Yâ Hâbib Yâ Sâhib al-Qadam

PoetryNovember 1, 2006 9:02 pm



How much ever I bury you deep inside me, your absence pierces through… O Tasbih! I am not after the Rose, but its Scent leading me to Him. I will not ask for you anymore, though your thoughts hurt me from within… Though eyes filled with tears when I wrote these words; I shall not cry for you anymore. I have tied my own knot, I dug my own grave; I set my own trap: the love of ‘MyMerciful Him’ I invented myself. You are free of any blame. When have you ever said a word of kindness to me? You abandoned and ignored me, always.

Ah! Yet how can the fly go away from the vicinity of the Sweet Seller? The sweet is what attracts it. The Moth is after the essence of the Light of the Flame, not its light-ed body form.

Whatsoever from this world attracts or distracts for some time, ‘My Merciful Him’ shall always prick at the end.

I wish, though I wish not, a Tabrez of your nature had never appeared… I wwould be free of His Love-anguish. I would not suffer so silently, unable to tell any where and what the pain is… You left me alive in your separation: Ah! What a tribulation! Had you made me a martyr of ‘His Love-battle’

At none else’ sight I gained such. At none else’ sight I pained such! O the Sword of My Merciful Him! Yet I shall continue to play puzzle with blocks my silent pain. Moving here, shifting there..


Islamic Books - Reviews 8:35 pm




Wayfarers To God is, as the blurb on the back informs us, a book based on a translation of a series of lectures delivered by Habib Ali al-Jifri (may Allah preserve him) at the Al Zayed University for Women in the United Arab Emirates. The first thing that strikes the reader is that the translation is extraordinary. It manages to convey a sense of being in the lecture room whilst still feeling that one is reading a book. The translator (Shaykh Mohamed Mlamali Adam) has done an admirable job as the language used is easy to follow. It has an elegant simplicity and yet is certainly not simplistic. It is obvious that the translator has strived to convey the meaning of the Habib’s words rather than to display his own erudition. As a result the book reads beautifully and has a majestic flow.

The book itself is divided into seven chapters and an epilogue where each chapter is a distinct lecture. The chapters can be read randomly although one would think that the full benefit would be derived from reading the book from beginning to end. This is because Habib Ali is truly a master of his science and he develops his theme gracefully and rationally; each lecture is a summary of the preceding one and the foundation of the succeeding one. He ends with perfect symmetry; the book concludes with the point it begins with.

In an age when slogans and sound bites masquerade as knowledge, Habib Ali makes two seemingly simple points - we have to turn to Allah with total sincerity and the source of all our righteous actions are only through His Enabling Grace. Habib Ali then uses the rest of the book to prove this through commentary, thought provoking anecdotes of the pious predecessors, and by way of some especially illustrative analogies for the modern reader. Being a spiritual guide, Habib Ali, then shows the impediments for the wayfarer, helps to diagnose the diseases underlying these impediments, prescribes the cure, and finally offers practical advice to combat them.

The book begins with a note of hope. Habib Ali says the fact that one is reading the book is an indication that Allah is summoning one to His presence. However, as one reads further the wing of fear takes flight as Habib Ali begins to rhetorically question the reader’s spiritual state and one is forced to brutally reflect upon one’s own spiritual condition. After this awakening the Habib takes the reader by the hand and guides him through the ascending stations from sincere repentance (tawba) to excellence in works of worship (ihsan). Along the way the Habib examines modern bones of contention such as the concept of bida, clarifies misconceptions relating to tasawuf, and cleanses other muddy waters such as the nature of Zuhd (abstinence).

The interesting thing about ‘Wayfarers To God’ is how Habib Ali has added many layers to the ideas. To one who is approaching these ideas for the first time they are plain and simple. For those further along the path there are many familiar themes which at times are presented in a new light. For those who have been on the path for a while this is an indispensable hand book as it summarises the salient features of the path. For all of the above this should become a well thumbed and dog eared book; a testimony to having read the book over and over as with each reading new insights are found.

Although Habib Ali delves deeply into the points he is making the language is never overbearing. The result of this type of language is that the text is open to all comers and does not require any academic background. In fact the only prerequisite to deriving benefit from this book is complete sincerity.

Habib Ali shows that adherence to the sunnah and surrendering one’s affairs to Allah are the ways to achieve tranquillity. It is the lack of this tranquillity that has led to all types of dysfunctions in society especially within the family. In this sphere the book has much to offer the modern wayfarer. Ultimately, this is an essential book for all those who wish to purify themselves; who want to excel in their slavehood; who wish to do so not according to their whims and desires but according to the desire of Allah and His Beloved Messenger (Allah’s peace and blessings upon him and his family).

