Sunday, September 13, 2009

The Brave Speaks The Truth

By APP, *PIF pays tribute to Sachal Sarmast* - Daily Times - Pakistan
Sunday, September 6, 2009

Islamabad: Speakers at a literary gathering on Saturday paid tribute to saint Sachal Sarmast, who planted divine love in the hearts of people of Sindh province.

They said Sarmast was the most remembered and revered sufi poet. The gathering was arranged by Pakistan Intellectual Forum (PIF) in connection with the 188 Urs of Sarmast.

Ibrahim Nizamani said Sarmast was a leading sufi who composed verses on philosophy and sufism. “Sachoo is known as Second Mansoorul Halaj because of his poetry and philosophy,” he said.

Hashim Abro said Sachoo revolted against trends of his time with his philosophy and poetry with such messages ‘The brave speaks the truth, let others like it or not, let not be friends based on false’.

“His unique use of similes, metaphors and allegories gives him a prominent place in Sindh language and literature” Abro concluded.


[Picture: A view of Hazrat Sachal Sarmast Dargah. Photo: Jameelshahr, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sachal_sarmast.jpg]

Saturday, September 12, 2009

1012th Annual Urs Festival

By Syed Muthahar Saqaf, *Urs festival celebrated at Tiruchi dargah* - The Hindu - India
Saturday, September 5, 2009

Tiruchi, Tamil Nadu: A large number of devotees from different parts of the country participated in the 1012th annual Urs festival of the Sufi Saint Hazrath Thable Alam Badusha Nathervali held on the dargah premises in Tiruchi in the early hours of Saturday.

The fortnight-long festival began with the hoisting of the holy flag on August 21 and installation of the Banwa Jama Sarguru.

The pot containing the sandal paste was brought to the dargah in a decorated chariot from the Gandhi Market.

The sandal paste was anointed on the tomb of Hazrath Thable Alam Badsha, who was the first Sufi saint to visit this part of the country, by Khalifa Syed Mazharuddin Khalandar Suharwardy.

Later, the fakirs belonging to the five Jamas of Sha Banwa, Sha Malang, Sha Tabkhat, Sha Jalal and Sha Rifayee and the Muzawars also anointed the sandal paste in the presence of the chief executive trustee (CET), A. D. B. Badhushas, and hereditary trustee Khalifa M. Syed Ghulam Rasool Suharwardy.

A. K. Yussouf, national president of the Builders Association of India, was among those who participated in the celebrations.

Special “Fathiha” (prayers) was offered to seek the blessings of the saint. Recital of Maulood Shariff, discourses, rendering of qawwali songs by the famous qawwals from all over the country and devotional songs marked the occasion.

The tomb of the sufi saint was cleaned on Thursday with the water of [the river] Cauvery. It was brought in a procession by devotees.

Picture: Sandal paste pot being carried in a decorated chariot during the annual Urs festival of Hazarath Thable Alam Badhusha Nathervali Dargah, Tiruchi on Saturday. Photo: R.M. Rajarathinam/The Hindu

Friday, September 11, 2009

Mystical Islam

AD Report, *Peabody Museum Press Publishes New Book: Sacred Spaces: A Journey with the Sufis of the Indus* - Art Daily - Mexico
Sunday, September 6, 2009

Cambridge, MA: Imaginative, vibrant, and saturated with the rich colors of South Asia, Samina Quraeshi’s photographs, calligraphic works, and montages reflect the diversity of Islamic expressions of faith.

Her work is a creative response to the experience of pilgrimage to the Sufi shrines in the Indus Valley. The images evoke the music, dance, and acts of faith that animate these sacred spaces.

Raised in Pakistan and India, Samina Quraeshi is the first Robert Gardner Visiting Artist at the Peabody Museum. Quraeshi says, “Sufi mysticism complicates the all-too-common view that Islam is monolithic—unable or unwilling to recognize the internal plurality of devotion and interpretation among its faithful.”

Her images bring to life a landscape and a culture that reverberate with the Sufi traditions of mystical Islam. Through vivid storytelling illustrated with over 250 color images, Quraeshi adds her voice to the long tradition of mystical Islam and illuminates the ways in which sacred spaces act as profound expressions of both faith and culture.

Her journey, infused with childhood memories and ancient legends, explores the localized traditions of Sufi practices in the Indus Valley region. Essays by scholars Ali S. Asani and Carl W. Ernst and by Pakistani architect Kamil Khan Mumtaz supplement Quraeshi’s personal journey with discussions of the musical, political, and architectural dimensions of Sufism in South Asia.

*Sacred Spaces: A Journey with the Sufis of the Indus* will be published in October 2009 by the Peabody Museum Press and Mapin Publishing. The book will be available for purchase at the Opening Reception and at the Museum.

Related exhibition: Sacred Spaces: Reflections on a Sufi Path
The Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology presents a new exhibition opening on October 22, 2009: Sacred Spaces: Reflections on a Sufi Path by Samina Quraeshi.

The exhibition includes photographs, calligraphy, and mixed media compositions. It opens Thursday October 22, 2009, at 5:30 PM with brief talks by Ms. Quraeshi and by Thomas W. Lentz, Director of the Harvard Art Museums and William L. Fash, Director of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.

Their remarks will be followed by a performance of Sufi music and by an Opening Reception and Book Signing in the Peabody’s Museum.

*Sacred Spaces: Reflections on a Sufi Path* at Harvard’s Peabody Museum will be on view through April 30, 2010.

Companion Exhibition: *Sacred Spaces: The World of Dervishes, Fakirs, and Sufis* at Harvard’s Arthur M. Sackler Museum is on view through January 3, 2010.
Samina Quraeshi is an educator, designer, artist, photographer, and author. Formerly Henry R. Luce Professor in Family and Community at the University of Miami and Director of Design for the National Endowment for the Arts, she is currently the Gardner Visiting Artist at the Peabody Museum, Harvard University.

Ms. Quraeshi has exhibited her artwork internationally and is the author of Legacy of the Indus: A Discovery of Pakistan, Lahore: The City Within, and Legends of the Indus.

Professor of Indo-Muslim and Islamic Religion and Cultures at Harvard University, Ali S. Asani has written, “Samina Quraeshi offers us a unique account of a journey through her childhood homeland in search of the wisdom of the Sufis. Along this meandering path she has created an imaginative personal history and a rich body of photographs and works of art, all of which reflect the seeking heart of the Sufi way.”

Picture: Mixed media by Samina Quraeshi. Photo: Art Daily.


Visit the Peabody Museum

Thursday, September 10, 2009

The Organic Spread Of Love

Staff Report, *Sufi Retreat Offers a Multifaceted Spiritual Experience* - The Santa Barbara Independent - Santa Barbara, CA, USA
Thursday, September 3, 2009

Shadhuliyya Sufism Guide Visits Santa Barbara for Mid-Ramadan Retreat at La Casa de Maria

This Labor Day weekend, La Casa de Maria will be the site of the Southwest Sufi School’s* Sufi retreat. For the first time ever, Sufi master and guide Sidi Shaykh Muhammad Sa'id al-Jamal ar-Rifa'i ash-Shadhuli* —Sidi al-Jamal for short—will visit Santa Barbara to spend three days praying, chanting, and feasting with his followers as part of his annual trip to the U.S.

The retreat begins Friday, September 4, at 2 p.m. and finishes Monday, September 7, at 1 p.m., following an all-night prayer vigil that begins at 1 p.m. on Sunday (all religions are invited).

The event aims to enhance the spiritual experience for all involved, and the Santa Barbara sanctuary La Casa de Maria*, nestled in foliage near Montecito’s Upper Village, is the perfect setting; according to L.A. Sufi Center moderator Cheri Langdell, the “sacredness of the place” is tangible.

Aside from witnessing the teachings of a “world-known healer and scholar of Sufi studies,” attendees may also expect to benefit from the presence of at least three other teachers while enjoying meals before sunrise and after sundown—in observance of Ramadan—and attending classes and practices throughout the day.

While the retreat is ideal for practiced Sufis, the event welcomes newcomers as well. Although University of Spiritual Healing and Sufism* president Dr. Ibrahim Jaffe* defined Sufism as “the heart of Islam; the root of the metaphorical tree of Islam,” he also identified that the goal of Sidi’s annual trip to the U.S. is “to stimulate the organic spread of love; to address people searching for truth.”

Jaffe, a medical doctor, claims that Sidi saved his life after he was diagnosed with a rare heart disease at the age of 36. Jaffe said, “I went to Sidi, and he told me, ‘I see that you are dying and that you have six months to live’ before giving me three orders: Learn to love, embrace Sufism, and follow a prescription of herbs and medicines; and I recovered.”

As Langdell said, “When you’re around Sidi, there are little miracles, things start to go better.”

As Jaffe described, “Sidi is a very high Sufi master who has reached a state of God realization; the higher you travel, the more you embody the Godly light.”

The event is expected to bring to La Casa de Maria nearly 200 people from a broad spectrum of religious paths, largely due to Sidi’s presence. Said Langdell, “This is truly a landmark event for Santa Barbara. Sidi al-Jamal is the highest ranking Sufi in Jerusalem.”

For those who are interested in Sufism, Langdell recommends the poetry of world-renowned Sufi poet Rumi whose mystically spiritual poetry is available widely through the translation of Shahram Shiva* among others.

*Links:

*Visit the Los Angeles Shadhiliyya Sufi Center

*Visit Sidi Muhammad Press

*Visit the Retreat and Conference Center La Casa De Maria

*Visit the University of Spiritual Healing & Sufism USHS

*Visit Dr. Ibrahim Jaffe, MD

*Visit Shahram Shiva's Rumi Network

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

A Place Of Worship

By Sadia Dehlvi, *The gates of paradise are thrown open to you* - The Times Of India - India

Friday, September 4, 2009

Mystics of various religions have believed fasting to be an effective way of controlling the lower instincts.

Sufi Masters say that hunger brings about illumination of the soul, for Allah provides spiritual sustenance to those who keep hungry for His sake.

Rumi writes, "Hunger is God's food for which he quickens the bodies of the upright."

Shaqiq Balkhi taught that 40 days of constant hunger could transform the darkness of the heart into light. Sahl Tustari fasted perpetually and earned the title of Shaykh ul Arifin, Master of the Knowers. He said, "Hunger is God's secret on earth."

Abu Madyan the African mystic wrote, "One who is hungry becomes humble, one who becomes humble begs and the one who begs attains God. So hold fast to your hunger, my brother, and practise it constantly for it means that you will attain what you desire and will arrive at what you hope."

Muslims believe that God through Gabriel revealed the Quran to Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) in Ramzan, the ninth month of the Islamic calendar. One of the five pillars of the faith, fasting is defined as abstaining from eating, drinking, smoking and sexual activity in the prescribed hours, dawn to sunset.

God's Messenger said that the breath of a fasting person is more pleasing to God than the fragrance of musk and that there were two joys associated with fasting. One is the joy of breaking the fast and other is when one meets the Lord. Scholars say that breaking the fast is akin to meeting the Lord.

Ramzan is a wonderful enclosure in time, just as a place of worship is in physical space, commanding the same respect.

Islam describes the month as a portal of mercy, a time when the gates of Paradise are open and the gates of Hell are closed. It is a time for reflection, self-purification and retreating from the commotion of a worldly life into a state of deeper contemplation. Through the power of patience, fasting raises taqvah, one's consciousness of God.

After a few days of fasting, the physical system slows down and the 'i' separates from the body. Hunger is felt not as 'i am hungry' but as 'My body is hungry', just as you would observe another's hunger. This process helps one recognise that the intellect, body and heart are different components, readying one for a spiritual journey.

Fasting without abstaining from wrongful actions such as engaging in foul conversation or gossip, is fruitless. Harbouring suspicion, rancour or negative opinions about others is especially noxious in Ramzan, as also cheating, vanity and irrational anger.

Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) taught that a person who fasts and does not guard the tongue simply remains hungry, achieving little or no spiritual benefit. Likewise, the love of praise and the oppression of others are struck down for they are an anathema to the spirit of Ramzan.

Ramzan is also known as the month of spending in the way of God, divesting oneself from material assets and investing in the Hereafter. Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) was the most generous of people and in Ramzan he was known to be even more generous. He said that the best charity in Ramzan is setting things right between people who are in conflict and those who harbour hatred for each other.

Ramzan presents a great opportunity to be mindful, to build resolves to purify the heart and come closer to the Almighty.

The writer is author of *Sufism: The Heart of Islam*

Picture: The Gates Of Paradise Are Thrown Open To You. Photo: Getty Images

Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Outspoken Opinions

By Omar Waraich, *Pakistani Minister Survives Terrorist Attack* - Time - USA

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

In the most high-profile attack on an elected official in recent years, Pakistan's Religious Affairs Minister survived a brush with death after gunmen opened fire on his official car in the heart of Islamabad on Wednesday. The minister, Hamid Saeed Kazmi, was shot in the leg, but is stable and undergoing treatment at a nearby hospital. The attack killed his driver.

Wednesday's shooting has raised fears of a renewed campaign of violence in Pakistan's major cities after a lull following the counterinsurgency operation in the northwest Swat Valley and the assassination of Taliban commander Baitullah Mehsud, who was killed in a CIA drone strike on Aug. 5.

Today's attack took place at 3 pm, moments after Kazmi left his ministry. At the scene, his black car lies badly damaged on the side of the road. There are bullet marks on three sides of the vehicle, the front windscreen, and on both sides of the backseat. Broken shards of glass lie strewn on the road nearby. The steering wheel is smeared with blood, as are the cars seats. The minister's blood-stained turban and prayer beads were left abandoned as he was rushed to hospital.

According to Muntazir Khan, a policeman at the scene, two suspected gunmen were on motorbikes. They shot at the driver from the front, apparently killing him instantly. As the vehicle veered to the left side of the road, the attackers turned their guns on the minister, sitting behind blacked-out windows on the back seat. On the left side, eight bullets are punched into the window, four on the right side. The gunmen then managed to speed away.

"This shows that the militant elements have become active again," says Hasan Askari-Rizvi, a security analyst. "It also shows that there are serious security problems. If this type of attack can take place in the center of Islamabad," he added, then nowhere in Pakistan is safe. Police at the scene of the attack say that the minister had not been accompanied by his usual police escort. The attack took place in a sensitive area of the city, just minutes away from major government buildings, and the Inter-Services Intelligence agency's headquarters. The city's many checkpoints, manned by armed policemen, failed to stop the attackers.

The attack on the minister comes a day after the Interior Ministry said there were unspecified reports of a Taliban campaign to target religious and political leaders. Analysts say that the notoriously vicious new leader of the Pakistani Taliban Hakimullah Mehsud is keen to assert himself after assuming the leadership of the organization. But there is also speculation that any new campaign might be the work of al-Qaeda. Last week, Saudi Arabia's deputy interior minister survived an al-Qaeda suicide bomb attack in the port city of Jeddah.

"It's difficult to say whether it was done by the Taliban or other group," says Askari-Rizvi. "What is clear is that it is an attack on a religious leader who has been very critical of the Taliban's use of violence, which seems to be the reason for the attack." Moderate religious leaders who have spoken out against the Taliban's brutality have been repeatedly targeted in recent months. In June, a suicide bomber killed Sarfraz Naeemi, who belonged to a sufi strain of Islam, in his mosque office in Lahore.

Fellow members of the ruling Pakistan People's Party are convinced that Kazmi was targeted for his outspoken opinions. "[Kazmi] has been at the forefront of our government attempt to unify all the senior most Muslim leaders of this country who are all opposed to the militant viewpoint on Islam," says presidential spokesperson Farahnaz Ispahani. "He has been out there, he is a mild and soft-spoken man who has spoken out publicly about the sufi Islam that is the true Islam of Pakistan."

Picture: Men carry Pakistan's Religious Affairs Minister Hamid Saeed Kazmi into the back of a vehicle moments after he was shot in the leg in Islamabad. Photo: Reuters.

Monday, September 07, 2009

A Hungry Drive

By Mohammed Omer Ousta, *Interfaith Dialogue in Kurdistan* - The Hawler Tribune - Erbil, Iraq
Monday, August 31, 2009

A little over three weeks ago, I went on a trip to Hawraman, a region in the southeast of Kurdistan. During our stay there, I paid visits to most of the districts. Nevertheless I mostly stayed in Sulaimani which was once capital of the Babban Emirate and known as “cultural center” of Kurdistan. Sulaimani has also been known as for revolts and sacrifice.

One of our stops on our journey was at Hawraman territory villages, Tawella town which in an extremely prominent place where Sufis are all over the world. Sufism (the divine mysticism) is not a sect of Islam, but rather, a broad tradition that tends to be more esoteric and places love, peace and tolerance at the center of the practice of Islam. Every year in December, thousands of people travel to Konya,Turkey for the Rumi Festival, the highlight of which, for many, are performances if the Whirling Dervishes.

On a formal invitation, I accompanied a delegation from Iraq to take part in the Festival.

I won't even attempt to explain the spiritual and liturgical complexities of the Dervishes' dance there. The Dervishes Gathering which we joined in Hawraman was slightly different and less ceremonious from their usual dances that I know about. But basically it's a series of prayers whirling dances to a sacred music. Each of the dervishes sheds his black cloak to reveal white robes, and enters into a spinning dance, like that of child spinning round and round in the middle of the field. As the fluid, smooth, graceful motion speeds up, he raises his arms, pointing one hand to heaven and one to the earth, and spins in a deep euphoric state of prayer.

The goal of the dancer is to be lifted from this world into a state of union with the divine.

All of the dancers are spinning, and at the same time rotating in patterns around the arena. From afar, it looks like a meticulously rehearsed and choreographed performance. In reality, however the movement of the Dervishes, individually and as a whole, happens naturally and organically.

The never forgotten awe-inspiring moments we spent there was absolutely beautiful.

The questioning Kurd grown in urban areas that I was a little perplexed by its mechanics, so I turned to one of our Muslim guides on the trip to ask more questions (which at this point on the trip, had to have begun trying his patience!).

“How come they aren't getting dizzy?” I asked; “How come they aren't running into each other?”; “How do they know where to go and when to start and stop?”; “How does it work, Ziryan?”.

