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The Place of Tasawwuf in Traditional
Islam
©Nuh Ha Mim Keller 1995
Perhaps the biggest challenge
in learning Islam correctly today is the scarcity of traditional ‘ulama. In this
meaning, Bukhari relates the sahih, rigorously authenticated hadith that
the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said,
"Truly, Allah does not
remove Sacred Knowedge by taking it out of servants, but rather by taking back
the souls of Islamic scholars [in death], until, when He has not left a single
scholar, the people take the ignorant as leaders, who are asked for and who give
Islamic legal opinion without knowledge, misguided and misguiding" (Fath al-Bari,
1.194, hadith 100).
The process described
by the hadith is not yet completed, but has certainly begun, and in our times,
the lack of traditional scholars—whether in Islamic law, in hadith, in tafsir
‘Koranic exegesis'—has given rise to an understanding of the religion that is
far from scholarly, and sometimes far from the truth. For example, in the course
of my own studies in Islamic law, my first impression from orientalist and
Muslim-reformer literature, was that the Imams of the madhhabs or
‘schools of jurisprudence' had brought a set of rules from completely outside
the Islamic tradition and somehow imposed them upon the Muslims. But when I sat
with traditional scholars in the
Middle East
and asked them about the details, I came away with a different point of view,
having learned the bases for deriving the law from the Koran and sunna.
And similarly with
Tasawwuf—which is the word I will use tonight for the English Sufism,
since our context is traditional Islam—quite a different picture emerged from
talking with scholars of Tasawwuf than what I had been exposed to in the
West. My talk tonight, In Sha' Allah, will present knowledge taken from the
Koran and sahih hadith, and from actual teachers of Tasawwuf in Syria and
Jordan, in view of the need for all of us to get beyond clichés, the need for
factual information from Islamic sources, the need to answer such questions as:
Where did Tasawwuf come from? What role does it play in the din or
religion of Islam? and most importantly, What is the command of Allah about it?
As for the origin of
the term Tasawwuf, like many other Islamic discliplines, its name was not
known to the first generation of Muslims. The historian Ibn Khaldun notes in his
Muqaddima:
This knowledge is a
branch of the sciences of Sacred Law that originated within the Umma. From the
first, the way of such people had also been considered the path of truth and
guidance by the early Muslim community and its notables, of the Companions of
the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace), those who were taught by them,
and those who came after them.
It basically consists
of dedication to worship, total dedication to Allah Most High, disregard for the
finery and ornament of the world, abstinence from the pleasure, wealth, and
prestige sought by most men, and retiring from others to worship alone. This was
the general rule among the Companions of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give
him peace) and the early Muslims, but when involvement in this-worldly things
became widespread from the second Islamic century onwards and people became
absorbed in worldliness, those devoted to worship came to be called Sufiyya
or People of Tasawwuf (Ibn Khaldun, al-Muqaddima [N.d. Reprint.
Mecca: Dar al-Baz, 1397/1978], 467).
In Ibn Khaldun's words,
the content of Tasawwuf, "total dedication to Allah Most High," was, "the
general rule among the Companions of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) and the early Muslims." So if the word did not exist in earliest
times, we should not forget that this is also the case with many other Islamic
disciplines, such as tafsir, ‘Koranic exegesis,' or ‘ilm al-jarh wa
ta‘dil, ‘the science of the positive and negative factors that affect hadith
narrators acceptability,' or ‘ilm al-tawhid, the science of belief in
Islamic tenets of faith,' all of which proved to be of the utmost importance to
the correct preservation and transmission of the religion.
