|
Sufism and Dervishes The origin and roots of Sufism
lie in the life and practices of the Prophet of Islam and the Qur’an.
Sufism espouses a well-founded and thoroughgoing interpretatio
n of Islam,
which focuses on love, tolerance, worship of God, community development,
and personal development through self-discipline and responsibility. A
Sufi’s way of life is to love and be of service to people, deserting the
ego or false self and all illusion so that one can reach maturity and
perfection, and finally reach Allah, the True, the Real.
Through the Whirling Dervishes program we hope to bring to you a hint
of one of the remarkable ways of achieving this: the way of Rumi, the
great Muslim mystic and poet.
The Order of the Whirling Dervishes is one branch of the vast Sufi
tradition of Islam. The universal values of love and service shared by
all Sufis are very much relevant to the social and political realities
of today, and this ritual, which is only performed by the Order of the
Whirling Dervishes, has come to symbolize these values in the hearts and
minds of millions throughout the world.
The
Fundamental Meaning of Sema
THE SEMA RITUAL began with the inspiration of Mevlâna Jalâluddîn Rumi
(1207-1273) and was influenced by Turkish customs and culture.
It
is scientifically recognized that the fundamental condition of our
existence is to revolve. There is no being or object which does not
revolve, because all beings are comprised of revolving electrons,
protons, and neutrons in atoms. Everything revolves, and the human being
lives by means of the revolution of these particles, by the revolution
of the blood in his body, and by the revolution of the stages of his
life, by his coming from the earth and his returning to it.
However, all of these revolutions are natural and unconscious. But
the human being possesses a mind and an intelligence which distinguishes
him from other beings. Thus the whirling dervish or semazen,
intentionally and consciously participates in the shared revolution of
other beings.
Contrary to popular belief, the semazen's goal is not to lose
consciousness or to fall into a state of ecstasy. Instead, by revolving
in harmony with all things in nature -- with the smallest cells and with
the stars in the firmament -- the semazen testifies to the existence and
the majesty of the Creator, thinks of Him, gives thanks to Him, and
prays to Him. In so doing, the semazen confirms the words of the Qur'an
(64:1): Whatever is in the skies or on earth invokes God.
An important characteristic of this seven-centuries-old ritual is
that it unites the three fundamental components of human nature: the
mind (as knowledge and thought), the heart (through the expression of
feelings, poetry and music) and the body (by activating life, by the
turning). These three elements are thoroughly joined both in theory and
in practice as perhaps in no other ritual or system of thought.
The Sema ceremony represents the human being's spiritual journey, an
ascent by means of intelligence and love to Perfection (Kemal). Turning
toward the truth, he grows through love, transcends the ego, meets the
truth, and arrives at Perfection. Then he returns from this spiritual
journey as one who has reached maturity and completion, able to love and
serve the whole of creation and all creatures without discriminating in
regard to belief, class, or race.
In the symbolism of the Sema ritual, the semazen's camel's hair hat
(sikke) represents the tombstone of the ego; his wide, white skirt
represents the ego's shroud. By removing his black cloak, he is
spiritually reborn to the truth. At the beginning of the Sema, by
holding his arms crosswise, the semazen appears to represent
the number
one, thus testifying to God's unity. While whirling, his arms are open:
his right arm is directed to the sky, ready to receive God's beneficence;
his left hand, upon which
his eyes are fastened, is turned toward the earth. The semazen conveys
God's spiritual gift to those who are witnessing the Sema. Revolving
from right to left around the heart, the semazen embraces all humanity
with love. The human being has been created with love in order to love.
Mevlâna Jalâluddîn Rumi says, "All loves are a bridge to Divine love.
Yet, those who have not had a taste of it do not know!"
The
Ritual Dance or Sema
The Mevlevi (also spelled as mawlawi) Ritual dance or sema
consists of several stages with different meanings:
The first stage, Naat-i
Sherif, is a eulogy to the Messenger of
Islam and the all Prophets before him, who represent love. To praise
them is to acknowledge and praise God Almighty Who created and sent them
to humanity as a mercy. This eulogy is followed by a drumbeat (on the
kudum) symbolizing the divine command ‘Be’ for the creation of the
entire universe.
The Naat-i Sherif is followed by a Taksim, an
improvisation on the reed flute or ney.
This
expresses the divine breath, which gives life to everything.
Then follows the Sultan Veled procession or Devr-i Veled,
accompanied by peshrev music; this is a circular, anticlockwise,
procession three times around the turning space. The greetings of the
semazen, or whirling dervishes, during the procession represent the
three stages of knowledge: ilm-al yaqin (received knowledge,
gained from others or through study), ayn-al yaqin (knowing by
seeing or observing for oneself) and haqq-al yakin (knowledge
gained through direct experience, gnosis).
During the Sema itself there are four selams, or
musical movements, each with a distinct rhythm. At the beginning, during
and close of each selam, the semazen testify to God's
existence, unity, majesty and power:
The First Selam represents the human being's birth to truth
through feeling and mind. It represents his complete acceptance of his
condition as a creature created by God.
The Second Selam expresses the rapture of
the human being witnessing the splendor of
creation in the face of God's greatness and omnipotence.
The Third Selam is the rapture of dissolving into love and the
sacrifice of the mind to love. It is complete submission, unity, and the
annihilation of self in the Beloved. This is the state that is known as
nirvana in Buddhism and fana fillah in Islam. The next
stage in Islamic belief is the state of servanthood represented by the
Prophet, who is called God's servant foremost and subsequently His
‘Messenger.’ The aim of Sema is not uncontrolled ecstasy and loss
of consciousness, but the realization of submission to God.
In the Fourth Selam, just as the Prophet ascends to the
spiritual Throne of Allah and then returns to his task on earth, the
whirling
dervish, after the ascent of his spiritual journey, returns to his task,
to his servanthood. He is a servant of God, of His Books, of His
Prophets, of His whole Creation.
This is followed by a recitation from the Qur’an, the Sura (Chapter)
Mary on the miracle birth of Jesus and his mission.
At the end, by the salute, the dervish
demonstrates again the number ‘1’ in his appearance, arms consciously
and humbly crossed, and, by this, the unity of God.
The ceremony ends with a prayer for the peace of the souls of all the
Prophets and believers.
After the completion of the Sema, all the
dervishes retire silently to their rooms for meditation and further
remembrance of God.
IMPORTANT NOTE:
Sema is a spiritual act, so please DO NOT applaud while watching.
Youmay kindly do so, if you wish, after the dervishes have left the
stage.
Rumi's life
A
short outline of the life of Rumi
Jalaleddin
Rumi was one of the great spiritual masters and poetic geniuses of
mankind, and the Mevlevi Sufi order was founded to follow his teachings.
He was born in 1207 in Balkh in present day Afghanistan to a family of
learned theologians. Escaping the Mongol invasion, he and his family
traveled extensively in Muslim lands, performed
pilgrimage to Mecca and visited Medina; the journey brought the family
to Erzincan and then Karaman, where Rumi studied for a short period in
the Halaveye School. In 1228, at the invitation of the Sultan of the
Seljuks, Alaeddin Keykubad, they settled in Konya, Anatolia, in present
day Turkey, then part of the Seljuk Empire. Here Jalaleddin married and
lived with his wife, Gevher Hatun, who bore him two children. He is
called ‘Rumi,’ meaning ‘Anatolian’ because of his life in that place. He
also gained the title Mevlana which means ‘Our Master’ through his
life’s work there.
When his father Bahauddin Veled passed away in
1231, Rumi succeeded him as professor in religious sciences at the
largest theological school in Konya. Only 24 years old, Rumi was already
an accomplished scholar in religious and positive sciences. He died on
the 17th of December 1273 in Konya, where he had spent most
of his adult life and composed all his works, and where his tomb lies
today.
Although Rumi had already succeeded to his
father’s position as a teacher, when the great scholar and Sufi
Burhaneddin al-Tirmithi arrived in Konya, Rumi studied under him and
devoted himself to his service for nine years. This training was focused
on divine love, worship, austerity and abstinence, piety, consciousness
of God, humility, and tolerance, which are the foundations of Sufism.
Rumi spent his days mostly praying and serving people who came to visit
the Sufi center, preparing food for them,
collecting wood for cooking and heating, and cleaning the toilets and
bathrooms used by visitors. He thus learned the merit of serving people
and knew that serving people is ultimately serving God. On Burhaneddin’s
advice Rumi completed his scholarly education in Aleppo, mastering also
the classical Islamic sciences, including jurisprudence (fiqh),
commentary on the Qur’an (tafsir), tradition (hadith) and
epistemology (usul). There were thus a number of significant
figures in Rumi’s spiritual development. Apart from his father and
Burhaneddin, he met many great philosophers and scholars of the age
including the renowned Ibn Arabi in Aleppo and Damascus, and others in
Konya under the patronage of the Seljuk Court. He thus acquired both the
inner and outer sciences within sixteen years.
The most famous and probably the most fruitful
relationship in his development was with Shems-i Tebriz, whom he met in
Konya at the suggestion of Ruknuddin Zarqubi. Modern historians may
argue about who influenced whom in their long
association
but this is not profitable. What we know is that for a particular period
of time, two skillful and acute spirits came
together, and by sharing the divine bounties and gifts they received
from their Lord, they reached peaks that most would not be able to reach
easily on their own. To this day the place where the two first met in
Konya is known as Marc’al Bahreyn, the meeting point of the two
oceans. Through their spiritual cooperation, they enlightened those of
their own age, and have also influenced all the centuries which
followed.
Following the departure of Shams, Rumi continued
to compose his works and to develop the principles that would be
followed by the order formed and named in his honour after his death. He
started to live in seclusion and abstinence practicing ascetics in
series of three periods of forty days; eating little, talking little and
sleeping little were essential components of
this discipline.
Here it is important to remember that while Rumi
was informed by numerous sources of ideas, on his journey he seemed to
leave many of his contemporaries behind—his love and compassion flowed
like the waters of the world’s oceans; so much so that while continuing
to live physically among humans, he managed to become ever closer to
God. He never elevated himself above others but his writings, both
during his life and after his entering into eternal life, provide a
guiding star which reflects the light of the spiritual life of the
Prophet of Islam. Thus, he is among the few figures who have exerted
great influence over large parts of history and large regions of the
world.
A SAMPLING OF RUMI'S POEMS
This Great Love Inside Me
am so small I can barely be seen.
How can this great love be inside me?
Look at your eyes. They are small,
but they see enormous things.
Trans./Compiled by Coleman Barks.
The Essential Rumi. Harper San Fransisco, 1997.
The Secret Turning
A secret turning in us
makes the universe turn.
Head unaware of feet,
and feet head. Neither cares.
They keep turning.
Compiled by Coleman Barks, i.b.i.d.
This We Have NowThis we have now
is not imagination.
This is not
grief or joy.
Not a judging state,
or an elation,
or sadness.
Those come and go.
This is the presence
that doesn't.
Compiled by Coleman Barks, i.b.i.d.
The Day I've Died
The day I've died, my pall is moving on
-
But do not think my heart is still on earth!
Don't weep and pity me: "Oh woe, how awful!"
You fall in devil's snare - woe, that is awful!
Don't cry "Woe, parted!" at my burial -
For me this is the time of joyful meeting!
Don't say "Farewell!" when I'm put in the grave -
A curtain is it for eternal bliss.
You saw "descending" - now look at the rising!
Is setting dangerous for sun and moon?
To you it looks like setting, but it's rising;
The coffin seems a jail, yet it means freedom.
Which seed fell in the earth that did not grow there?
Why do you doubt the fate of human seed?
What bucket came not filled from out the cistern?
Why should the Yusaf "Soul" then fear this well?
Close here your mouth and open it on that side.
So that your hymns may sound in Where- no-place!
Schimmel, Annemarie. Look! This Is
Love:Poems of Rumi
Boston, Mass.: Shambhala Publications, 1991.
Sufism (tasawwuf)
is the path followed by Sufis (adherents of Islamic mysticism) to reach
the Truth—God. While this term usually expresses the theoretical or
philosophical aspect of this search, its practical aspect is usually
referred to as "being a dervish."
Sufism has been defined in many ways.
Some see it as God's annihilating the individual's ego, will, and self-centredness
and then reviving him spiritually with the lights of His Essence so that
he may live according to His will. Others view it as a continuous
striving to cleanse one's self of all that is bad or evil in order to
acquire virtue. Junayd al-Baghdadi, a famous
Sufi master, defines Sufism as a method of recollecting "self-annihilation
in God" and "permanence or subsistence with God."
Shibli summarizes it as always being together with
God or in His presence, so that no worldly or other-worldly aim is even
entertained. Abu Muhammad Jarir describes it
as resisting the temptations of the carnal self and bad qualities and
acquiring laudable moral qualities.
There are some who describe Sufism
as seeing behind the "outer" or surface appearance of things and events
and interpreting whatever happens in the world in relation to God. This
means that a person regards every act of God as a window to "see" Him,
lives his life as a continuous effort to view or "see" Him with a
profound, spiritual "seeing" indescribable in physical terms, and with a
profound awareness of being continually overseen by Him.
All of these definitions can be
summarized as follows: Sufism is the path followed by an individual who
is seeking to free himself or herself from
human vices and weaknesses in order to acquire angelic qualities and
conduct pleasing to God. Such a goal can be realized by living in
accordance with the requirements of God's knowledge and love, and in the
resulting spiritual delights that ensue. Sufism is based on observing
even the most "trivial" rule of Shari'a in
order to penetrate their inner meaning.
An initiate or traveler on the path
(salik) never separates the outer observance
of the Shari'a from its inner dimension, and
therefore observes all of the requirements of both the outer and the
inner dimensions of Islam. Through such observance, he or she travels
toward the goal in utmost humility and submission.
Sufism, being a demanding path
leading to knowledge of God, has no room for negligence or frivolity. It
requires that the initiate should strive continuously, like a honeybee
flying from the hive to flowers and from flowers to the hive, to acquire
this knowledge. He should purify his heart from all other attachments,
and resist all carnal inclinations, desires, and appetites. He should
lead his life in a spiritual manner, always be ready to receive divine
blessing and inspiration, and in strict observance of the example left
behind by Prophet Muhammad. Convinced that attachment and adherence to
God is the greatest merit and honor, he should renounce his own desires
for the demands of God, the Truth.
After these [preliminary]
definitions, we should discuss the aim, benefits, and principles of
Sufism. Sufism requires the strict observance of all religious
obligations, an austere lifestyle, and the renunciation of carnal
desires. Through this method of spiritual
self-discipline, the individual's heart is purified and his senses and
faculties are employed in the way of God, which means that he can now
begin to live on a spiritual level.
Sufism also enables man, through the
constant worship of God, to deepen his
awareness
of himself as a devotee of God. It enables him to renounce this
transient world and the desires and emotions that it engenders, and
awakens him to the reality of the other world that is turned toward
God's Divine Beautiful Names. Sufism allows the individual to make this
transition, for it develops the angelic dimension of one's existence and
enables the acquisition of a strong, heart-felt, and personally
experienced conviction of the articles of faith that he had accepted
only superficially.
The principles of
Sufism may be listed as follows:
1. Reaching true belief in God's
Divine Oneness and living in accordance with its demands.
2. Heeding the Divine Speech (the
Qur'an), and discerning and then obeying the commands of the Divine
Power and Will as they relate to the universe (the laws of creation and
life).
3. Overflowing with Divine Love and
getting along with all other beings in the realization (originating from
Divine Love) that the universe is a cradle of brotherhood.
4. Giving preference or precedence
to the well-being and happiness of others.
5. Acting in accord with the demands
of the Divine Will-not with the demands of our own will-and living in a
manner that reflects our self-annihilation in God and subsistence with
Him.
6. Being open to love, spiritual
yearning, delight, and ecstasy.
7. Being
able to discern what is in hearts or minds through facial expressions
and the inner, Divine mysteries and meanings of surface events.
8. Visiting spiritual places and
associating with people who encourage the avoidance of sin and striving
in the way of God.
9. Being
content with permitted pleasures, and not to taking even a single step
toward that which is not permitted.
10. Continuously struggling against
worldly ambitions and illusions that lead us to believe in the eternal
nature of this world.
11. Never forgetting that salvation
is possible only through certainty or conviction of the truth of
religious beliefs and conduct, sincerity or purity of intention, and the
sole desire to please God.Two other elements may be added: acquiring
knowledge and understanding of the religious and
gnostic sciences, and following the guidance of a perfected,
spiritual master. Both of these are of considerable significance the
Naqshbandiyah Sufi order.
It may be useful to discuss Sufism
according to the following basic concepts, which often form the core of
books written on good morals, manners, and
asceticism, and which are regarded as the sites of the "Muhammadan
Truth" in one's heart. They can also be considered lights by which to
know and follow the spiritual path leading to God. The first and
foremost of these concepts is wakefulness (yaqaza),
which is alluded to in several Prophetic sayings (hadiths):
"My eyes sleep but my heart does not," and "Men are asleep. They wake up
when they die."
THE ORIGIN OF SUFISM
As the history of Islamic religious
sciences tells us, religious commandments were not written down during
the early days of Islam; rather, the practice and oral circulation of
commandments related to belief, worship, and daily life allowed the
people to memorize them. Thus it was not difficult to compile them in
books later on, for what had been memorized and practiced was simply
written down. In addition, since religious commandments were the vital.
issues in a Muslim's individual and
collective life, scholars gave priority to them and compiled books on
them. Legal scholars collected and codified books on Islamic law and its
rules and principles pertaining to all fields of life.
Traditionists established the Prophetic
traditions (hadiths) and way of life (sunnah),
and preserved them in books. Theologians dealt with the issues
concerning Muslim belief. Interpreters of the Qur'an dedicated
themselves to studying its meaning, including issues that would later be
called "Qur'anic sciences," such as
naskh (abrogation of a law),
inzal (God's sending down the entire Qur'an
at one time), tanzil (God's sending down the
Qur'an in parts on different occasions), qira'at
(Qur'anic recitation),
ta'wil (exegesis), and others.
Thanks to these universally
appreciated efforts, the truths and principles of
Islam
were established in such a way that their authenticity cannot be doubted.
While some scholars were engaged in these "outer" activities, Sufi
masters were mostly concentrating on the pure spiritual dimension of the
Muhammadan Truth. They sought to reveal the
essence of man's being, the real nature of existence, and the inner
dynamics of man and the cosmos by calling attention to the reality of
things lying beneath and beyond their outer dimension.
Adding to the
Qur'anic commentaries, the narrations of the
Traditionists, and the deductions of the legal scholars, the Sufi
masters developed their ways through asceticism, spirituality and self-purification-in
short, their practice and experience of religion. Thus the Islamic
spiritual life based on asceticism, regular worship, abstention from all
major and minor sins, sincerity and purity of intention, love and
yearning, and the individual's admission of his essential impotence and
destitution became the subject-matter of Sufism, a new science
possessing its own method, principles, rules, and terms. Even if various
differences gradually emerged among the orders that were established
later on, it can be said that the basic core of this science has always
been the essence of the Muhammadan Truth.
The two aspects of the same truth—the
commandments of the Shari'a and Sufism—have
sometimes been presented as mutually exclusive. This is quite
unfortunate, as Sufism is nothing more than the spirit of
Shari'a, which is made up of austerity,
self-control and criticism, and the continuous struggle to resist the
temptations of Satan and the carnal, evil-commanding self so as to be
able to fulfill religious obligations. While adherence to the former has
been regarded as exotericism (self-restriction to the outer dimension of
religion), following the latter has been seen as pure esotericism.
Although this discrimination partly arises from assertions that the
commandments of the Shari'a are represented
by legal scholars or muftis, and the other by the Sufis, it should be
viewed as the result of the natural, human tendency of assigning
priority to that way which is most suitable for the individual
practitioner.
Many legal scholars,
Traditionists, and interpreters of the
Qur'an produced important books based on the Qur'an and the
Sunna. The Sufis, following the methods
dating back to the time of the Prophet and his Companions, also
compiled books on austerity, the spiritual struggle against carnal
desires and temptations, states and stations of the spirit. They also
recorded their own spiritual experiences, love, ardor, and rapture. The
goal of this literature was to attract the attention of those whom they
regarded as restricting their practice and reflection to the "outer"
dimension of religion, and directing it to the "inner" dimension of the
religious life. Both Sufis and scholars sought to reach God by observing
the Divine obligations and prohibitions. Nevertheless, some extremist
attitudes-occasionally observed on both sides-caused disagreements.
Actually there was no substantial
disagreement, and it should not have been viewed as a disagreement, for
it only involved dealing with different aspects and elements of religion
under different titles. The tendency of specialists in jurisprudence to
concern themselves with the rules of worship and daily life and how to
regulate and discipline man's individual and social life, and that of
Sufis to provide a way for man to live at a high level of spirituality
through self-purification and spiritual training cannot be considered a
disagreement.
In fact, Sufism and jurisprudence
are like the two schools of a university that is seeking to teach its
students the two dimensions of the Shari'a
and to enable its students to practice it in their daily life. One
school cannot survive without the other, for while one teaches how to
pray, how to be ritually pure, how to fast, how to give charity, and how
to regulate all aspects of daily life, the other concentrates on what
these and other actions really mean, how to make worship an inseparable
part of man's existence, and how to elevate man to the rank of a
universal, perfect being-a true human being. That is why neither
discipline can be neglected. Although some self-proclaimed Sufis have
labelled
religious scholars as "scholars of ceremonies" and "exoterists,"
real, perfected Sufis have always depended on the basic principles of
the Shari'a and have based their thoughts on
the Qur'an and the Sunna. They have derived
their methods from these basic sources of Islam.