“They just do, Mohammed, they just do” he patiently replied “They are paying attention to nothing around them. This is prayer for them, and all they're focusing on is God.”

It seemed so complex to me and so beautifully simple at the same time. Since the beginning of our trip, I was excited about seeing the Whirling Dervishes honestly, though I thought it would be more fun, a touristy thing to see. It turned out to be a much more poignant experienced than I bargained for.

I saw this experience as a powerful metaphor for the wider communion of God-seekers, attempting to live together on a world stage.

Each of us as individuals and as units-places of worship, denominations, religions -each is spinning in a hungry drive to experience the divine, to understand and be part of the mystery and magnitude of God. We are too often, however, distracted by the waxing and wanting distances between the dancers, the different ways of spinning, insecurities in our own movement. We are colliding with one another in a clumsy, chaotic mess.If we could lift our eyes and arms to God and just spin, moving in the ecstatic reality of God's love, not only would our personal spiritual experience be enriched, but we would begin to spin together, to fall into a beautiful, cosmic dance, one of peace and harmony.

This question then comes: “How do we do that?”.

This place of peace and harmony, quite frankly, seems distant and illusory. Humanity is a diverse assortment of people, trying to live together in an increasingly small world.

There is a startlingly prevalent tone in the world arena of intolerance, judgment, and hatred. Humankind is tragically plagued with violence, hurt, oppression, conflict, and war, and too much of this takes place in the context of religious differences. Our differences aren't going to dissipate any time soon, nor should they.

What has to happen in a dialogue? We have to learn, love, respect, and communicate with one another. As people of God, we can do one of two things. We can couple our religious identity with that of a soldier, armed and ready for the clash of religious empires, or we can take our seat at the table of humanity with a voice of love, humility, and faith.

Religious tolerance is the significant first step that we much take, first in our personal lives, then towards a peaceful world communication. Religion in one of the most deep and penetrating faces of human condition. It bears in it an energy of passion and intensity, a power that little else in the sphere if human existence does. We are inherently driven, with something that's greater than ourselves.

While I personally believe that this hunger is the universal, natural core of our being, it undoubtedly manifests itself in infinitely varying ways. There is no ignoring the fact that there are huge differences and points of separation between the world's religious nomenclatures. There are points of convergence and divergence on every level, from East to West, Jew to Buddhist, Episcopalian to Baptist, and from me to you. The only way to love all in the context of this diversity is to acknowledge and respect those differences.

Now, It's important to note that religious tolerance is not merely a failure to stand up for what one believes. It isn't a weak cop-out.

It begins with a security and understanding of one's own identity, one's spiritual core. An awareness of and a conviction to one's own beliefs allows for calmly, strongly held, but permeable boundaries.

Tolerance does not require abdication of those boundaries, but neither does it call for a relentless defense of those boundaries.

Tolerance in not enough, though. There is no room for growth in merely recognizing differences and agreeing to respect one another form a distance. If we, as individuals, seek growth, and if we as a global religious community seek movement toward a peaceful existence together, have to take it further. We have to dialogue, to engage in a meaningful conversation with one another.

Dialogue is a mutual sharing between different sides. This means through love, you share your faith with others. But, it also means that through love you seek a better understanding of those whose faith is different from your own.

Interfaith dialogue is an extremely powerful, highly underestimated tool for achieving peace in such a deeply divided world. Globalization is rapidly and forcefully changing the way we live our lives, whether we realize or not. Every day, technology transportation, and communication are improving and placing the entire world in our reach. Geographical separation is becoming much less significant and real.

The cultural and religious separation, however, are not narrowing. We live in a tiny global neighborhood with Jews, Muslims, and Hindus, Baptists, Roman Catholics, Methodists and the like. We are neighbors who don't understand one another, don't talk one another…we just stay at home, separated by high fences.

The fences are there for a reason, we tell ourselves. Better yet, let's build them higher, and let's build some more.

How much energy have we spent on building these barriers? We have to be intentional about breaking down those fences and living out the inclusiveness and universality of God's immeasurable and unconditional love. This doesn't mean losing our identity or abdicating our beliefs. It means love, compassion, and understanding a priority.

One of Christ's major endeavors as a social activist was to tear down the walls that separate humanity to unite all of humankind under the banner of divine love. The Jewish community during his time was in a tumultuous state of tension between its religious identity and a growing Roman presence. Among the varying responses from the Jewish community, one of the most prevalent was that of the Pharisees. They believed that the redemption of Israel would come from a strict adherence to the complex codes of holiness and purity. Christ made clear, though, that it's Yahweh's love, compassion, and the mercy that supersede the walls that we build to separate and compartmentalize ourselves. He wanted to override with divine love the barriers that separate the Jews and Greeks, Slaves and Free, Prostitutes and Tax Collectors, Pharisees and Sadducees, Rich and Poor. We are called to do the same.

While there are very real issues that separate the religions of the world, our points of commonality are far greater. In loving one another we must understand, dig deeper into our differences. We must move away from a polemic approach and toward a respectful appreciation for religious diversity. We must come to a table with humility and a sincere desire to grow.

In "The Dialogue Decalogue" thesis, Turkish Islamic Scholar and a prominent figure in the Islamic globe Fethullah GÜLEN had listed some commandments for effective interreligious dialogue (adapted from "Sonsuz nur" by Fethullah GÜLEN):

1. The purpose of dialogue is to increase understanding.
2. Participants should engage in both interfaith and interreligious dialogue.
3. Participants should be honest and sincere.
4. Participants should assume that other participants are equally frank, obvious, honest and sincere.
5. Each participant should be allowed self-definition.
6. There should be no preconceptions as to areas of disagreement.
7. Dialogue can only occur between equals.
8. Dialogue can only occur where there is mutual trust.
9. Participants must be self-critical of their religious traditions.
10. Participants must attempt to experience how the traditions of others affect them holistically.

Basically, interfaith dialogue brings people of faith together, created a loving respectful relationship between them, and offers immeasurable growth to every party.

I know I'm running on some really broad, abstract ideas, so I want to offer my real, personal poor experience with interfaith dialogue.

My interest in dialogue between religions and within my own faith goes far back, but my recent trip to Kurdistan's Sufi spots transformed that interest into something much deeper and more passionate.We traveled all over the territory and also on the outskirts of Sulaimani, visiting important cultural and religious sites and spending time with people who were a part of this gigantic movement in Kurdistan and within Islam.

The movements stem from the teachings of Biyara and Tawella Shaykhs whom are not only divine and mysticism-leading people, they are also religious leaders, social activists, Islamic scholars and literalists; among them the late Sheikh Osman of Biyara who was great poet with wisdom implicit in his eloquent text of poetry which mainly turns around religious and divine subjects.

I also left with a massive charge on my heart to bring Christianity to the table with equal fervor and conviction.

We need to step it up, join our voices in this exciting and hopeful journey toward peace through understanding and education. We have so much to gain, and so much to offer, since we share Kurdistan with minor population of Christian fellow-citizens in the context of a civilized formula of co-existence.

I want to leave you with a quote by Huston Smith:

"What a strange fellowship this is, the God-seekers in every land lifting their voices in the most disparate way imaginable to the God of all life. How does it sound from above? Like Bedlam, or do the strains blend in strange, ethereal harmony? Does one faith carry the lead, or do the parts share counterpoint and antiphony where not in full-throated chorus? We cannot know. All we can do is to try to listen carefully and with full attention so each voice in turn as addresses the divine."

The moments I spent there with Sufis' fascinating dance, ceremonious occasion and ritual gathering of Shaykhs are the most missed memories of my life and nicest moments too.

Sunday, September 06, 2009

Sabr / صبر

By Golden Boy, *Love, Bollywood & Sufism* - Desicritics.org - Bangalore, Karnataka, India
Monday, August 31, 2009

I don’t know about 1947; it was three decades before I was born. From what I have read I know that India was partitioned in 1947 during Independence from the British Raj. Yet, it amazes me to notice that the nuances of Partition are still investigated in Political circles, even as the fire of its aftermath ignites the hearts of people on both the sides of the Indo-Pak border to this day.

All I know is that a line was drawn then dividing the Land, and all hell broke loose.

The fate of Kashmir (pieces of which are held by both countries) is still a matter of contention between the two countries; and I have noticed how the Indian media remains tight-lipped about the everyday rallies and bandhs (closures) in the Valley; while its Pakistani counterpart fans the fire.

The Valley is burning and it is my personal belief as an Indian Hindu citizen that a UN plebiscite in Kashmir is the need of the hour in order to judge if the people want to stay with India, Pakistan or want total Independence. It will do a great deal of good to the future of India, Pakistan and Kashmiri people.

-x-x-x-

As a Hindu child I grew up in a mohallah in Mumbai consisting of Hindu and Moslem people who participated actively in each other’s festival. Muslim guys and girls would swirl away into the night to the music of Garba during Navratri and Sewaiya (a Moslem delicacy) would be served to Hindu neighbours during Eid.
Mumbai riots of 1992 changed all that!

-x-x-x-

Amidst increasing ghettoisation that took place in the city after the 1992 riots and the immediate bomb blasts of 1993, Muslim families ran away from Hindu dominated localities and pockets of the city, while Hindu families fled from Muslim neighbourhoods. Today that ghettoisation is complete (the latest victim of this was the Celebrity Imran Hashmi)

I was a 15-year-old Hindu lad then, a Mumbaikar who was growing up to the tunes of Bollywood (the Hindi Film Industry). Bollywood has always served platters of romantic movies with songs that put ‘Aashiqui’ (romantic love) on a high pedestal.

Upper middle class Intellectual circles still stay away from Hindi Movies; though the majority of Indians have grown up being influenced by the concepts of romantic love that they preach.

The beautiful lyrics penned down by both Hindu and Moslem Indian writers have kept the flame of the Sufi concept of ‘Ishq’ burning in the hearts of the Indian youth.

Ishq-e-Majaazi (Allegorical Love) :

“chhoo lene do naazuk hothon ko
kuchh aur nahin hai jaam hai ye
qudrat ne jo hamko baksshaa hai
wo sabse haseens inaam hai ye”

Singer- Mohd. Rafi, Lyrics-Sahir Ludhianvi, Music-Ravi, Movie Kaajal 1965

Translation: “Let me touch those delicate lips/ It is nothing but wine/ It is God Who has gifted me these/ A big reward”… is an example of one such Bollywood song.

In Sufism, the beauty of one’s beloved is considered to be a representation (symbol) of the Perfection of God. No wonder then that it has the power to evoke true love in the heart of a lover! Intoxication i.e. wine, or jaam, is a symbol for divine ecstay.

In the Hindi Film Anwar (2007), the chosen murshid (guide) advises the young protoganist of the movie Anwar, that he has to fall in love in the earthly realm in order to evolve true love for God in his heart. For Sufis believe that only when a person treads on the path of earthly ‘true romantic love’ and suffers in the pain of separation from one’s beloved, can one get in touch with the rend of separation from God Almighty that is suppressed in the heart of every Individual.

In many Indian films (the modern story-telling characteristic of a community) when the two lovers cannot unite, they kill themselves. But Sabr (perseverance) on the path of love despite everything, is an important maqam (station) of the Sufi way that leads to tawaqqul (trust in God) i.e. the state of yaqin (certainty).

“Ye ishq nahi aasa, Itna to samajh lejiye... Ek Aag ka dariya hai, aur doob ke jaana hai”

The path of Love is not easy, first understand this. It is a pool of fire, and you need to drown to cross it. When one treads through the fires of earthly/ romantic love i.e. ishq-e-majaazi (Allegorical love), one can get a glimpse of the greater Path leading to God i.e. ishq-e-haqiqi (True Love).

We Hindus call Ishq-e-majaazi i.e. True love as “Bhakti”. Hindu-Saint Meera was a perfect example of somebody who was on the path of Ishq-e-haqiqi. This is the beauty of the path of the Spirit, the essence of religion that comes to one after one is on the Path for a long time: This is the path of gnosis (self-experience) which is the same whether it be Moslem or Hindu as exemplified by Meera.

The religions of the world were invented for the less-brave and people who have not started on the Spiritual path. So we find words, treatises, scriptures, religious inquests, historical blunders and plunders, interpretation, and confusion: because all of these belong to the Mind-chatter and the Mind is bound by the limitations of Time, Matter and Space unlike the Spirit. Beyond the words of Religion, lies ‘Faith’ -the realm of the Spirit. This realm (of the Spirit) is the same for a Hindu or a Moslem. Only the path i.e. religion is different.

Scholars, intellectuals, our Politicians, religious fanatics, kings and other saints of the past, needlessly get into a war of words on matters of religion! They lead holy Jihads of words and swords, and interfere in the progress of the common man. While the common man is busy with finding his way towards the realm of Spirit in his religion and has nothing to do with bloodshed.

All the common man needs is an environment that is congenial to the needs of his earthly survival i.e. roti, kapda and makan (food, clothing and shelter) so that he can also look out for the needs of his soul: the spiritual manna. People who are die-hard Intellectuals, terrorists and Kings do great injustice to the common man by disturbing the peace of the Land.

-x-x-x-

I, for one, fell in love with the beauty I found in my beloved. I know it was true love because I experienced the pain of love for the first time in my life. Many people are afraid of this aspect of love i.e. Pain. So they either escape into intellectual mind-chatter or fall prey to hatred and violence when they get all entangled in relentless mind-pursuits all the time afraid to face the pain of separation (with God) in one’s heart.

These are the lost sheep of the Lord’s herd. One can only pray for them, and at best forgive them if one can, for one’s own peace of mind and spiritual-progress. Personally, coming to terms with the pain of unreciprocated love and separation, I fell through a trap-door onto the Path of God.

I did not know anything about the first-hand direct experience of the ‘Path of God’ until I learnt of the Islamic/Sufi concept of love and reconciled with the pain in my heart. Then I set out in search of a murshid i.e. guide (we call such a person a Guru in Hinduism).
I am fortunate that I found a Guru. To this day I walk “not by sight but by Faith”: Islam/Sufism helped me regain my own path and Faith i.e. Hinduism.

-x-x-x-

Ishq-e-Haqiqi (True Love):

True Believers (Hindu or Muslim) and true lovers of God have no time for Religious Inquests or spreading of hatred in the name of religion. They are too busy nursing the pain of Love in their own hearts for their Beloved (God).

We Hindus believe that Bhakti (i.e. true love for God) cannot be cultivated in oneself without the Grace of God Himself. So I have no hate for people who chatter over religion and spread hatred based on the Past because of their own lack of direct first hand experience with the realm of one’s Spirit. They don’t know the essence of their own religion, and are too stuck in words words and words, facts and figures, history and injustice (the realm of the Mind).

They are too scared of what they would find if they looked within: the pain of love and separation.

Saturday, September 05, 2009

Not Haram, Not Haram, Not Haram

By Hamid Golpira & Gul Jammas Hussain, *‘We preach the message of love through Sufi music’* - Tehran Times - Tehran, Iran
Sunday, August 30, 2009

The Fareed Ayaz Qawwali group of Pakistan did a concert tour of Iran from August 6 to 14, giving performances in Tehran, Isfahan, and Shiraz

The band, which is led by award-winning musician Qawwal Ghulam Fareeddin Ayaz al-Hussaini, came to Iran to participate in the celebrations of Pakistan’s Independence Day, which occurred on August 14.

Qawwali is a form of Sufi Muslim devotional music characterized by simple melodies, forceful rhythms, and wild improvisations that encourage a state of euphoria in the listener. The musical tour was arranged by the Economic Cooperation Organization Cultural Institute, the Embassy of Pakistan in Tehran, and Iran’s Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance.

The Tehran Times conducted an interview with Qawwal Ghulam Fareeddin Ayaz al-Hussaini backstage at Vahdat Hall on August 7, just after the band completed their second concert in Tehran. Following is the text of the interview:

How have you enjoyed your stay in Iran so far?
I’ve very much liked these concerts. For the last three or four years I have been performing in Iran and enjoying it. Many people in Pakistan think that I’m an expert in Persian poetry. It’s something I’m very proud of. I know the Persian language very well but I cannot speak fluently like Iranians and my pronunciation is a bit different.

I like Iranian people very much. Iran has been a center of civilization for thousands of years. Many of the extraordinary people of art and culture are from Iran or regions very near to Iran -- Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, and Iraq… Iraq also had a great culture. So the Arabic, Persian, and Turkish languages are in Pakistan.

We (Pakistanis) do not regard Persian as a foreign language, we regard it as our own language… I like Iran very much, its Sufi saints, its poetry. Sufi saints actually do not belong to any particular area. Sufis have their own territory that is universal. And most of the Sufi saints belong to Iran, you know.

How long have you been playing music? And how did you first become interested in mystical Sufi music?
We have been performing this mystical Sufi music for the last 750 years. I mean 39 generations of my family have been performing this Sufi music Qawwali. Since the time of Hazrat Amir Khusro we have been in this profession. Qawwali was not a profession then but a medium to convey the message of Sufism. But now it’s a regular profession.

We use the poetry of Sufi saints, mystics, and friends of God for our Qawwali performances. We also compose ourselves. As musicians, we can compose each verse according to its mood and the mood of the singing. If the mood is fast, the music is fast, if the mood is slow, the music is slow. Qawwali is a very spiritual and devotional thing. I can say this because we have been in this profession for the past 750 years.

The first person from our family who started performing Qawwali was Samat bin Ibrahim, who lived in the time of Hazrat Amir Khusro, and I’m the direct blood descendant of Samat bin Ibrahim.

You have performed in many other places around the world. Where exactly did you play and how was the reaction?
I’ve performed throughout the world. However, Iranian culture and Pakistani culture are very similar. Historically they have been similar. Europe, America, and Africa are very far away from Pakistan. When I perform in Iran, I really feel at home. But when I perform in other far-off places, I feel somebody has trespassed into my home.

While performing in Iran, we do not need to explain much about what we are singing and its meaning, but when performing in other countries, we have to explain each and every little thing. That’s why I really like performing in Iran.

Do you view Sufi music as a means to promote Sufi ideas throughout the world?
Our world has reached the brink of disaster. Only Sufism can save it from a complete disaster, and that’s why we are so ardent about preaching Sufism, which is the message of love. Sufism teaches humanity. It is beyond the boundaries of religions and nationalities. It unites people. All religions teach humanity, and Sufism does the same. The teachings of Sufism shape the body and purify soul.

Some people have an interpretation of Islam according to which music is haram (prohibited). Have you had any problems with these people?
This is not a present-day problem. It’s an old issue. People have had a lot of discussions on this issue. I would only say this: What is haram in music? There’s nothing in music that is prohibited. I’ve studied the Quran, the Bible, the Torah, and many sacred books of Hinduism. I have studied all the major religions of the world. Wording can be haram, not singing, you see. If I say this person (he points to someone by his side) is God or a prophet, this is haram. If I say he is a handsome, endearing, or charming fellow, this cannot be haram. Sufism teaches this. It teaches love.

How can teachings of love be haram? So music is not haram, not haram, not haram. Look, Islam is not 14 centuries old. Islam is as old as Hazrat Adam (AS). If you looked at the constitution of Adam (AS), Jesus Christ (AS), or Moses (AS), you would see music inside. In their religions, there was music. Even Noah (AS) possessed all the knowledge and the system of music. So if something is given to a prophet from Almighty Allah as a gift, how can that thing ever be haram?

But have you ever had any problems with the people who believe that music is forbidden in Islam?
I do not face any kind of problems. When somebody comes to me with any questions or complaints, I reply to him and he returns with satisfaction, because I have studied the Quran, the Hadith, Islamic studies, and Christian studies. I can satisfy him with my knowledge.

Friday, September 04, 2009

"This Episode Should End"

TOI Editor, *Khadims divided over removal of nazim* - The Times of India - Jaipur, India
Friday, August 28, 2009

Ajmer: Cracks appeared in the unity among the khadims at the mausoleum of Khwaja Garib Nawaj Chishti on Thursday over the issue of removal of dargah nazim Ahmed Raza after a CD containing his alleged controversial statements on Islam and the Sufi saint came to light.

A month ago, the khadims lodged an FIR in the Dargah police station alleging Raza of religious deviation and making objectionable statements. A mob of khadims attacked the nazim, whose hand was fractured. According to the khadims, the nazim is appointed by the Centre to look after the management of the dargah only.

"He is not a saint who delivers speeches on religion and Sufism," Syeed Julikar Chishti said and alleged that Raza talked wrong things about the Khwaja.

Irked over the issue, the khadims went on a month-long agitation and made every effort to remove Raza from the post. They even met Union minister Salman Khursheed and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

However, claiming that nothing objectionable was found in the CD even after a long agitation, khadim Jahoor Chishti demanded resignation of the members of the Anjuman Committee (committee of khadims) who registered the case against Raza and started the agitation. "They did everything they could have done. But the government found nothing objectionable in the CD. Now the khadims should end this episode," Jahoor said, adding, "They have tarnished the image of the khadims by creating such scenes."

On the other hand, the Anjuman Committee is still trying to remove Raza. "Even the Committee of Moulvis took the matter seriously and found that the nazim should not say such things about religion," said a khadim. Meanwhile, the police have arrested six people for attacking Raza and are searching for three more in the matter.

[Picture: Moinuddin Chishti dargah, Ajmer, India. Photo from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moinuddin_Chishti]

Thursday, September 03, 2009

Mutual Affection

By Ammar Ali Hassan, *Anatomy of Sufism* - Al-Ahram Weekly - Cairo, Egypt
27 August - 2 September 2009; Issue No. 962

Long thought to be on the path to extinction, modern-day Sufism is as strong as ever in the Arab world even if serious study of the movement is lacking

With its folk appeal, Sufism has had a vivid history in Islam from the time the movement was little more than sentimental leanings and yearnings filling the hearts of the pious to when it spawned institutions that prospered on a blend of faith and folk tales with an occasional flirtation with politics.

For centuries, Sufism has defied predictions of its demise. It survived the harsh criticism of Islamist hardliners and withstood the waves of modernism that have swept over the Islamic world.

As other forms of religious association emerged on the scene, with variable emphases on charity or politics, Sufism was thought to be on the way out. But it has managed to stay the course despite the dire expectations. It has even managed to attract a new following among people who are highly professional, modern even.

But there is a big difference between Sufi societies that cope with modernism and get involved in public work so as to push their members to the top of the political echelon, as is the case in Turkey, and Sufi societies that inhabit a world of folklore and become little more than a festive phenomenon donning the garments of tradition. The latter are incapable of producing any political input, unless it is one that serves the status quo, as is the case in Egypt.

One can regard Egypt's Sufi societies as being a tributary of civil society, for they do engage in charity work, but that is not the whole story. It is hard to see them turning to activism or rising out of their political lethargy. It is even harder to imagine them ending their infatuation with myths that border on charlatanism.

Yet, Egyptian Sufism has produced some great scholars. It produced imams who challenged the sultans, drawing their immense political appeal from a public that was all too willing to bow to the power of myth, especially when it came with a dollop of material gain. Today, however, Sufism has become a mere servant of the authorities. One cannot fail to see this fact in Sufi festivities and detect it in Sufi discourse about authority.

Indeed, there seems to be an umbilical chord binding Sufi organisations, administrative as well as spiritual, to the religious branch of the state.

In Turkey, politicians such as Erbakan and Erdogan have used their connections to Sufi groups to great personal advantage. They cultivated the tradition of tolerance for which Sufis are known. They made political capital of the pluralism inherent in Sufism and of its ability to coexist with others and condone alternative styles of life. Turkish politicians turned the empathy and asceticism of Sufism into democratic assets. In Egypt, this did not happen.

Sufi societies have played a major role in the history of many countries, including the Mahdis of Sudan, the Sanussis, Qadiris, Tijanis and Maridis of central and western Africa, and the Naqshabandis and Mulawis of Central Asia and the Caucasus. Some of these societies went on to create nations out of the rubble of imperialism. Some turned their congregational meeting rooms into agricultural associations. And all helped spread Islam in Africa, Asia and Europe -- or at least held their ground in the face of the communist tide in Central Asia and the Caucasus.

In general, however, there is a lack of scholarship on the relationship between Sufism and politics. Apart from a handful of books, most of which focus more on the past than the present and are of a tentative rather than scholarly nature, there is little one can use. Material on this subject is lacking.

In Egypt, it is necessary to examine Sufi societies from a political perspective for several reasons. Firstly, there are many followers of Sufi societies, and they come from all sections and levels of society. Some say that membership of Sufi societies today exceeds 10 million people, with followers varying in their social, cultural, educational and professional profiles. There are 78 Sufi societies available to serve their needs.

Secondly, Sufism runs deep in Egyptian culture, and it was important in the formative years of some of the main figures of political Islam. Sheikh Hassan El-Banna, founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, was a member of the Hasafi society, for example, working as a secretary for the Hasafi Charitable Society ( Al-Gam'iya Al-Khairiya Al-Hasafiya ) in Mahmoudiya. Sheikh Mahmoud Khattab Al-Sobki, founder of the Sharia Society for Followers of the Mohamedan Book and Teachings ( Al-Gam'iya Al-Shar'ia lil-Amilina bil-Ketab wal-Sunna Al-Mohamediya ) also started his life as a Sufi. Imam Mohamed Abdu started his life as a follower of the Khalili Society.

Thirdly, some still believe that Sufism is apolitical because it focuses mainly on asceticism, love, knowledge and successiveness ( welayat ). To show the error of such a view, one needs to discuss the actual practices of the followers of Sufi methods and examine the theoretical principles of Sufi thinking.

Fourthly, at a time when civil society is being hailed as a possible counterpart to the state, a study of Sufi societies -- which can be regarded as a form of civil society -- may be useful. Sufi societies appeared much earlier than other forms of civil society. They first came onto the scene in the 12th century, whereas modern civil society organisations appeared well into the 19th century. Furthermore, when Sufi societies are examined, it can be seen how the state has tried to take them over. The fact that the state has for years intervened in Sufi affairs and used Sufi societies to promote itself is all too obvious.

Fifthly, Sufi societies are indirectly involved in politics, simply because they often do the bidding of political groups. Although they may not have political demands of their own, the power their members derive from being part of a non-political group is not to be discounted. In fact, voluntary work is often dedicated to implicit political goals, regardless of the nature of the organisation involved. Members of Sufi societies have a greater political clout than people who have no organisational links whatsoever.

Sixthly, there is a need to examine the political culture of Egyptians, for old habits die hard. We cannot aspire to raising the cultural level of the nation without taking a good look at its values and leanings. Because Sufism has impacted the psychology and mentality of many in Egypt, it needs to be examined as a prelude to outlining the path of progress in Egypt.

Lastly, political modernisation, now more than ever an urgent need in the Arab world, cannot take place without religious reform. There is a need to reinforce the culture of democracy in politicised and non-politicised religious institutions. In our societies, where religion moves every political and social juncture of society, it is necessary to reform religious views as well as politics.

***
The first Sufi society appeared in Egypt during the time of Salaheddin Al-Ayoubi (Saladin). In the Mamluk era, more societies appeared throughout the land. As Khanqas (charity hostels) and madrasas changed the landscape of the towns, Sufism developed a system of initiation in which the murid (hopeful adherent or beginner) would have to work his way through the system to become a naqeeb (chief or dean), and a khalif (master) would keep followers in line and demand their full obedience.

The Sufi rank and file came to resemble a military organisation, hardly surprising in Mamluk time when the whole state apparatus was always on alert and ready for endless war. In Ottoman times, the Sufis became more influential and acquired more zawyas, or congregational halls. They divided Egypt into areas of influence that did not tally with those of the state. Moreover, the manner of their organisation changed over time.

For one thing, the power of the sheikh mashayekh (chief sheikh) gradually eroded. In Ayoubid times, Sufi societies had had to submit to the authority of an overall chief ( sheikh khanqah ), a man to whom the state gave power over all Sufis. This system remained in effect until Nasser Mohamed bin Qalawun established the Nasserite khanqah in Siryaqus and made its chief sheikh the highest Sufi chief in the country.

This system ended in Ottoman times, when a system of four-way leadership was put in place. The state gave the leadership of all Sufi societies to four families. One was the family of Al-Sadat of Bani Al-Wafa. Another was the family of Mohamed Shamseddin Al-Hanafi. The third was the family of Madyan Al-Ashmuni, a student of Al-Hanafi. The fourth was the family of Abi Al-Abbas Al-Ghamri.

This four-way distribution of Sufi power remained in force until Sheikh Al-Sadat, who died in 1813, brought the entire Sufi community under his leadership. So powerful was Al-Sadat that he brought the Al-Ahmediya, Al-Saadiya and Al-Shaabiya societies to heel. The historian Al-Jabarti, one of his contemporaries, says that Al-Sadat took over the administration of the country's main mausoleums, including Al-Husseini, Al-Shafei, Al-Zeinabi and Al-Nafisi. This meant that Al-Sadat was in control of their immense revenues. Suffice it to say that he lived and died a very wealthy man.

Sheikh Mohamed Tawfiq Al-Bakri, who took over the Sufi Societies Command ( Mashyakhat Al-Turuk Al-Sufiya ) in 1892, issued a decree on 2 June 1903 making the sheikh mashayekh, or chief sheikh, run Sufi affairs through a council consisting of the sheikhs of the major Sufi societies. The system remained in force until 1976. The Bakri decree included 16 articles, and it gave Sufism a council to run its affairs for the first time in its history. Aside from the chief sheikh, the council included four members who were to be elected every three years. In 1905, another decree was passed making the appointment of a Sufi sheikh contingent on his knowledge and moral standing.

After the 1952 Revolution, the Sufi societies continued to operate under the Bakri decree until the republican leaders introduced a new Higher Sufi Council, while retaining aspects of the former decree. Under president Gamal Abdel-Nasser, elections for the General Assembly of the Sheikhs of Sufi Societies ( Al-Gam'iya Al-Amma li-Mashayekh Al-Turuq Al-Sufiya ) used to take place at the offices of the Cairo governorate. They took place every three years and were supervised by the Cairo governor. The Higher Sufi Council retained the power to appoint the sheikhs of Sufi societies all over the country.

Law 118/1976 stipulates that the Higher Council of Sufi Societies is to consist of 16 members named as follows: the sheikh mashayekh, or chief sheikh, is the head of the council. He is to be appointed by a decision of the president of the republic from among the sheikhs eligible for membership of the Higher Council of Sufi Societies; ten members of the Sufi Society sheikhs are to be elected by the General Assembly of the Sheikhs of Sufi Societies; a representative from Al-Azhar is to be selected by the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar; a representative from the Ministry of Awqaf (religious endowments) is to be selected by the respective minister; a representative from the Ministry of Interior is to be selected by the respective minister; a representative from the Ministry of Culture is to be selected by the respective minister; a representative from the Ministry of Local Administration is to be selected by the respective minister.

This law gave the Sufi Mashyakhah Ammah, or General Council, the authority to appoint deputies in various parts of the country who would be authorised to communicate on behalf of the Mashyakhah with the authorities. The sheikhs of the various societies retained their power to appoint deputies and sub-deputies in various governorates, cities and villages.

The law also made it incumbent on the sheikh of each society to gather his followers in a specified place on a regular basis for purposes of induction and training. He also had to inspect his deputies and sub-deputies and check on their performance. The sheikhs of societies were to report to the sheikh mashaykh, or chief sheikh, on their activities.

The law prohibited the creation of new Sufi societies unless the new society could prove that it was different from the existing ones in name and approach. A decision sanctioning the formation of a new society would need to be made by the Minister of Awqaf and Al-Azhar affairs, after consulting the minister of interior and obtaining permission from the Higher Council of Sufi Societies. Once these steps were made, the decision to create the new society would appear in the official gazette.

Since the beginning, Sufi societies were based on cohesion within the group. From the murid, the lowest- ranking member, to the sheikh mashayekh, the superior of all sheikhs, there is a clear chain of command and one that maintains continuity in the movement. This system was hospitable to newcomers, with things getting more structured as members moved up the ranks.

This brief description of Sufi organisation shows that the main method for attaining a high rank in the movement is through appointment. While it is true that the 1976 law allowed for the election of the members of the Higher Sufi Council every three years, generally speaking a man could only become a sheikh through inheriting the post. And while the men at the top gave orders and issued guidelines, those beneath them were asked to report on the conditions of their followers. They were allowed to make suggestions, but these were not binding on the higher echelons.

***
To better appreciate the precision and sophistication of the organisation of the Sufi movement in Egypt, one has to go into the details of every society and its affairs. There is hardly a village or town in Egypt that does not have followers of Sufi societies.

They hold nights of zikr (religious chanting) and hadras (religious parades) on given days. The sheikh tariqah (society chief or grandmaster) is superior to the sheikh seggadah (carpet chief or local chief), who tells the naqeeb noqaba seggadah (chief of deputies) what to do. And the latter supervise the khalif al-kholafa (chief of sub-deputies) and the khalifs (sub-deputies), who in turn keep an eye on the noqaba (acting deputies), the munshids (singers), and the murids (beginners or seekers).

For every sheikh tariqah there is an army of deputies, sub-deputies and acting deputies spanning many towns and villages. The sheikh is revered by his subjects, but he does not live isolated in the equivalent of a religious ivory tower. Instead, he is a kind of brother to his subjects, leading the congregation in a hierarchical structure that goes back, through genealogical descent, to the Prophet Mohamed.

The bonds within the society are normally viewed as ritual kinship, a kind of affinity that is not derived from birth but from mutual affection, the power of rite and the sentimental bonds of common practice. What is seen in Sufi organisation is a web of strong attachments rather than a family-style structure. The murids call each other "brothers", and they draw mutual benefits from their adopted family. The sheikh tariqah shares a ritual bond with the sheikh seggadah and with the other followers. He refers to members of his society as "sons" and sees himself as responsible for their welfare, just as a real father is responsible for his children.

The deputies are all brothers in ritual and fathers to the beginners and sub-deputies. They are expected to inquire after the well-being of the murids and help them resolve any problems. These bonds of brotherhood and fatherhood run throughout the society, with everyone taking part according to their organisational standing.

Sufi organisations are a mix of divergent individuals, of people who may differ in their discipline, approach and nature. It can be hard sometimes to tell whether the organisation is official or non-official.

In a way, the Sufi groups are civil society groups bearing all the features of voluntary organisations. But the fact is that they are ruled in the last instance by the authorities, which gives them a gloss of officialdom and makes them a mixed breed.

Although Sufi societies are open to the public and voluntary in nature, appearances can also be deceptive. The sheikhs inherit their posts from their fathers, and many feel obliged to follow a path they would not have normally chosen. Likewise, many of the sons and relatives of Sufis join the societies because their relatives keep pushing them in this direction.

Because Sufism is regarded as the righteous path by common tradition, many enrol in Sufi societies to please God and clan. Although membership is theoretically open to all, there are certain ways of ensuring that troublesome people, including the politically outspoken, are left out.

Sufi societies share many similarities in their daily operations. The sheikh's authority, the litanies and the singing rituals are more or less the same. Many of the traditions transcend the boundaries of time and place, for some societies were formed by foreigners on the move or by people who did not stay in one place very long, as was the case for the Makkiya Fassiya Society. Others are quite conventional, and yet they seem to hold a certain appeal for the most modern sections of society, including engineers and doctors, army men and business people.

There is a great diversity in the size of Sufi societies. There are massive societies that have maintained their status for decades, such as the Rifaei society, and there are tiny societies limited to certain areas.

Sufi societies are open to both sexes and all ages, from children to octogenarians. They make up a spectrum of organisations that are loyal to their chiefs and offspring. This hereditary aspect of Sufism is one of the elements of authority that one glimpses in Sufi organisations, along with other laws that govern performance and rituals.

Aside from these administrative concerns, there is also a spiritual chain of command. The Sufis believe in a hierarchical structure that they believe reflects the structure of the world. They envision a universe that is divinely divided into abdals (substitutes), awtad (pillars), aqtab (poles), nogabaa (leaders) and noqabaa (chiefs). These ranks can be rigid, and followers are not allowed to move up the ladder without going through spiritual trials.

The murid needs to have qualities allowing him to be promoted within the Sufi structure, for example. These include loyalty, the desire to help one's "brothers", the willingness to cooperate with fellow members, kindness towards one's parents, compassion to one's family, hospitality, kindness to neighbours, etc.

Once the murid manages to fulfil his quota of good deeds, he is promoted to a naqeeb (chief) or salek (path follower), at which point he is asked to respect his sheikhs and show even more humility towards his fellow members.

A Sufi is asked to strive to do more to help others and obey God. He is asked to be obedient and humble. Only with humility can he be promoted to the level of naqeeb (chief) or wasel (path finder).

Those who achieve such levels of initiation are expected to refrain from disputes with those from other creeds, to maintain the secrets of the Sufi societies, to avoid interfering in other people's business and to recognise the fact that the ability of others to understand the faith and the world may be more limited than theirs.

A murid 's becoming a salek is only the first part of the way, for then he can move on to becoming a magzub (drawn to faith), at which point things take a different path. A magzub is on a higher spiritual plateau, one that ends in being a motadarak (path ender), who no longer needs the material world.

When the practical consequences of the four pillars of Sufism (asceticism, love, successiveness and intuition) are considered, together with the way Sufism in Egypt has dealt with the authorities, the public and other Islamic movements, it will be seen that placating the authorities has long been a main feature of Sufism.

The Sufis supported the former sultans for political gain and social status, and more modern rulers use the Sufis to bolster their own legitimacy.

With some rare exceptions in which Sufis opposed the rulers, one may safely conclude that Egyptian Sufism provides a strong example of religion being used to justify government. Even when rulers have held eminent Sufis in awe, the latter have not used their status to reverse injustice or to build up an alternative power base to oppose the regime.

There was the rare case of the Ibn Al-Sufi insurgence in southern Egypt in ancient times, a long-running rebellion that gave a hard time to the Tulunid and then the Akhshid armies. There was also the case of the Ansar Al-Haq (supporters of righteousness) led by Mahmoud Abul-Azayem, sheikh of the Azaymi Society. In more modern times, there was General Mohamed Saleh Harb, head of the Muslim Youth Society, and Ahmed Hussein, leader of the Young Egypt movement. The Ansar Al-Haq sent 200 men to fight in the 1948 Palestine war, and they are said to have fought valiantly in Gaza between April 1948 and February 1949.

The Sufis are also attracted by military mythology. Concerning the mediaeval Crusades, for example, folk tales in Egypt describe how Ahmed Al-Badawi (the Muslim wali, or saint, of Tanta) managed to release Muslim prisoners held by the Crusaders. Much later, during the 19th-century Orabi Revolution, Sufis circulated a rumour to the effect that a chicken had laid an egg bearing the words " nasrallah qarib " (the victory of God is soon). Another rumour had it that the country's three major walis, or saints (Al-Desouki, Al-Badawi and Abdel-Aal) had given Ahmed Orabi, the leader of the Revolution, three cannons to use against the invading British forces.

Nevertheless, the history of Sufism is generally one of consistent submission to rulers and the avoidance of confrontation. Only with a few exceptions have Sufis ever stood up against invaders or unjust rulers.

Sufism is based on inspiring leadership, or charisma. It does not draw its hierarchy from the system of land ownership, and it is not a utilitarian organisation based on the exchange of mutual benefits among members. Neither is it a specialised organisation based on dedication to a certain field of knowledge or profession. At the end of the day, Sufism is held together by the personal charisma of the mashayekh al-tariqah, or the grandmasters of the movement.

Finally, the paths of the political development of the Sufi societies in Egypt tend to converge. Despite different circumstances in their manner of inception, personal qualities of the sheikh, economic capability, organisational rigour, geographical boundaries and number of followers, all Sufi societies are politically alike.

Superficial differences in litanies, chants and rituals fade when one looks at actual practices. The role the sheikh plays in the grooming of the murids is the same everywhere. When a difference in the political culture surfaces among different societies, this is likely to occur because of the social milieu in which the followers live, not because of the thinking behind the rituals of the societies themselves.

The writer is a researcher in socio-political science and author of The Political Upbringing of Sufism in Egypt , soon to be published by Dar Al-Ain, Cairo.

Pictures, (clockwise from top left): the khalifa, or descendant of the sheikh, on a horse in the zaffa of Ahmed El-Rifaai; one of the two khalifas of Ahmed El-Badawi, in Tanta; in moulid Al-Sayeda Zeinab, the tahtib dance; the zikr. All Photos: Sherif Sonbol.

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

Sister Cities


By Federal Bureau Editor, *Konya and Multan declared sister cities* - Pakistan Times - Pakistan
Friday, August 28, 2009

Islamabad: At a graceful ceremony in Konya, Turkey on Wednesday, the Mayor of Konya Metropolitan city Tahir Akyurek and District City Nazim Multan Faisal Ahmad Mukthar signed a protocol to declare Konya and Multan as sister cities.

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, Foreign Minister of Turkey Ahmet Davutoglu, Governor of Konya Aydin N. Dogan and Ambassador of Pakistan to Turkey Tariq Azizuddin alongwith other dignitaries from both the brotherly countries were present during the signing of the protocol, said a message received here.

The framework document indicates the ‘sister cities’ Konya and Multan officially focusing on the areas covering the partnership.

The Mayor of Konya Metropolitan city and District City Nazim Multan signed the protocol on behalf of their respective cities strengthening the relations in areas of culture, arts, economy, education and sports.

The document reads that periodical programmes will be organized in Konya and Multan cities every year related to Hazrat Shams-i-Tebriz (RA).

Foreign Minister Qureshi thanked the government and people of Turkey for their cooperation and support in every test and turmoil. He also pointed out the historical, cultural and spiritual similarities between the cities of Konya and Multan. The Foreign Minister of Turkey assured that the relations between Pakistan and Turkey will further strengthen after signing of this protocol.

Konya is a city in the Central Anatolia Region of Turkey. It is the capital of the Konya Province and had a city population of 1,412,343 in 2007, while the provincial population (including the other urban centers in the Konya Province) was 1,959,082 in the same year.

The tomb of Hazrat Maulana Jalal al-Din Muhammad Rumi (RA), the great Persian Sufi poet commonly known as 'Ya Hazrat Mevlâna' also exists on the soils of Konya. The tomb of the great saint, who is the founder of the Sufi Mevlevi order (known for the Whirling Dervishes) is located in the heart of Konya city where he spent the last fifty years of his life.

Yet another great Sufi saint, Ibn Arabi, visited Konya in 1207, and made it as his eternal abode.

And, Multan is a city in the Punjab Province of Pakistan. It is located in the southern part of the province. Multan District has a population of over 3.8 million—according to 1998 census—and the city itself is the sixth largest within the boundaries of Pakistan. It is situated on the east bank of the Chenab River, about 966 km (600 miles) from Pakistan's coastal city of Karachi.

Multan is known as the City of Saints and Sufis due to the large number of shrines and great Sufi saints from the city. The city is full of bazaars, mosques, shrines and ornate tombs. It is located in a bend created by five rivers of the Punjab province.

[Pictures: Konya, Turkey: Rumi's Mausoleum;
Multan, Pakistan: Shrine of Sheikh Rukn-e-Alam.
Photos: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konya; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rukn-e-Alam]

Tuesday, September 01, 2009

A Wake-up Call

By Beth Healy, *Followers of a mystical religion were taken in by Madoff scheme* - Boston Globe - Boston, MA, USA
Thursday, August 27, 2009

There’s another religious group that was taken in by Bernard Madoff, one that’s less well known than the Jewish community he so widely infiltrated: the Sufis.

A number of Sufis, who practice a mystical form of Islam, and Sufi groups on both US coasts entrusted millions of dollars to a California lawyer, Richard M. Glantz, who is a member of the Sufi community. He in turn placed their money with Madoff. The connection: Glantz, raised in a Jewish family, is the son of a New York accountant who had placed $88 million in client funds with Madoff.

“We’re devastated,’’ said Saphira Linden, a Jamaica Plain Sufi teacher and drama therapist who recalls learning of her Madoff losses when her son called her while she was driving home from the hairdresser on Dec. 11. Linden, 66, runs a drama program out of her home, in cooperation with Lesley University. She lost her Omega Theater program’s $76,000 endowment to Madoff, as well as her personal savings.

“We cannot continue the school unless we raise money,’’ Linden said.

She and nine others first invested with Madoff 20 years ago, through a connection of a Sufi friend, coming up with $10,000 each. Then, after another Sufi friend introduced her to Glantz, she had him manage her money. She invested not only the theater’s funds but her nest egg - several hundred thousand dollars from the sale of a Jamaica Plain property. The money was meant to support her theater program and her retirement.

Glantz, a lawyer in San Raphael, Calif., is also chairman and treasurer of the Hope Project, an India-based nonprofit founded by a Sufi teacher. According to people who do business with him, Glantz ran at least two large funds for friends and family - the Fern Creek Limited Partnership and the Ostrin Family Partnership - portions of which were invested with Madoff. He earned commissions on clients’ investments.

People who act as investment advisers must be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission or the state in which they do business. In Glantz’s case, he told a California news website that he registered with the SEC in 2007, but the agency has no record of him doing so.

Glantz got in trouble for his business relations with Madoff nearly two decades ago. He and his late father, Edward Glantz, were disciplined by the SEC in 1993 for raising money for Madoff in the form of unregistered securities. Edward Glantz and a partner raised $88 million, according to SEC documents, which they sent to Madoff via an accounting firm started by Ruth Madoff’s father, Saul Alpern. Richard Glantz, meanwhile, raised $30 million for Madoff from 350 investors from 1985 through 1992, the SEC said.

Richard Glantz was fined $300,000 and, according to a June report by PacificSun, an online paper in Marin County, Madoff had to return the $30 million to Glantz’s clients. Glantz said he continued to make referrals to Madoff, but did not take fees again until 2007, when he said he registered with the SEC.

Glantz did not return calls requesting an interview. In the PacificSun report, he said he had lost millions of his own money to Madoff, and had to sell two homes.

For members of the Sufi community, the Madoff news came as a particular blow. A group whose traditions include embracing all religions, woodsy retreats, and meditative dancing, Sufis may have been overly trusting of Madoff, they now say, and unsophisticated about investing.
“I really believe it’s a wake-up call,’’ Linden said.

Alima Lucinski, executive director of the Sufi Order International, North America, said Glantz assured the organization as recently as last September - when the stock market was in a deep dive - that it was on track to make money because Madoff had its investments in US Treasuries. The New Lebanon, N.Y., group was invested in the Fern Creek fund, which had a large slice of its estimated $17 million with Madoff. The Sufi Order declined to say how much of its endowment was lost to Madoff.

Lucinski said she believes a greater number of religious groups and nonprofits were affected by Madoff than is known, because some are not required to reveal their finances and are also reluctant to do so voluntarily. “It’s not something people want to come out and say,’’ she said.

Linden has been public about her losses because her Omega Theater is now broke. In its early days in the 1960s, the group performed Bertolt Brecht works on Lewis Wharf and later did puppet theater for children and large sociopolitical pieces. One play about the turbulence of the 1960s, “Riot,’’ went to New York and in 1968 won an off-Broadway Obie Award. In October, Linden is scheduled to perform in a two-woman show called “Motherblood’’ at Passim in Cambridge.

Linden now devotes most of her time to teaching and is writing two books. She has melded her spiritual side with theater to teach actors, poets, social workers, and business people theatrical and spiritual skills they can apply to their own work. She is making ends meet in her modest apartment attached to the theater, but can’t take on new students. “I had to stop everything,’’ she said.

Linden said she trusted Glantz with her money because “he had found this way to help people.’’ He sometimes would warn investors that the returns of 15 to 18 percent a year they were allegedly getting from Madoff could one day vanish. “It could change in a minute, so you’re taking a risk,’’ Linden recalled Glantz saying.

All Linden has to show for her investments now is a neatly filed stack of old statements. One, dated Feb. 15, 2002, says Madoff bought 62 shares of American International Group for her account. As it turned out, Madoff never made any of the trades he detailed so carefully for clients.

Linden also has a copy of a letter she sent in 2001 to Madoff’s top lieutenant, Frank DiPascali. In it, she inquired about her account, noted that she was adding $20,000 to it, and praised him for his work. “Let me take this opportunity to thank you for the work you do for me and for other friends who invest with you. It has made such a difference in my life,’’ she wrote.

DiPascali is now awaiting trial and faces 125 years in prison for his role in the Ponzi scheme, the first executive other than Madoff himself to face indictment so far.

Picture: Saphira Linden lost her theater program’s endowment and her life savings to Bernard Madoff. Photo: Barry Chin/Globe Staff

A Centre Of Sufism

By Dr. Ashiq Hussain, *Kashmir dispute: A brief history* - Meri News - New Delhi, India

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

In August 1947, India became independent and like other princely states, Kashmir too had the choice to accede to its preferred dominion - India or Pakistan. It was this decision that became the dispute's keystone, which has existed for five decades.

Kashmir is one of the most beautiful places on earth with equally beautiful people. Its a centre of Sufism - a culture created by liberal Islamic and Hindu traditions. Even though this region has a Muslim majority, it is almost divided into three equal sub-regions with majority Buddhist, Hindu and Muslim areas. It is painful that the unrest in valley (one of the three regions) has dragged for two decades now and has been a flash point among unresolved disputes.

The state was created under the Treaty of Amritsar between the East India company and Raja Gulab Singh of Jammu who bought the Valley from the former for Rs 75,00,000 (in 1846) and added it to Jammu and Ladakh already under his rule. The Valley is a muslim majority region with a composite cultural identity called 'Kashmiriyat' transcending religious barriers. Moreover, the people are hospitable and engage in Sufi tradition.

The unrest began in 1931, with the movement against the repressive Maharaja Hari Singh. Singh, a part of the Hindu Dogra dynasty was ruling over a majority muslim state, while there was no representation of the latter. In 1932, Sheikh Mohammed Abdullah started the All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference to fight for Kashmiri freedom from the Maharaja's rule, which eventually became the National Conference in 1939.

The Glancy Commission appointed by the Maharaja in its report in April 1932, confirmed that the subjects had grievances and suggested recommendations. These were accepted but not implemented, leading to another agitation in 1934. These culminated in a Quit Kashmir movement in 1946, led by the National Conference, to restore the sovereignty of the people.

In August 1947, the Indian subcontinent became independent and like other princely states, Kashmir also had the choice to accede to its preferred dominion - India or Pakistan, taking into account factors such as geographical contiguity and the wishes of their people. The Maharaja delayed his decision, attempting to remain independent. However, the people expected to accede to Pakistan.

In a controversial move, the Maharaja handed over control of the kingdom of Jammu and Kashmir to India, despite Pakistani protests and calls for a referendum that would allow the Kashmiri people to decide. Barring National Conference, other parties like the Muslim Conference and the Chiefs of Gilgit region, advised against this move. While in prison, Sheikh Abdullah wrote a letter to a friend in Jammu (which was published in the Congress press) in favour of accession of Kashmir to India. Abdullah was released from prison on September 29, 1947, after which he alternated his demand between an Azad Kashmir and one belonging to either nation.

The Indian army entered the state on October 27, to repel invading forces, and Abdullah endorsed the accession as unplanned which would otherwise be ultimately decided by a plebiscite. He was appointed as head of the emergency administration. Pakistan retriated that the accession is illegal and the Maharaja acted under compulsion.

In November 1947, India proposed to Pakistan to withdraw all its troops first, as a precondition for plebiscite, which Pakistan rejected stating that the Kashmiris may not vote freely given the presence of Indian army and Abdullah's friendship with the Indian Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. Thus Pakistan too proposed simultaneous withdrawal of all troops. On January 1, 1948, India took the Kashmir problem to the United Nations (UN) Security Council.

A year later, a ceasefire between the two was forced, which left India in control of most of the Valley, as well as Jammu and Ladakh, while Pakistan gained control of part of Kashmir including what Pakistan calls "Azad" Kashmir and Northern territories. Pakistan claimed it is merely supporting an native rebellion in "Azad" Kashmir and Northern Territories against repression, while India terms that territory as POK (Pakistan Occupied Kashmir).

Four days later, UNCIP (United Nations Commission for India and Pakistan) resolution stated that the question of the accession of Jammu and Kashmir to India or Pakistan will be decided through a free and impartial plebiscite. As per the 1948 and 1949, UNCIP resolutions, both countries accepted the principle that Pakistan secures the withdrawal of Pakistani intruders followed by withdrawal of Pakistani and Indian forces, as a basis for the formulation of a Truce agreement whose details were to be arrived in future. However, both countries failed to arrive at a Truce agreement due to differences in interpretation of the procedure.

On October 17, the Indian Constituent Assembly adopted Article 370 of the Constitution ensuring a special status and internal autonomy for the state with central jurisdiction limited to the three areas - defence, foreign affairs and communications.

Later on in 1951, the first post-independence elections were observed here but the UN passed a resolution stating that these were not substitutes for a plebiscite because a plebiscite offered the option of choosing between India and Pakistan. Sheikh Abdullah won, mostly unopposed. There were widespread charges of election rigging.

In 1952, he drifted from a position of endorsing accession to India to insisting on self-determination of Kashmiris. In July, he signed the Delhi Agreement with the Central government on Centre-State relationships, providing for autonomy of the state within India and of regions within the state; Kashmir was even allowed to have its own flag.

This issue continued to reel in one or other group and then ultimately, Jawaharlal Nehru on August 7, 1952, quoted that "Ultimately - I say this with all deference to this Parliament - the decision will be made in the hearts and minds of the men and women of Kashmir; neither in this Parliament, nor in the United Nations nor by anybody else.”

Since then and over half a century later, there is no sign of an end to this dense and complicated dispute. A series of wars and ongoing guerilla operations have ensured that the state has remained one of the most volatile and bloody regions of the world. Further demands and new conflicts have added twisted complications to an argument that has not been resolved.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

The Brave Speaks The Truth
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By APP, *PIF pays tribute to Sachal Sarmast* - Daily Times - Pakistan
Sunday, September 6, 2009

Islamabad: Speakers at a literary gathering on Saturday paid tribute to saint Sachal Sarmast, who planted divine love in the hearts of people of Sindh province.

They said Sarmast was the most remembered and revered sufi poet. The gathering was arranged by Pakistan Intellectual Forum (PIF) in connection with the 188 Urs of Sarmast.

Ibrahim Nizamani said Sarmast was a leading sufi who composed verses on philosophy and sufism. “Sachoo is known as Second Mansoorul Halaj because of his poetry and philosophy,” he said.

Hashim Abro said Sachoo revolted against trends of his time with his philosophy and poetry with such messages ‘The brave speaks the truth, let others like it or not, let not be friends based on false’.

“His unique use of similes, metaphors and allegories gives him a prominent place in Sindh language and literature” Abro concluded.


[Picture: A view of Hazrat Sachal Sarmast Dargah. Photo: Jameelshahr, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sachal_sarmast.jpg]
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Saturday, September 12, 2009

1012th Annual Urs Festival
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By Syed Muthahar Saqaf, *Urs festival celebrated at Tiruchi dargah* - The Hindu - India
Saturday, September 5, 2009

Tiruchi, Tamil Nadu: A large number of devotees from different parts of the country participated in the 1012th annual Urs festival of the Sufi Saint Hazrath Thable Alam Badusha Nathervali held on the dargah premises in Tiruchi in the early hours of Saturday.

The fortnight-long festival began with the hoisting of the holy flag on August 21 and installation of the Banwa Jama Sarguru.

The pot containing the sandal paste was brought to the dargah in a decorated chariot from the Gandhi Market.

The sandal paste was anointed on the tomb of Hazrath Thable Alam Badsha, who was the first Sufi saint to visit this part of the country, by Khalifa Syed Mazharuddin Khalandar Suharwardy.

Later, the fakirs belonging to the five Jamas of Sha Banwa, Sha Malang, Sha Tabkhat, Sha Jalal and Sha Rifayee and the Muzawars also anointed the sandal paste in the presence of the chief executive trustee (CET), A. D. B. Badhushas, and hereditary trustee Khalifa M. Syed Ghulam Rasool Suharwardy.

A. K. Yussouf, national president of the Builders Association of India, was among those who participated in the celebrations.

Special “Fathiha” (prayers) was offered to seek the blessings of the saint. Recital of Maulood Shariff, discourses, rendering of qawwali songs by the famous qawwals from all over the country and devotional songs marked the occasion.

The tomb of the sufi saint was cleaned on Thursday with the water of [the river] Cauvery. It was brought in a procession by devotees.

Picture: Sandal paste pot being carried in a decorated chariot during the annual Urs festival of Hazarath Thable Alam Badhusha Nathervali Dargah, Tiruchi on Saturday. Photo: R.M. Rajarathinam/The Hindu
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Friday, September 11, 2009

Mystical Islam
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AD Report, *Peabody Museum Press Publishes New Book: Sacred Spaces: A Journey with the Sufis of the Indus* - Art Daily - Mexico
Sunday, September 6, 2009

Cambridge, MA: Imaginative, vibrant, and saturated with the rich colors of South Asia, Samina Quraeshi’s photographs, calligraphic works, and montages reflect the diversity of Islamic expressions of faith.

Her work is a creative response to the experience of pilgrimage to the Sufi shrines in the Indus Valley. The images evoke the music, dance, and acts of faith that animate these sacred spaces.

Raised in Pakistan and India, Samina Quraeshi is the first Robert Gardner Visiting Artist at the Peabody Museum. Quraeshi says, “Sufi mysticism complicates the all-too-common view that Islam is monolithic—unable or unwilling to recognize the internal plurality of devotion and interpretation among its faithful.”

Her images bring to life a landscape and a culture that reverberate with the Sufi traditions of mystical Islam. Through vivid storytelling illustrated with over 250 color images, Quraeshi adds her voice to the long tradition of mystical Islam and illuminates the ways in which sacred spaces act as profound expressions of both faith and culture.

Her journey, infused with childhood memories and ancient legends, explores the localized traditions of Sufi practices in the Indus Valley region. Essays by scholars Ali S. Asani and Carl W. Ernst and by Pakistani architect Kamil Khan Mumtaz supplement Quraeshi’s personal journey with discussions of the musical, political, and architectural dimensions of Sufism in South Asia.

*Sacred Spaces: A Journey with the Sufis of the Indus* will be published in October 2009 by the Peabody Museum Press and Mapin Publishing. The book will be available for purchase at the Opening Reception and at the Museum.

Related exhibition: Sacred Spaces: Reflections on a Sufi Path
The Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology presents a new exhibition opening on October 22, 2009: Sacred Spaces: Reflections on a Sufi Path by Samina Quraeshi.

The exhibition includes photographs, calligraphy, and mixed media compositions. It opens Thursday October 22, 2009, at 5:30 PM with brief talks by Ms. Quraeshi and by Thomas W. Lentz, Director of the Harvard Art Museums and William L. Fash, Director of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.

Their remarks will be followed by a performance of Sufi music and by an Opening Reception and Book Signing in the Peabody’s Museum.

*Sacred Spaces: Reflections on a Sufi Path* at Harvard’s Peabody Museum will be on view through April 30, 2010.

Companion Exhibition: *Sacred Spaces: The World of Dervishes, Fakirs, and Sufis* at Harvard’s Arthur M. Sackler Museum is on view through January 3, 2010.
Samina Quraeshi is an educator, designer, artist, photographer, and author. Formerly Henry R. Luce Professor in Family and Community at the University of Miami and Director of Design for the National Endowment for the Arts, she is currently the Gardner Visiting Artist at the Peabody Museum, Harvard University.

Ms. Quraeshi has exhibited her artwork internationally and is the author of Legacy of the Indus: A Discovery of Pakistan, Lahore: The City Within, and Legends of the Indus.

Professor of Indo-Muslim and Islamic Religion and Cultures at Harvard University, Ali S. Asani has written, “Samina Quraeshi offers us a unique account of a journey through her childhood homeland in search of the wisdom of the Sufis. Along this meandering path she has created an imaginative personal history and a rich body of photographs and works of art, all of which reflect the seeking heart of the Sufi way.”

Picture: Mixed media by Samina Quraeshi. Photo: Art Daily.


Visit the Peabody Museum
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Thursday, September 10, 2009

The Organic Spread Of Love
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Staff Report, *Sufi Retreat Offers a Multifaceted Spiritual Experience* - The Santa Barbara Independent - Santa Barbara, CA, USA
Thursday, September 3, 2009

Shadhuliyya Sufism Guide Visits Santa Barbara for Mid-Ramadan Retreat at La Casa de Maria

This Labor Day weekend, La Casa de Maria will be the site of the Southwest Sufi School’s* Sufi retreat. For the first time ever, Sufi master and guide Sidi Shaykh Muhammad Sa'id al-Jamal ar-Rifa'i ash-Shadhuli* —Sidi al-Jamal for short—will visit Santa Barbara to spend three days praying, chanting, and feasting with his followers as part of his annual trip to the U.S.

The retreat begins Friday, September 4, at 2 p.m. and finishes Monday, September 7, at 1 p.m., following an all-night prayer vigil that begins at 1 p.m. on Sunday (all religions are invited).

The event aims to enhance the spiritual experience for all involved, and the Santa Barbara sanctuary La Casa de Maria*, nestled in foliage near Montecito’s Upper Village, is the perfect setting; according to L.A. Sufi Center moderator Cheri Langdell, the “sacredness of the place” is tangible.

Aside from witnessing the teachings of a “world-known healer and scholar of Sufi studies,” attendees may also expect to benefit from the presence of at least three other teachers while enjoying meals before sunrise and after sundown—in observance of Ramadan—and attending classes and practices throughout the day.

While the retreat is ideal for practiced Sufis, the event welcomes newcomers as well. Although University of Spiritual Healing and Sufism* president Dr. Ibrahim Jaffe* defined Sufism as “the heart of Islam; the root of the metaphorical tree of Islam,” he also identified that the goal of Sidi’s annual trip to the U.S. is “to stimulate the organic spread of love; to address people searching for truth.”

Jaffe, a medical doctor, claims that Sidi saved his life after he was diagnosed with a rare heart disease at the age of 36. Jaffe said, “I went to Sidi, and he told me, ‘I see that you are dying and that you have six months to live’ before giving me three orders: Learn to love, embrace Sufism, and follow a prescription of herbs and medicines; and I recovered.”

As Langdell said, “When you’re around Sidi, there are little miracles, things start to go better.”

As Jaffe described, “Sidi is a very high Sufi master who has reached a state of God realization; the higher you travel, the more you embody the Godly light.”

The event is expected to bring to La Casa de Maria nearly 200 people from a broad spectrum of religious paths, largely due to Sidi’s presence. Said Langdell, “This is truly a landmark event for Santa Barbara. Sidi al-Jamal is the highest ranking Sufi in Jerusalem.”

For those who are interested in Sufism, Langdell recommends the poetry of world-renowned Sufi poet Rumi whose mystically spiritual poetry is available widely through the translation of Shahram Shiva* among others.

*Links:

*Visit the Los Angeles Shadhiliyya Sufi Center

*Visit Sidi Muhammad Press

*Visit the Retreat and Conference Center La Casa De Maria

*Visit the University of Spiritual Healing & Sufism USHS

*Visit Dr. Ibrahim Jaffe, MD

*Visit Shahram Shiva's Rumi Network
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Wednesday, September 09, 2009

A Place Of Worship
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By Sadia Dehlvi, *The gates of paradise are thrown open to you* - The Times Of India - India

Friday, September 4, 2009

Mystics of various religions have believed fasting to be an effective way of controlling the lower instincts.

Sufi Masters say that hunger brings about illumination of the soul, for Allah provides spiritual sustenance to those who keep hungry for His sake.

Rumi writes, "Hunger is God's food for which he quickens the bodies of the upright."

Shaqiq Balkhi taught that 40 days of constant hunger could transform the darkness of the heart into light. Sahl Tustari fasted perpetually and earned the title of Shaykh ul Arifin, Master of the Knowers. He said, "Hunger is God's secret on earth."

Abu Madyan the African mystic wrote, "One who is hungry becomes humble, one who becomes humble begs and the one who begs attains God. So hold fast to your hunger, my brother, and practise it constantly for it means that you will attain what you desire and will arrive at what you hope."

Muslims believe that God through Gabriel revealed the Quran to Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) in Ramzan, the ninth month of the Islamic calendar. One of the five pillars of the faith, fasting is defined as abstaining from eating, drinking, smoking and sexual activity in the prescribed hours, dawn to sunset.

God's Messenger said that the breath of a fasting person is more pleasing to God than the fragrance of musk and that there were two joys associated with fasting. One is the joy of breaking the fast and other is when one meets the Lord. Scholars say that breaking the fast is akin to meeting the Lord.

Ramzan is a wonderful enclosure in time, just as a place of worship is in physical space, commanding the same respect.

Islam describes the month as a portal of mercy, a time when the gates of Paradise are open and the gates of Hell are closed. It is a time for reflection, self-purification and retreating from the commotion of a worldly life into a state of deeper contemplation. Through the power of patience, fasting raises taqvah, one's consciousness of God.

After a few days of fasting, the physical system slows down and the 'i' separates from the body. Hunger is felt not as 'i am hungry' but as 'My body is hungry', just as you would observe another's hunger. This process helps one recognise that the intellect, body and heart are different components, readying one for a spiritual journey.

Fasting without abstaining from wrongful actions such as engaging in foul conversation or gossip, is fruitless. Harbouring suspicion, rancour or negative opinions about others is especially noxious in Ramzan, as also cheating, vanity and irrational anger.

Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) taught that a person who fasts and does not guard the tongue simply remains hungry, achieving little or no spiritual benefit. Likewise, the love of praise and the oppression of others are struck down for they are an anathema to the spirit of Ramzan.

Ramzan is also known as the month of spending in the way of God, divesting oneself from material assets and investing in the Hereafter. Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) was the most generous of people and in Ramzan he was known to be even more generous. He said that the best charity in Ramzan is setting things right between people who are in conflict and those who harbour hatred for each other.

Ramzan presents a great opportunity to be mindful, to build resolves to purify the heart and come closer to the Almighty.

The writer is author of *Sufism: The Heart of Islam*

Picture: The Gates Of Paradise Are Thrown Open To You. Photo: Getty Images
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Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Outspoken Opinions
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By Omar Waraich, *Pakistani Minister Survives Terrorist Attack* - Time - USA

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

In the most high-profile attack on an elected official in recent years, Pakistan's Religious Affairs Minister survived a brush with death after gunmen opened fire on his official car in the heart of Islamabad on Wednesday. The minister, Hamid Saeed Kazmi, was shot in the leg, but is stable and undergoing treatment at a nearby hospital. The attack killed his driver.

Wednesday's shooting has raised fears of a renewed campaign of violence in Pakistan's major cities after a lull following the counterinsurgency operation in the northwest Swat Valley and the assassination of Taliban commander Baitullah Mehsud, who was killed in a CIA drone strike on Aug. 5.

Today's attack took place at 3 pm, moments after Kazmi left his ministry. At the scene, his black car lies badly damaged on the side of the road. There are bullet marks on three sides of the vehicle, the front windscreen, and on both sides of the backseat. Broken shards of glass lie strewn on the road nearby. The steering wheel is smeared with blood, as are the cars seats. The minister's blood-stained turban and prayer beads were left abandoned as he was rushed to hospital.

According to Muntazir Khan, a policeman at the scene, two suspected gunmen were on motorbikes. They shot at the driver from the front, apparently killing him instantly. As the vehicle veered to the left side of the road, the attackers turned their guns on the minister, sitting behind blacked-out windows on the back seat. On the left side, eight bullets are punched into the window, four on the right side. The gunmen then managed to speed away.

"This shows that the militant elements have become active again," says Hasan Askari-Rizvi, a security analyst. "It also shows that there are serious security problems. If this type of attack can take place in the center of Islamabad," he added, then nowhere in Pakistan is safe. Police at the scene of the attack say that the minister had not been accompanied by his usual police escort. The attack took place in a sensitive area of the city, just minutes away from major government buildings, and the Inter-Services Intelligence agency's headquarters. The city's many checkpoints, manned by armed policemen, failed to stop the attackers.

The attack on the minister comes a day after the Interior Ministry said there were unspecified reports of a Taliban campaign to target religious and political leaders. Analysts say that the notoriously vicious new leader of the Pakistani Taliban Hakimullah Mehsud is keen to assert himself after assuming the leadership of the organization. But there is also speculation that any new campaign might be the work of al-Qaeda. Last week, Saudi Arabia's deputy interior minister survived an al-Qaeda suicide bomb attack in the port city of Jeddah.

"It's difficult to say whether it was done by the Taliban or other group," says Askari-Rizvi. "What is clear is that it is an attack on a religious leader who has been very critical of the Taliban's use of violence, which seems to be the reason for the attack." Moderate religious leaders who have spoken out against the Taliban's brutality have been repeatedly targeted in recent months. In June, a suicide bomber killed Sarfraz Naeemi, who belonged to a sufi strain of Islam, in his mosque office in Lahore.

Fellow members of the ruling Pakistan People's Party are convinced that Kazmi was targeted for his outspoken opinions. "[Kazmi] has been at the forefront of our government attempt to unify all the senior most Muslim leaders of this country who are all opposed to the militant viewpoint on Islam," says presidential spokesperson Farahnaz Ispahani. "He has been out there, he is a mild and soft-spoken man who has spoken out publicly about the sufi Islam that is the true Islam of Pakistan."

Picture: Men carry Pakistan's Religious Affairs Minister Hamid Saeed Kazmi into the back of a vehicle moments after he was shot in the leg in Islamabad. Photo: Reuters.
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Monday, September 07, 2009

A Hungry Drive
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By Mohammed Omer Ousta, *Interfaith Dialogue in Kurdistan* - The Hawler Tribune - Erbil, Iraq
Monday, August 31, 2009

A little over three weeks ago, I went on a trip to Hawraman, a region in the southeast of Kurdistan. During our stay there, I paid visits to most of the districts. Nevertheless I mostly stayed in Sulaimani which was once capital of the Babban Emirate and known as “cultural center” of Kurdistan. Sulaimani has also been known as for revolts and sacrifice.

One of our stops on our journey was at Hawraman territory villages, Tawella town which in an extremely prominent place where Sufis are all over the world. Sufism (the divine mysticism) is not a sect of Islam, but rather, a broad tradition that tends to be more esoteric and places love, peace and tolerance at the center of the practice of Islam. Every year in December, thousands of people travel to Konya,Turkey for the Rumi Festival, the highlight of which, for many, are performances if the Whirling Dervishes.

On a formal invitation, I accompanied a delegation from Iraq to take part in the Festival.

I won't even attempt to explain the spiritual and liturgical complexities of the Dervishes' dance there. The Dervishes Gathering which we joined in Hawraman was slightly different and less ceremonious from their usual dances that I know about. But basically it's a series of prayers whirling dances to a sacred music. Each of the dervishes sheds his black cloak to reveal white robes, and enters into a spinning dance, like that of child spinning round and round in the middle of the field. As the fluid, smooth, graceful motion speeds up, he raises his arms, pointing one hand to heaven and one to the earth, and spins in a deep euphoric state of prayer.

The goal of the dancer is to be lifted from this world into a state of union with the divine.

All of the dancers are spinning, and at the same time rotating in patterns around the arena. From afar, it looks like a meticulously rehearsed and choreographed performance. In reality, however the movement of the Dervishes, individually and as a whole, happens naturally and organically.

The never forgotten awe-inspiring moments we spent there was absolutely beautiful.

The questioning Kurd grown in urban areas that I was a little perplexed by its mechanics, so I turned to one of our Muslim guides on the trip to ask more questions (which at this point on the trip, had to have begun trying his patience!).

“How come they aren't getting dizzy?” I asked; “How come they aren't running into each other?”; “How do they know where to go and when to start and stop?”; “How does it work, Ziryan?”.

