We know that there are different views about the nature of man, two
of which stand opposed to each other: the view of the spiritualists and
that of the materialists.
According to spiritualists, man is a reality composed of body and spirit.
The spirit is eternal and does not perish with death, and we know that
religion and Islamic texts affirm this view.
According to materialists, man comprises only this machine of the body,
which is destroyed with death, and its dismemberment means the dissolution
of his personality.
In spite of this great difference of opinion, there is something about
which both groups are unanimous, and that is that there are certain non-material
elements which may be called intellectual, and which give a man his value
and personality. If he is deprived of them, he will sink to the level of
animals. Sa’di, the poet, has expressed this idea in the following poem:
"Man's body is ennobled by his soul,
And this fine garment is not a sign of humanity
If man were known by his eyes, nose, mouth and ears,
What difference would there be between a picture on the wall and humanity?"
There is a saying: "How easy it is to become a scholar and how difficult
to be a human being." It requires so many qualities that depend on one's
personality and worth.
Deviations which take place in an individual or society are of two kinds:
1) Those anti-values which stand against values, such as tyranny against
justice, suppression against freedom, atheism and lack of discipline against
devotion and worship, and foolishness and stupidity against wisdom and
intelligence. Most deviations do not belong to this group, because such
anti-values are soon defeated. 2) Another group of deviations takes the
form of a cancerous growth of one value which obliterates all other values.
For example, asceticism is a value and criterion of humanity, but a person
or a society may turn to it to the extent of ignoring every other value.
Human values may be said to come under one heading, as expressed by Gnostics
and modern theologians, and that is a feeling of pain, something which
animals lack.
Pain is a source of discomfort, but at the same time it gives an awareness
and alertness to find the cause. In this way, it is a blessing even though
it causes some loss. Rumi expresses this idea in a poem:
"The sigh and groaning which are in sickness, Provide a wakefulness
at that time. When you fall ill, you feel penitent of guilt. And a sin
will seem ugly to you. Then you resolve to follow the right path And promise
to obey thenceforth. So it is certain that sickness has this benefit that
it grants you alertness and care. Know then, you who are searching for
causes, that he who feels pain, the greater is the awareness and the greater
the awareness, the paler the visage."
Feeling no pain is like having no feeling and understanding. It is tantamount
to being ignorant. Which is better, to be stupid and ignorant and feel
no pain, or to be aware and alert and feel pain?
It is sometimes said that being a lean Socrates is preferable to being
a fat pig. Being learned and wise but deprived of comforts is better than
a fool enjoying all comforts. Literature is full of complaints of having
intelligence, for, it deprives its owner of comfort and ease. A poet says:
"My intelligence and wisdom are my enemies, I wish that my
eyes and ears were not open."
Another poet says:
"Do not be wise to grieve for the crazy, Be crazy to be grieved for by the wiseBut such an attitude is wrong. He who attains the level of humanity and
understands the worth of sensitivity and pain, never says that his intelligence
and wisdom are his enemies. He would rather repeat the utterance of the
Prophet that "The true friend of a person is his intelligence and his real
enemy is his ignorance."He who considers his intelligence to be his enemy never feels the uneasiness
and misfortunes caused by ignorance, otherwise he would not make such a
remark. In physical illness, too, there must be pain, otherwise the illness
could not be diagnosed and consequently treated. An illness which is sudden
and without pain is most dangerous.
What is human pain? It does not mean only physical pain. It is a pain
considered sacred by mystics and is peculiar to human beings and for this
reason, a human being is preferable to an angel, for, an angel is free
from pain. That human pain is the pain of seeking God. Man is a reality
produced by divine breath in another world, and is not wholly homogeneous
with the things of this world. He has a feeling of strangeness and alienation
with all other creatures here since they are all changeable and perishable
and not worthy of attachment. Man, however, has a perpetual anxiety, and
this is what draws him towards devotion and worship of God, communion with
Him, and proximity to Him, as his origin.
There are many parables in mysticism about returning to one's origin.
Poets speak of a parrot brought in a cage from India always longing to
break open the cage and flying back home. Rumi tells the story of a reed
which is cut off from its reed-bed, and you hear the moan of the pipe lamenting
this separation and longing for the reunion. Sometimes they compare a person
to an elephant which must be constantly knocked on the head so that it
gets no chance to think of its Indian homeland.
Most of these parables mean to say that a human being is anxious to
return to the next world, feels the pain of separation and longs for a
divine reunion. Imam Ali, in a conversation with Kumayl-bin-Ziad,
declares that there is no one to whom he may divulge the secret of his
heart. But he says there are some individuals in the world who have attained
the point of perfect certainty in knowledge and feel that there is no space
to separate them from the spirit of certitude. That thing, namely livelihood,
which is difficult for men of pleasure and materialists to achieve is tame
and easy for them, and what is the source of terror for the former, namely
privacy with God, is the means of companionship for the latter. They go
along with people but their spirits soar high, and while they are here
they are also simultaneously in the next world going through the mystic
and devotional pains and communions that Ali had.
