Mawlana Jalaluddin Muhammad Rumi (Persian: جلالالدین محمد بلخى) also known as Jalaluddin Muhammad Balkhi (Persian: جلالالدین محمد بلخى) (30 September 1207 – 17 December 1273), often known respectfully as Mawlana or Mevlana (“our Master”), is a thirteenth-century Persian Sufi saint, jurist, theologian, poet and one of the greatest spiritual masters of Islam. He was known as Rumi (“Roman”) because he spent most of his life in the region known by Muslims as “Rum,” the Anatolian peninsula most of which had been conquered by the Seljuq Turks after centuries of rule by the Roman Empire. He is acknowledged as the father of one of Islam’s major Sufi orders, the Mevlevi order although its actual inception came about through his disciples. He was also often referred to by the Persian title, Khodawandgar (“great Master”).
Mawlana is widely regarded as not only one of the greatest Sufi poets but has also been described by Western orientalists as “the most eminent Sufi poet whom Persia has produced”, “the greatest mystical poet of Islam” and even “the greatest mystical poet of any age.”
He is the author of the famous Mathnawi, a poem of 25,700 couplets, considered his greatest work that was composed in his later years, containing a great number of stories and anecdotes of diverse styles. His second best known work is the Diwan-i Shams-i Tabriz, totaling some 40,000 couplets, which is a collection of poems describing the mystical states and expounding various points of Sufi doctrine. The Diwan is a collection of ecstatic utterances, with most of the ghazals (or “lyric poems of love”) composed spontaneously by Mawlana during the sama (whirling meditation), a practice still performed today by the Sufis of the Mevlevi order.
Family & Birth
Mawlana was born on 30 September 1207 AD. Originally it was thought he was born in Balkh, in the province of Khorasan in northern Persia (now Afghanistan). However, recent scholarship suggests that at the time of his birth, his father is said to have been living some 250km north-east of Balkh, in the small town of Wakhsh, situated in modern Tajikistan, where his father lived and worked as a jurist and preacher between 1204 and 1210.
Hazrat Husain ibn Ahmad Khatibi, the grandfather of Mawlana, was a great scholar, and was considered a great spiritual leader not only by learned men but also by contemporary rulers so much so that he is said to have married Malika-i-Jahan, the only daughter of the Sultan of Khwarizmshah, Sultan Alauddin Muhammad.[4] This relationship is rejected by some modern scholars.
His marriage to the princess had been foretold in the dreams of four people – Himself, the Sultan of Khwarizmshah, the princess and his vizier – in which each was told by the Prophet ﷺ that Hazrat Husain ibn Ahmad should marry the princess. Nine months after their marriage, they had a son whom they named Bahauddin.
Mawlana’s father, Hazrat Bahauddin Walad, inherited the traditions of his father in the realm of knowledge and spiritual eminence. He was acknowledged as a man of deep learning and bore the title of Sultan-ul-Ulama (King of Scholars) and is also said to have been a descendant of Abu Bakr (r), the First Caliph and close companion of the Prophet although some scholars disagree with this.
Hazrat Bahauddin had strong mystical inclinations and his surviving spiritual journal, preserved under the title Ma’aref (Gnostic Wisdom), records some of his experiences. In one striking entry, he reports:
“I obliterated myself, stripping myself of all forms so that I could see God. I told myself I would obliterate [in] God and strip God of all forms to see God and attain His blessings more immediately. I chanted ‘God’ and my consciousness [vanish]ed in God and I saw God, in the guise of His Godhead and the attributes of perfection. ”
Early Life
Much of Mawlana’s formative years were spent traveling with his family. After his birth, the family left Khorasan and lived in various Middle Eastern cities for about a decade. Various explanations are given for the family’s departure from Khorasan. Some say Hazrat Bahauddin left because of a premonition about the impending Mongol invasion, which devastated much of the area, whilst others say his departure was due to the hostility of Fakhruddin Razi, the philosopher and influential courtier of the Khwarizmshah.