“They just do, Mohammed, they just do” he patiently replied “They are paying attention to nothing around them. This is prayer for them, and all they're focusing on is God.”

It seemed so complex to me and so beautifully simple at the same time. Since the beginning of our trip, I was excited about seeing the Whirling Dervishes honestly, though I thought it would be more fun, a touristy thing to see. It turned out to be a much more poignant experienced than I bargained for.

I saw this experience as a powerful metaphor for the wider communion of God-seekers, attempting to live together on a world stage.

Each of us as individuals and as units-places of worship, denominations, religions -each is spinning in a hungry drive to experience the divine, to understand and be part of the mystery and magnitude of God. We are too often, however, distracted by the waxing and wanting distances between the dancers, the different ways of spinning, insecurities in our own movement. We are colliding with one another in a clumsy, chaotic mess.If we could lift our eyes and arms to God and just spin, moving in the ecstatic reality of God's love, not only would our personal spiritual experience be enriched, but we would begin to spin together, to fall into a beautiful, cosmic dance, one of peace and harmony.

This question then comes: “How do we do that?”.

This place of peace and harmony, quite frankly, seems distant and illusory. Humanity is a diverse assortment of people, trying to live together in an increasingly small world.

There is a startlingly prevalent tone in the world arena of intolerance, judgment, and hatred. Humankind is tragically plagued with violence, hurt, oppression, conflict, and war, and too much of this takes place in the context of religious differences. Our differences aren't going to dissipate any time soon, nor should they.

What has to happen in a dialogue? We have to learn, love, respect, and communicate with one another. As people of God, we can do one of two things. We can couple our religious identity with that of a soldier, armed and ready for the clash of religious empires, or we can take our seat at the table of humanity with a voice of love, humility, and faith.

Religious tolerance is the significant first step that we much take, first in our personal lives, then towards a peaceful world communication. Religion in one of the most deep and penetrating faces of human condition. It bears in it an energy of passion and intensity, a power that little else in the sphere if human existence does. We are inherently driven, with something that's greater than ourselves.

While I personally believe that this hunger is the universal, natural core of our being, it undoubtedly manifests itself in infinitely varying ways. There is no ignoring the fact that there are huge differences and points of separation between the world's religious nomenclatures. There are points of convergence and divergence on every level, from East to West, Jew to Buddhist, Episcopalian to Baptist, and from me to you. The only way to love all in the context of this diversity is to acknowledge and respect those differences.

Now, It's important to note that religious tolerance is not merely a failure to stand up for what one believes. It isn't a weak cop-out.

It begins with a security and understanding of one's own identity, one's spiritual core. An awareness of and a conviction to one's own beliefs allows for calmly, strongly held, but permeable boundaries.

Tolerance does not require abdication of those boundaries, but neither does it call for a relentless defense of those boundaries.

Tolerance in not enough, though. There is no room for growth in merely recognizing differences and agreeing to respect one another form a distance. If we, as individuals, seek growth, and if we as a global religious community seek movement toward a peaceful existence together, have to take it further. We have to dialogue, to engage in a meaningful conversation with one another.

Dialogue is a mutual sharing between different sides. This means through love, you share your faith with others. But, it also means that through love you seek a better understanding of those whose faith is different from your own.

Interfaith dialogue is an extremely powerful, highly underestimated tool for achieving peace in such a deeply divided world. Globalization is rapidly and forcefully changing the way we live our lives, whether we realize or not. Every day, technology transportation, and communication are improving and placing the entire world in our reach. Geographical separation is becoming much less significant and real.

The cultural and religious separation, however, are not narrowing. We live in a tiny global neighborhood with Jews, Muslims, and Hindus, Baptists, Roman Catholics, Methodists and the like. We are neighbors who don't understand one another, don't talk one another…we just stay at home, separated by high fences.

The fences are there for a reason, we tell ourselves. Better yet, let's build them higher, and let's build some more.

How much energy have we spent on building these barriers? We have to be intentional about breaking down those fences and living out the inclusiveness and universality of God's immeasurable and unconditional love. This doesn't mean losing our identity or abdicating our beliefs. It means love, compassion, and understanding a priority.

One of Christ's major endeavors as a social activist was to tear down the walls that separate humanity to unite all of humankind under the banner of divine love. The Jewish community during his time was in a tumultuous state of tension between its religious identity and a growing Roman presence. Among the varying responses from the Jewish community, one of the most prevalent was that of the Pharisees. They believed that the redemption of Israel would come from a strict adherence to the complex codes of holiness and purity. Christ made clear, though, that it's Yahweh's love, compassion, and the mercy that supersede the walls that we build to separate and compartmentalize ourselves. He wanted to override with divine love the barriers that separate the Jews and Greeks, Slaves and Free, Prostitutes and Tax Collectors, Pharisees and Sadducees, Rich and Poor. We are called to do the same.

While there are very real issues that separate the religions of the world, our points of commonality are far greater. In loving one another we must understand, dig deeper into our differences. We must move away from a polemic approach and toward a respectful appreciation for religious diversity. We must come to a table with humility and a sincere desire to grow.

In "The Dialogue Decalogue" thesis, Turkish Islamic Scholar and a prominent figure in the Islamic globe Fethullah GÜLEN had listed some commandments for effective interreligious dialogue (adapted from "Sonsuz nur" by Fethullah GÜLEN):

1. The purpose of dialogue is to increase understanding.
2. Participants should engage in both interfaith and interreligious dialogue.
3. Participants should be honest and sincere.
4. Participants should assume that other participants are equally frank, obvious, honest and sincere.
5. Each participant should be allowed self-definition.
6. There should be no preconceptions as to areas of disagreement.
7. Dialogue can only occur between equals.
8. Dialogue can only occur where there is mutual trust.
9. Participants must be self-critical of their religious traditions.
10. Participants must attempt to experience how the traditions of others affect them holistically.

Basically, interfaith dialogue brings people of faith together, created a loving respectful relationship between them, and offers immeasurable growth to every party.

I know I'm running on some really broad, abstract ideas, so I want to offer my real, personal poor experience with interfaith dialogue.

My interest in dialogue between religions and within my own faith goes far back, but my recent trip to Kurdistan's Sufi spots transformed that interest into something much deeper and more passionate.We traveled all over the territory and also on the outskirts of Sulaimani, visiting important cultural and religious sites and spending time with people who were a part of this gigantic movement in Kurdistan and within Islam.

The movements stem from the teachings of Biyara and Tawella Shaykhs whom are not only divine and mysticism-leading people, they are also religious leaders, social activists, Islamic scholars and literalists; among them the late Sheikh Osman of Biyara who was great poet with wisdom implicit in his eloquent text of poetry which mainly turns around religious and divine subjects.

I also left with a massive charge on my heart to bring Christianity to the table with equal fervor and conviction.

We need to step it up, join our voices in this exciting and hopeful journey toward peace through understanding and education. We have so much to gain, and so much to offer, since we share Kurdistan with minor population of Christian fellow-citizens in the context of a civilized formula of co-existence.

I want to leave you with a quote by Huston Smith:

"What a strange fellowship this is, the God-seekers in every land lifting their voices in the most disparate way imaginable to the God of all life. How does it sound from above? Like Bedlam, or do the strains blend in strange, ethereal harmony? Does one faith carry the lead, or do the parts share counterpoint and antiphony where not in full-throated chorus? We cannot know. All we can do is to try to listen carefully and with full attention so each voice in turn as addresses the divine."

The moments I spent there with Sufis' fascinating dance, ceremonious occasion and ritual gathering of Shaykhs are the most missed memories of my life and nicest moments too.
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Sunday, September 06, 2009

Sabr / صبر
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By Golden Boy, *Love, Bollywood & Sufism* - Desicritics.org - Bangalore, Karnataka, India
Monday, August 31, 2009

I don’t know about 1947; it was three decades before I was born. From what I have read I know that India was partitioned in 1947 during Independence from the British Raj. Yet, it amazes me to notice that the nuances of Partition are still investigated in Political circles, even as the fire of its aftermath ignites the hearts of people on both the sides of the Indo-Pak border to this day.

All I know is that a line was drawn then dividing the Land, and all hell broke loose.

The fate of Kashmir (pieces of which are held by both countries) is still a matter of contention between the two countries; and I have noticed how the Indian media remains tight-lipped about the everyday rallies and bandhs (closures) in the Valley; while its Pakistani counterpart fans the fire.

The Valley is burning and it is my personal belief as an Indian Hindu citizen that a UN plebiscite in Kashmir is the need of the hour in order to judge if the people want to stay with India, Pakistan or want total Independence. It will do a great deal of good to the future of India, Pakistan and Kashmiri people.

-x-x-x-

As a Hindu child I grew up in a mohallah in Mumbai consisting of Hindu and Moslem people who participated actively in each other’s festival. Muslim guys and girls would swirl away into the night to the music of Garba during Navratri and Sewaiya (a Moslem delicacy) would be served to Hindu neighbours during Eid.
Mumbai riots of 1992 changed all that!

-x-x-x-

Amidst increasing ghettoisation that took place in the city after the 1992 riots and the immediate bomb blasts of 1993, Muslim families ran away from Hindu dominated localities and pockets of the city, while Hindu families fled from Muslim neighbourhoods. Today that ghettoisation is complete (the latest victim of this was the Celebrity Imran Hashmi)

I was a 15-year-old Hindu lad then, a Mumbaikar who was growing up to the tunes of Bollywood (the Hindi Film Industry). Bollywood has always served platters of romantic movies with songs that put ‘Aashiqui’ (romantic love) on a high pedestal.

Upper middle class Intellectual circles still stay away from Hindi Movies; though the majority of Indians have grown up being influenced by the concepts of romantic love that they preach.

The beautiful lyrics penned down by both Hindu and Moslem Indian writers have kept the flame of the Sufi concept of ‘Ishq’ burning in the hearts of the Indian youth.

Ishq-e-Majaazi (Allegorical Love) :

“chhoo lene do naazuk hothon ko
kuchh aur nahin hai jaam hai ye
qudrat ne jo hamko baksshaa hai
wo sabse haseens inaam hai ye”

Singer- Mohd. Rafi, Lyrics-Sahir Ludhianvi, Music-Ravi, Movie Kaajal 1965

Translation: “Let me touch those delicate lips/ It is nothing but wine/ It is God Who has gifted me these/ A big reward”… is an example of one such Bollywood song.

In Sufism, the beauty of one’s beloved is considered to be a representation (symbol) of the Perfection of God. No wonder then that it has the power to evoke true love in the heart of a lover! Intoxication i.e. wine, or jaam, is a symbol for divine ecstay.

In the Hindi Film Anwar (2007), the chosen murshid (guide) advises the young protoganist of the movie Anwar, that he has to fall in love in the earthly realm in order to evolve true love for God in his heart. For Sufis believe that only when a person treads on the path of earthly ‘true romantic love’ and suffers in the pain of separation from one’s beloved, can one get in touch with the rend of separation from God Almighty that is suppressed in the heart of every Individual.

In many Indian films (the modern story-telling characteristic of a community) when the two lovers cannot unite, they kill themselves. But Sabr (perseverance) on the path of love despite everything, is an important maqam (station) of the Sufi way that leads to tawaqqul (trust in God) i.e. the state of yaqin (certainty).

“Ye ishq nahi aasa, Itna to samajh lejiye... Ek Aag ka dariya hai, aur doob ke jaana hai”

The path of Love is not easy, first understand this. It is a pool of fire, and you need to drown to cross it. When one treads through the fires of earthly/ romantic love i.e. ishq-e-majaazi (Allegorical love), one can get a glimpse of the greater Path leading to God i.e. ishq-e-haqiqi (True Love).

We Hindus call Ishq-e-majaazi i.e. True love as “Bhakti”. Hindu-Saint Meera was a perfect example of somebody who was on the path of Ishq-e-haqiqi. This is the beauty of the path of the Spirit, the essence of religion that comes to one after one is on the Path for a long time: This is the path of gnosis (self-experience) which is the same whether it be Moslem or Hindu as exemplified by Meera.

The religions of the world were invented for the less-brave and people who have not started on the Spiritual path. So we find words, treatises, scriptures, religious inquests, historical blunders and plunders, interpretation, and confusion: because all of these belong to the Mind-chatter and the Mind is bound by the limitations of Time, Matter and Space unlike the Spirit. Beyond the words of Religion, lies ‘Faith’ -the realm of the Spirit. This realm (of the Spirit) is the same for a Hindu or a Moslem. Only the path i.e. religion is different.

Scholars, intellectuals, our Politicians, religious fanatics, kings and other saints of the past, needlessly get into a war of words on matters of religion! They lead holy Jihads of words and swords, and interfere in the progress of the common man. While the common man is busy with finding his way towards the realm of Spirit in his religion and has nothing to do with bloodshed.

All the common man needs is an environment that is congenial to the needs of his earthly survival i.e. roti, kapda and makan (food, clothing and shelter) so that he can also look out for the needs of his soul: the spiritual manna. People who are die-hard Intellectuals, terrorists and Kings do great injustice to the common man by disturbing the peace of the Land.

-x-x-x-

I, for one, fell in love with the beauty I found in my beloved. I know it was true love because I experienced the pain of love for the first time in my life. Many people are afraid of this aspect of love i.e. Pain. So they either escape into intellectual mind-chatter or fall prey to hatred and violence when they get all entangled in relentless mind-pursuits all the time afraid to face the pain of separation (with God) in one’s heart.

These are the lost sheep of the Lord’s herd. One can only pray for them, and at best forgive them if one can, for one’s own peace of mind and spiritual-progress. Personally, coming to terms with the pain of unreciprocated love and separation, I fell through a trap-door onto the Path of God.

I did not know anything about the first-hand direct experience of the ‘Path of God’ until I learnt of the Islamic/Sufi concept of love and reconciled with the pain in my heart. Then I set out in search of a murshid i.e. guide (we call such a person a Guru in Hinduism).
I am fortunate that I found a Guru. To this day I walk “not by sight but by Faith”: Islam/Sufism helped me regain my own path and Faith i.e. Hinduism.

-x-x-x-

Ishq-e-Haqiqi (True Love):

True Believers (Hindu or Muslim) and true lovers of God have no time for Religious Inquests or spreading of hatred in the name of religion. They are too busy nursing the pain of Love in their own hearts for their Beloved (God).

We Hindus believe that Bhakti (i.e. true love for God) cannot be cultivated in oneself without the Grace of God Himself. So I have no hate for people who chatter over religion and spread hatred based on the Past because of their own lack of direct first hand experience with the realm of one’s Spirit. They don’t know the essence of their own religion, and are too stuck in words words and words, facts and figures, history and injustice (the realm of the Mind).

They are too scared of what they would find if they looked within: the pain of love and separation.
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Saturday, September 05, 2009

Not Haram, Not Haram, Not Haram
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By Hamid Golpira & Gul Jammas Hussain, *‘We preach the message of love through Sufi music’* - Tehran Times - Tehran, Iran
Sunday, August 30, 2009

The Fareed Ayaz Qawwali group of Pakistan did a concert tour of Iran from August 6 to 14, giving performances in Tehran, Isfahan, and Shiraz

The band, which is led by award-winning musician Qawwal Ghulam Fareeddin Ayaz al-Hussaini, came to Iran to participate in the celebrations of Pakistan’s Independence Day, which occurred on August 14.

Qawwali is a form of Sufi Muslim devotional music characterized by simple melodies, forceful rhythms, and wild improvisations that encourage a state of euphoria in the listener. The musical tour was arranged by the Economic Cooperation Organization Cultural Institute, the Embassy of Pakistan in Tehran, and Iran’s Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance.

The Tehran Times conducted an interview with Qawwal Ghulam Fareeddin Ayaz al-Hussaini backstage at Vahdat Hall on August 7, just after the band completed their second concert in Tehran. Following is the text of the interview:

How have you enjoyed your stay in Iran so far?
I’ve very much liked these concerts. For the last three or four years I have been performing in Iran and enjoying it. Many people in Pakistan think that I’m an expert in Persian poetry. It’s something I’m very proud of. I know the Persian language very well but I cannot speak fluently like Iranians and my pronunciation is a bit different.

I like Iranian people very much. Iran has been a center of civilization for thousands of years. Many of the extraordinary people of art and culture are from Iran or regions very near to Iran -- Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, and Iraq… Iraq also had a great culture. So the Arabic, Persian, and Turkish languages are in Pakistan.

We (Pakistanis) do not regard Persian as a foreign language, we regard it as our own language… I like Iran very much, its Sufi saints, its poetry. Sufi saints actually do not belong to any particular area. Sufis have their own territory that is universal. And most of the Sufi saints belong to Iran, you know.

How long have you been playing music? And how did you first become interested in mystical Sufi music?
We have been performing this mystical Sufi music for the last 750 years. I mean 39 generations of my family have been performing this Sufi music Qawwali. Since the time of Hazrat Amir Khusro we have been in this profession. Qawwali was not a profession then but a medium to convey the message of Sufism. But now it’s a regular profession.

We use the poetry of Sufi saints, mystics, and friends of God for our Qawwali performances. We also compose ourselves. As musicians, we can compose each verse according to its mood and the mood of the singing. If the mood is fast, the music is fast, if the mood is slow, the music is slow. Qawwali is a very spiritual and devotional thing. I can say this because we have been in this profession for the past 750 years.

The first person from our family who started performing Qawwali was Samat bin Ibrahim, who lived in the time of Hazrat Amir Khusro, and I’m the direct blood descendant of Samat bin Ibrahim.

You have performed in many other places around the world. Where exactly did you play and how was the reaction?
I’ve performed throughout the world. However, Iranian culture and Pakistani culture are very similar. Historically they have been similar. Europe, America, and Africa are very far away from Pakistan. When I perform in Iran, I really feel at home. But when I perform in other far-off places, I feel somebody has trespassed into my home.

While performing in Iran, we do not need to explain much about what we are singing and its meaning, but when performing in other countries, we have to explain each and every little thing. That’s why I really like performing in Iran.