This love of God makes the devotee wholly unconscious of what goes on
around him and he does not feel any pain even if an arrow is being pulled
out of his body. This pain of separation from God, and longing for divine
proximity do not end until he attains his goal of joining God. The Qur'an
says the heart is soothed by one thing only, and that is the remembrance
of God.
Rumi quotes the parable of a man who was constantly in communion with
God and kept on repeating the divine name. Satan came to him once
and tempted him in such a manner that he stopped his invocations henceforth.
One day, Satan came to the man again and said: "With all your repetition
of the name of God and your wakefulness at dawn for devotion and your longing,
did you ever hear once from Him saying: "Here am I?" If you had gone to
any other door and groaned so much, you would have received a response
at least once." This remark appeared logical to the man, so he kept silent.
In a dream, an invisible voice asked him as to why he had abandoned his
communion. He answered that despite all his longing and pain of love, he
had never received an answer. The voice said: "I am sent by God to give
you an answer. The pain of love that He has put in your heart is the response."
Imam Ali, in his prayer (dua) of Kumayl, says: "0 God, forgive
that sin which causes my praying to be confined and the pain of it to be
removed." Thus, prayer is a goal in itself and not always the means of
receiving a favorable answer.
Another group claims that the criterion of humanity is to feel the pain
of God's creatures and as Sa’di, the poet, says:
"It is not poverty that has made me pale, I am pale because of grieving
for the poor."
If the hunger and pains of others become more difficult to bear than
one’s own hunger and pain, it is a value which is the basis of personality
and a source of other human values. It involves a feeling of responsibility
towards other human beings and their needs and sufferings.
We see its perfect example in Imam Ali, especially the last fasting
month of Ramadhan in his life. For him it had a new delight, and
for his household it was full of anxiety, because his behavior in that
month was quite different from the fasting months of previous years.
"Ali (as) speaks of the following Qur’anic verse: Chapter "Spider"
(Ankabut) verse 2::
"Do men think that they will be left alone on saying, We
believe, and not be tried? And certainly we tried those before them, so
Allah will certainly know those who are true and He will certainly know
the liars."
He says: "As soon as this Verse descended, I knew that great seditions
and trials lay in store for these people, and I asked the Prophet what
the Verse meant!" The Prophet answered: "After me, my people will be tested
and tried." I said: "Those who were martyred in the Battle of Uhud were
seventy in number headed by Hamza-bin-Abdul-Mottaleb, while I was uneasy
not to receive the blessing of martyrdom. Why was I deprived of this?"
The Prophet said: "If you were not martyred there, you will be martyred
in the way of God."
In the battle of Uhud, Ali (as) was just twenty-five, had newly
wedded Fatimah (as), and had Hassan (as) as his first offspring. A young
family usually expects a gradual progress in life whereas the only great
wish of Ali was to get martyred in the way of God. The Prophet then asked
Ali (as): "How much fortitude will you show in martyrdom?" Ali answered:
"Please do not speak of fortitude; ask me rather how grateful I will be."
In consequence of the Prophet's utterances and of the signs, which Ali
(as) recognized and explained, his family and companions became worried.
In that last fasting month, he went as a guest to different places to break
his fast, but ate very little. His children asked him sympathetically why
he abstained from food so much. He answered that he wished to meet his
God with an empty stomach. Then, they realized that Ali (as) was waiting
for something close at hand. Sometimes, he looked up at the sky and said:
"What my beloved Prophet has told me is true and quite near." On the
night before the 19th of Ramadhan, the children were with him for
a time.
Then, Imam Hassan went back to his own house. Ali (as) had a private
place for prayer where he retired for communion with his Lord after attending
to his private and public affairs. The sun had not risen yet when Imam
Hassan went there to see his father. Ali (as) had a special affection for
Fatimah's children. He said to his son: "As I was sitting there last night,
I fell into a slumber and dreamt of the Prophet to whom I said: "I have
suffered so much through your people." He said: "Curse them", I cursed
them and prayed God to take me away from them and send an incompetent person
to them."