Purchase

Suhbats-Talks 4:04 pm


Everyday I ask my Lord to protect us from deviating from the Path of Truth, to keep us from tumbling into a deep abyss.  We must constantly ask for such protection as we are living in a time which the Holy Prophet Muhammed  SallAllahu alaihi wasallam has described: “…when good people will be thought of as bad people, and bad people as good: honest people as liars and liars as honest people; deceivers as trustworthy people and trustworthy people as deceivers.”

These are the conditions prevalent in our time; every moral value is turned upside-down so that people can no longer distinguish between good and evil. We are asking our Lord Almighty to steady us on the Path of Truth and to help us adhere to it even if many people attack us and insist that we are misguided. And because we have been informed by the Holy Prophet Muhammed SallAllahu alaihi wasallam that true people will come under such heavy criticism in the last times we are heartened by such criticism and take it as verification of our being on a true way.

Whoever is asking about us must be told that we are following a Sufi Way, the Most Distinguished Naqshbandi Tariqah. This information alone is enough to touch off a torrent of heavy criticism from many people, especially Muslims.

Upon hearing the word “Tariqah” they will automatically object and deny the validity of the Sufi Way. They will rant and rave on about how misguided we are, without even having inquired about us personally or about our practices. The bad assumptions about anything called “Sufi” will lead them to slander people they know nothing about. Should they not be ashamed to judge people they have never met on the basis of bigoted opinions? Of course they should be ashamed, but they are not: that is a sure sign that we are on the right way, in accordance with that saying of our Holy Prophet Muhammed SallAllahu alaihi wasallam

The animosity that most Muslims show towards the followers of the Sufi Path is indeed a sign of the last times.  Up until fifty years ago the Sufi Orders, and especially the Naqshbandiyya, were universally accepted by the scholars and Imams of most Muslim countries. No one of any rank or importance would show such antagonism towards Sufis: indeed, the Sufis were held in great esteem by religious scholars, many of whom submitted themselves to Sufi Sheikhs as their humble followers.  Truth and purity were recognized as such, for those were times when some perspective still remained with people.  

But nowadays we can observe so many “religious scholars” sprouting up like mushrooms without  roots who object to the Sufi Way. Yes, in our time the Holy Prophet Muhammed’s SallAllahu alaihi wasallam prophecy is being fulfilled, and the viewpoints of a formerly isolated and condemned sects are being universally propagated through the power of unearned money. Quickly the beliefs that Sunni Muslims have held for fourteen hundred years, which recognized the necessity of the inner work of the Sufis, have been replaced by a dry externalist doctrine.

So many of today’s Muslims are embracing the beliefs and outlook of that ternalist sect. Usually the ones who espouse those doctrines most ardently are people from a certain socio-economic class in the Muslim World. They are the rich, high-life people the highly “educated”, well-to-do, who have attained a luxurious standard of living.  Why do such people deny Tariqas? As much as such people may try to reason out their opposition to the Sufi Way, the real reason for their opposition to Tariqas is that Tariqas stress the importance of preparation for eternal life, ranking it where it belongs – in first place; all concerns of this life are held secondary to that.

The opponents of Sufism try to justify their extreme love of this world and its pleasures by twisting Islamic teaching and ignoring the thousands of Qur’anic Verses and Prophetic Traditions which warn them: “The worldly life is but a game for you to play among yourselves, seeing who can accumulate more riches and offspring, taking pleasure in it like the farmer who sees his crops flourishing, then suffering disappointment when it all turns yellow and dries up”, and: “The love of the world is the origin of every sin”, and: “The world is a cadaver and those who seek to devour it are dogs.”

It enrages those people when they hear that we are practicing “Dhikr Allah”, Remembrance of Allah, and repeating His Holy Name: “Allah, Allah, Allah…” They accuse us of making harmful innovations in the religion, when, in reality, there are over one-thousand Qur’anic Verses alone, not to mention Prophetic Traditions, in which our Lord Almighty orders us to “Remember Him”, “Glorify Him”, “Praise Him” and “Call upon Him”. He has ordered this that we may approach His Divine Presence, as every repetition of our Lord’s Name increases the love of Him in our hearts.

But the people who object to Tariqahs are in love with this life only, and demand that it be praised at least as much as Allah is praised. In reality they worship this world’s pleasures as a partner to Allah, and no such association is ever acceptable to Him Almighty, as He has said: “We have not created two hearts in the breast of men.” But in our Way we are taught to recognize that our love for this world is preventing us from attaining the true reality of worship, is keeping us from true monotheism, and therefore we are trying to downgrade worldliness from its present supreme position and are seeking to enthrone the love of God in our hearts.