As for the origin of
the word Tasawwuf, it may well be from Sufi, the person who does
Tasawwuf, which seems to be etymologically prior to it, for the earliest mention
of either term was by Hasan al-Basri who died 110 years after the Hijra, and is
reported to have said, "I saw a Sufi circumambulating the Kaaba, and offered him
a dirham, but he would not accept it." It therefore seems better to understand
Tasawwuf by first asking what a Sufi is; and perhaps the best definition of both
the Sufi and his way, certainly one of the most frequently quoted by masters of
the discipline, is from the sunna of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) who said:
Allah Most High says:
"He who is hostile to a friend of Mine I declare war against. My slave
approaches Me with nothing more beloved to Me than what I have made obligatory
upon him, and My slave keeps drawing nearer to Me with voluntary works until I
love him. And when I love him, I am his hearing with which he hears, his sight
with which he sees, his hand with which he seizes, and his foot with which he
walks. If he asks me, I will surely give to him, and if he seeks refuge in Me, I
will surely protect him" (Fath al-Bari, 11.340–41, hadith 6502);
This hadith was related
by Imam Bukhari, Ahmad ibn Hanbal, al-Bayhaqi, and others with multiple
contiguous chains of transmission, and is sahih. It discloses the central
reality of Tasawwuf, which is precisely change, while describing the path
to this change, in conformity with a traditional definition used by masters in
the Middle East, who define a Sufi as Faqihun ‘amila bi ‘ilmihi fa awrathahu
Llahu ‘ilma ma lam ya‘lam,‘A man of religious learning who applied what he
knew, so Allah bequeathed him knowledge of what he did not know.'
To clarify, a Sufi is
a man of religious learning,because the hadith says, "My slave approaches
Me with nothing more beloved to Me than what I have made obligatory upon him,"
and only through learning can the Sufi know the command of Allah, or what has
been made obligatory for him. He has applied what he knew, because the
hadith says he not only approaches Allah with the obligatory, but "keeps
drawing nearer to Me with voluntary works until I love him." And in turn,
Allah bequeathed him knowledge of what he did not know, because the hadith
says, "And when I love him, I am his hearing with which he hears, his sight with
which he sees, his hand with which he seizes, and his foot with which he walks,"
which is a metaphor for the consummate awareness of tawhid, or the ‘unity
of Allah,' which in the context of human actions such as hearing, sight,
seizing, and walking, consists of realizing the words of the Koran about Allah
that,
"It is He who created
you and what you do" (Koran 37:96).
The origin of the way
of the Sufi thus lies in the prophetic sunna. The sincerity to Allah that it
entails was the rule among the earliest Muslims, to whom this was simply a state
of being without a name, while it only became a distinct discipline when the
majority of the Community had drifted away and changed from this state. Muslims
of subsequent generations required systematic effort to attain it, and it was
because of the change in the Islamic environment after the earliest generations,
that a discipline by the name of Tasawwuf came to exist.
But if this is true of
origins, the more significant question is: How central is Tasawwuf to the
religion, and: Where does it fit into Islam as a whole? Perhaps the best answer
is the hadith of Muslim, that ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab said:
As we sat one day with
the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace), a man in pure white
clothing and jet black hair came to us, without a trace of travelling upon him,
though none of us knew him.
He sat down before the
Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) bracing his knees against his,
resting his hands on his legs, and said: "Muhammad, tell me about Islam." The
Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace) said: "Islam is to
testify that there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is the Messenger of
Allah, and to perform the prayer, give zakat, fast in Ramadan, and perform the
pilgrimage to the House if you can find a way."
He said: "You have
spoken the truth," and we were surprised that he should ask and then confirm the
answer. Then he said: "Tell me about true faith (iman)," and the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) answered: "It is to believe in Allah, His angels,
His inspired Books, His messengers, the Last Day, and in destiny, its good and
evil."
"You have spoken the
truth," he said, "Now tell me about the perfection of faith (ihsan)," and the
Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) answered: "It is to worship Allah
as if you see Him, and if you see Him not, He nevertheless sees you."
The hadith continues to
where ‘Umar said:
Then the visitor left.
I waited a long while, and the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said
to me, "Do you know, ‘Umar, who was the questioner?" and I replied, "Allah and
His messenger know best." He said,
"It was Gabriel, who
came to you to teach you your religion" (Sahih Muslim, 1.37: hadith 8).
This is a sahih
hadith, described by Imam Nawawi as one of the hadiths upon which the Islamic
religion turns. The use of din in the last words of it, Atakum
yu‘allimukum dinakum, "came to you to teach you your religion"
entails that the religion of Islam is composed of the three fundamentals
mentioned in the hadith: Islam, or external compliance with what Allah
asks of us; Iman, or the belief in the unseen that the prophets have
informed us of; and Ihsan, or to worship Allah as though one sees Him.