It is so strange to see people not showing harmony with Ali (as) in
following his way, and causing him so much suffering. Such were Ayesha's
companions who broke their allegiance, and Muawiah with his cunning and
cleverness, knowing well what would hurt Ali (as) most, and those 'Outsider'
rebels (Khawarij) who heartily and faithfully excommunicated Ali
(as). When someone hears of all such tragic events, he wonders at Ali's
fortitude, and realizes as to why, in his dream, he spoke of his sufferings
to the Prophet,
The cackling of ducks is heard from outside the house, and Ali (as)
predicts that very soon the sound of wailing and lamentation will dominate
that cackling. His family came forward to stop him from going to the mosque
that day and suggest sending someone else to lead the congregational prayer
instead. At first, he mentioned the name of Ja'dat-bin-Hobeira, his nephew,
as substitute. But he changed his mind and said he himself would go to
lead the prayer. He is asked to have someone as company, but refuses. Later
that day when he was laid down with his terrible wound, he said: "I swear
by God that the blow of the sword on my forehead was like a lover being
united with his beloved, or like a person looking in a dark night for a
well where he could pitch his tent, and is overjoyed to find it."
Anyhow, while setting off for the mosque he was very excited and tried
to discover the reason. He felt that a great event was about to take place
after he cried out the call of summoning the faithful to prayer, he bade
farewell to that dawn, and said:
"0 dawn, has there been a day in Ali’s life when you appeared to find
him asleep? Henceforth, his eyes will be closed for ever." As he descended
from his pedestal, he said: "Open the way to a fighting believer." We see
him as a perfect man who, in all his epic-creating struggles, always remembered
God and feared nothing in the way of Him. As former men of learning said,
man is himself the gate through which he enters the world of spirituality.
Therefore, there are elements in man's essence, which are not in harmony
with the world of matter. This is not only what old psychologists believed,
but modern ones, too, admit it explicitly.
The holy Prophet (saw) says: "He who knows himself knows God", and the
Qur'an devotes a separate account for man as against all other creatures.
It says in Chapter "Ha Mim", Verse 53:
"We will soon show them our signs in the Universe and in their own souls,
until it will become quite clear to them that it is the truth. Is it not
sufficient as regards your Lord that He is a witness over all things?"
You may ask what are those elements in man which cannot be accounted
for by material things? This requires a long discussion, and is related
to human values and man's humanity. In the case of animals, there is no
separation between them and their entity. A horse is a horse, a dog is
a dog, a tiger is a tiger, But man may lack humanity, that is, those qualities
which are the basis of personality, and though they belong to this world,
they are not tangible, and are spiritual rather than material.
Secondly, what is the criterion of man’s humanity and gives him personality,
is not framed by nature or anyone else, but by man himself. Imam Ali-bin-Mussa-Reza,
the eighth Imam, says: "What is there is known through what
is here." As it was mentioned before, all the human values may be summed
up into a single value, and that is, having a feeling of pain above various
human pains or the pain of every living creature. It is the pain of being
a stranger to this world, and being separated from his origin in the other
world. He longs to return to his own home and to God, from the earthly
world to heaven from where he was driven out. Yet, his coming into this
world has not been wrong and futile, and has been sent for a purpose.
No matter what sublimity and perfection a man attains, he still feels
he has not reached the ultimate. He desires something, and when he secures
it, he feels no attachment for it. Someone said: "I was going round a foreign
museum, when I saw the statue of a very beautiful woman lying down on a
bed and a fine young man standing on the bed with one leg on the floor
and his face turned away from the woman, as if he was on the point of running
away." He could not understand what the sculptor had meant by this scene.
He asked someone what it meant, and was told: "This scene illustrates the
thought of Plato that a man turns with great love and zeal to something,
but on attaining it, that love dies away and gets buried there. It is the
beginning of weariness dislike and escape."
Others who have pondered more deeply over this issue say that man is
a creature who cannot be in love with what is limited and perishable. He
longs for absolute perfection and loves nothing else. That means love of
God. Even those who deny God or even abuse Him are unaware that in the
depth of their nature they love God, but they have lost the way and their
beloved. Mohyedin Arabi says no human being has loved anyone but his own
God. The Prophets have not come to teach creatures the name of God and
His worship, for this is inherent in human nature. They have come to show
the difference between the right and wrong paths, and tell men that they
are really in love with absolute perfection. If you think that money or
rank of life is perfection, you are wrong. The Prophets came to remove
false veils and enable men to find their beloved through loving devotions,
which we have seen in Imam Ali (as). The Qur’an says in Chapter "Thunder"
(Ra'd), Verse 27:
"Those who believe and whose hearts are set at rest by the remembrance
of Allah; now surely by Allah's remembrance are the hearts set at rest."
The Qur'an does not ask people not to seek wealth, rank or comfort,
but it says that these things do not give peace and tranquility, for, they
are not their ultimate goal.
Other schools of thought emphasize human pain for God's creatures and
not for God. The Gnostics, while referring to man's progress towards perfection,
say that he embarks on four journeys:
1) Man's journey towards God.
2) His journey with God in God, meaning knowing Him.
3) His journey with God towards God’s creatures
4) His journey with God among creatures for their salvation.
Nothing can be said better than the above, as long as man is separated
from God, everything is wrong, But after communion with God, and knowing
and approaching Him and feeling Him with himself, he returns to His creatures
in the company of God, to help and salvage them and bring them near God.
If we say that a man journeys from people towards God, he does not attain
anything. And if we say he moves towards human beings without moving towards
God, he will be like materialist human schools of today, unable to do anything,
because it is absolutely false. Only those who have delivered themselves
first can deliver others from being enslaved by nature and other human
beings. It means freedom from one's carnal desires in the first place and
from the domination of external nature and others in the second place.
From the viewpoint of Islam, is a man someone who feels the pain of
others, or feels for God and then feels the pain of His creatures?
The Qur'an says in Chapter "Cave" (Kahf), Verse 6:
"Then maybe you will kill yourself with grief, sorrowing after them,
if they do not believe in this announcement."
This Verse shows the Prophet (saw) to be so eager to guide and deliver
people from the captivities and difficulties of this world that he wants
to kill himself with grief.
Then, two other Verses refer to the same thing:
Chapter "Ta Ha", Verse I:"We have not revealed the Qur'an to you that you may be unsuccessful."And Chapter "immunity" (Baraat), Verse 128:"Certainly, an Apostle has come to you from among yourselves, grievous
to him is your falling into distress, excessively solicitous respecting
you, to the believers (he is) compassionate, merciful"Thus, the Prophet feels for other human beings and does his utmost for
them.
A Muslim must feel both for God and for His creatures. Sometimes you
have seen a father taking so much trouble and spending so much money for
his children's education that he is called ravenous with respect to their
trading. The Prophet, too, shows the same zeal for his people.
Imam Ali (as), too, shows the same feeling as mentioned in "Nahjul-Balagha".
He receives a report from Basra that Othman-bin-Hanif has taken part
in a feast. There has been no drinking, gambling and debauchery. But Ali
(as) reproaches this Governor for attending a wholly aristocratic feast
where no poor person has been present, Then, Ali (as) begins to describe
his own pains, saying that he could obtain all means of comfort and pleasure
himself if he wished, but would not leave the reins of his life in the
hands of desires. He is thinking of all those in various lands who are
poor and in great need. This is what ‘feeling the pains of others’ means,
He says: "Should I be satisfied with the title of Caliph and commander
of the faithful without sharing the troubles of the faithful?"
Avicenna compares this pain to itching which is painful, but pleasant
when someone scratches himself. It is not a bitter feeling. In mourning
for Imam Hossain, tears are shed because one feels the pain, and yet one
loves to do so and to participate in such ceremonies. There, one feels
the spirit not to be alone, but it is the spirit of all the bodies. Such
a spirit prompts one to wear patched up shoes inspite of all available
resources in order to be one with a spirit like Ali' s.
A poet says woe upon that spirit which is great, for in being
great it feels everyone's pain and its task becomes crucial. Ali (as) sees
a woman carrying a waterskln and thinks that she must be lonely to be forced
to perform such a task. He approaches her and politely offers to help her,
She accepts the offer, and on reaching her house, he asks her if she has
someone to help her. She says that her husband has been killed in the service
of Ali-bin-Abi-Talib, and she has no one to look after her, On hearing
this Ali's whole body was set afire with pity and he could not sleep all
night. Next morning, he and his companions carried some provisions to her
house, and then and there he cooked some meat, fed her orphans and caressed
them, saying: "Forgive Ali for having neglected you". Then, he lit the
oven and came near to feel its heat, and said to himself: "Ali, feel this
heat so that you could not forget the heat of hell for neglecting the orphans,
the poor and others". This is an example of a perfect Islamic man.
As I said before, when some radical values emerge, these eventually
eliminate other values, such as an inclination to worship to the extent
of forgetting other duties. Now I feel that another radical wave is about
to develop, and that is an inclination to social matters of Islam and neglect
of godly duties. If we are to deviate from the path of moderation in Islam,
what difference would there be between forgetting the society by turning
to worship and vice versa?
The Qur'an says in Chapter "Victory" (Fat 'h), Verse 28:
"Muhammad is the Apostle of Allah, and those with him are firm of heart
against the unbelievers, compassionate among themselves, You will see them
bowing down, prostrating themselves, seeking grace from Allah and pleasure;
their marks are in their faces because of the effect of prostration; that
is their description in the Old and New Testaments; like a seed produce
that puts forth its sprout, then strengthens it, so it becomes stout and
stands firmly on its stem, delighting the sowers that He may enrage the
unbelievers on account of them; Allah has promised those among them who
believe and do good, forgiveness and a great reward."
Below in Verse 4 of Chapter "The Ranks" (Saff), the Qur'an says: "Surely Allah loves those who fight in His way in ranks as if they were
a firm and compact wall."Here, the Verse describes the Prophet's companions and those trained by
him, and calls those as the enemies of truth" who cover the face of truth,
while believers stand firmly against these enemies, and when they are among
faithful people, they are perfectly kind to and united with them.This is the social characteristic of Islamic society, which has been
neglected for so many centuries. The Qur’an continues to say in Chapter
"Victory", Verse 28 referred to above that these people who are highly
social, always ask God for more and more for society and desire God's satisfaction,
and this is the highest degree of their devotion. In Chapter "Immunity1'
(Baraat), Verse 112, the Qur'an says:
"They who turn (to Allah) who serve (Him), who praise (Him), who
fast, who bow down, who prostrate themselves, who enjoin what is good and
forbid what is evil, and who keep the limits of Allah and give good news
to the believers."
These are the divine qualities of a people and those who reform society.
And in Chapter "Al e-Imran'", Verse 16, it speaks of:
"The patient, and the truthful, and the obedient, and those who spend
(benevolently) and those who ask forgiveness in the morning times."
The word 'patience 'in Qur'an stands for 'resistance, especially for
those who are honest and truthful ones in battle; and all the qualities
mentioned in the verse are inseparable.
There is a description of the companions of Imam Mahdi, the twelfth
Imam, in various narrations saying: "All night, they are monks and in daytime
lions." There is another narration about the Prophet's companions, which
says: "The Prophet went one day to visit the companions at Safa according
to his habit. It was between dawn and sunrise. He saw a young man staggering
along, his eyes sunk in their socket, and looking very pale.
The Prophet asked him: "How did you begin your morning?" He answered: "I
have begun it with certainty," meaning what "You have told us through the
tongue and ear, I have found it through insight". The Prophet said: "There
is a sign for everything. What is the sign of your certainty?" He answered:
"Its sign is that it keeps me thirsty in daytime, and sleepless at night."
meaning his certainty does not allow him to break his fast or to sleep,
The Prophet said: "This is not enough. I want further signs." He answered:
"Now that I am in this world I have a vision of the next world and I hear
the voices of those who are in both heaven and hell. Let me name those
of your followers who are in heaven and those in hell. (Rumi has expressed
all this in a poem.) Then, the Prophet asked him: "What is your wish?"
He answered: Martyrdom in the way of God." Thus, this man is a true Muslim
with that wish and in the way he spends his days and nights. It is his
feeling for God that has produced his other feeling of pain. The Qur'an
says in Chapter "The Cow" (Baghara), Verse 153:
"O you who believe! Seek assistance through patience and prayer; surely
Allah is with the patient."To be an authentic Muslim in society, you must pray in all sincerity. Some
people scorn prayer, consider it be suitable for old woman, and think it
enlightenment to be only sociable. You may have heard that Omar omitted
the sentence of "Hasten to good deeds" from the call to prayer. He thought
it as an enlightened step, but he was wrong. His time was the peak of Islamic
victories and effervescence of Islamic Jihad. Soldiers attacked the enemy
in groups and, inspite of being small in number, vanquished it. Their number
was no more than fifty to sixty thousand, and yet they fought against two
empires, each of which had an army of several hundred thousand. The soldiers
of Islam fought on two fronts, and were victorious in both. Umar's reason
for that omission was that as the people are called to pray, which is the
best devotion and the best deed, they would think that there is no need
to call them to other good deeds such as the jihad, for, it would divert
them and substitute prayer for other deeds. He suggested substituting the
sentence: "Prayer is better than sleep" for "Hasten
to good deeds."He did not think as to why the small army of Islam was victorious. Was
it the superiority of weapons of the Arabs over those of the Iranians and
the Romans? No, because the two civilized countries of that time were well
equipped while the Arabs' arms were insignificant. Was it because the Arab
race was stronger? Again no, for, we have seen what Shahpur, the King of
Iran, did to the Arabs and how he fastened iron chains to their shoulders.
It was the power of faith that defeated the Iranian and Roman armies and
the power that is derived from that sentence in ritual prayer: "Hasten
to good deeds." When a man stands at night to have communion with God,
he gains a morale-boosting power. Prayer means renewal of faith, and the
repetition of the phrase "God is great" in prayer makes everything else
seem so small and insignificant. Such a man, on seeing so many hundred
thousands of soldiers before him, says to himself: "God is greater than
all, all powers belong to Him, and we should rely on Him:' It is this prayer
that gives him strength. When going to holy war is a duty for a person
he must go, and his staying on for prayer in the mosque is prohibited.
The condition for the prayer to be acceptable to God is to go on a jihad,
while the condition for the jihad to be acceptable to Him is to perform
his prayer. Prayer without jihad is null and void and jihad without prayer
is likewise null and void.
In the system of Islamic values, devotion comes at the top but it must
be such whose conditions correspond with Qur'anic criteria. Prayer is real
only when it shows its effect by checking wicked acts. It is then that
prayer leads to other worthwhile values.
Ali (as) is the sun of all Islamic values and a comprehensive personality.
On one occasion we see him as an epic-producing fighter, as if he had been
a soldier all his life. Then, we find him elsewhere as a mystic who knows
nothing but loving communion with God. As an example, we cite two cases
from "Nahjul-Balagha", In the first military encounter of Ali (as)
with Muawiah in Siffin on the bank of the Euphrates, Muawiah ordered his
men to block the way to the river so that Ali's men could have no access
to water and thus be forced to flee.
Ali proposed to hold parleys with them to solve this problem and to
prevent unnecessary bloodshed between two groups of Muslims. Muawiah discussed
the matter in his war council and it was decided not to let Ali’s men have
access to water. Ali (as) delivered a discourse to his men, which was more
effective than a thousand drums, trumpets and military songs. He told them
the bare fact that Muawiah had gathered a number of perverse men and had
blocked the way of Ali's men to water, and said: "You must choose one of
the two alternatives, first you must quench your swords with evil blood,
and then quench yourselves next."
Then he uttered a sentence which created much excitement among all of
them. He asked them as to what life and death meant, and said: "Is
life just walking, eating and sleeping? Is death the act of being buried
under the earth? No, that is not life, and this is not death. Life is to
die victoriously, and death is to live as condemned and vanquished.
Ali’s men advanced swiftly and drove back Muawiah's army, which was
now deprived of water. Muawiah wrote to Ali begging for access to water,
but Ali's companions were opposed to it. Ali (as), however, was against
acting unchivalrous, and said that they must not fight the enemy by creating
difficulties for it. Winning victory in such a way is unmanly and unworthy
of him as a Muslim. Thus, he showed that manliness and magnanimity are
loftier than valor. Rumi, in his poem, calls Ali the lion of God, in courage,
but he says no one can describe his magnanimity.
Then, we find Ali in a different scene and a different garment when
he is free from public duties and is engaged in his devotion and worship,
and utters the following prayer: "0 God, you are a greater companion for
your saints than any friend. You are readier than anyone to aid those who
trust you. You observe the innermost thoughts and secrets of your friends
and lovers, and are well aware of their insight and knowledge, and know
that their hearts beat and long for you."
You should listen to the Du’a Kumayl, which is Ali’s prayer, and, in
content, it rises to the height of mysticism. There is something in it
beyond the two worlds. It shows solely the relation of a sincere, humble
and loving servant to the holy essence of providence. The way Imam Ali
(as) and Imam Zain al –Abedin (as) commune with God in the dawns of the
month of Ramadhan shows us as to how we should approach God as our first
step and then perform our other duties towards ourselves and society. We
should abstain from one-sided inclinations.
Imam Sadiq (as), just moments before passing away, summoned his kith
and kin and uttered one sentence before breathing his last. He said: "Our
intercession does not apply to those who take prayer lightly."
The life of Ali (as) may be divided into six phases, the most amazing
of which is the last of them. The first period is from his birth to the
ordainment of the Prophet. The second period is from the Prophet's ordainment
to his Emigration to Medina. The third period, different from the other
two, is from the Emigration to the death of the Prophet. The fourth phase
is from the Prophet's death to Ali’s own Caliphate, a period of twenty-five
years. The fifth phase is his four and a half years of Caliphate. And the
sixth or the last phase is of only two days from his receiving a sword
blow on the head till his martyrdom.
The last phase is the most amazing of all because Ali shows his perfection
as a human being the way he faced death. On receiving the blow he uttered
two sentences, namely: "Get hold of man", and "I swear by the God of the
Kaaba that I have received my salvation through martyrdom.
A physician, called Assad-bin-Amr, was brought to him, and he diagnosed
that poison had entered Ali’s blood. He said he could do nothing and recommended
the Imam to make his last will.
When Umm Kulthum, the Imam's daughter, saw ibn Muljam, she spoke harshly
to him and asked as to why he had acted thus towards her father and expressed
the hope that Ali (as) would recover. The cursed man said: "Have no hope,
for I have bought this sword for a thousand dinars and paid another thousand
for smearing it with poison. The poison is so strong that it will not only
kill your father; it could kill all the people of Kufa if used against
them,"
They brought Ali (as) some milk, and he told those around to treat the
assassin kindly. Then he addressed his kith and kin and said: "0 descendants
of Abdul Muttalib, after my death do not go among people saying what has
happened to me and accusing such and such a man. No, my assassin is only
one man."