Do you view Sufi music as a means to promote Sufi ideas throughout the world?
Our world has reached the brink of disaster. Only Sufism can save it from a complete disaster, and that’s why we are so ardent about preaching Sufism, which is the message of love. Sufism teaches humanity. It is beyond the boundaries of religions and nationalities. It unites people. All religions teach humanity, and Sufism does the same. The teachings of Sufism shape the body and purify soul.

Some people have an interpretation of Islam according to which music is haram (prohibited). Have you had any problems with these people?
This is not a present-day problem. It’s an old issue. People have had a lot of discussions on this issue. I would only say this: What is haram in music? There’s nothing in music that is prohibited. I’ve studied the Quran, the Bible, the Torah, and many sacred books of Hinduism. I have studied all the major religions of the world. Wording can be haram, not singing, you see. If I say this person (he points to someone by his side) is God or a prophet, this is haram. If I say he is a handsome, endearing, or charming fellow, this cannot be haram. Sufism teaches this. It teaches love.

How can teachings of love be haram? So music is not haram, not haram, not haram. Look, Islam is not 14 centuries old. Islam is as old as Hazrat Adam (AS). If you looked at the constitution of Adam (AS), Jesus Christ (AS), or Moses (AS), you would see music inside. In their religions, there was music. Even Noah (AS) possessed all the knowledge and the system of music. So if something is given to a prophet from Almighty Allah as a gift, how can that thing ever be haram?

But have you ever had any problems with the people who believe that music is forbidden in Islam?
I do not face any kind of problems. When somebody comes to me with any questions or complaints, I reply to him and he returns with satisfaction, because I have studied the Quran, the Hadith, Islamic studies, and Christian studies. I can satisfy him with my knowledge.
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Friday, September 04, 2009

"This Episode Should End"
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TOI Editor, *Khadims divided over removal of nazim* - The Times of India - Jaipur, India
Friday, August 28, 2009

Ajmer: Cracks appeared in the unity among the khadims at the mausoleum of Khwaja Garib Nawaj Chishti on Thursday over the issue of removal of dargah nazim Ahmed Raza after a CD containing his alleged controversial statements on Islam and the Sufi saint came to light.

A month ago, the khadims lodged an FIR in the Dargah police station alleging Raza of religious deviation and making objectionable statements. A mob of khadims attacked the nazim, whose hand was fractured. According to the khadims, the nazim is appointed by the Centre to look after the management of the dargah only.

"He is not a saint who delivers speeches on religion and Sufism," Syeed Julikar Chishti said and alleged that Raza talked wrong things about the Khwaja.

Irked over the issue, the khadims went on a month-long agitation and made every effort to remove Raza from the post. They even met Union minister Salman Khursheed and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

However, claiming that nothing objectionable was found in the CD even after a long agitation, khadim Jahoor Chishti demanded resignation of the members of the Anjuman Committee (committee of khadims) who registered the case against Raza and started the agitation. "They did everything they could have done. But the government found nothing objectionable in the CD. Now the khadims should end this episode," Jahoor said, adding, "They have tarnished the image of the khadims by creating such scenes."

On the other hand, the Anjuman Committee is still trying to remove Raza. "Even the Committee of Moulvis took the matter seriously and found that the nazim should not say such things about religion," said a khadim. Meanwhile, the police have arrested six people for attacking Raza and are searching for three more in the matter.

[Picture: Moinuddin Chishti dargah, Ajmer, India. Photo from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moinuddin_Chishti]
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Thursday, September 03, 2009

Mutual Affection
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By Ammar Ali Hassan, *Anatomy of Sufism* - Al-Ahram Weekly - Cairo, Egypt
27 August - 2 September 2009; Issue No. 962

Long thought to be on the path to extinction, modern-day Sufism is as strong as ever in the Arab world even if serious study of the movement is lacking

With its folk appeal, Sufism has had a vivid history in Islam from the time the movement was little more than sentimental leanings and yearnings filling the hearts of the pious to when it spawned institutions that prospered on a blend of faith and folk tales with an occasional flirtation with politics.

For centuries, Sufism has defied predictions of its demise. It survived the harsh criticism of Islamist hardliners and withstood the waves of modernism that have swept over the Islamic world.

As other forms of religious association emerged on the scene, with variable emphases on charity or politics, Sufism was thought to be on the way out. But it has managed to stay the course despite the dire expectations. It has even managed to attract a new following among people who are highly professional, modern even.

But there is a big difference between Sufi societies that cope with modernism and get involved in public work so as to push their members to the top of the political echelon, as is the case in Turkey, and Sufi societies that inhabit a world of folklore and become little more than a festive phenomenon donning the garments of tradition. The latter are incapable of producing any political input, unless it is one that serves the status quo, as is the case in Egypt.

One can regard Egypt's Sufi societies as being a tributary of civil society, for they do engage in charity work, but that is not the whole story. It is hard to see them turning to activism or rising out of their political lethargy. It is even harder to imagine them ending their infatuation with myths that border on charlatanism.

Yet, Egyptian Sufism has produced some great scholars. It produced imams who challenged the sultans, drawing their immense political appeal from a public that was all too willing to bow to the power of myth, especially when it came with a dollop of material gain. Today, however, Sufism has become a mere servant of the authorities. One cannot fail to see this fact in Sufi festivities and detect it in Sufi discourse about authority.

Indeed, there seems to be an umbilical chord binding Sufi organisations, administrative as well as spiritual, to the religious branch of the state.

In Turkey, politicians such as Erbakan and Erdogan have used their connections to Sufi groups to great personal advantage. They cultivated the tradition of tolerance for which Sufis are known. They made political capital of the pluralism inherent in Sufism and of its ability to coexist with others and condone alternative styles of life. Turkish politicians turned the empathy and asceticism of Sufism into democratic assets. In Egypt, this did not happen.

Sufi societies have played a major role in the history of many countries, including the Mahdis of Sudan, the Sanussis, Qadiris, Tijanis and Maridis of central and western Africa, and the Naqshabandis and Mulawis of Central Asia and the Caucasus. Some of these societies went on to create nations out of the rubble of imperialism. Some turned their congregational meeting rooms into agricultural associations. And all helped spread Islam in Africa, Asia and Europe -- or at least held their ground in the face of the communist tide in Central Asia and the Caucasus.

In general, however, there is a lack of scholarship on the relationship between Sufism and politics. Apart from a handful of books, most of which focus more on the past than the present and are of a tentative rather than scholarly nature, there is little one can use. Material on this subject is lacking.

In Egypt, it is necessary to examine Sufi societies from a political perspective for several reasons. Firstly, there are many followers of Sufi societies, and they come from all sections and levels of society. Some say that membership of Sufi societies today exceeds 10 million people, with followers varying in their social, cultural, educational and professional profiles. There are 78 Sufi societies available to serve their needs.

Secondly, Sufism runs deep in Egyptian culture, and it was important in the formative years of some of the main figures of political Islam. Sheikh Hassan El-Banna, founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, was a member of the Hasafi society, for example, working as a secretary for the Hasafi Charitable Society ( Al-Gam'iya Al-Khairiya Al-Hasafiya ) in Mahmoudiya. Sheikh Mahmoud Khattab Al-Sobki, founder of the Sharia Society for Followers of the Mohamedan Book and Teachings ( Al-Gam'iya Al-Shar'ia lil-Amilina bil-Ketab wal-Sunna Al-Mohamediya ) also started his life as a Sufi. Imam Mohamed Abdu started his life as a follower of the Khalili Society.

Thirdly, some still believe that Sufism is apolitical because it focuses mainly on asceticism, love, knowledge and successiveness ( welayat ). To show the error of such a view, one needs to discuss the actual practices of the followers of Sufi methods and examine the theoretical principles of Sufi thinking.

Fourthly, at a time when civil society is being hailed as a possible counterpart to the state, a study of Sufi societies -- which can be regarded as a form of civil society -- may be useful. Sufi societies appeared much earlier than other forms of civil society. They first came onto the scene in the 12th century, whereas modern civil society organisations appeared well into the 19th century. Furthermore, when Sufi societies are examined, it can be seen how the state has tried to take them over. The fact that the state has for years intervened in Sufi affairs and used Sufi societies to promote itself is all too obvious.

Fifthly, Sufi societies are indirectly involved in politics, simply because they often do the bidding of political groups. Although they may not have political demands of their own, the power their members derive from being part of a non-political group is not to be discounted. In fact, voluntary work is often dedicated to implicit political goals, regardless of the nature of the organisation involved. Members of Sufi societies have a greater political clout than people who have no organisational links whatsoever.

Sixthly, there is a need to examine the political culture of Egyptians, for old habits die hard. We cannot aspire to raising the cultural level of the nation without taking a good look at its values and leanings. Because Sufism has impacted the psychology and mentality of many in Egypt, it needs to be examined as a prelude to outlining the path of progress in Egypt.

Lastly, political modernisation, now more than ever an urgent need in the Arab world, cannot take place without religious reform. There is a need to reinforce the culture of democracy in politicised and non-politicised religious institutions. In our societies, where religion moves every political and social juncture of society, it is necessary to reform religious views as well as politics.

***
The first Sufi society appeared in Egypt during the time of Salaheddin Al-Ayoubi (Saladin). In the Mamluk era, more societies appeared throughout the land. As Khanqas (charity hostels) and madrasas changed the landscape of the towns, Sufism developed a system of initiation in which the murid (hopeful adherent or beginner) would have to work his way through the system to become a naqeeb (chief or dean), and a khalif (master) would keep followers in line and demand their full obedience.

The Sufi rank and file came to resemble a military organisation, hardly surprising in Mamluk time when the whole state apparatus was always on alert and ready for endless war. In Ottoman times, the Sufis became more influential and acquired more zawyas, or congregational halls. They divided Egypt into areas of influence that did not tally with those of the state. Moreover, the manner of their organisation changed over time.

For one thing, the power of the sheikh mashayekh (chief sheikh) gradually eroded. In Ayoubid times, Sufi societies had had to submit to the authority of an overall chief ( sheikh khanqah ), a man to whom the state gave power over all Sufis. This system remained in effect until Nasser Mohamed bin Qalawun established the Nasserite khanqah in Siryaqus and made its chief sheikh the highest Sufi chief in the country.

This system ended in Ottoman times, when a system of four-way leadership was put in place. The state gave the leadership of all Sufi societies to four families. One was the family of Al-Sadat of Bani Al-Wafa. Another was the family of Mohamed Shamseddin Al-Hanafi. The third was the family of Madyan Al-Ashmuni, a student of Al-Hanafi. The fourth was the family of Abi Al-Abbas Al-Ghamri.

This four-way distribution of Sufi power remained in force until Sheikh Al-Sadat, who died in 1813, brought the entire Sufi community under his leadership. So powerful was Al-Sadat that he brought the Al-Ahmediya, Al-Saadiya and Al-Shaabiya societies to heel. The historian Al-Jabarti, one of his contemporaries, says that Al-Sadat took over the administration of the country's main mausoleums, including Al-Husseini, Al-Shafei, Al-Zeinabi and Al-Nafisi. This meant that Al-Sadat was in control of their immense revenues. Suffice it to say that he lived and died a very wealthy man.

Sheikh Mohamed Tawfiq Al-Bakri, who took over the Sufi Societies Command ( Mashyakhat Al-Turuk Al-Sufiya ) in 1892, issued a decree on 2 June 1903 making the sheikh mashayekh, or chief sheikh, run Sufi affairs through a council consisting of the sheikhs of the major Sufi societies. The system remained in force until 1976. The Bakri decree included 16 articles, and it gave Sufism a council to run its affairs for the first time in its history. Aside from the chief sheikh, the council included four members who were to be elected every three years. In 1905, another decree was passed making the appointment of a Sufi sheikh contingent on his knowledge and moral standing.

After the 1952 Revolution, the Sufi societies continued to operate under the Bakri decree until the republican leaders introduced a new Higher Sufi Council, while retaining aspects of the former decree. Under president Gamal Abdel-Nasser, elections for the General Assembly of the Sheikhs of Sufi Societies ( Al-Gam'iya Al-Amma li-Mashayekh Al-Turuq Al-Sufiya ) used to take place at the offices of the Cairo governorate. They took place every three years and were supervised by the Cairo governor. The Higher Sufi Council retained the power to appoint the sheikhs of Sufi societies all over the country.

Law 118/1976 stipulates that the Higher Council of Sufi Societies is to consist of 16 members named as follows: the sheikh mashayekh, or chief sheikh, is the head of the council. He is to be appointed by a decision of the president of the republic from among the sheikhs eligible for membership of the Higher Council of Sufi Societies; ten members of the Sufi Society sheikhs are to be elected by the General Assembly of the Sheikhs of Sufi Societies; a representative from Al-Azhar is to be selected by the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar; a representative from the Ministry of Awqaf (religious endowments) is to be selected by the respective minister; a representative from the Ministry of Interior is to be selected by the respective minister; a representative from the Ministry of Culture is to be selected by the respective minister; a representative from the Ministry of Local Administration is to be selected by the respective minister.

This law gave the Sufi Mashyakhah Ammah, or General Council, the authority to appoint deputies in various parts of the country who would be authorised to communicate on behalf of the Mashyakhah with the authorities. The sheikhs of the various societies retained their power to appoint deputies and sub-deputies in various governorates, cities and villages.

The law also made it incumbent on the sheikh of each society to gather his followers in a specified place on a regular basis for purposes of induction and training. He also had to inspect his deputies and sub-deputies and check on their performance. The sheikhs of societies were to report to the sheikh mashaykh, or chief sheikh, on their activities.

The law prohibited the creation of new Sufi societies unless the new society could prove that it was different from the existing ones in name and approach. A decision sanctioning the formation of a new society would need to be made by the Minister of Awqaf and Al-Azhar affairs, after consulting the minister of interior and obtaining permission from the Higher Council of Sufi Societies. Once these steps were made, the decision to create the new society would appear in the official gazette.

Since the beginning, Sufi societies were based on cohesion within the group. From the murid, the lowest- ranking member, to the sheikh mashayekh, the superior of all sheikhs, there is a clear chain of command and one that maintains continuity in the movement. This system was hospitable to newcomers, with things getting more structured as members moved up the ranks.

This brief description of Sufi organisation shows that the main method for attaining a high rank in the movement is through appointment. While it is true that the 1976 law allowed for the election of the members of the Higher Sufi Council every three years, generally speaking a man could only become a sheikh through inheriting the post. And while the men at the top gave orders and issued guidelines, those beneath them were asked to report on the conditions of their followers. They were allowed to make suggestions, but these were not binding on the higher echelons.

***
To better appreciate the precision and sophistication of the organisation of the Sufi movement in Egypt, one has to go into the details of every society and its affairs. There is hardly a village or town in Egypt that does not have followers of Sufi societies.

They hold nights of zikr (religious chanting) and hadras (religious parades) on given days. The sheikh tariqah (society chief or grandmaster) is superior to the sheikh seggadah (carpet chief or local chief), who tells the naqeeb noqaba seggadah (chief of deputies) what to do. And the latter supervise the khalif al-kholafa (chief of sub-deputies) and the khalifs (sub-deputies), who in turn keep an eye on the noqaba (acting deputies), the munshids (singers), and the murids (beginners or seekers).

For every sheikh tariqah there is an army of deputies, sub-deputies and acting deputies spanning many towns and villages. The sheikh is revered by his subjects, but he does not live isolated in the equivalent of a religious ivory tower. Instead, he is a kind of brother to his subjects, leading the congregation in a hierarchical structure that goes back, through genealogical descent, to the Prophet Mohamed.

The bonds within the society are normally viewed as ritual kinship, a kind of affinity that is not derived from birth but from mutual affection, the power of rite and the sentimental bonds of common practice. What is seen in Sufi organisation is a web of strong attachments rather than a family-style structure. The murids call each other "brothers", and they draw mutual benefits from their adopted family. The sheikh tariqah shares a ritual bond with the sheikh seggadah and with the other followers. He refers to members of his society as "sons" and sees himself as responsible for their welfare, just as a real father is responsible for his children.

The deputies are all brothers in ritual and fathers to the beginners and sub-deputies. They are expected to inquire after the well-being of the murids and help them resolve any problems. These bonds of brotherhood and fatherhood run throughout the society, with everyone taking part according to their organisational standing.

Sufi organisations are a mix of divergent individuals, of people who may differ in their discipline, approach and nature. It can be hard sometimes to tell whether the organisation is official or non-official.

In a way, the Sufi groups are civil society groups bearing all the features of voluntary organisations. But the fact is that they are ruled in the last instance by the authorities, which gives them a gloss of officialdom and makes them a mixed breed.

Although Sufi societies are open to the public and voluntary in nature, appearances can also be deceptive. The sheikhs inherit their posts from their fathers, and many feel obliged to follow a path they would not have normally chosen. Likewise, many of the sons and relatives of Sufis join the societies because their relatives keep pushing them in this direction.

Because Sufism is regarded as the righteous path by common tradition, many enrol in Sufi societies to please God and clan. Although membership is theoretically open to all, there are certain ways of ensuring that troublesome people, including the politically outspoken, are left out.

Sufi societies share many similarities in their daily operations. The sheikh's authority, the litanies and the singing rituals are more or less the same. Many of the traditions transcend the boundaries of time and place, for some societies were formed by foreigners on the move or by people who did not stay in one place very long, as was the case for the Makkiya Fassiya Society. Others are quite conventional, and yet they seem to hold a certain appeal for the most modern sections of society, including engineers and doctors, army men and business people.

There is a great diversity in the size of Sufi societies. There are massive societies that have maintained their status for decades, such as the Rifaei society, and there are tiny societies limited to certain areas.

Sufi societies are open to both sexes and all ages, from children to octogenarians. They make up a spectrum of organisations that are loyal to their chiefs and offspring. This hereditary aspect of Sufism is one of the elements of authority that one glimpses in Sufi organisations, along with other laws that govern performance and rituals.

Aside from these administrative concerns, there is also a spiritual chain of command. The Sufis believe in a hierarchical structure that they believe reflects the structure of the world. They envision a universe that is divinely divided into abdals (substitutes), awtad (pillars), aqtab (poles), nogabaa (leaders) and noqabaa (chiefs). These ranks can be rigid, and followers are not allowed to move up the ladder without going through spiritual trials.