The Koran says, in Surat Maryam,
"Surely We have
revealed the Remembrance, and surely We shall preserve it" (Koran 15:9),
and if we reflect how
Allah, in His wisdom, has accomplished this, we see that it is by human beings,
the traditional scholars He has sent at each level of the religion. The level of
Islam has been preserved and conveyed to us by the Imams of
Shari‘a
or ‘Sacred Law' and its ancillary disciplines; the level of Iman, by the
Imams of ‘Aqida or ‘tenets of faith'; and the level of Ihsan, "to
worship Allah as though you see Him," by the Imams of Tasawwuf.
The hadith's very words
"to worship Allah" show us the interrelation of these three fundamentals,
for the how of "worship" is only known through the external prescriptions
of Islam, while the validity of this worship in turn presupposes
Iman or faith in Allah and the Islamic revelation, without which
worship would be but empty motions; while the words, "as if you see Him,"
show that Ihsan implies a human change, for it entails the
experience of what, for most of us, is not experienced. So to understand
Tasawwuf, we must look at the nature of this change in relation to both Islam
and Iman, and this is the main focus of my talk tonight.
At the level of Islam,
we said that Tasawwuf requires Islam,through ‘submission to the rules of
Sacred Law.' But Islam, for its part, equally requires Tasawwuf. Why? For the
very good reason that the sunna which Muslims have been commanded to follow is
not just the words and actions of the Prophet (Allah bless him and
give him peace), but also his states, states of the heart such as
taqwa ‘godfearingness,' ikhlas ‘sincerity,' tawakkul ‘reliance
on Allah,' rahma ‘mercy,' tawadu‘ ‘humility,' and so on.
Now, it is
characteristic of the Islamic ethic that human actions are not simply divided
into two shades of morality, right or wrong; but rather five, arranged in order
of their consequences in the next world. The obligatory (wajib) is that
whose performance is rewarded by Allah in the next life and whose nonperformance
is punished. The recommended (mandub) is that whose performance is
rewarded, but whose nonperformance is not punished. The permissible (mubah)
is indifferent, unconnected with either reward or punishment. The offensive
(makruh) is that whose nonperformance is rewarded but whose performance is not
punished. The unlawful (haram) is that whose nonperformance is rewarded
and whose performance is punished, if one dies unrepentant.
Human states of the
heart, the Koran and sunna make plain to us, come under each of these headings.
Yet they are not dealt with in books of fiqh or ‘Islamic jurisprudence,'
because unlike the prayer, zakat, or fasting, they are not quantifiable
in terms of the specific amount of them that must be done. But though they are
not countable, they are of the utmost importance to every Muslim. Let's look at
a few examples.
(1) Love of Allah.
In Surat al-Baqara of the Koran, Allah blames those who ascribe associates to
Allah whom they love as much as they love Allah. Then He says,
"And those who believe
are greater in love for Allah" (Koran 2:165), making being a believer
conditional upon having greater love for Allah than any other.
(2) Mercy.
Bukhari and Muslim relate that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
said, "Whomever is not merciful to people, Allah will show no mercy" (Sahih
Muslim, 4.1809: hadith 2319), and Tirmidhi relates the well authenticated (hasan)
hadith "Mercy is not taken out of anyone except the damned" (al-Jami‘ al-sahih,
4.323: hadith 1923).
(3) Love of each
other. Muslim relates in his Sahih that the Prophet (Allah bless him
and give him peace) said, "By Him in whose hand is my soul, none of you shall
enter paradise until you believe, and none of you shall believe until you love
one another . . . ." (Sahih Muslim, 1.74: hadith 54).
(4) Presence of mind
in the prayer (salat). Abu Dawud relates in his Sunan that ‘Ammar ibn
Yasir heard the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) say, "Truly, a man
leaves, and none of his prayer has been recorded for him except a tenth of it, a
ninth of it, eighth of it, seventh of it, sixth of it, fifth of it, fourth of
it, third of it, a half of it" (Sunan Abi Dawud, 1.211: hadith
796)—meaning that none of a person's prayer counts for him except that in which
he is present in his heart with Allah.
(5) Love of the
Prophet. Bukhari relates in his Sahih that the Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace) said, "None of you believes until I am more beloved to
him than his father, his son, and all people" (Fath al-Bari, 1.58, hadith
15).