Al-Wasaya
wa al-Ri'aya (The
Advices and Observation of Rules) by al-Muhasibi,
al-Ta'arruf li-Madhhabi
Ahl al-Sufism (A Description of the Way of
the People of Sufism) by Kalabazi, al-Luma'
(The Gleams) by al-Tusi,
Qut al-Qulub (The
Food of Hearts) by Abu Talib al-Makki,
and al-Risala (The Treatise) by al-Qushayri
are among the precious sources where Sufism is dealt with according to
the Qur'an and the Sunna. Some of these
sources concentrate on self-control and self-purification, while others
elaborate upon various topics concerned with Sufism.
After these great compilers came
Hujjat al-Islam Imam al-Ghazzali
, author of Ihya' al-Ulum
al-Din (Reviving the Religious Sciences), his most celebrated work. He
reviewed all of Sufism's terms, principles, and rules, and, establishing
those agreed upon by all Sufi masters and criticizing others, united the
outer (Shari'a and jurisprudence) and inner
(Sufi) dimensions of Islam.
The Sufi masters coming after him
presented Sufism as one of the religious sciences or a dimension thereof,
promoting unity or agreement among themselves and the so-called "scholars
of ceremonies." In addition, they made several Sufi subjects, such as
the states of the spirit, certainty or conviction, sincerity and
morality, part of the curriculum of madrassas
(institutes for the study of religious sciences).
Although Sufism mostly concentrates
on the inner world of man and deals with the meaning and effect of
religious commandments on man's spirit and heart and is therefore
abstract, it does not contradict any of the Islamic ways based on the
Qur'an and Sunna. In fact, as is the case
with other religious sciences, its source is the Qur'an and the
Sunna, as well as the conclusions drawn from
the Qur'an and the Sunna via
ijtihad (deduction) by the purified scholars
of the early period of Islam. It dwells on knowledge, knowledge of God,
certainty, sincerity, perfect goodness, and other similar, fundamental
virtues. Defining Sufism as the "science of esoteric truths or mysteries,"
or the "science of man's spiritual states and stations," or the "science
of initiation" does not mean that it is completely different from other
religious sciences.
Such definitions have resulted from
the Shari'a-rooted experiences of various
individuals, all of whom have had different temperaments and
dispositions, over the centuries. It is a distortion to present the
viewpoints of Sufis and the thoughts and conclusions of
Shari'a scholars as essentially different
from each other. Although it is undeniable that some Sufis have been
fanatic adherents of their own ways, and that some religious scholars
(i.e., legal scholars, Traditionists, and
interpreters of the Qur'an) have restricted themselves to the outward
dimension of religion, those who follow and represent the middle,
straight path have always formed the majority. Therefore it is wrong to
conclude that there is a serious disagreement, which most likely began
with some unbecoming thoughts and words uttered by some legal scholars
and Sufis against each other, between the two groups.
When compared with those on the side
of tolerance and consensus, those who have started or participated in
such conflicts are very few indeed. This is natural, for both groups
have always depended on the Qur'an and Sunna,
the two main sources of Islam. In addition, the priorities of Sufism
have never been different from those of jurisprudence. Both disciplines
stress the importance of belief and of engaging in good deeds and good
conduct. The
only
difference is that Sufis emphasize self-purification, deepening the
meaning of good deeds and multiplying them, and attaining higher
standards of good morals so that one's conscience can awaken to the
knowledge of God and thus embark upon a path that leads to the required
sincerity in living Islam and obtaining God's pleasure. By means of
these virtues, man can acquire another nature, another heart, a
spiritual intellect within the heart, a deeper knowledge of God, and
another "tongue" with which to mention God, he can observe all
Shari'a commandments based on a deeper
awareness of, and with a disposition for, devotion to God.
An individual practitioner of Sufism
can use it to deepen his or her spirituality. Through the struggle with
one's self, solitude or retreat, invocation, self-control and self-criticism,
the veils covering the inner dimension of existence are torn apart,
enabling the individual to acquire a strong conviction of the truth of
all the major and minor principles of faith.
How can you see the dervishes in
Istanbul?
The most popular place is calling as "Galata Mevlevihanesi" they
have got regular ceramonies there seasonal. Here is their web link, you
can get more information and may you can book it before you come ;
http://www.mekder.org/english/index.php
|