Toshihiko Izutsu:
The Man of Light, the “Witness in Heaven” is, Najm Kubra emphatically asserts, no other than your true self — Anta huwa literally meaning “You are He”. This alter ego at the final stage of dhikr-practice completely absorbs into itself what has falsely been posited as the empirical ego, the ordinary I. The mythopoeic experience on the part of the Sufi of the unification of these two egos which is effected as the alter ego absorbing into itself the empirical ego, marks the birth of the Theophanic Ego. It is called “theophanic” because the celestial Witness of man as conceived by Najm Kubra is the inner locus of tajallī, “theophany”. Metaphorically it is a Mirror in which the Hidden God reflects Himself, thereby changing Himself into the self-revealing God. This Mirror is like transparent water; it reveals something beyond itself. That Something is God as He manifests Himself (mutajallī) through the Mirror. The Ego of the mystic thus actualized as the divine Mirror is the Theophanic Ego. At first, that is, from the viewpoint of the ordinary man, it was his alter ego. But now it is no longer his “alter” Ego, for it is the only Ego that subsists in this dimension, there being no trace here of the empirical ego.
Toshihiko Izutsu:
The Man of Light, the “Witness in Heaven” is, Najm Kubra emphatically asserts, no other than your true self — Anta huwa literally meaning “You are He”. This alter ego at the final stage of dhikr-practice completely absorbs into itself what has falsely been posited as the empirical ego, the ordinary I. The mythopoeic experience on the part of the Sufi of the unification of these two egos which is effected as the alter ego absorbing into itself the empirical ego, marks the birth of the Theophanic Ego. It is called “theophanic” because the celestial Witness of man as conceived by Najm Kubra is the inner locus of tajallī, “theophany”. Metaphorically it is a Mirror in which the Hidden God reflects Himself, thereby changing Himself into the self-revealing God. This Mirror is like transparent water; it reveals something beyond itself. That Something is God as He manifests Himself (mutajallī) through the Mirror. The Ego of the mystic thus actualized as the divine Mirror is the Theophanic Ego. At first, that is, from the viewpoint of the ordinary man, it was his alter ego. But now it is no longer his “alter” Ego, for it is the only Ego that subsists in this dimension, there being no trace here of the empirical ego.
Toshihiko Izutsu:
The Man of Light, the “Witness in Heaven” is, Najm Kubra emphatically asserts, no other than your true self — Anta huwa literally meaning “You are He”. This alter ego at the final stage of dhikr-practice completely absorbs into itself what has falsely been posited as the empirical ego, the ordinary I. The mythopoeic experience on the part of the Sufi of the unification of these two egos which is effected as the alter ego absorbing into itself the empirical ego, marks the birth of the Theophanic Ego. It is called “theophanic” because the celestial Witness of man as conceived by Najm Kubra is the inner locus of tajallī, “theophany”. Metaphorically it is a Mirror in which the Hidden God reflects Himself, thereby changing Himself into the self-revealing God. This Mirror is like transparent water; it reveals something beyond itself. That Something is God as He manifests Himself (mutajallī) through the Mirror. The Ego of the mystic thus actualized as the divine Mirror is the Theophanic Ego. At first, that is, from the viewpoint of the ordinary man, it was his alter ego. But now it is no longer his “alter” Ego, for it is the only Ego that subsists in this dimension, there being no trace here of the empirical ego.
Toshihiko Izutsu:
The Man of Light, the “Witness in Heaven” is, Najm Kubra emphatically asserts, no other than your true self — Anta huwa literally meaning “You are He”. This alter ego at the final stage of dhikr-practice completely absorbs into itself what has falsely been posited as the empirical ego, the ordinary I. The mythopoeic experience on the part of the Sufi of the unification of these two egos which is effected as the alter ego absorbing into itself the empirical ego, marks the birth of the Theophanic Ego. It is called “theophanic” because the celestial Witness of man as conceived by Najm Kubra is the inner locus of tajallī, “theophany”. Metaphorically it is a Mirror in which the Hidden God reflects Himself, thereby changing Himself into the self-revealing God. This Mirror is like transparent water; it reveals something beyond itself. That Something is God as He manifests Himself (mutajallī) through the Mirror. The Ego of the mystic thus actualized as the divine Mirror is the Theophanic Ego. At first, that is, from the viewpoint of the ordinary man, it was his alter ego. But now it is no longer his “alter” Ego, for it is the only Ego that subsists in this dimension, there being no trace here of the empirical ego.
An Analysis of the Sufi Psychology of Najm al-Din Kubra Sufism is a complex H is to r ic a lly a s w e ll a s s tr u c tu r a lly phenomenon. In the earliest periods of its development, the Sufis were not at all interested in theorizing and thinking; the main emphasis was naturally laid on the practice of ascetism and devotion. But soon outstanding mystics began to appear, who could very well be considered each an independent thinker with peculiar ideas of his own about mystical experience, based on an original interpreta tion of the esoteric aspects of Islam. The sayings and doings of these early masters, remembered and recorded by their followers, gradu ally gave rise to what is now called the Sufi tradition. This spiritual tradition came to produce in the subsequent periods divergent schools and orders which often widely differ from one another in their teachings. As a matter of fact there is no uniform system of ideas which we might consider the Sufi doctrine, so wide a divergence of opinion prevails among individual thinkers and among the schools and orders to which they belong. Structurally too, Sufism shows a bewildering complexity. There are so many different facets to it in terms of both praxis and theoria. It is hardly possible to present Sufism in a nutshell and give a simple and clear-cut account of it as a uniform system. Choice must necessarily be made as to which definite aspect of Sufism we are to deal with and from which particular point of view. Thus any exposition of Sufism will be heavily conditioned by the choice we are forced to make at the outset with regard to these points. Note: This is the third o f the series o f three lectures on the ego-consciousness in Eastern religions delivered in New York for the C. G. Jung Foundation, November 6, 1975. 24 Sophia Perennis, Volume IV, number 1 Now my topic in the present paper is the problem of ego- consciousness in Sufism. This would mean that of all the divergent factors which go to constitute Sufism I shall be mainly concerned with its psychological aspect. And this again will naturally determine to a great extent my choice as to whom I shall turn to, from among all the famous Sufi masters, in getting primary materials to draw upon for my exposition. I have decided to turn for my purpose mainly to Najm al-Din al-Kubra (usually known in Iran as Najm Kubra),1 one of the greatest masters of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, the founder of a very important Sufi order called after him Kubrawiyah or the Kubra-School. What characterizes Kubra and his school is the extra ordinary attention accorded to the psychological process which the Sufi aspirant goes through stage by stage until he reaches the final state of spiritual perfection, commonly known as unio my shea. In fact, Kubra himself seems to have been the first in the history of Sufism to attempt an objective phenomenological description of what a mystic actually experiences at every stage of the spiritual discipline as it gradually transforms his inner self. What he offers as a result is a detailed description of the transformation-process of the ego- consciousness of the Sufi. His description of this process is rendered the more valuable because it is directly based on an attentive observa tion of his own experience as a Sufi and the experiences of his disciples under his guidance. In this respect nothing could supersede his work for all those who are interested in the formation and struc ture of ego-consciousness in Sufism. Approaching Sufism from the psychological point of view, we are struck first of all by the fact that, as was the case with Shamanism and Taoism which we dealt with in previous papers, imagery plays an exceedingly important role. Everything, as far as it is positively experienced by the Sufi, is experienced in the form of an image. A single perusal of Najm Kubras work will leave upon every reader an overwhelming impression that the esoteric world as experienced by the Sufi is essentially an image-world or rather, an imaginal world. And this holds true not only of Najm Kubras inner experi ence, but applies with equal truthfulness to Sufism in general. We might express the same thing by saying that the mythopoeic function of the mind is fully at work in Sufism. And this latter formulation immediately brings Sufism close to Shamanism. The Sufi world, in other words, is no less a world of imaginal or mythopoeic visions than the Shamanic world whose structure I analyzed in my second lecture. Moreover, Sufism bears a superficial resemblance to Shamanism in that its theory and philosophy are based on the belief in the Toshihiko Izutsu 25 existence of a spiritual entity called soul . The concept of soul plays an exceedingly important role in the theoretical formation of both Sufism and Shamanism. In this respect and to this extent there is no difference between the two. But a remarkable difference begins to appear as we examine more closely the way they actually treat the soul. A Shaman is, as Mircea Eliade says, The great specialist in the human soul . He is thoroughly acquainted or at least is supposed to be acquainted with the drama of the soul; by profession he knows its essential instability and precariousness. He is also acquainted with the geography of the extraterrestrial regions to which the soul can be carried away. With regard to his own soul, he is a man who can freely and at will send it out from his body so that the disembodied soul might have its own peculiar experience in a region lying beyond the physical limitations of empirical experience. It is remarkable that, in order to actualize his Shamanic ego, the Shaman must send out his soul from the body into far distances. His soul, thus separated from his body, encounters extraordinary things and beings such as he never comes across in the ordinary world. The soul in such a state is the Shamanic ego. And the world in which the Shamanic ego as a vagrant soul roams about is a world of unusual images. Thus a Shaman characteristically lives in two entirely different worlds. One is the empirical world of mundane affairs, in which he experiences ordinary things as a normal, non-shamanic ego. The other is a world of unusual and fantastic imagery, in which he is conscious of himself as a shamanic ego, a true master of his own image-world. His soul comes and goes between these two different worlds, in each of which he is quite a different person. Quite unlike this is the structure of the Sufi experience of the soul. The Sufi, to begin with, does not send his soul out of his body with the aim of letting her experience the fantastic things of the image-world. At least he is not interested in such a practice. He is interested in intentionally going down into the depths of his own soul, exploring its ever darker regions, visualizing the essential make-up of the deep strata of the soul in the form of mythopoeic images which are spontaneously evoked out of these inner regions as he goes on purify ing his soul through a systematic spiritual discipline. The images that emerge in the process reflect and visualize the otherwise invisible depths of his soul. They are a mirror of the soul. And herein lies the significance of imagination for the Sufi. 26 Sophia Perennis, Volume IV, number 1 Thus in the case of Sufism particularly as conceived and systematized by Najm Kubra all images and visions are considered spiritually significant insofar as they function as visual forms in which the different dimensions of the soul are disclosed to the Sufi. Each image or each group of images is for him a symbolic reference to a certain stage which he is actually going through in the course of spiritual discipline. There is, in this sense, a perfect correlation recognizable bet ween a group of images and a spiritual stage on the Sufi Way. Ones actually experiencing a certain image or image-group is directly and by itself indicative of ones being at a certain stage of inner maturity. It will be clear, then, that, although the Sufi world is a world of symbolic images like the Shamanic world, the images and imagina tion play conspicuously different roles in these two religious tradi tions. But in order to further elucidate this point, I must begin by giving a somewhat more detailed explanation of the Sufi theory of the soul itself. For the Sufi view of mythopoeic imagery entirely depends upon the Sufi view of the structure of the soul. In fact, all archetypal images, whether visual or auditory, that are perceived by the Sufi in the course of his spiritual discipline are attributed to the soul in the sense that they are considered to be inner experiences of the soul. The soul is the subject of these imaginal experiences. That is to say, the soul is the ego which experiences the imaginal forms as they arise out of its own depths in the course of its spiritual metamorphosis. Fora full understanding of the significance of this observation we would do well to remember that there are in Islam two different currents of thought concerning the nature of the soul : one is the theory of the soul that was propounded and developed by the scholastic philosophers, and the other is that which is peculiar to the Sufis. The scholastic conception of the soul belongs to the Aris totelian tradition of De Anima. It is represented in Islam by Ibn Sina (Avicenna, 980-1037) who for the first time in the history of scholas tic philosophy, Western as well as Eastern, put forward in this section of the traditional Aristotelian philosophy a remarkable view in which he established the self-evident nature of the existence of the soul in such a way that it could be interpreted as an assertion of the self evidence of ego-consciousness. Let us imagine, Avicenna says,2that a man is created all of a Toshihiko Izutsu 27 sudden, in a perfect form except that his eyes are veiled so that he cannot see anything in the external world. He is created floating in the air or rather in the void so that he does not feel any pressure of the air which would force his sense of touch into action. His arms and legs are separated from one another, there being no direct contact bet ween them. Now suppose, Avicenna continues, the man thus created reflects upon himself. Will he in such a state affirm the existence of his own self? Yes, he will, no doubt. He will surely affirm it without, however, affirming the existence of any part of his body . . . If, being in such a situation he were able to imagine a hand or any other bodily member, he would not imagine it as an integral part of himself. This intuitive awareness of the self which maintains its identity throughout a mans life, regardless of whether he be in a waking state or dreaming, intoxicated or asleep, is in the view of Avicenna, the psychological ground for the persistence of mans ego-consciousness (anniyah, lit. I-ness).3 And for Avicenna, it is this intuitive aware ness of the ego that proves the self-evidence of the existence of the soul . Thus, for the Muslim philosopher, that which establishes man as an existential subject, i.e., that which constitutes the I or ego of each individual man is the soul . The soul, in other words, is the locus of the ego -consciousness. And its primary function lies in letting man directly and intuitively become aware of his I am . The soul , once established in this way as the subject of human existence, is then recognized as the central principle of all the motive, vital, emotive and cognitive functions. And from here on the Muslim philosopher follows in the main the Aristotelian teachings of De Anima, which have no direct relevance to the topic of the present paper. Without going into details I would simply point out here that the scholastic concept of ego which is based on such an understanding of the soul is nothing but the concept of the empirical ego. It refers to the subject which comes into contact with the objective world through the five senses, perceives things, estimates them, feels, imagines and thinks, exercising all these functions in the dimension of empirical experience. From the Sufi point of view, the I or ego posited in this way as the empirical subject of empirical experiences is but an illusion, a mere figure of speech. The illusory image of the I emerges and asserts itself as the subjective center of human personality because one is unaware of Something divine that lies hidden in his existential depths. When 28 Sophia Perennis, Volume IV, number 1 thou regardest thyself as existent and dost not regard Me the divine as the cause of thy existence, I veil My face and thine own face appears to thee, said a Sufi on behalf of God.4 That is to say, your own face appears to you simply because God veils Himself behind your human face; Your human face only remains visible and the Divine face disappears and you become conscious of yourself as the center and ground of your existence. This precisely is the empirical ego which the philosopher speaks of. In reality, however, the exis tence of such an ego has in the eyes of the Sufi but an imaginary or merely imagined existence (hasti-ye mawhum).5 Sufism, too, admits the existence of the soul in man. Indeed Sufi psychology is theoretically a psychology of the soul . Sufism recognizes also the existence of all the functions which philosophy attributes to it. However, Sufism makes a conspicuously different approach to the soul . In other words, the emphasis is placed on those aspects of the soul which philosophy pays little or no attention to. Sufism structures the soul in an entirely different way from philosophy, around a different center, on a different principle, dis posing its various functional spheres into a different form of stratification. Of all the so-called mental functions that are generally attributed to the soul, it is perception that plays in Sufi psychology the most interesting and original role from the viewpoint of the present paper which is mainly concerned with imagination . The kind of percep tion, however, in which Sufism is interested is not the ordinary perception of external objects. The ordinary perceptual event is for the Sufi devoid of significance. Suppose a Sufi perceives a blazing fire, for example, as indeed Sufis often do. Of course it may come to pass that he perceives through his physical organ of sight a fire actually burning in the external world. But such an event does not interest him at all. What is of vital importance to him is a perceptual event of a different order. Regardless of whether or not there is a fire burning in the external world, he often perceives vividly a blazing fire as a matter of actual experience it is such an event that is important to him. The perception of fire of this kind is important to him because, as I have said before, he considers it an extemalization of the spiritual state in which he happens to be. The perception of fire assumes a symbolic significance to him as visualization of his inner state. It will be interesting to observe in this respect that Sufism assumes the existence in man of two different sets of sense organs: one exoteric and the other esoteric. The exoteric sense organs are Toshihiko Izutsu 29 nothing other than our ordinary physical or bodily organs of five senses, whose activity depends upon the stimuli coming from the external world, whereas the esoteric organs of perception are non physical organs whose working is based on the creative potentials of mythopoesis, that function of the psyche whose nature it is to per ceive and project archetypal images. The esoteric organs of percep tion are supposed to work independently of the exoteric. Thus in the view of Sufism, every man is endowed with, for example, two different sets of ears: one is the exoteric, i.e., physical ear with which he hears physical sounds, and the other is the esoteric ear with which he hears super-physical sounds. And the same applies to the rest of the sense organs. An esoteric organ is called in Sufism latlfah meaning literally a subtle one, that is, a subtle organ of a luminous nature in contradistinction to a gross (kathif) organ of a material, physical nature. As a comprehensive complex of all such esoteric organs, a human being is represented as a subtle body of luminosity in distinction from the gross body of material turbidity. Man in this sense is possessed of two bodies, subtle and gross, or luminous and dark, and essentially he is a being of Light. And the soul in its original purity is to be understood as the spiritual core of the Man of Light as distinguished from the Man of Darkness. The whole problem of ego-consciousness in Sufism centers round this idea. All this, however, will become fully understandable only when we have understood the Sufi view of the structure of the soul and the nature of the technique of spiritual discipline that has specifically been devised by the Sufis for the purpose of transforming the empiri cally given dark soul back into the state of its original luminosity. To this problem we shall now turn. The soul as conceived by the Sufis has a multilayer structure consisting primarily of three principal strata. Let me first enumerate them without a detailed explanation, keeping in mind only that although each of these three is given an independent name as if there were three independent entities, they are, in the view of the majority of Sufis, nothing but three different dimensions or stages of one and the same soul . The first stratum is technically called nafs ammarah meaning literally the commanding soul, that is, that aspect of the soul which instigates man to evil. It may be translated as the lower soul or appetitive soul . It is an inner locus of immoderate desires and fiery passions. It is, according to the Sufis, in this dimension that the 30 Sophia Perennis, Volume TV, number 1 ego-consciousness of the ordinary man is constituted as the sensuous and sensual I. The second stratum is called nafs lawwamah, literally the blam ing soul . It refers to that aspect of the soul which blames or criticizes itself, that is to say, which becomes aware of its own evil nature which it manifests in the first stratum just explained. In this sense it is the locus of moral conscience. And the ego which is formed in this dimension is principally a rational ego, the subject passing critical judgments upon itself and others. In this respect the concept partially covers what the philosopher calls aql,reason or intellect. The third stratum is nafs mutmainnah or the pacified soul , designating the mode of being of the soul in which the turbulence of desires and passions has been calmed down and the agitations of thoughts and concepts reduced to stillness. This dimension of the soul is more generally called qalb, the heart . Qalb is one of the most important technical terms of Sufism, concerning which many things have been said and written by the Sufis. Here I would simply point out that the qalb is no other than what I have referred to above as the spiritual core of the Man of Light, as an integral whole of the subtle, esoteric organs for perceiving the esoteric aspects of things. The qalb is a supersensory organ of cognition through the activation of which is realized what is usually known as mystical experience. According to the Sufi theory of the soul , the qalb which is its third stratum is the threshold of the divine dimension of Being; it is essentially of a luminous nature, and the world which is disclosed by the activity of the qalb constitutes ontologically the middle domain between the world of the pure Lightof God, and the world of material Darkness under the dominion of Satan. But Sufism recognizes within the qalb itself two deeper layers. The first is called ruh, the spirit and the second which lies still deeper than the spirit and which therefore is the deepest of all the strata of the soul, is sirr, meaning literally the secret i.e., the innermost recess of the soul. The spirit is mythopoeically represented by the image of an incandescent Sun whose dazzling light illumines the whole world of Being. As the sun in the physical world rises from the eastern horizon and illumines all things and activates their life-energy, so the divine Sun, rising from the spiritual East,6illumines the infinitely wide world of the spirit and animates all the energies contained in the spiritual faculty of this subtle organ of supersensory cognition. Subjectively the mystic feels at this stage that he is standing in extreme proximity to God. Toshihiko Izutsu 31 Thesirr, secret , on the other hand, is the inmost ground of the soul, the deepest layer of consciousness which is in reality beyond consciousness in the ordinary sense of the word. It is the sacred core of the soul , where the divine and the human become united, unified and fused. In other words, it is in this dimension of the soul that the so-called unio mystica is realized. The ego-consciousness which is actualized in this dimension and which naturally is the highest form of ego-consciousness in Sufism is no longer the con sciousness of the mystic of himself as the human I. It is, as we shall see in more detail later, rather the consciousness of the divine I. The Sufi who, as a novice, starts with the consciousness of his human I finally ends by losing sight of it and finding in its place the divine I. This is the whole track of his spiritual journey. And the existential tension caused by the mutual relationship between the human I and the divine I, underlies all the unusual inner events which the mystic encounters on his way. Sufism as a spiritual praxis consists in effectuating the transference of man from the dimension of the purely human to the dimension of the purely divine, from Darkness to Light, through the process of the transfiguration of the soul from the stage of the appetitive soul to that of the secret . Such a radical transfiguration or we might say, transubstantia- tion of consciousness would be extremely difficult, if not absolutely impossible, if it were not for a systematic method of spiritual training to help the inexperienced on the way. In the earliest periods of the history of Sufism there seems to have been no definite technique of meditation; that is to say, each individual Sufi was in a large measure on his own in this matter. Gradually, however, the Sufi masters came to devise for themselves as well as for their disciples a number of systematic methods of meditation, among which by far the most important is the dhikr-practice. Dhikr (meaning remembrance) is a highly developed techni que of one-pointed meditation on God consisting in the Sufis con stantly and continuously repeating to himself, either verbally or silently, the name of God, somewhat like the practice of nembutsu in the Pure Land School of Mahayana Buddhism. The novice is admonished to endeavor to keep his mind directed with the utmost degree of concentration toward the object of meditation, so much so that he becomes totally absorbed in the thought of God. The simplest and perhaps the earliest form of dhikr consisted in the repetition of one single word signifying God: Allah repeating Allah! Allah! Allah! unceasingly.7 Later a number of more com plicated dhikr-formulae were proposed by different masters. That is 32 Sophia Perennis, Volume TV, number 1 to say, the word Allah became amplified into various phrases and sentences, each containing the name of God as its innermost con stituent. From among all these dhikr-iormvl&e which developed in the course of the history of Sufism, there is one which has come to occupy an especially privileged position, being appreciated by the majority of the leading masters as the best theme of dhikr- meditation. It is La ilaha ilia Allah, meaning: There is no divine being except God . As a theme of concentrated meditation on God, this formula has a very conspicuous semantic advantage. As is easy to see, the sen tence is divisible into two halves; the first part, la ilaha meaning there is no divine being or god, and the second, ilia Allah meaning except God . The first section is negative in its semantic structure, negating as it does all elements in the consciousness that are other than God. When activated as part of the dhikr-meditation, it serves the purpose of sweeping off the mind the dirt of all profane images and thoughts of God arising from the dimension of the appetitive soul . The second half except God on the contrary, is positive; it brings into the purified space of the mind prepared by the action of the first part, a pure image of God. So the formula taken as a whole first negates everything other than God and then affirms and estab lishes God, and God alone. Metaphysically it reflects the whole process of creation as understood by the Sufis: the things other than God emerge out of His unfathomable depths; then their ontological reality as things other than God having been negated, they all return to Him as their sole and true Reality. What is far more important for our purpose, however, is the very original way in which this formula has traditionally been used in the actual dhikr-practice by the Sufis. Without going into unnecessary details, I shall give here a brief exposition of it, condensing it into a typical pattern.8 The Sufi who intends to engage in the dhikr-practice begins by accomplishing a two-fold purification, cleansing his body by absti nence and ablution and purifying his mind from all sinful desires and thoughts. Then, he enters a dark, quiet room, preferably burns frag rant incense and sits cross-legged. Laying his hands open on his thighs, with his eyes closed,9 he starts with the negative part of the afore-mentioned dhikr-formula: la ilaha (There is no divine being). With intense concentration he pronounces the first word Id, pushing it up, as it were, out of the underside of his left nipple or according to Day eh, out of the root of the navel. Having produced the Toshihiko Izutsu 33 word of negation, la, in this fashion, he prolongs it in a forcefully suppressed voice until he reaches the next word, ilaha which he pronounces in such a way that in his imagination he throws it down to his back over the right shoulder. This is immediately followed by the second, i.e., positive, half of the formula: ilia Allah. The Sufi, without relaxing his inner concentra tion, begins to pronounce the first word ilia, producing it from the upper part of his right shoulder, and then, summoning up the whole of his spiritual energy, strikes the word, Allah, down into his heart as if with a hammer. The wordAllah thus forcefully driven into the heart is supposed to awaken the soul from its natural slumber and make it realize its own self in a deeper, non-empirical dimension. And the whole process of dhikr, repeated assiduously and continuously day after day will end up by disclosing the qalb which, as I have explained earlier, is the subtle esoteric organ of supersensory cognition. The qalb will be completely disclosed, and through it the divine Light will begin to stream into the soul . The soul will finally be immersed in the divine Light. It is in this dimension of pure luminosity that the Sufi will encounter, and become identical with, his Alter Ego, the inner Man, the Man of Light. Let us note that he is not identified with God. He is merely, identified with his other Ego. Our remaining task will consist in correlating stage by stage the process of the dhikr-discipline with the process of the transfiguration of the soul which we have summarily described above. Each stage of the transfiguration of the soul is clearly marked by the spontaneous emergence of images that are peculiar to, and characteristic of, the spiritual stage. It goes without saying that from the viewpoint of the theory of mythopoesis, this is the most interesting part of the Sufi experience. Let us begin with the first dimension of the soul, that of the lower or appetitive self, the nafs ammarah, which is the ground and locus of the empirical I. The empirical I, prior to being subjected to the dhikr-discipline, that is, as long as it exists under ordinary conditions, is naturally unaware of its own state. Desires and passions are swirling and swarming in the soul at this stage. Najm Kubra compares it to a house littered with filth in which all kinds of brutes live, dogs, pigs, donkeys, leopards and elephants. But the empirical ego does not realize its own existential misery except on rare occasions and that in a very superficial manner. However, to the spiritual eye of a novice in Sufism who has 34 Sophia Perennis, Volume IV, number 1 already made some progress in the dhikr-exercise, the actual state of his appetitive soul discloses itself in a number of characteristic images. The first image that emerges is that of a deep pit or well (bir). He finds himself at the bottom of the well. An impenetrable darkness reigns all over. There is no light. Nothing is discernible. The dark pit is a mythopoeic visualization of the bodily, physical, and material aspect of human existence. From time to time, piercing through the thick darkness there flashes a mysterious red light. It is the flickering fire of the Devil. Unlike the limpid and serene fire of a spiritual nature which we shall encounter at a later stage, the fire of the Devil is strangely turbid, says Najm Kubra.10The Devil himself is a personified configuration of the uncontrollable lust and pleasure-seeking (called in Arabic haw a) which is often compared in Sufism to a foul dog filled with frantic passions, a dark force which, residing in the lower soul, instigates it to immorality.11 The Sufi-aspirant, when he witnesses the diabolic fire, feels unusual heaviness in his whole body, the breast pressed hard, and the four members as if crushed by a stone.12 Sometimes the lower soul itself projects its own image on the mental screen of the Sufi. Its color is blue, sky-blue. The image gives the impression of blue water continuously welling up from a spring.13 In the scheme of the color symbolism of Najm Kubra, blue is the color of the appetitive soul as it is active with an exuberant vitality, whereas green is the highest color, being as it is the sign of the full vitality of the qalb, i.e., the soul in its third dimension.14 As the Sufi-aspirant moves on a little further in the dhikr- exercise, that which was at first utter darkness reigning over the bottom of the pit changes its appearance and begins to coagulate. Suddenly it assumes the form of dense black clouds. And as he still moves on, the Sufi begins to notice something like a crescent faintly observable through the clouds. And finally the crescent fully discloses itself in the rip of the clouds. The emergence of the image of the crescent is a sign that the soul has to a great extent been purified by the force of the dhikr-formula that has continuously been penetrating into it. The soul is already getting into its second dimension. In the corresponding sphere of mythopoeic imagery, the black clouds are gradually transformed into heaps of white clouds.15 The soul at this stage visualizes itself in the image of the rising sun, except that it rises in a very peculiar manner. The Sufi notices a red sun rising out of his right cheek. The impression is so vivid that he feels the burning heat of the sun on his cheek. The sun ascends to the level of the ear, sometimes to the level of the forehead, and some Toshihiko Izutsu 35 times again above the head. When this is actually experienced, the soul is definitely in its second dimension. That is to say, it has been transfigured into the blaming soul . The Sufi has not yet come out of the dark pit in which he found himself confined in the beginning. He is still in the well. But he stands now closer to the exit. This situation too is visualized in the form of an image. In the midst of darkness filling up the pit he notices a beautiful green light. As I said above, green occupies the highest position in the color symbolism of Najm Kubra. The green light is a reflection of the light emanating from the Emerald Stone which in the mythopoeic cosmology of Sufism marks the highest point or the Center of the Universe, which is directly connected to the sacred space, and which, therefore, is the gate of entrance to the Presence of God. Led by this supernatural green light, the Sufi goes out of the well. And therewith his soul reaches the third stage, that of the pacified soul or the qalb, the heart . The event marks the opening up of the divine dimension in man. And the soul thus transfigured produces its own image. Let me quote Kubras own words concerning the imagery peculiar to this stage. Sometimes (while your soul is in this stage), says Najm Kubra, you witness your soul emerging in front of you as a circle which gives you an impression of a huge spring of Light emitting brilliant rays in all directions. It often happens that you, in a state of ecstasy, perceive your soul appearing as the circle-image of your own face, a circle of pure light somewhat like a well-polished mirror. And as this circle comes up toward your face, it absorbs your face into it. When this is experienced, you may be sure that that image df your face is (the image of) the pacified soul.16 The last sentence of the passage just quoted, which as it stands may be obscure, in reality expresses a very important idea relating to the basic structure of the ego-consciousness in Sufism. For.the Circle which emerges in front of the Sufis face and into which his face is absorbed is a visualization of the alter ego of the Sufi himself .'With the realization of the pacified soul , your soul , i.e.,, your empifical ego, becomes absorbed into the Circle of Light which is nothing other than the visual image of your true Ego. The two egos become com pletely unified into one, your empirical ego disappearing into the figure of your alter ego, your true Ego. That which hap been split into two egos by the force of the physical and fnaterial structure of existence goes back to its original, primordial unity. The image of The Circle plays an important role in the process leading to the final emergence of the alter ego. Already in the earlieir 36 Sophia Perennis, Volume IV, number 1 stages of dhikr-practice before the Sufi reaches the stage we are now dealing with, he witnesses various circles: two luminous circles cor responding to the two eyes, for example, appearing everywhere, in no matter which direction he may turn, right or left, and the circle of sacred light appearing between the eyebrows and the eyes, etc. All these circles are unstable; they constantly become larger or smaller and change the intensity of their luminosity corresponding to the inner states of the Sufi. But the most important of them all is the just-mentioned Circle of the face announcing the appearance of the alter ego which Najm Kubra calls the Witness in Heaven (al-shahid fi al-sama), that is, the individual Sufis celestial I. Concerning the Circle of the face Kubra writes: When the Circle of the face becomes pure and limpid, it begins to effuse bright light which issues forth from it just as water gushes forth from a spring, so much so that the Sufi himself becomes aware of the effusion of the light from his own face. The effusion occurs from between the two eyes and the two eyebrows. Then, as the Circle absorbs his entire face, there appears in front of his face another irradiating Face, effusing, this one too, brilliant light. And behind its thin veil the Sufi perceives a Sun moving forward and backward like a swing. This Face is in reality your own real face, and this Sun is the Sun of the spirit ruh (one of the deeper layers of the qalb) moving this way and that in the body .17 It is at this point that the image of a luminous human figure appears to the inner eye of the mystic. It is the afore-mentioned emergence of the Man of Light {shakhs min nur, shakhs anwari), the mythopoeic carrier of the true Ego (ananiyah ox anrii, the true I-ness). Thus the alter ego of the Sufi, his Witness in Heaven appears to him assuming the form of a Man of Light who dwells in him and who mythopoeically represents his true I. Then an atmosphere of spiritual serenity covers up the whole of your body, and you witness before you a Man of Light effusing out of himself effulgent light. Correspondingly you feel yourself also effus ing light. It often happens that at such moments the veil is torn apart so that your true I becomes completely disclosed .18 The Man of Light, the Witness in Heaven is, Najm Kubra emphatically asserts, no other than your true self Anta huwa literally meaning You are He . This alter ego at the final stage of dhikr-practice completely absorbs into itself what has falsely been posited as the empirical ego, the ordinary I. The mythopoeic experi ence on the part of the Sufi of the unification of these two egos which is effected as the alter ego absorbing into itself the empirical ego, Toshihiko Izutsu 37 marks the birth of the Theophanic Ego. It is called theophanic because the celestial Witness of man as conceived by Najm Kubra is the inner locus of tajalll, theophany. Metaphorically it is a Mirror in which the Hidden God reflects Himself, thereby changing Himself into the self-revealing God. This Mirror is like transparent water; it reveals something beyond itself. That Something is God as He man ifests Himself (mutajalli) through the Mirror. The Ego of the mystic thus actualized as the divine Mirror is the Theophanic Ego. At first, that is, from the viewpoint of the ordinary man, it was his alter ego. But now it is no longer his alter Ego, for it is the only Ego that subsists in this dimension, there being no trace here of the empirical ego. And now, only at this stage is the mystic in a position to stand in a I-Thou relationship wih God. This relationship assumes the form of a dialogue between the I and the Thou. The Theophanic Ego, in other words, comes into a very special dialogical relationship with the Divine Ego. Let us recall at this point that Islam is a monotheistic religion of Semitic origin standing parallel to Judaism and Christiani ty. Thus in Sufism as Islamic mysticism, the deification of man cannot go to the extent of man becoming God, or man being transubs tantiated into God. Except in some aberrant cases, unio mystica is conceivable only in the sense of God manifesting Himself in and through man, i.e., theophany. In terms of the Sufi theory of con sciousness, it is the afore-mentioned sirr, the secret, the deepest layer of the soul, which is the real locus of such theophany. In order to get into a dialogical relationship of I-and-Thou with God, the soul must be brought up to the Divine Presence. Subjec tively this is experienced by the Sufi as an ascension to Heaven. It is interesting to observe that here again we encounter the Ascension- theme, the Celestial Journey, which is so familiar to mythopoeic mentality all over the world and through all ages.19 The Ascension of the Sufi in the technical sense of the word begins at the level of the spirit the above-mentioned ruh that is, when the transfiguration of the soul attains to the deeper layer of the qalb. Says Najm Kubra: Here the concentrated energy of the d/ukr-formula bores a tiny hole in the right side of the body of the Sufi. It leaves its trace there looking like a cicatrix, which effuses the irradiance of the energy of dhikr. Then the cicatrix begins to move and turns to other parts of the body corresponding to the gradual shift of the concentration-center of dhikr in the heart. Thus, beginning with the right flank it gradually moves on and ends by reaching the 38 Sophia Perennis, Volume IV, number 1 back of the body. The Sufi all the while has a vivid sensation of both the inside and the outside of the cicatrix. And from this narrow aperture the transfigured soul emerges out of the body, and goes upward . . . until finally it attains to the sacred regions of God .20 For the Theophanic Ego thus actualized at the end of the dhikr- discipline, God is no longer the third person, He, the transcendent Absolute standing aloof from the man. God is here primarily the second person and in that capacity he enters into a dialogical relation with the Theophanic Ego of the Sufi. The I and Thou are the two terms of this relationship. As a matter of actual experience on the part of the Sufi, the I and Thou are at this stage confusingly close to each other. It is in such a dimension of sanctification in which the I is hardly distinguishable from the Thou that secret dialogues (technically cal led munajat) take place between the two. Says the famous Sufi, Abu Mansur al-Hallaj (executed in 921 A.D.) in one of his poems: How surprising the relation between Thee and Me! Through Thy Thou, hast Thou annihilated My I from Me. Thou hast brought Me so nigh unto Thee that I imagine Thy I were my own I.21 The intimacy between the two is indeed so close that they are almost interchangeable with one another. It is as if each of the two contained the other within itself. This situation is admirably expres sed by Jalal al-Din Rumi (d. 1273 A.D.) in the well-known quat rain:22 Between us the Thou and the I have ceased. I am not I, Thou art not Thou, nor art Thou I. I am at once I and Thou, Thou art at once Thou and I. As we see, the Thou and the I are here separated from one another by an extremely tenuous veil. Negatively speaking, there is almost no separation between the two. Yet, positively, we must admit that the distinction between the Theophanic Ego of man and the Divine Ego of God is still maintained. How could there be any dialogue otherwise? A dialogue, being essentially bifurcation of logos, is conceivable only where there are two persons, one who addresses and the other who is addressed. As long as the Sufi here addresses himself to God, saying that the Thou and the I have Toshihiko Izutsu 39 ceased between us, i.e., that there is no longer two distinguishable terms of a dialogical relationship, it is still a dialogical relationship. It is evidently not a monologue. However, the Theophanic Ego is theophanic. If the emphasis is shifted to this part of the semantic complex, then everything will immediately turn into pure theophany. There will then be absolutely no trace left of the Ego, no matter how transfigured and deified an ego it might be. Besides, strictly speaking, the co-subsistence of two egos is impossible in the spiritual space of Divine Presence whose structure we are now discussing. The coexistence of two or many egos is a matter pertaining properly to the empirical level of human existence; it is characteristic of, and peculiar to, the personal relations that obtain between man and man in the social space of their day-to-day existence. The immediate implication of this statement would seem to be this. Of the two egos here in question, i.e., the Theophanic Ego and the Divine Ego, the former is fundamentally a false ego, although, to be sure, it is the real Ego of the Sufi if it is viewed in comparison with his empirical ego. And as a false ego understood in this sense, it is something to be done away with, something to disappear ultimately. The dialogical relation of the I and Thou is also, consequently, to disappear. The coming to an end of the dialogue between the Theophanic Ego and the Divine Ego is given an impres sive description by Bayazld Bastami in the following dialogue between him and God.23 It will hardly be necessary to point out that the speaker here is the Theophanic Ego of Bastami describing the process of its own nullification. Once God lifted me up [reference to the celestial Ascension by which the soul is transubstantiated into a Theophanic Ego] and placed me in His presence. He said to me: O Bayazld, My creatures long to behold thee. I said: Adorn me, then, with Thy all-comprehensive Unity and clothe me in Thy I [anariiyah, I-ness] and raise me up to Thy absolute Oneness [the primordial state of undifferentiation where there is nothing discernible, not even potentially], so that when Thy creatures behold me, they may say they have seen Thee [God]. But then, there will be only Thou there; I [Bastami] shall have completely disappeared. The impossibility of the co-subsistence of two egos in the divine region of Being is theoretically explained by Rumi in a typically Sufi manner as follows. In the presence of God two Is cannot possibly subsist. You say T and He says T . Either you must die before Him, or He must die before you, so that there might remain no duality. That God should die, however, is factually impossible and rationally 40 Sophia Perennis, Volume IV, number 1 inconceivable. For He is the Living, the Immortal. Of course He is so gracious that He would gladly die for your sake, if it were at all possible, in order to nullify the duality. Since, however, it is impossi ble for Him to die, you must die so that He might manifest Himself in you thereby bringing duality to naught. Thus at the height of mystical experience, the duality which at the previous stage sustained the dialogical relationship between the I and the Thou completely disappears. That is to say, the Theophanic Ego of the Sufi disappears and there remains only the Divine Ego. It is now the Divine Ego that assumes the role of the Theophanic Ego. This means that the Divine Ego in such a state speaks in the first person through the mouth of the Sufi. It is then that the Sufi utters what sounds to uninitiated ears as sheer blasphemy. Many such scandalously blasphemous words have been recorded and come down to us as shatahat, ecstatic utterances, of the Sufis, the most famous of all being among others, Ana al-Haqq (I am God!) of Hallaj andSubhani, ma azama shani (Glory to Me, how great is My state!) of Bayazid Bastami. Because of utterances of this nature many a Sufi was put to death. We must remember, however, that the first person in these utterances is not the I of the Sufi, not even his Theophanic Ego. The speaker is the Divine Ego. Hallaj cries out Ana al-Haqq I am God! not because he feels himself completely deified, or that he has become God. The preceding analysis of the Sufi experience will have made it clear that the utterance is not an outburst of rapturous exultation arising from the conviction that he is now God. Quite the contrary. He says I am God because he, Hallaj, is no longer there. Instead of being a glorification of his ego, it is an absolute glorification of God through an expression of the total absence of the human ego even in the form of the Theophanic Ego. Let us observe in ending that Najm Kubra used to regard Sufism as a spiritual alchemy (al-kimiya).24 We now see that the final end to which leads this alchemical process is the transfiguration of the human ego into its absolutely unadulterated essence, which is nothing other than its own annihilation in the presence of the Divine Ego. And this must be the Theophanic Ego in the final and absolute sense of the word, i.e., God appearing as God to God Himself. Toshihiko Izutsu 41 Notes 1. Najm al-Din al-Kubra (ca. 1145-1221 A.D.). His major workFawaih al-Jamal wa-Fawatih al-Jalal was edited and published by Fritz Meier (Franz Steiner Verlag, Wiesbaden, 1957). All references to Kubra in the present paper are to this edition of this book; 2. Kitab al-Nafs (Shifa, Physica VI) Chap. I, edbyF. Rahman, Oxford, 1959, p. 16. Almost the same description of the man in the air is found also in Al-Isharat wa-al-Tanblhat, (Physica ) ed. by S. Dunya, Cairo, 1957, pp. 319-320. The Avicennian image of the floating man became very famous in Mediaeval philosophy in the West; it is regarded by some historians of Western philosophy as the precursor of the Cartesian concept of the ego as established by the famous Cogito ergo sum. 3. Al-Isharat (op. cit.), p. 320. 4. This is an utterance of a wandering dervish of the tenth century, Niffari. The quotation is from R. Nicholson, The Mystics o f Islam, London, (reprint) 1963,p. 85. 5. On the illusory and imaginary nature of the existence attributed ot the empirical ego, see Muhammad Lahljl: Mafatih al-Vjaz fi Sharh-e Gulshan-e Raz, ed. Kayvan Samli, Tehran, 1957, p. 154. Lahljl was a famous head of the Nurbakhshiya-Order in Iran. He died in 1506/7 A.D. 6. The East (mashriq) in Sufism is a symbol of spiritual illumination, whereas the West, the place where the sun sinks and disappears, is a symbol of material darkness. 7. See, for example, the technical admonition given by Sahl al-Tustari (d. 896 A.D.) to one of his disciples, Hujwin: Kashf al-Mahjub, ed. by Zhukovski, Tehran reprint, 1336 A.H. (solar), p. 245. 8. The description is based on two books. The first is al-Qushashi, al-Simtal-mafid, Hyderabad 1327 A.H., p. 149. The gist of the passage was translated into German by Fritz Meier in the Introduction to his edition of Najm Kubras major work (op. cit., see Note 1). The second is Mirsad al- I bdd of Najm al-Dln al-Razi (d. 1256 A.D.), widely known by his surname, Day eh. The book is considered authoritative in the Kubrawiyah School. 9. The sitting posture here described is of course not the only one; there are variant forms. For example, in the present-day Nimatullahl Order according to an explanation given by its master himself, the Sufi kneels on his heels with the right hand on the left thigh, the left hand grasping the wrist ofthe right, so that the body as a whole and the hands and feet bent inwards assume the form of the Arabic letter La. See Dr. Javad Nurbakhsh: The A im and Method o f Sufism, Tehran, 1974, p. 13. 10. Op. cit., 7, p. 3. 11. See, for instance, Hujwiri (op. cit.) p. 262. 12. Najm Kubra (op. cit.) p. 262. 13. Ibid. 14. Ibid., 13, p. 6. 15. Ibid., 7, p. 3; 35, p. 26. 16. Ibid., 56, p. 26. 17. Ibid., 66, pp. 31-32. 18. Ibid. 42 Sophia Perennis, Volume IV, number 1 19. The most famous example of this phenomenon in Sufi literature is the Ascension experience (mVraj) of Bayazld BastamI (commonly and mistakenly known in the West as BistamI, d. 875 A.D.)- On Bastamis Ascension see Hujwiri (op. cit.) p. 306; Sarraj; Kitab al-Luma (ed. Nicholson, Leyden-London, 1914), p. 384. 20. Najm Kubra (op. cit.), 50, pp. 23-24. 21. Le Diwan dal-Hallaj, ed. Louis Massignon, Paris, 1955, pp. 30-31. 22. I expressly quote this quatrain as it is found in Cassirers opus magnum, in which this famous philosopher refers to it as expressing the idea of a pure correlation between God and man . There is no denying that many of the leading Sufis themselves recognize such a correlation, i.e. a mutual existential dependence, between God and man. But the point is that Cassirer does not properly deter mine the dimension in which man comes into such a relation of mutual dependence. See Ernst Cassirer: The Philosophy o f Symbolic Forms, vol. 2, Mythical Thought , Tr. R. Manheim (Yale paperback), New Haven-London, 1953, p. 231. 23. Sarraj (op. cit.), p. 382. 24. Tanq-na tariq al-kimiya, op. cit., 12, p. 5.
Sivanār (Sivadesikār) - Nānā Jīva Vāda Kattalai, Or, The Ordinances Relating To The Doctrine That All Varieties of Life Are Phenomena in Spiritual Being.
Sivanār (Sivadesikār) - Nānā Jīva Vāda Kattalai, Or, The Ordinances Relating To The Doctrine That All Varieties of Life Are Phenomena in Spiritual Being.