It is plain from these
texts that none of the states mentioned—whether mercy, love, or presence of
heart—are quantifiable, for the Shari‘a cannot specify that one must "do two
units of mercy" or "have three units of presence of mind" in the way that the
number of rak‘as of prayer can be specified, yet each of them is personally
obligatory for the Muslim. Let us complete the picture by looking at a few
examples of states that are haram or ‘strictly unlawful':
(1) Fear of anyone
besides Allah. Allah Most High says in Surat al-Baqara of the Koran,
"And fulfill My
covenant: I will fulfill your covenant—And fear Me alone" (Koran 2:40), the last
phrase of which, according to Imam Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, "establishes that a
human being is obliged to fear no one besides Allah Most High" (Tafsir al-Fakhr
al-Razi, 3.42).
(2) Despair.
Allah Most High says,
"None despairs of
Allah's mercy except the people who disbelieve" (Koran 12:87), indicating the
unlawfulness of this inward state by coupling it with the worst human condition
possible, that of unbelief.
(3) Arrogance.
Muslim relates in his Sahih that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give
him peace) said, "No one shall enter paradise who has a particle of arrogance in
his heart" (Sahih Muslim, 1.93: hadith 91).
(4) Envy,meaning
to wish for another to lose the blessings he enjoys. Abu Dawud relates that the
Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said, "Beware of envy, for envy
consumes good works as flames consume firewood" (Sunan Abi Dawud, 4.276:
hadith 4903).
(5) Showing off in
acts of worship. Al-Hakim relates with a sahih chain of transmission
that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said, "The slightest bit
of showing off in good works is as if worshipping others with Allah . . . ." (al-Mustadrak
‘ala al-Sahihayn, 1.4).
These and similar
haram inward states are not found in books of fiqh or
‘jurisprudence,' because fiqh can only deal with quantifiable
descriptions of rulings. Rather, they are examined in their causes and remedies
by the scholars of the ‘inner fiqh' of Tasawwuf, men such as Imam al-Ghazali in
his Ihya' ‘ulum al-din [The reviving of the religious sciences], Imam al-Rabbani
in his Maktubat [Letters], al-Suhrawardi in his ‘Awarif al-Ma‘arif
[The knowledges of the illuminates], Abu Talib al-Makki in Qut al-qulub
[The sustenance of hearts], and similar classic works, which discuss and solve
hundreds of ethical questions about the inner life. These are books of
Shari‘a
and their questions are questions of Sacred Law, of how it is lawful or unlawful
for a Muslim to be; and they preserve the part of the prophetic sunna
dealing with states.
Who needs such
information? All Muslims, for the Koranic verses and authenticated hadiths all
point to the fact that a Muslim must not only do certain things and say certain
things, but also must be something, must attain certain states of the
heart and eliminate others. Do we ever fear someone besides Allah? Do we have a
particle of arrogance in our hearts? Is our love for the Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace) greater than our love for any other human being? Is
there the slightest bit of showing off in our good works?
Half a minute's
reflection will show the Muslim where he stands on these aspects of his din,
and why in classical times, helping Muslims to attain these states was not left
to amateurs, but rather delegated to ‘ulama of the heart, the scholars of
Islamic Tasawwuf. For most people, these are not easy transformations to make,
because of the force of habit, because of the subtlety with which we can deceive
ourselves, but most of all because each of us has an ego, the self, the Me,
which is called in Arabic al-nafs, about which Allah testifies in Surat
Yusuf:
"Verily the self ever
commands to do evil" (Koran 12:53).
If you do not believe
it, consider the hadith related by Muslim in his Sahih, that:
The first person judged
on Resurrection Day will be a man martyred in battle.
He will be brought
forth, Allah will reacquaint him with His blessings upon him and the man will
acknowledge them, whereupon Allah will say, "What have you done with them?" to
which the man will respond, "I fought to the death for You."
Allah will reply, "You
lie. You fought in order to be called a hero, and it has already been said."
Then he will be sentenced and dragged away on his face and flung into the fire.
Then a man will be
brought forward who learned Sacred Knowledge, taught it to others, and who
recited the Koran. Allah will remind him of His gifts to him and the man will
acknowledge them, and then Allah will say, "What have you done with them?" The
man will answer, "I acquired Sacred Knowledge, taught it, and recited the Koran,
for Your sake."
Allah will say, "You
lie. You learned so as to be called a scholar, and read the Koran so as to be
called a reciter, and it has already been said." Then the man will be sentenced
and dragged away on his face to be flung into the fire.
Then a man will be
brought forward whom Allah generously provided for, giving him various kinds of
wealth, and Allah will recall to him the benefits given, and the man will
acknowledge them, to which Allah will say, "And what have you done with them?"
The man will answer, "I have not left a single kind of expenditure You love to
see made, except that I have spent on it for Your sake."
Allah will say, "You
lie. You did it so as to be called generous, and it has already been said." Then
he will be sentenced and dragged away on his face to be flung into the fire (Sahih
Muslim, 3.1514: hadith 1905).
We should not fool
ourselves about this, because our fate depends on it: in our childhood, our
parents taught us how to behave through praise or blame, and for most of us,
this permeated and colored our whole motivation for doing things. But when
childhood ends, and we come of age in Islam, the religion makes it clear to us,
both by the above hadith and by the words of the Prophet (Allah bless him and
give him peace) "The slightest bit of showing off in good works is as if
worshipping others with Allah" that being motivated by what others think is no
longer good enough, and that we must change our motives entirely, and henceforth
be motivated by nothing but desire for Allah Himself. The Islamic revelation
thus tells the Muslim that it is obligatory to break his habits of thinking and
motivation, but it does not tell him how. For that, he must go to the scholars
of these states, in accordance with the Koranic imperative,
"Ask those who know if
you know not" (Koran 16:43),
There is no doubt that
bringing about this change, purifying the Muslims by bringing them to spiritual
sincerity, was one of the central duties of the Prophet Muhammad (Allah bless
him and give him peace), for Allah says in the Surat Al ‘Imran of the Koran,
"Allah has truly
blessed the believers, for He has sent them a messenger of themselves, who
recites His signs to them and purifies them, and teaches them the Book and the
Wisdom" (Koran 3:164),
which explicitly lists
four tasks of the prophetic mission, the second of which, yuzakkihim
means precisely to ‘purify them' and has no other lexical sense. Now, it is
plain that this teaching function cannot, as part of an eternal
revelation, have ended with the passing of the first generation, a fact that
Allah explictly confirms in His injunction in Surat Luqman,
"And follow the path of
him who turns unto Me" (Koran 31:15).
These verses indicate
the teaching and transformative role of those who convey the Islamic revelation
to Muslims, and the choice of the word ittiba‘ in the second verse, which
is more general, implies both keeping the company of and following the example
of a teacher. This is why in the history of Tasawwuf, we find that though there
were many methods and schools of thought, these two things never changed:
keeping the company of a teacher, and following his example—in exactly the same
way that the Sahaba were uplifted and purified by keeping the company of the
Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) and following his example.
And this is why the
discipline of Tasawwuf has been preserved and transmitted by Tariqas or
groups of students under a particular master. First, because this was the sunna
of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) in his purifying function
described by the Koran. Secondly, Islamic knowledge has never been transmitted
by writings alone, but rather from ‘ulama to students. Thirdly, the nature of
the knowledge in question is of hal or ‘state of being,' not just
knowing, and hence requires it be taken from a succession of living masters back
to the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace), for the sheer range and
number of the states of heart required by the revelation effectively make
imitation of the personal example of a teacher the only effective means of
transmission.
So far we have spoken
about Tasawwuf in respect to Islam, as a Shari‘a science necessary to fully
realize the Sacred Law in one's life, to attain the states of the heart demanded
by the Koran and hadith. This close connection between Shari‘a and Tasawwuf is
expressed by the statement of Imam Malik, founder of the Maliki school, that "he
who practices Tasawwuf without learning Sacred Law corrupts his faith, while he
who learns Sacred Law without practicing Tasawwuf corrupts himself. Only he who
combines the two proves true." This is why Tasawwuf was taught as part of the
traditional curriculum in madrasas across the Muslim world from Malaysia to
Morocco, why many of the greatest Shari‘a scholars of this Umma have been Sufis,
and why until the end of the Islamic caliphate at the beginning of this century
and the subsequent Western control and cultural dominance of Muslim lands, there
were teachers of Tasawwuf in Islamic institutions of higher learning from
Lucknow to Istanbul to Cairo.
But there is a second
aspect of Tasawwuf that we have not yet talked about; namely, its relation to
Iman or ‘True Faith,' the second pillar of the Islamic religion, which in
the context of the Islamic sciences consists of ‘Aqida or ‘orthodox
belief.'
All Muslims believe in
Allah, and that He is transcendently beyond anything conceivable to the minds of
men, for the human intellect is imprisoned within its own sense impressions and
the categories of thought derived from them, such as number, directionality,
spatial extention, place, time, and so forth. Allah is beyond all of that; in
His own words,
"There is nothing
whatesover like unto Him" (Koran 42:11)
If we reflect for a
moment on this verse, in the light of the hadith of Muslim about Ihsan
that "it is to worship Allah as though you see Him," we realize that the means
of seeing here is not the eye, which can only behold physical things like
itself; nor yet the mind, which cannot transcend its own impressions to reach
the Divine, but rather certitude, the light of Iman, whose locus is not the eye
or the brain, but rather the ruh, a subtle faculty Allah has created
within each of us called the soul, whose knowledge is unobstructed by the bounds
of the created universe. Allah Most High says, by way of exalting the nature of
this faculty by leaving it a mystery,
"Say: ‘The soul is of
the affair of my Lord'" (Koran 17:85).
The food of this ruh is
dhikr or the ‘remembrance of Allah.' Why? Because acts of obedience
increase the light of certainty and Iman in the soul, and dhikr is among the
greatest of them, as is attested to by the sahih hadith related by
al-Hakim that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said,
"Shall I not tell you
of the best of your works, the purest of them in the eyes of your Master, the
highest in raising your rank, better than giving gold and silver, and better for
you than to meet your enemy and smite their necks, and they smite yours?" They
said, "This—what is it, O Messenger of Allah?" and he said: Dhikru Llahi
‘azza wa jall, "The remembrance of Allah Mighty and Majestic." (al-Mustadrak
‘ala al-Sahihayn, 1.496).
Increasing the strength
of Iman through good actions, and particularly through the medium of dhikr
has tremendous implications for the Islamic religion and traditional
spirituality. A non-Muslim once asked me, "If God exists, then why all this
beating around the bush? Why doesn't He just come out and say so?"
The answer is that
taklif or ‘moral responsibility' in this life is not only concerned with
outward actions, but with what we believe, our ‘Aqida—and the
strength with which we believe it. If belief in God and other eternal truths
were effortless in this world, there would be no point in Allah making us
responsible for it, it would be automatic, involuntary, like our belief, say,
that London
is in England.
There would no point in making someone responsible for something impossible
not to believe.
But the responsibility
Allah has place upon us is belief in the Unseen, as a test for us in this world
to choose between kufr and Iman, to distinguish believer from unbeliever, and
some believers above others.
This why strengthening
Iman through dhikr is of such methodological importance for Tasawwuf: we have
not only been commanded as Muslims to believe in certain things, but have been
commanded to have absolute certainty in them. The world we see around us is
composed of veils of light and darkness: events come that knock the Iman out of
some of us, and Allah tests each of us as to the degree of certainty with which
we believe the eternal truths of the religion. It was in this sense that ‘Umar
ibn al-Khattab said, "If the Iman of Abu Bakr were weighed against the Iman of
the entire Umma, it would outweigh it."
Now, in traditional
‘Aqida one of the most important tenets is the wahdaniyya or ‘oneness
and uniqueness' of Allah Most High. This means He is without any sharik
or associate in His being, in His attributes, or in His acts. But the ability to
hold this insight in mind in the rough and tumble of daily life is a function of
the strength of certainty (yaqin) in one's heart. Allah tells the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) in Surat al-A‘raf of the Koran,
"Say: ‘I do not possess
benefit for myself or harm, except as Allah wills'" (Koran 7:188),
yet we tend to rely on
ourselves and our plans, in obliviousness to the facts of ‘Aqida that
ourselves and our plans have no effect, that Allah alone brings about effects.
If you want to test
yourself on this, the next time you contact someone with good connections whose
help is critical to you, take a look at your heart at the moment you ask him to
put in a good word for you with someone, and see whom you are relying upon. If
you are like most of us, Allah is not at the forefront of your thoughts, despite
the fact that He alone is controlling the outcome. Isn't this a lapse in your
‘Aqida, or, at the very least, in your certainty?