At the time that Hazrat Bahauddin emigrated westwards, his family consisted of a daughter, Fatima Khatun, an eldest son, Husayn, both of whom probably stayed behind in Khorasan, along with Hazrat Bahauddin’s elderly mother. The family members he took with him included his wife, Mu’mine Khatun, and two sons, Hazrat Jalaluddin and Alauddin. Hazrat Jalaluddin’s brother was the elder of the two by two years, having been born in 1205.
According to some scholars, Mawlana encountered one of the most famous mystic Persian poets, Hazrat Fariduddin Attar, in the Iranian city of Nishapur after leaving Samarkand. Hazrat Fariduddin, appeared to have been deeply impressed by the young Hazrat Jalaluddin Rumi and presented him with a copy of his Asrar-nama (Book of Secrets). As Hazrat Bahauddin set off again with his young son following behind, Hazrat Fariduddin is said to have remarked: “There goes a river dragging a mighty ocean behind it.”
As a child, Mawlana Rumi was quick, intelligent and full of curiosity. One such story highlighting his spiritual prowess during his childhood relates that at the age of six when, in response to a request from his playmates to jump to a neighboring terrace, he is reported to have replied:
“My brethren, to jump from terrace to terrace is an act well adapted for cats, dogs and the like to perform; come now, if you feel disposed, let us spring up to the heavens, and visit the regions of God’s realm.”
From Khorasan to Anatolia
From Khorasan, the travellers journeyed on to Baghdad, where it is suggested they arrived in 1217 and stayed for about one month,[6] where he was received by the great Sufi shaykh Shahabuddin al-Suhrawardi of the Suhrawardi tariqa. In Baghdad, Hazrat Bahauddin turned down the Caliph’s gift of money, citing it was money unlawfully acquired and refused to visit him, although he did accept an invitation to preach in his presence in the congregational mosque. During the Friday sermon, Hazrat Bahauddin reproached the Caliph for his corrupt way of life, warning him of his impending end in the forthcoming Mongol invasion.
Before the family left Baghdad, news was received of the siege of Balkh, where the Mongol army had captured and destroyed the ancient centre of learning.
From Baghdad, Mawlana went to Syria with his father, visiting Damascus and Aleppo before undertaking the pilgrimage to Mecca. The family arrived at Aqshahr, near Erzincan (on the upper reaches of the Euphrates) in eastern Anatolia, between late 1217 and early 1218 [7]. There Hazrat Bahauddin is said to have taught for four years in a college (madrasah) built for him by the wife of Fakhruddin Bahramshah, the local ruler and a great patron of learning.
Laranda and Konya
From Aqshahr (Akshehir), the party went to Larinda, which was situated in the central Anatolian province of Rum (the “Roman land” from which the name Rumi is derived from). The family remained there for about seven years, during which time Hazrat Bahauddin taught in the madrasah under the patronage of Amir Musa, the local governer. The period in Laranda was also marked by two deaths, a marriage, and two births in the family. Hazrat Alauddin, the elder brother of Mawlana Rumi and Mu’mine Khatun, his mother, both died.
At the age of 17, Mawlana married Gowher Khatun, the daughter of Sharfuddin of Samarqand and, in due course, Mawlana’s wife gave birth to two sons – Alauddin, named after his recently deceased older brother, and Sultan Walad, who was named in honour of his grandfather. The two boys were born about a year apart.
While in Laranda, Hazrat Bahauddin received an invitation from the Seljuq ruler, Alauddin Kayqubad, to teach in Konya, where the family settled in 1229 when Mawlana Rumi was 22 of age.
Hazrat Bahauddin evidently intended Mawlana Rumi to succeed him as mufti (preacher) and he introduced him to his congregation and students and gave him the opportunity to preach. Hazrat Bahauddin taught in the madrasah in Konya until his death, two years later, in February 1231 when he was about 80 years old.
Education
Mawlana Rumi’s father had appointed his own trusted disciple, Hazrat Burhanuddin Muhaqqiq al-Tirmidhi, as a tutor responsible for his son’s education during his infancy.
A year after the death of Hazrat Bahauddin, Hazrat Burhanuddin arrived in Konya, unaware of the fact that his Master had passed away. Having had lost his teacher, Hazrat Burhanuddin was reunited with Mawlana Rumi and assumed a role that he had had some nineteen or so years previously when he had been tutor to the infant Mawlana Rumi, this time being placed in charge of Mawlana Rumi’s spiritual education.
Mawlana surrendered himself completely to his teacher during a period of intensive training lasting nearly nine years in which he later recalls with a glowing tribute to his teacher:
Be mature and transcend all change
And become the light incarnate like Burhan Muhaqqiq.
When you escape from yourself you become Burhan,
When you say, ‘I am a slave,’ you become a king.
Hazrat Burhanuddin sent Mawlana Rumi to Halab (Aleppo), where studied at Madrassa Halawiyya (a college of the Ḥanafi school of Sunni Islamic law) and then to Damascus in order to further his studies. These two places were the most important centres of Islamic learning during the thirteenth century and managed to remain immune from the destruction of the Mongols. During his stay in Syria, Mawlana Rumi pursued a traditional course of religious studies, including Fiqh, Tafsir, Arabic language and literature, Hadith and theology.
After spending seven years in Syria, Mawlana Rumi returned to Kayseri (ancient Caesarea) where he was instructed by Hazrat Burhanuddin in undertaking the spiritual practices of the Sufis, such as fasting, and it was after a particularly rigorous fast during which Mawlana Rumi is said to have performed three forty-day fasts in succession, that Hazrat Burhanuddin pronounced him ‘perfect in all the sciences, outer and inner, human and spiritual’.
Mawlana Rumi also began to study and deeply treasure his father’s spiritual journal, absorbing its mystical accounts, as well as the spiritual notebooks and Quran Tafasir (commentaries) of Hazrat Burhanuddin.
Hazrat Burhanuddin then directed Mawlana Rumi to start his mission of assisting and preaching to those who had gone astray in Konya, while he himself resumed preaching duties in Kayseri until he later passed away in 1241. Thus, Mawlana Rumi became a fully-fledged successor to his father.
Not long after Mawlana’s return to Konya, in 1242 or 1243, his wife Gowhar Khatun passed away. Between 1240 and 1245, Mawlana’s teenage sons went to Damascus to acquire an education like their father’s, under the protection of their maternal grandfather, Hazrat Sharfuddin. After they returned, Hazrat Sultan Walad would sometimes sit near his father during his lectures and people would mistake them for brothers, rather than father and son, on account of their relatively small age difference.
Mawlana was later remarried to a widow named Kerra Khatun (d.1292) with whom he had a third son, Muzaffar al-Din Amir Alim Chelebi (d.1277), and a daughter, Malika Khatun (d. 1303-1306).
Career in Konya
In Konya, Mawlana Rumi took over his father’s old position as teacher in the madrasah. His life was the life of a learned orthodox professor addressing vast audiences, consisting of both men and women, on religion, philosophy, Islamic law and morals. He had attained a reputation for profound knowledge and was recognised as an authority on religion by the age of 34.
Meeting with Hazrat Shams Tabrizi
On November 29, 1244, Mawlana Rumi’s life took an abrupt mystical turn. As he strolled through Konya’s marketplace on his way home from the madrasah, he was approached by a dervish named Shams al-Din Tabrizi. Shams al-Din (“Sun of Faith”) was a formidable mystic who had long been looking for a saintly and spiritual companion. In his writings he states:
“I implored God to allow to mix with and be a companion of His friends (awliya-ye khwod). I had a dream and was told, “We will make you a companion of a saint.” I asked, “Where is this saint?” The next night I was told in a dream, “He is in Anatolia (Rum).” After a while, I had another dream and was told, “It’s not yet time. All things come in the fullness of time.”