He then said to his son Imam Hassan: "My son, this man has given your
father only one stroke of the sword. After me, you have the choice either
to set him free or punish him. If so deal him only one blow whether it
kills him or not." Then, he asked if they have fed and treated the man
well. This is how he treated his enemy and that is why Rumi, in his poem,
calls him the lion of God and says no one can describe the extent of his
magnanimity.
All this shows All's manliness and humanity. The poison is affecting
him more and more and his companions are weeping and groaning, but they
see his smiling lips uttering this sentence: "I swear to God that what
has happened to me is not disagreeable, This death and martyrdom in the
way of God is something for which I had longed all my life, and so much
the better that it has happened during the act of devotion." Then Ali uses
a simile that is well known among the Arabs. The desert Arabs were in the
habit of staying where there was grass, and when it was exhausted, they
moved elsewhere. In hot weather, they sought a place at night where water
could be found. He said: "I am like a lover who has found his beloved,
or like one looking for water on a dark night who is overjoyed to find
it.
In those last moments, they were all around Ali's bed. Poison had done
its work, and from time to time Ali (as) fell into a coma, and whenever
he opened his eyes, he preached to those present. His last words which
were fiery contained a twenty-point address directed first at his sons,
Hassan and Hossain, and then at his other children and finally at all people
who may hear his words until the day of Resurrection.
Generally, everyone who has pioneered a school of thought has a theory
about man's perfection or a perfect man. What is called ethics is related
to what should be, not what is, and if man can acquire those ethical qualities,
he will attain the peak of humanity, The views of various schools in connection
with perfect man may be summarized as under:
1) One view is that of intellectualists who view man in terms of his
mental qualities, and think that his essence is his mind and his faculty
of thought. This is the view of ancient philosophers including Avicenna.
For them, a perfect man was a sage, and his perfection lay in his philosophy.
By theoretical philosophy, they meant the proper general understanding
of the whole existence, and that is different from science, which means
understanding only a section of existence.
To show the difference between science and philosophy, the following
explanation will illustrate the issue. You might wish to know something
about a city. This knowledge may be general or specific. A municipal engineer
can draw the plan of the city to show its limits and divisions into various
precincts, parks, streets and squares, in which you would not be able to
locate your house. Another man can supply all the local information of
a precinct, which a general engineer cannot. A philosopher gives you a
plan and picture of the whole existence and tries to find its origin and
cause, its beginning and end, and its phases and general principles. If
you ask this man something about a plant, an animal, a stone, a star, or
the sun, he may not be able to answer your question. For the philosopher,
the picture of universe as a whole is significant even though the details
may be vague or even unknown.
To intellectualists, finding the general picture was the goal, and its
attainment the sign of perfection, in which the world of intellect corresponds
with the objective world. They thought this was possible through the use
of reasoning, logic and reflection. They believed in two types of philosophy:
a) theoretical philosophy or understanding the world as it is, and b) practical
philosophy which meant the complete predominance of human intellect over
all of his instincts and faculties. Books of ethics judge matters on this
basis, and our ethics is a Socratic one based on intellect. Does your intellect
dominate your passion, or vice versa? Does your intellect dominate your
anger and fear, or vice versa? Thus, if you can manage to understand the
world through reasoning, and allow your intellect to dominate the self,
then you are a perfect man.
2) Another school is the school of love or Gnosticism. By love is meant
affectionate devotion to God. Unlike the intellectual school which is the
school of reflection and not movement and in which all movements are intellectual,
the school of love is all movement, a vertical rather than a horizontal
motion, though at a later stage it assumes a horizontal direction. At first
it is an upward flight towards God. They do not believe in reasoning and
reflection as the means of advancement; it is the spirit of man that moves
ahead until it reaches God. It berates the school of intellect, and this
attitude is the basis of one of the finest debates in literature between
love and intellect, and those who are engaged in such discussions are themselves
mostly Gnostics who have given love victory over intellect. This school
considers intellect as a small part of man1s existence and only
a means, whereas the essence of man is his spirit, which belongs to the
world of, love involving nothing but moving towards God. That is why the
followers of this school, such as the poet Hafiz, prefer love and its intoxication
to intellect.
Their monotheism is the unity of existence, which takes the form of
absolute truth once a human being attains that position. It means that
a perfect man becomes ultimately God or a part of Him.