Tasawwuf corrects such
shortcomings by step-by-step increasing the Muslim's certainty in Allah. The two
central means of Tasawwuf in attaining the conviction demanded by ‘Aqida
are mudhakara, or learning the traditional tenets of Islamic faith, and
dhikr, deepening one's certainty in them by remembrance of Allah. It is
part of our faith that, in the words of the Koran in Surat al-Saffat,
"Allah has created you
and what you do" (Koran 37:96);
yet for how many of us
is this day to day experience? Because Tasawwuf remedies this and other
shortcomings of Iman, by increasing the Muslim's certainty through a systematic
way of teaching and dhikr, it has traditionally been regarded as personally
obligatory to this pillar of the religion also, and from the earliest centuries
of Islam, has proved its worth.
The last question we
will deal with tonight is: What about the bad Sufis we read about, who
contravene the teachings of Islam?
The answer is that
there are two meanings of Sufi: the first is "Anyone who considers himself a
Sufi," which is the rule of thumb of orientalist historians of Sufism and
popular writers, who would oppose the "Sufis" to the "Ulama." I think the
Koranic verses and hadiths we have mentioned tonight about the scope and method
of true Tasawwuf show why we must insist on the primacy of the definition of a
Sufi as "a man of religious learning who applied what he knew, so Allah
bequeathed him knowledge of what he did not know."
The very first thing a
Sufi, as a man of religious learning knows is that the Shari‘a and
‘Aqida of Islam are above every human being. Whoever does not know
this will never be a Sufi, except in the orientalist sense of the word—like
someone standing in front of the stock exchange in an expensive suit with a
briefcase to convince people he is a stockbroker. A real stockbroker is
something else.
Because this
distinction is ignored today by otherwise well-meaning Muslims, it is often
forgotten that the ‘ulama who have criticized Sufis, such as Ibn al-Jawzi in his
Talbis Iblis [The Devil's deception], or Ibn Taymiya in places in his
Fatawa, or Ibn al-Qayyim al-Jawziyya, were not criticizing Tasawwuf as an
ancillary discipline to the
Shari‘a.
The proof of this is Ibn al-Jawzi's five-volume Sifat al-safwa, which
contains the biographies of the very same Sufis mentioned in al-Qushayri's
famous Tasawwuf manual al-Risala al-Qushayriyya. Ibn Taymiya considered
himself a Sufi of the Qadiri order, and volumes ten and eleven of his
thirty-seven-volume Majmu‘ al-fatawa are devoted to Tasawwuf. And Ibn al-Qayyim
al-Jawziyya wrote his three-volume Madarij al-salikin, a detailed
commentary on ‘Abdullah al-Ansari al-Harawi's tract on the spiritual stations of
the Sufi path, Manazil al-sa'irin. These works show that their authors'
criticisms were not directed at Tasawwuf as such, but rather at specific groups
of their times, and they should be understood for what they are.
As in other Islamic
sciences, mistakes historically did occur in Tasawwuf, most of them stemming
from not recognizing the primacy of
Shari‘a
and ‘Aqida above all else. But these mistakes were not different in principle
from, for example, the Isra'iliyyat (baseless tales of Bani Isra'il) that
crept into tafsir literature, or the mawdu‘at (hadith forgeries) that
crept into the hadith. These were not taken as proof that tafsir was bad,
or hadith was deviance, but rather, in each discipline, the errors were
identified and warned against by Imams of the field, because the Umma needed the
rest. And such corrections are precisely what we find in books like Qushayri's
Risala,Ghazali's Ihya' and other works of Sufism.
For all of the reasons
we have mentioned, Tasawwuf was accepted as an essential part of the Islamic
religion by the ‘ulama of this Umma. The proof of this is all the famous
scholars of Shari‘a sciences who had the higher education of Tasawwuf, among
them Ibn ‘Abidin, al-Razi, Ahmad Sirhindi, Zakariyya al-Ansari, al-‘Izz ibn ‘Abd
al-Salam, Ibn Daqiq al-‘Eid, Ibn Hajar al-Haytami, Shah Wali Allah, Ahmad Dardir,
Ibrahim al-Bajuri, ‘Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulsi, Imam al-Nawawi, Taqi al-Din al-Subki,
and al-Suyuti.