Elsewhere, he states:
“I wanted someone of my own type to make into my qibla [the direction one faces in prayer] and turn to, for I had grown tired of myself… ”
Accounts differ as to exactly what happened at this first meeting between the two, but it was a life-changing experience for Mawlana Rumi. The most frequently repeated account of what happened is related by Ahmed Aflaki in Manaqib al-‘Arifin:
“One day, as he [Shams] was seated at the gate of an inn, Rumi came by, riding on a mule, in the midst of a crowd of students and disciples on foot. Shams arose, advanced and took hold of the mule’s bridle, addressing Rumi in these words, ‘Exchanger of the current coins of deep meaning, who knows the Names of God! Tell me, was Muhammad ﷺ the greater servant of God, or Bayazid Bistami?’
Rumi answered him, ‘Muhammad ﷺ was incomparably the greater – the greatest of all prophets and saints.’
‘Then,’ rejoined Shams, ‘how is it that Muhammad ﷺ said, “We have not known Thee, O God, as Thou ought to be known,” whereas Bayazid said, “Glory unto me! How great is my glory.”?’
On hearing this question, Rumi fainted. On regaining his senses, he took the questioner to his home.
An exchange ensued between the two men, with Mawlana Rumi finally saying that Hazrat Bayazid’s spiritual thirst was quenched after one drink, he spoke of being full and so he stopped seeking. However, the Prophet’s ﷺ thirst was never quenched and he went on seeking, aspiring to be drawn closer to the Divine. It was for this reason that he said, ‘We have not known Thee as Thou ought to be known.’ Hearing this, it was Hazrat Shams that fainted.
Hazrat Muhyiddin Abdul Qadir, a contemporary of Hazrat Sultan Walad, the son of Mawlana Rumi, gives another account of the meeting:
“Rumi was addressing his students as usual in his house. Before him was lying a heap of books. During the lecture, a man entered and politely took his seat in a corner after formal greetings.
Pointing towards the books the visitor said: “What is this?”
Rumi who was busy with his lecture must have been annoyed with such a silly interruption for the books were there for anybody to see, and on the face of it the question was both preposterous and irrelevant. It was, moreover, a breach of good manners for a student to interrupt the Master so insolently during the course of his lecture.
Rumi, therefore, brushed the question aside by simply saying: ‘You don’t know,’ at which point the books caught fire.
Bewildered and aghast Rumi looked about for an explanation of this phenomenon.
‘What is this?’ he asked, turning his face towards the newcomer who simply repeated Rumi’s own words, ‘You don’t know!’ and quietly walked away.
Rumi left his lecture, and, according to Abdul Qadir, went in search of Shams but could not trace him.
The two were inseparable, day and night and it is said that the two spent days, even months, together in a state of mystical communion. Mawlana Rumi’s old life fell away and he neglected his duties as a teacher and as a family man. Hazrat Shams introduced Mawlana to sama, the meditational practice of whirling and the two spent long hours at the sama. Mawlana Rumi was overwhelmed by the very presence of Hazrat Shams.
One biographer describes Mawlana Rumi’s spiritual transformation:
“The encounter with Shams triggered the completion of a paradigm shift in Rumi’s approach to piety and spirituality; he discovered that beyond the safe, dry and socially approved forms of obedience (prayer, sermonizing, discovering and applying the principles of law) and renunciation ( fasting, controlling the passions and the ego), there is a meta-spirituality of love, which consists in joyously and creatively celebrating our relationship with God.”
Hazrat Sultan Walad, Maulana Rumi’s son, looked back on his father’s transformation through this poem:
Through love, a fatwa-writing Shaykh turned poet
though ascetic, he grew intoxicated
but not from a wine which is made of grapes
a spirit of light drinks only wine of light.
Burial Place
Mawlana Rumi’s tomb in Konya, Turkey.
