Jalal al-Din
Rumi
Jalal
al-Din Rumi, the Persian Sufi Sage and Poet, was born in
Balkh on the 30th September, 1207. His proper
name was Mubammad, title Jalal al-Din and later "Khudawandagar",
"lord". In his poetry he used the pen-name "khamush"
(meaning "silent") and from the 15th century came
to be known as Mawlawi, the term deriving from his earlier
title of Mulla-yi rum, "the learned master of Anatolia". His
disciples, such as Ahmad Aflaki called him "The Greatest
Mystery of God" (sirr Allah al-a'zam), while the Persian
speaking world usually refers to him as Mawlana. In the West
where his fame has spread steadily since the 19th
century he is usually known as Rumi, (meaning from Roman
Anatolia).
Rumi's father Muhammad ibn Hussain Khatibi, known as Baha'
al-Din Walad (entitled Sultan al-'ulama'), was an
outstanding Sufi in Balkh. He is the author of the Ma'arif ,
a masterpiece of Sufism, which left its mark upon Rumi's
Mathnawi.
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When Rumi
was about twelve or thirteen years old (around 1220),
Baha al-Din Walad left the eastern provinces of Persia
with his whole family and a group of disciples and
travelled westward. This may have been as a result of
the threat of invading Mongol armies. It is said that in
Nayshapur he met the renowned Persian Sufi poet Farid
al-Din 'Attar and presented Jalal al-Din to him.
Apparently Sheikh 'Attar was very impressed by the young
Rumi, and told Baha' al-Din Walad, 'soon this son of
thine shall set the spiritual aspirants of this world
afire'.
From Nayshapur Baha' al-Din Walad and his entourage set
out for Baghdad where they were highly respected,
meeting many of the scholars and Sufis of the city. From
there they went to the Hejaz and performed the
pilgrimage at Mecca. It was after this journey that most
likely as a result of the invitation of 'Ala', al-Din
Kayqubad, the ruler of Anatolia, Baha' al-Din came to
Asia Minor and finally settled in Konya, a city
associated with his family to this day. The family of
Baha' al-Din Walad was welcomed warmly in Konya, which
was witness at this time to many immigrants from the
eastern cities of Persia, since Anatolia offered a
peaceful haven in the Islamic world during the turbulent
years of the Mongol invasion. Baha' al-Din rapidly
gained fame as a religious scholar and Sufi and died
with honor when Rumi was 24 years of age. |
Around a year after his father's death, Rumi met Burhan
al-Din Muhaqqiq Tirmidhi, a Sufi master of high quality who
was himself a disciple of Baha' al- Din Walad. It was
through Burhan al-Din that Rumi inherited the spiritual
heritage of his father and became initiated into the
mysteries of Sufism. For nine years Rumi practiced Sufism as
a disciple of Burhan al-Din until the latter died in 1240-1.
During this period Rumi also travelled to Damascus and is
said to have spent four years there.
Having become a master of both the Shari'ite sciences and
Sufism, Rumi established a circle around him in Konya, and
from around 1240 to 1244, he was occupied with teaching,
meditating, helping the poor, and other activities of a
religious scholar. It is said that he was a popular teacher
and that as many as four hundred students attended his
formal classes. In 1244 Rumi's life was transformed through
his encounter with Shams al-Din Tabrizi, who had entered
Konya that year after spending some time in Baghdad. Shams
was a mysterious and powerful Sufi, who fled social
connections. Even his death remains a mystery and he has
several tombs which have remained sites of pilgrimage, to
this day.
There is no doubt that Shams al-Din Tabrizi was not just a
Sufi master for Rumi. Jalal al-Din had already practiced
Sufism for many years before meeting Shams al-Din. It seems,
rather, that Shams al-Din had a spiritual influence on him.
Rumi was the type of Sufi who needed spiritual companionship
in order to express himself in words. The companionship that
Shams al-Din provided, was so powerful that it transformed
the sober teacher Rumi, into an ecstatic poet. The first
poem ever written by Rumi is in a letter to Shams, and from
the time of their encounter until Rumi's death, the latter
never ceased to compose poetry. The spiritual, friendship
between these two towering figures is rare in the history of
Sufism and has become proverbial in the East.
Harassed by some of the disciples, who had become jealous of
the fact that Jalal al-Din spent all of his time with Shams,
the latter left Konya. Rumi became so distressed that he
sent him many letters and messages containing his first
poems in Persian and Arabic and finally, after having
discovered that he was in Damascus, sent his own son Sultan
Walad after him. Shams finally accepted to return to Konya,
he stayed at Rumi's home and again the mystical conversation
began, leading to a renewed jealousy among some of Rumi's
disciples. On the night of December 5, 1248, as Rumi and
Shams were talking, Shams was called to the door. He went
out, and was never seen again. It is believed that he was
murdered. The mystery of his absence engulfed Rumi's world
and he searched for him for two years travelling as far as
Damascus, but to no avail. It was there that he came to the
following realization:
Why should
I seek? I am the same as he.
His essence speaks through me.
I have been searching for myself! |
Rumi
returned to Konya, began his open instruction of Sufism and
devised the spiritual dance (sama), for which the Mawlawi
order has been famous for the past seven centuries.
The rest of Jalal al-Din's life from 1249-50 to 1273 was the
period of dissemination of Sufism and the esoteric sciences
contained in it. He trained numerous disciples, some of whom
like Salah al-Din Zarkub Qunyawi and Husam al-Din Chalabi
were themselves spiritual guides. According to Rumi, Husam
Chelebi was the one who understood the vast, secret of the
Mathnawi, that great work that shifts so fantastically from
theory to folklore to jokes to ecstatic poetry. For the last
twelve years of his life, Rumi dedicated the six volumes of
this masterwork to Husam.
In December 1273, Jalal al-Din fell ill. He knew that the
moment of encounter with the Beloved was near, a moment
which for him could not but be the most joyous moment of
life. He predicted his own death and composed the well-known
ghazal, which begins with the verse:
How doest
thou know what sort of king I have within me as
companion?
Do not cast thy glance upon my golden face, for I have
iron legs. |
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