Among the Sufis who
aided Islam with the sword as well as the pen, to quote Reliance of
the Traveller, were:
such men as the
Naqshbandi sheikh Shamil al-Daghestani, who fought a prolonged war against the
Russians in the Caucasus in the nineteenth century; Sayyid Muhammad ‘Abdullah
al-Somali, a sheikh of the Salihiyya order who led Muslims against the British
and Italians in Somalia from 1899 to 1920; the Qadiri sheikh ‘Uthman ibn Fodi,
who led jihad in Northern Nigeria from 1804 to 1808 to establish Islamic rule;
the Qadiri sheikh ‘Abd al-Qadir al-Jaza'iri, who led the Algerians against the
French from 1832 to 1847; the Darqawi faqir al-Hajj Muhammad al-Ahrash, who
fought the French in Egypt in 1799; the Tijani sheikh al-Hajj ‘Umar Tal, who led
Islamic Jihad in Guinea, Senegal, and Mali from 1852 to 1864; and the Qadiri
sheikh Ma' al-‘Aynayn al-Qalqami, who helped marshal Muslim resistance to the
French in northern Mauritania and southern Morocco from 1905 to 1909.
Among the Sufis whose
missionary work Islamized entire regions are such men as the founder of the
Sanusiyya order, Muhammad ‘Ali Sanusi, whose efforts and jihad from 1807 to 1859
consolidated Islam as the religion of peoples from the Libyan Desert to
sub-Saharan Africa; [and] the Shadhili sheikh Muhammad Ma‘ruf and Qadiri sheikh
Uways al-Barawi, whose efforts spread Islam westward and inland from the East
African Coast . . . . (Reliance of the Traveller,863).
It is plain from the
examples of such men what kind of Muslims have been Sufis; namely, all kinds,
right across the board—and that Tasawwuf did not prevent them from serving Islam
in any way they could.
To summarize everything
I have said tonight: In looking first at Tasawwuf and Shari‘a, we found that
many Koranic verses and sahih hadiths oblige the Muslim to eliminate haram
inner states as arrogance, envy, and fear of anyone besides Allah; and on the
other hand, to acquire such obligatory inner states as mercy, love of one's
fellow Muslims, presence of mind in prayer, and love of the Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace). We found that these inward states could not be dealt
with in books of fiqh, whose purpose is to specify the outward,
quantifiable aspects of the
Shari‘a.
The knowledge of these states is nevertheless of the utmost importance to every
Muslim, and this is why it was studied under the ‘ulama of Ihsan, the teachers
of Tasawwuf, in all periods of Islamic history until the beginning of the
present century.
We then turned to the
level of Iman, and found that though the ‘Aqida of Muslims is that Allah
alone has any effect in this world, keeping this in mind in everhday life is not
a given of human consciousness, but rather a function of a Muslim's yaqin,
his certainty. And we found that Tasawwuf, as an ancillary discipline to ‘Aqida,
emphasizes the systematic increase of this certainty through both mudhakara,
‘teaching tenets of faith' and dhikr, ‘the remembrance of Allah,' in
accordance with the words of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
about Ihsan that "it is worship Allah as though you see Him."
Lastly, we found that
accusations against Tasawwuf made by scholars such as Ibn al-Jawzi, and Ibn
Taymiya were not directed against Tasawwuf in principle, but to specific groups
and individuals in the times of these authors, the proof for which is the other
books by the same authors that showed their understanding of Tasawwuf as a
Shari‘a science.
To return to the
starting point of my talk this evening, with the disappearance of traditional
Islamic scholars from the Umma, two very different pictures of Tasawwuf emerge
today. If we read books written after the dismantling of the traditional
fabric of Islam by colonial powers in the last century, we find the big hoax:
Islam without spirituality and
Shari‘a
without Tasawwuf. But if we read the classical works of Islamic scholarship, we
learn that Tasawwuf has been a
Shari‘a science like
tafsir, hadith, or any other, throughout the history of Islam. The Prophet
(Allah bless him and give him peace) said,
"Truly, Allah does not
look at your outward forms and wealth, but rather at your hearts and your works"
(Sahih Muslim, 4.1389: hadith 2564).
And this is the
brightest hope that Islam can offer a modern world darkened by materialism and
nihilism: Islam as it truly is; the hope of eternal salvation through a religion
of brotherhood and social and economic justice outwardly, and the direct
experience of divine love and illumination inwardly.
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