A short while after Mawlana Rumi’s death, the Seljuq Sultan, Alam al-Din Qaysar, approached Hazrat Sultan Walad about erecting the Green Dome, the building which houses the mausoleum of Mawlana Rumi, for which he required 30,000 dirhams. Several times this amount was collected and thus Badr al-Din Tabrizi, an architect and disciple of Mawlana Rumi who was described by Mawlana as “the second Socrates and Greek Plato” supervised the construction of the shrine. On his sarcophagus, several of his poems are inscribed as well as verses from the Quran. One of the poems which was inscribed begins:
On the day I die
as they bear aloft my bier
do not suppose
I’m consumed by the cares of this world.
Don’t cry for me and do not lament
In the centuries since, Mawlana Rumi’s tomb has been visited by people from all walks of life, Muslim and non-Muslim alike. During the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent (d.1566), the semahane (a ceremonial hall where the sama or ‘whirling’ meditation is carried out) was built adjoining Mawlana Rumi’s mausoleum, which is also the burial place of his father and other successors of the Mevlevi Order.
Successors
It was Mawlana Rumi’s wish that Hazrat Husamuddin be his spiritual successor (khalifa). Hazrat Husamuddin remained at the helm of the Mevlevi community until he passed away, guiding it according to the ideas and principles of its late master. Every Friday following the prayers and recitation of the Quran, Hazrat Husamuddin would hold readings of the Mathnavi and a undertake a session of sama, which would be attended by hundreds of disciples and other members of the Sufi community.
When Hazrat Husamuddin died in 1284, he was succeeded by Mawlana Rumi’s son, Hazrat Sultan Walad, who was instrumental in founding and organising the the Mevlevi Order of Sufis. During his tenure, the wisdom and knowledge of the disciples increased, as did the number of both male and female initiates. In response to the growth and spread of the Mevlevi Order throughout Anatolia, khalifas were appointed by Hazrat Sultan Walad in each city where there were a sizeable number of disciples. When he passed away in 1312, at the age of 86, the Mevlevi order was firmly shaped and was set to become one of the most influential orders in Anatolia.
Spiritual Chain (Silsila)
According to Ahmed Aflaki in Manaqib al-‘Arifin, Mawlana Rumi’s silsila (spiritual chain) is traced back to the Beloved Prophet ﷺ as follows:
Mawlana Jalaluddin Rumi, disciple of
Sheikh Burhanuddin Muhaqqiq al-Tirmidhi, disciple of
Sheikh Bahauddin Walad (Mawlana’s father), disciple of
Sheikh Shams al-Din al-Sarakhsi, disciple of
Sheikh Ahmad Khatibi (Hazrat Bahauddin’s grandfather), disciple of
Sheikh Ahmad Ghazali, disciple of
Sheikh Abu Bakr Nassaj Tusi, disciple of
Sheikh Muhammad Zojjaj, disciple of
Sheikh Abu Bakr Shibli, disciple of
Sheikh Junayd Baghdadi, disciple of
Sheikh Abu’l Hasan Sari Saqati, disciple of
Sheikh Maruf al-Karkhi, disciple of
Sheikh Dawood Tai, disciple of
Sheikh Habib al-Ajami, disciple of
Sheikh Hasan al-Basri, disciple of
Sayyadina Ali ibn Abi Talib (r), disciple of
Sayyidina Muhammad ibn Abdillah ﷺ
Major Works
Mawlana Rumi’s mother tongue was Persian, but acquired knowledge of Arabic as a child while learning to read and recite the Qur’an. Following his family’s migration to Anatolia, he also learnt Turkish. His intimate knowledge of these languages is reflected in his writings, which although written mainly in Persian contain passages in Arabic and Turkish. His three major works are generally referred to as the Mathnawi, Divan-i Shams-i Tabrizi, and the Fihi Ma Fihi.
Mathnavi or Mathnavi-i Ma’navi (Persian: مثنوی معنوی, meaning “Rhyming Couplets of Profound Spiritual Meaning”) was the result of Hazrat Husamuddin’s initial request for Mawlana Rumi to write a short ‘teaching’ poem. It takes the form of an extended poem, 25,577 verses long, and comprises six books, each with a prose introduction. It is an exceptional work, not only in length but also in style and content, for it blends traditional tales, parables, anecdotes and legends about the Sufi saints with stories about the prophets, and commentaries on the Prophetic Traditions and passages from the Qur’an. It is considered by many to be one of the greatest works of Sufi poetry.