We love our Lord, and we are asking Him to love us. Therefore, we try to occupy our whole hearts with the love of our Lord and are going to do our best to encourage others to occupy their hearts with that Divine Love as well. This we seek to accomplish through Dhikr, the remembrance of our Lord, despite the insistent efforts of Satan and his armies to dissuade us from following this way by making us drunk with this life’s pleasures.

There is further proof that we are on a right way, apart from the criticism by Muslims of other Muslims who follow Tariqahs. Nowadays more and more non Muslims are leveling criticism at Islam, and  unbelievers are more and more vocally criticizing religion in general. Even to believe in God in our time means exposing oneself to ridicule; unbelief has become the dominant fashion, and, in large portions of the world, state policy.

Islam in particular is a target for such people: even people who call themselves Christians and Jews and profess belief in God are attacking Islam. Usually they center their attacks on “Islam’s stringent moral code”, although the original and authentic moral codes of their religions were once very similar to ours. But in our time the moral authority once exercised by those religions over their adherents has been eroded to such an extent that nothing remains of most people’s Christianity or Judaism except, perhaps, to say: “I am Christian” or “I am Jewish.”

Therefore, some adherents of those religions envy Islam for having preserved such pervasive influence over all aspects of people’s lives in the Islamic World. They envy Islam for its success in bringing spiritual dimensions into the everyday life and actions of the Muslim. The result of this envy is that they loudly criticize Islam for “not allowing enough personal freedom” and “being too severe.” They would, of course, like to see Muslims leave their religion altogether, but short of attaining that ultimate goal they would be satisfied to see Islam relegated to being a marginal force in the lives of Muslims just as Christianity has become in the lives of Christians; yes, they would have us suffer that same miserable fate.

The main reason for which all of these groups (materialistic Muslims, “reformed Christians and Jews”, as well as the outright unbelievers) criticize our Way is that we are seeking to purify ourselves by controlling our ego’s whims; that we are brave enough to stand up against the lower self and its desires. We recognize that the only way to approach God is to strengthen our souls sufficiently that they may gain control over our egos. By this the egos of those people feel threatened, as “the truth hurts.”

Suhbats-Talks 1:23 pm



SubhanAllah!

And thunder celebrates the praise of Allah, as do the angels from awe thereof. (13:13)

A glittering golden cloud crown illuminates the already luminous City of Light, while blessed jewels of raindrops sprinkle the sacred dust. A thunderous fanfare amplifies a rejoicing canticle orchestrated by the Master Virtuoso. An ambrosial balminess intoxicates the senses, as the heavenly scented liquid pearls hit the heavenly sent presence of the Sealed Nectar, SallAllahu alaihi wasallam.

While our Lord’s House is drenched with the essential essence of Graciousness and Benevolence, and the mizāb al-Rahma pours a sanctifying infusion of Loving Forgiveness and Kindness on the visitors in Hateem.

O Allah, make it a profitable downpour. Ameen.

Rains Bring Chaos to Jeddah, Makkah Streets

Poetry 11:15 am

 

The beginning of Your pain, is the end of all other pain
Your love, Your desire knows no bound no end [1]

How much longer forcing the strangers to taste the torments
In spite of Your mercy upon us, still so many complaints [2]

Within the drama of Your love no knowledge and deeds fit [3]

Where Your legend wows there is no room for mere stories
Comparing to Your knowledge like a stumbling toddler
All wise old sages and all powerful governing men
To no prophet and no close friend revealed Your depth [4]

That much has been revealed through Gabriel and the verse
If the book of my poems not written by the heart’s blood
These words would not have entered any bosoms at all
Did you know Kamaal if a dark day reaches upon you [5]
Indeed shall rise a sun from the east of benevolence soon




Notes:

[1] I am in love with these words. Yes truly any ache for the Beloved ends all other mortal pains we experience. Perhaps sometimes Allah breaks our heart in order for us to be relieved from all other pain and through the cracks of our hearts beams of light illuminate a path towards the Beloved.

[2] Kamaal is praying to Allah to stop the pain and suffering for the people around him e.g. the Mongols his enemies who were in constant war and torment. He is telling Allah that people like him who are blessed by Allah and know the truth are complaining much about the daily suffering, but what about these unlearned unwise misguided creators around him who know nothing of the Beloved.

[3] Kamaal is teaching us that knowledge and actions belong to outside world of Beloved’ life. Where there is the love of Beloved knowledge and deeds are just tales and stories not real at all. This is a paramount discovery of this man and a lifetime needs to be devoted to uncover its secrets.

[4] “The verse” refers to Koran, which was revealed through the Angel Gabriel.

[5] This is a law in the universe of human affairs, the sun of victory and benevolence dawns at the darkest moment of our night, but it rises for certain, Koran[2:214]: