Follow Your Heart - The Seat of Wisdom: (Masnavi I, 3484-89)
Follow Your Heart - The Seat of Wisdom: (Masnavi I, 3484-89)
Follow Your Heart - The Seat of Wisdom: (Masnavi I, 3484-89)
Thank you for joining me in this exploration of Sufi stories and poetry, ancient
wisdom for modern life. My name is Kamila Shenmen and I am the Co-President
of the University of Sufism. I’m looking forward very much in sharing this beauty
from the Sufi Way.
I would like to begin with an excerpt – verses 3484-89 from book 1 of Rumi’s
Masnavi.
Jalāl ad-Dīn Muhammad Rūmī, known simply as Rumi, was a 13th-century Persian
poet, Islamic scholar, theologian, and Sufi mystic, whose followers established the
Mevlevi order of Sufism in Konya, Turkey. The Masnavi, or Mathnawi, is one of his
greatest works, commonly called ‘The Quran in Persian’. It is a series of 6 books of
mystical poetry that together span 25,000 verses.
Sufism is a spiritual path which teaches us of the wonders that lie in our heart -
the place where body and spirit come together to make us human. One of my
favorite verses from the holy Qur’an begins ‘God is the light of the heavens and
the earth’, and our Sufi guide Sidi Muhammad al Jamal explains this further,
saying, ‘This light is like a subtle physical force containing all of the Divine
realization within it. The heart of each person is the house of God and therein lies
the Divine light.’
This light, hidden deep within the heart of every human being is God’s original gift
to us, containing all of the wisdom needed for our human journey, and guidance
to bring us safely home. When we sit quietly, remembering the Name of God and
listening for that loving whisper within our heart, we begin to open to this flow of
Divine Love.
Sufis have been teaching us for centuries the lessons of Love and the heart’s
wisdom, and these lessons often come to us via stories and poems. I would like to
share a selection of these with you today.
I’ll begin with a story about a famous Sufi mystic named Rabi’a, entitled
The Lost Needle
(Rabi’a al ‘Adawiyya was born is Basra, Iraq around the year 717 C.E., and is one
of the most famous Sufi mystics about whom many stories are told. She is
credited with being the person who introduced the concept of Love into the Sufi
Way).
Rabi’a, was searching for something on the street outside her small hut.
The sun was setting and darkness was descending, as a few people gathered around
her. “What have you lost? What are you searching for? Perhaps we can help,”
they said to Rabi’a.
One amongst the people said, “Well, the sun is setting now and it will be very
difficult to find the needle. Where has it fallen? That’ll help us narrow down the
area on this big road. If we know the exact place, it will be easier to find it.”
Rabi’a told them, “It is better not to ask me that question — because, actually, it
has not fallen on the road at all. It has fallen inside my house.”
Everyone started giggling as if she was joking. Then a skeptic says out loud, “We
always knew that you were a little insane! If the needle has fallen inside the house,
then why are you searching for it on the road?”
“For a very simple reason: inside the house there is no light and on the outside a
little light is still there,” Rabi’a replied.
The people laughed and started dispersing. Rabi’a called them back and said,
“Listen! That’s exactly what you are doing: I was just following your example. You
go on seeking bliss in the outside world without asking the most fundamental
question: where exactly have I lost it?”
After a pause, she continues, “You have lost it inside, and yet you are looking for it
on the outside for the very same reason — your senses are outward bound, your
ears hear sounds on the outside, your hands touch things on the outside. That’s
the reason why you are searching outside. For a very long time, I was also just
searching on the outside. But the day I searched inwards, I was surprised. That is
where I lost it and that is the only place it can be found.”
(Divân, 110)
Close your mouth;
open the window of your heart.
For that is where
the souls meet and converse. (Divân, 110)
(Divân, 803)
O the Silent one!
Where is the heart hidden?
“Beneath the tongue.
When the words are gone,
the heart is revealed.” (Divân, 803)
Stop talking!
What a shame you have no familiarity
with inner silence!
Polish your heart for a day or two:
make that mirror your book of contemplation. (Masnavi VI,
1286-87)
Above all, the Sufis teach us of the primacy of a loving, merciful heart. For it is
through Love that the world came about and Mercy was the doorway for
creation. Only love can understand Love, as expressed in the following poems:
Divan 2730
The heart is so buoyant that it went up - heavenward,
and placed intellect as its ladder.
The heart heard the news of the Beloved’s coming.
Overflowing with love, the heart rushed to the rooftop.
Looking for signs of the Beloved,
behold, a world beyond this world came to its sight. (Divân,
2730)
Divan 1001
The face of the heart
is not like the face of any creature.
For the face of the heart
reflects the beauties of God. (Divân, 1001)
(Divân, 395)
Love resides, not in learning, not in knowledge, not in pages
and pamphlets
wherever the debates of men may lead, that is not the lover’s
path.
Love’s branches arch over pre-eternity, its roots, you see, delve
in Forever
a tree resting not on soil, nor trunk, nor even Heaven’s
throne.
We deposed reason and have bounded passion
For such reason and such morals are degrading to such glory.
You see, so long as you long, you idolize longing;
but become the beloved and then no being longs.
The incessant hope and fears of the sea-faring man float upon
planks;
but obliterate both planks and seaman and only submersion
remains.
Shams of Tabriz! You are the sea, the pearl, too
because your being head to toe is nothing but the mystery of
the Maker. (Divân, 395)
(Masnavi I, 109-116)
Being in love (a lover) is revealed by a lamenting heart
There is no sickness like lovesickness.
The lover’s ailment is different than any other ailment
Love is the astrolabe of God’s mysteries.
Whether a lover is drawn toward divine or derivative love,
Ultimately she is guided toward the One.
However much I describe and explain love
Once I arrive at love, I am ashamed of my words.
While explanation by the tongue sometimes makes things
clear
love unexplained (without tongue/silence) is clearer.
While the pen was smoothly writing the things it knew
Once it came to love it split in two.
The intellect, while explaining love, got stuck in mud like a
donkey
Only Love itself can explain love and lovers!
The proof of the sun is the sun itself.
If you wish to see it, don’t turn away from it. (Masnavi I, 109-
116)
(Divân, 662)
Even if the whole world is filled with thorns,
the heart of the lover remains an orchard.
Even if the wheel of heaven stops whirling,
the world of the lovers will function fully.
While all others become sorrowful, the lover’s soul
is always tender and kind, vivid and delightful. (Divân, 662)
And finally, a poem by Kabir 15th-century mystic poet and saint from India
The poem is titled: The Story of Love
From Perfume of the Desert by Andrew Harvey & Eryk Hanut.
I hope you have enjoyed these stories and poems about the heart. I would like to
share one final story which comes back to the theme of dropping into that light,
hidden deep within the heart of every human being, our essence. Again we turn
to Rumi’s Masnavi, book 2:
Intelligence and reason are also Divine gifts to humanity, and as such, are not to
be ignored or despised. But when we learn to combine intelligence and reason
with the Divine intuition, understanding and guidance available to us in our
hearts, then we have reached true wisdom.
In the words of our guide, Sidi Muhammad al-Jamal, ‘Walking in the heart’s light is
the best way and is illuminated the most by the radiating Light and it is the best
guidance and the most sincere and truthful and it is the original gnosis and what
leads to ascending until arriving at the Divine Presence and it is the sweetest way
and the most intensified tasting of Love.’
I would like to end with a poem called This is Your Heart by Ruzbehan Baqli
Abu Muhammad Sheikh Ruzbehan Baqli (1128–1209) was a Persian poet, mystic,
and Sufi. Extract from The Perfume of the Desert by Andrew Harvey & Eryk
Hanut
Thank you so much for joining me today. I pray that what I have shared has
brought nourishment and joy to your heart, and deepened your appreciation for
the beauty that God has bestowed on us all.