Divan-i Shams-i Tabrizi (Persian: دیوان شمس تبریزی, meaning “The Works of Shams Tabrizi”) is a collection of Mawlana Rumi’s lyrical poetry, much of which was written under the name of Shamsuddin of Tabriz. It comprises of 3,229 ghazals and qasidas (odes; 34,662 lines), 1,983 ruba’iyyat (quatrains; 7,932 lines) and 44 tarji-bands (1,698 lines). Most of the poems are in written in Persian, although there are also some in Arabic and a small number of mixed Persian/Greek poems. It is considered to be one of the greatest works of Persian literature. The poems in the Divan cover a span of almost thirty years, from shortly after Hazrat Shams’ arrival in Konya to Mawlana Rumi’s death in 1273. The poems are an impassioned celebration of the Divine Unity; or, perhaps more specifically, of love.
Fihi Ma Fihi (Persian: فیه مافی, literally meaning “What’s in it is in it”) contains the transcripts of 72 short discourses given by Mawlana Rumi to his close followers, written in prose during the last years of his life. The discourses were written down by a scribe while the conversation was taking place, and may have been corrected later by Mawlana Rumi himself. Among the subjects of the discourses are the outer and inner worlds, duality and nonduality, the Sufi path to enlightenment, and the relationship between the pupil and his/her spiritual mentor. The discourses themselves are enlivened with anecdotes and stories, and in many instances they also incorporate rudimentary lessons in human and spiritual psychology.
In addition to these three main works are:
Makatib (Persian: مکاتیب, meaning “The Letters”) consists of 144 letters from Mawlana Rumi, most written from the 1240s onwards, to various officials and men of influence on behalf of family members, disciples and those in need. It demonstrates that Mawlana Rumi was very involved in the lives of those around him.
Majalis-i Sab‘a (Persian: مجالس سبعه, meaning “Seven Sessions”) is a small booklet which contains seven of Mawlana Rumi’s public, formal sermons. The sermons give a commentary on the deeper meaning of Quran and Hadith. The sermons also include quotations from poets such as Hazrat Sana’i Ghaznavi, Hazrat Fariduddin Attar and others.
Quotes, Sayings & Poems
Love for the Prophet ﷺ
The light of Muhammad ﷺ has become distributed in millions of pieces and has encompassed the whole world.
The Prophet was like the lightening of that light.
When it strikes, all veils of unbelief are torn, and thousands of monks are influenced by Muhammad ﷺ and run toward him.
When Muhammad’s ﷺ light came, unbelief put on its black clothes.
When the period of the eternal kingdom came, the unbelievers hit the drum to prevent death.
The whole face of the earth had become green. The heavens envied the earth and tore its sleeve. The moon had become split. The earth received life and became alive.
Last night, there was a big commotion among the stars because a peerless star had descended to the earth.
I am the servant of the Qur’an as long as I live. And I am the soil where the foot of Muhammad ﷺ stepped.
There has never been a beauty like that of a (Prophet like) Muhammad ﷺ in this world or the next. May the Glory of God help him!
We learned the skill of being a (true) man from God. We are the heroes of love and the companions of Muhammad ﷺ.
Heart and love have become friends, like Ahmad ﷺ and Abu Bakr Ra.gif became friends in the cave. These two friends’ names were different, but their spirits were one.
His (Muhammad ﷺ) words totally are pearls from the ocean of reality
Because his heart was united with the ocean of truth.
If the face of Muhammad ﷺ is reflected on a wall, the heart of the wall will become alive.
The wall, through his blessed reflection, will have such great happiness that even the wall will be rescued from hypocrisy.
It was a shame for the wall to have two faces while the pious and the pure had only one
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