

Kaifiyat is an emotional state that can be experienced by ordinary people. We often see people getting emotional and tearful while listening to a heartfelt spiritual discourse or the recitation of Divine scriptures.  'And when they listen to the revelation received by the Apostle, thou wilt see their eyes overflowing with tears, for they recognize the truth: they pray: "Our Lord! we believe; write us down among the witnesses."' 5:83)

Hal can be described as a series of enlightened moments. Sufis believe that haal is not self induced but  is caused by tajalli, Divine graces that flow from the heavens.  In Sufi imagery this flow of blessings is called sharaab e marifat, the wine of gnosis, and sharaab e mohabba, the wine of love.  Most mystics remain sober despite intoxication from this wine, whereas some are unable to contain the drink. Mansur Hallaj and Bayazid of Bistam are among the most famous drunken Sufis who revealed God's mysteries, those that were meant to be veiled. Bayazid sings:

I have planted love in my heart

And shall not be distracted until judgment day

You have wounded my heart when you came near me

My desire grows, my love is bursting.

He has poured me a sip to drink.

He has quickened my heart with the cup of love

Which he has filled at the ocean of friendship.

Sufis of some orders use music to induce haal, a state of spiritual ecstasy. Hal is kaifiyat in a prolonged state and maqaam in its permanent state. 'Maqaam is something that descends from God into a man's heart, without his being able to repel it when it comes, or to attract it when it goes, by his own effort.'

In the last few years of his life, Prophet Muhammad spent a lot of time with his companions teaching them ways of achieving exalted ranks with God. One day Hanzalah al Usaydi, a companion, confessed to Abu Bakr that he felt divided between contradictory feelings. While in the Prophet's presence he had the ability to see paradise and hell, but away from the Messenger he felt overpowered by worldly affairs. Hanzalah felt he might be counted among the hypocrites of Islam.

Abu Bakr confided to having similar thoughts and both decided to seek answers from the Prophet on their spiritual states.

Hearing their doubts, Muhammad replied, 'By He who holds my soul in his hands, if you were able to remain in the state in which you were in my company, and remember God permanently, the angels would shake your hands in the bed and along the path you walk. Hanzalah, there is a time for this and there is a time for that.'  Sufis describe Hanzalah's state as haal and maqaam, the spiritual state where God commands the angels to greet His friends.

Courtesy: Hindustan Times, New Delhi

Extract from Sufism: The Heart of Islam, HarperCollins, releasing on April 30, 2009.

 URL of this page: http://www.newageislam.org/NewAgeIslamArticleDetail.aspx?ArticleID=1359

 

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