The murid needs to have qualities allowing him to be promoted within the Sufi structure, for example. These include loyalty, the desire to help one's "brothers", the willingness to cooperate with fellow members, kindness towards one's parents, compassion to one's family, hospitality, kindness to neighbours, etc.

Once the murid manages to fulfil his quota of good deeds, he is promoted to a naqeeb (chief) or salek (path follower), at which point he is asked to respect his sheikhs and show even more humility towards his fellow members.

A Sufi is asked to strive to do more to help others and obey God. He is asked to be obedient and humble. Only with humility can he be promoted to the level of naqeeb (chief) or wasel (path finder).

Those who achieve such levels of initiation are expected to refrain from disputes with those from other creeds, to maintain the secrets of the Sufi societies, to avoid interfering in other people's business and to recognise the fact that the ability of others to understand the faith and the world may be more limited than theirs.

A murid 's becoming a salek is only the first part of the way, for then he can move on to becoming a magzub (drawn to faith), at which point things take a different path. A magzub is on a higher spiritual plateau, one that ends in being a motadarak (path ender), who no longer needs the material world.

When the practical consequences of the four pillars of Sufism (asceticism, love, successiveness and intuition) are considered, together with the way Sufism in Egypt has dealt with the authorities, the public and other Islamic movements, it will be seen that placating the authorities has long been a main feature of Sufism.

The Sufis supported the former sultans for political gain and social status, and more modern rulers use the Sufis to bolster their own legitimacy.

With some rare exceptions in which Sufis opposed the rulers, one may safely conclude that Egyptian Sufism provides a strong example of religion being used to justify government. Even when rulers have held eminent Sufis in awe, the latter have not used their status to reverse injustice or to build up an alternative power base to oppose the regime.

There was the rare case of the Ibn Al-Sufi insurgence in southern Egypt in ancient times, a long-running rebellion that gave a hard time to the Tulunid and then the Akhshid armies. There was also the case of the Ansar Al-Haq (supporters of righteousness) led by Mahmoud Abul-Azayem, sheikh of the Azaymi Society. In more modern times, there was General Mohamed Saleh Harb, head of the Muslim Youth Society, and Ahmed Hussein, leader of the Young Egypt movement. The Ansar Al-Haq sent 200 men to fight in the 1948 Palestine war, and they are said to have fought valiantly in Gaza between April 1948 and February 1949.

The Sufis are also attracted by military mythology. Concerning the mediaeval Crusades, for example, folk tales in Egypt describe how Ahmed Al-Badawi (the Muslim wali, or saint, of Tanta) managed to release Muslim prisoners held by the Crusaders. Much later, during the 19th-century Orabi Revolution, Sufis circulated a rumour to the effect that a chicken had laid an egg bearing the words " nasrallah qarib " (the victory of God is soon). Another rumour had it that the country's three major walis, or saints (Al-Desouki, Al-Badawi and Abdel-Aal) had given Ahmed Orabi, the leader of the Revolution, three cannons to use against the invading British forces.

Nevertheless, the history of Sufism is generally one of consistent submission to rulers and the avoidance of confrontation. Only with a few exceptions have Sufis ever stood up against invaders or unjust rulers.

Sufism is based on inspiring leadership, or charisma. It does not draw its hierarchy from the system of land ownership, and it is not a utilitarian organisation based on the exchange of mutual benefits among members. Neither is it a specialised organisation based on dedication to a certain field of knowledge or profession. At the end of the day, Sufism is held together by the personal charisma of the mashayekh al-tariqah, or the grandmasters of the movement.

Finally, the paths of the political development of the Sufi societies in Egypt tend to converge. Despite different circumstances in their manner of inception, personal qualities of the sheikh, economic capability, organisational rigour, geographical boundaries and number of followers, all Sufi societies are politically alike.

Superficial differences in litanies, chants and rituals fade when one looks at actual practices. The role the sheikh plays in the grooming of the murids is the same everywhere. When a difference in the political culture surfaces among different societies, this is likely to occur because of the social milieu in which the followers live, not because of the thinking behind the rituals of the societies themselves.

The writer is a researcher in socio-political science and author of The Political Upbringing of Sufism in Egypt , soon to be published by Dar Al-Ain, Cairo.

Pictures, (clockwise from top left): the khalifa, or descendant of the sheikh, on a horse in the zaffa of Ahmed El-Rifaai; one of the two khalifas of Ahmed El-Badawi, in Tanta; in moulid Al-Sayeda Zeinab, the tahtib dance; the zikr. All Photos: Sherif Sonbol.
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Wednesday, September 02, 2009

Sister Cities
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By Federal Bureau Editor, *Konya and Multan declared sister cities* - Pakistan Times - Pakistan
Friday, August 28, 2009

Islamabad: At a graceful ceremony in Konya, Turkey on Wednesday, the Mayor of Konya Metropolitan city Tahir Akyurek and District City Nazim Multan Faisal Ahmad Mukthar signed a protocol to declare Konya and Multan as sister cities.

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, Foreign Minister of Turkey Ahmet Davutoglu, Governor of Konya Aydin N. Dogan and Ambassador of Pakistan to Turkey Tariq Azizuddin alongwith other dignitaries from both the brotherly countries were present during the signing of the protocol, said a message received here.

The framework document indicates the ‘sister cities’ Konya and Multan officially focusing on the areas covering the partnership.

The Mayor of Konya Metropolitan city and District City Nazim Multan signed the protocol on behalf of their respective cities strengthening the relations in areas of culture, arts, economy, education and sports.

The document reads that periodical programmes will be organized in Konya and Multan cities every year related to Hazrat Shams-i-Tebriz (RA).

Foreign Minister Qureshi thanked the government and people of Turkey for their cooperation and support in every test and turmoil. He also pointed out the historical, cultural and spiritual similarities between the cities of Konya and Multan. The Foreign Minister of Turkey assured that the relations between Pakistan and Turkey will further strengthen after signing of this protocol.

Konya is a city in the Central Anatolia Region of Turkey. It is the capital of the Konya Province and had a city population of 1,412,343 in 2007, while the provincial population (including the other urban centers in the Konya Province) was 1,959,082 in the same year.

The tomb of Hazrat Maulana Jalal al-Din Muhammad Rumi (RA), the great Persian Sufi poet commonly known as 'Ya Hazrat Mevlâna' also exists on the soils of Konya. The tomb of the great saint, who is the founder of the Sufi Mevlevi order (known for the Whirling Dervishes) is located in the heart of Konya city where he spent the last fifty years of his life.

Yet another great Sufi saint, Ibn Arabi, visited Konya in 1207, and made it as his eternal abode.

And, Multan is a city in the Punjab Province of Pakistan. It is located in the southern part of the province. Multan District has a population of over 3.8 million—according to 1998 census—and the city itself is the sixth largest within the boundaries of Pakistan. It is situated on the east bank of the Chenab River, about 966 km (600 miles) from Pakistan's coastal city of Karachi.

Multan is known as the City of Saints and Sufis due to the large number of shrines and great Sufi saints from the city. The city is full of bazaars, mosques, shrines and ornate tombs. It is located in a bend created by five rivers of the Punjab province.

[Pictures: Konya, Turkey: Rumi's Mausoleum;
Multan, Pakistan: Shrine of Sheikh Rukn-e-Alam.
Photos: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konya; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rukn-e-Alam]
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Tuesday, September 01, 2009

A Wake-up Call
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By Beth Healy, *Followers of a mystical religion were taken in by Madoff scheme* - Boston Globe - Boston, MA, USA
Thursday, August 27, 2009

There’s another religious group that was taken in by Bernard Madoff, one that’s less well known than the Jewish community he so widely infiltrated: the Sufis.

A number of Sufis, who practice a mystical form of Islam, and Sufi groups on both US coasts entrusted millions of dollars to a California lawyer, Richard M. Glantz, who is a member of the Sufi community. He in turn placed their money with Madoff. The connection: Glantz, raised in a Jewish family, is the son of a New York accountant who had placed $88 million in client funds with Madoff.

“We’re devastated,’’ said Saphira Linden, a Jamaica Plain Sufi teacher and drama therapist who recalls learning of her Madoff losses when her son called her while she was driving home from the hairdresser on Dec. 11. Linden, 66, runs a drama program out of her home, in cooperation with Lesley University. She lost her Omega Theater program’s $76,000 endowment to Madoff, as well as her personal savings.

“We cannot continue the school unless we raise money,’’ Linden said.

She and nine others first invested with Madoff 20 years ago, through a connection of a Sufi friend, coming up with $10,000 each. Then, after another Sufi friend introduced her to Glantz, she had him manage her money. She invested not only the theater’s funds but her nest egg - several hundred thousand dollars from the sale of a Jamaica Plain property. The money was meant to support her theater program and her retirement.

Glantz, a lawyer in San Raphael, Calif., is also chairman and treasurer of the Hope Project, an India-based nonprofit founded by a Sufi teacher. According to people who do business with him, Glantz ran at least two large funds for friends and family - the Fern Creek Limited Partnership and the Ostrin Family Partnership - portions of which were invested with Madoff. He earned commissions on clients’ investments.

People who act as investment advisers must be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission or the state in which they do business. In Glantz’s case, he told a California news website that he registered with the SEC in 2007, but the agency has no record of him doing so.

Glantz got in trouble for his business relations with Madoff nearly two decades ago. He and his late father, Edward Glantz, were disciplined by the SEC in 1993 for raising money for Madoff in the form of unregistered securities. Edward Glantz and a partner raised $88 million, according to SEC documents, which they sent to Madoff via an accounting firm started by Ruth Madoff’s father, Saul Alpern. Richard Glantz, meanwhile, raised $30 million for Madoff from 350 investors from 1985 through 1992, the SEC said.

Richard Glantz was fined $300,000 and, according to a June report by PacificSun, an online paper in Marin County, Madoff had to return the $30 million to Glantz’s clients. Glantz said he continued to make referrals to Madoff, but did not take fees again until 2007, when he said he registered with the SEC.

Glantz did not return calls requesting an interview. In the PacificSun report, he said he had lost millions of his own money to Madoff, and had to sell two homes.

For members of the Sufi community, the Madoff news came as a particular blow. A group whose traditions include embracing all religions, woodsy retreats, and meditative dancing, Sufis may have been overly trusting of Madoff, they now say, and unsophisticated about investing.
“I really believe it’s a wake-up call,’’ Linden said.

Alima Lucinski, executive director of the Sufi Order International, North America, said Glantz assured the organization as recently as last September - when the stock market was in a deep dive - that it was on track to make money because Madoff had its investments in US Treasuries. The New Lebanon, N.Y., group was invested in the Fern Creek fund, which had a large slice of its estimated $17 million with Madoff. The Sufi Order declined to say how much of its endowment was lost to Madoff.

Lucinski said she believes a greater number of religious groups and nonprofits were affected by Madoff than is known, because some are not required to reveal their finances and are also reluctant to do so voluntarily. “It’s not something people want to come out and say,’’ she said.

Linden has been public about her losses because her Omega Theater is now broke. In its early days in the 1960s, the group performed Bertolt Brecht works on Lewis Wharf and later did puppet theater for children and large sociopolitical pieces. One play about the turbulence of the 1960s, “Riot,’’ went to New York and in 1968 won an off-Broadway Obie Award. In October, Linden is scheduled to perform in a two-woman show called “Motherblood’’ at Passim in Cambridge.

Linden now devotes most of her time to teaching and is writing two books. She has melded her spiritual side with theater to teach actors, poets, social workers, and business people theatrical and spiritual skills they can apply to their own work. She is making ends meet in her modest apartment attached to the theater, but can’t take on new students. “I had to stop everything,’’ she said.

Linden said she trusted Glantz with her money because “he had found this way to help people.’’ He sometimes would warn investors that the returns of 15 to 18 percent a year they were allegedly getting from Madoff could one day vanish. “It could change in a minute, so you’re taking a risk,’’ Linden recalled Glantz saying.

All Linden has to show for her investments now is a neatly filed stack of old statements. One, dated Feb. 15, 2002, says Madoff bought 62 shares of American International Group for her account. As it turned out, Madoff never made any of the trades he detailed so carefully for clients.

Linden also has a copy of a letter she sent in 2001 to Madoff’s top lieutenant, Frank DiPascali. In it, she inquired about her account, noted that she was adding $20,000 to it, and praised him for his work. “Let me take this opportunity to thank you for the work you do for me and for other friends who invest with you. It has made such a difference in my life,’’ she wrote.

DiPascali is now awaiting trial and faces 125 years in prison for his role in the Ponzi scheme, the first executive other than Madoff himself to face indictment so far.

Picture: Saphira Linden lost her theater program’s endowment and her life savings to Bernard Madoff. Photo: Barry Chin/Globe Staff
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A Centre Of Sufism
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By Dr. Ashiq Hussain, *Kashmir dispute: A brief history* - Meri News - New Delhi, India

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

In August 1947, India became independent and like other princely states, Kashmir too had the choice to accede to its preferred dominion - India or Pakistan. It was this decision that became the dispute's keystone, which has existed for five decades.

Kashmir is one of the most beautiful places on earth with equally beautiful people. Its a centre of Sufism - a culture created by liberal Islamic and Hindu traditions. Even though this region has a Muslim majority, it is almost divided into three equal sub-regions with majority Buddhist, Hindu and Muslim areas. It is painful that the unrest in valley (one of the three regions) has dragged for two decades now and has been a flash point among unresolved disputes.

The state was created under the Treaty of Amritsar between the East India company and Raja Gulab Singh of Jammu who bought the Valley from the former for Rs 75,00,000 (in 1846) and added it to Jammu and Ladakh already under his rule. The Valley is a muslim majority region with a composite cultural identity called 'Kashmiriyat' transcending religious barriers. Moreover, the people are hospitable and engage in Sufi tradition.

The unrest began in 1931, with the movement against the repressive Maharaja Hari Singh. Singh, a part of the Hindu Dogra dynasty was ruling over a majority muslim state, while there was no representation of the latter. In 1932, Sheikh Mohammed Abdullah started the All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference to fight for Kashmiri freedom from the Maharaja's rule, which eventually became the National Conference in 1939.

The Glancy Commission appointed by the Maharaja in its report in April 1932, confirmed that the subjects had grievances and suggested recommendations. These were accepted but not implemented, leading to another agitation in 1934. These culminated in a Quit Kashmir movement in 1946, led by the National Conference, to restore the sovereignty of the people.

In August 1947, the Indian subcontinent became independent and like other princely states, Kashmir also had the choice to accede to its preferred dominion - India or Pakistan, taking into account factors such as geographical contiguity and the wishes of their people. The Maharaja delayed his decision, attempting to remain independent. However, the people expected to accede to Pakistan.

In a controversial move, the Maharaja handed over control of the kingdom of Jammu and Kashmir to India, despite Pakistani protests and calls for a referendum that would allow the Kashmiri people to decide. Barring National Conference, other parties like the Muslim Conference and the Chiefs of Gilgit region, advised against this move. While in prison, Sheikh Abdullah wrote a letter to a friend in Jammu (which was published in the Congress press) in favour of accession of Kashmir to India. Abdullah was released from prison on September 29, 1947, after which he alternated his demand between an Azad Kashmir and one belonging to either nation.

The Indian army entered the state on October 27, to repel invading forces, and Abdullah endorsed the accession as unplanned which would otherwise be ultimately decided by a plebiscite. He was appointed as head of the emergency administration. Pakistan retriated that the accession is illegal and the Maharaja acted under compulsion.

In November 1947, India proposed to Pakistan to withdraw all its troops first, as a precondition for plebiscite, which Pakistan rejected stating that the Kashmiris may not vote freely given the presence of Indian army and Abdullah's friendship with the Indian Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. Thus Pakistan too proposed simultaneous withdrawal of all troops. On January 1, 1948, India took the Kashmir problem to the United Nations (UN) Security Council.

A year later, a ceasefire between the two was forced, which left India in control of most of the Valley, as well as Jammu and Ladakh, while Pakistan gained control of part of Kashmir including what Pakistan calls "Azad" Kashmir and Northern territories. Pakistan claimed it is merely supporting an native rebellion in "Azad" Kashmir and Northern Territories against repression, while India terms that territory as POK (Pakistan Occupied Kashmir).

Four days later, UNCIP (United Nations Commission for India and Pakistan) resolution stated that the question of the accession of Jammu and Kashmir to India or Pakistan will be decided through a free and impartial plebiscite. As per the 1948 and 1949, UNCIP resolutions, both countries accepted the principle that Pakistan secures the withdrawal of Pakistani intruders followed by withdrawal of Pakistani and Indian forces, as a basis for the formulation of a Truce agreement whose details were to be arrived in future. However, both countries failed to arrive at a Truce agreement due to differences in interpretation of the procedure.

On October 17, the Indian Constituent Assembly adopted Article 370 of the Constitution ensuring a special status and internal autonomy for the state with central jurisdiction limited to the three areas - defence, foreign affairs and communications.

Later on in 1951, the first post-independence elections were observed here but the UN passed a resolution stating that these were not substitutes for a plebiscite because a plebiscite offered the option of choosing between India and Pakistan. Sheikh Abdullah won, mostly unopposed. There were widespread charges of election rigging.

In 1952, he drifted from a position of endorsing accession to India to insisting on self-determination of Kashmiris. In July, he signed the Delhi Agreement with the Central government on Centre-State relationships, providing for autonomy of the state within India and of regions within the state; Kashmir was even allowed to have its own flag.

This issue continued to reel in one or other group and then ultimately, Jawaharlal Nehru on August 7, 1952, quoted that "Ultimately - I say this with all deference to this Parliament - the decision will be made in the hearts and minds of the men and women of Kashmir; neither in this Parliament, nor in the United Nations nor by anybody else.”

Since then and over half a century later, there is no sign of an end to this dense and complicated dispute. A series of wars and ongoing guerilla operations have ensured that the state has remained one of the most volatile and bloody regions of the world. Further demands and new conflicts have added twisted complications to an argument that has not been resolved.
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