3) Another school of thought thinks of perfect man depending neither
on intellect nor on love, but on power, meaning thereby force, strength
or something similar. In ancient Greece, there was a group called Sophists
who explicitly claimed that might was right, and weakness meant absence
of right. Thus, justice and injustice had no meaning for them, since might
is right and every human being endeavored to gain power without any condition
or limitation.
In the last two centuries, this idea was revived by Nietzche, the German
philosopher. He and his followers say truth, honesty and goodness are all
nonsense. If a person is weak, it is his own fault and he deserves to be
vanquished. He believes religion is invented by the weak, and he himself
is opposed to religion, and this is opposite to Karl Marx's view that religion
is invented by the strong to enslave the weak. Nietzche thinks the weak
have invented it to limit the power of the strong, and the treachery of
religion to mankind has been to propagate such ideas as generosity, kindness,
humanity and justice etc. among the people, and this has deceived the strong
into diminishing their power for the sake of humanity.
He (Nietzche) thinks those who say that 'one should combat the self'
are wrong; rather, the self should be nourished. Those who speak of equality
are wrong; there should always exist inferiors to work for superiors so
as to enable them to grow and produce the superman. He is against the equality
of the sexes because the male is created as the stronger sex and the female
is to serve the male. Thus, this school thinks superman or the perfect
man to be at par with a strong and powerful man, and perfection means power.
Such ideas have consciously or otherwise become prevalent among the
Muslims, and sometimes we carelessly speak of life as the "survival of
the fittest," whereas this phrase means that defense of right and truth
is permissible, Without such a war, no priest, monk or clergy could peacefully
engage in worship in churches, temples or mosques; and they should all
be thankful to the soldier who makes this worship possible.
It would be fine for mankind to reach a stage of education and perfection
where no aggression exists, in which case no legitimate war would be needed.
Islam presents such a society in the form of the rule of Mahdi, the upcoming
Imam (as). It is said that then even wild beasts will be reconciled with
one another and there will exist no war and aggression.
A sentence is attributed to Imam Hossain (as), which is neither correct
nor verified as having been uttered by him. This sentence has become prevalent
in the last fifty years and says. "One should fight a jihad
for the sake of one's opinion". Such a sentence is in agreement with Western
ideas, while the Qur'an says that a jihad must be waged in the way of right
and truth.
A belief may be right or wrong. Another school of thought says that
one should have a belief, and an ideal for which one must put in efforts,
no matter what that belief is. But the Qur'an says these efforts must be
made in the way of right, and if the belief proves to be wrong, it must
be reformed. Very often, it is necessary to combat one's own belief to
discover the truth, and then begin combat in the way of truth. The idea
of the "survival of the fittest" is the basis of the supposition that "might
is right", an idea derived from Darwin's philosophy about animal life and
applied even to human life.
But we cannot consider human beings to be at the same level with animals
with regard to the fact that war is the only way of survival. If this is
so, then what can they say about co-operation, unity, sincerity and affection
among human beings? They may say these acts and sentiments, too, are for
survival, and are imposed on human beings by a superior enemy. It is a
necessity to have these elements to face a stronger enemy, The proof of
this is that no sooner the enemy is removed, than unity turns into dispersion,
and differences and disputes arise among them even when there are only
two individuals left.
As the schools of intellect and love meet with opposition, the school
of might, too, is faced with those who scorn it and say that man1s
perfection lies in his weakness not in his strength for, if he has power,
he will show aggression. Sa'di, the poet, has made the same mistake by
saying:
"I am the ant that is trampled on, And not the wasp to make others groan
with the pain of my sting. How can I express my thanks for this blessing
That I have no strength to hurt people." [1]
There is no reason, in fact, to be an ant or a wasp. One should be thankful
to have strength without hurting others. Sa’di speaks also of an ascetic
who had retired to a cave, and when he was asked as to why he did not live
in the town among people, he answered: "There are too many elegant and
pretty ones, and an old man slips on an abundance of flowers."
Sa'di also expresses the opposite view in another poem describing the
difference between an ascetic and a man of learning, and says an ascetic
wants to save his own skin, whereas a man of learning tries to save a drowning
man.
The Qur'an speaks, in Chapter "Yusuf" which is called "The Best Story",
Verse 90, of him "Who guards against evil and is patient," meaning Yusuf
who, inspite of all the available resources for seeking pleasure, controls
himself and guards his chastity. He is threatened with death if he does
not yield to lustfulness, but he says in Verse 33 of the same Chapter:
"My Lord! The prison house is dearer to me than that where they invite
me to; and if Thou turn not away their device from me, I will yearn towards
them."
This proves that man's perfection does not lie in his weakness, even
though the opposite view is expressed in many of our poems. For example,
Baba Taher Hamadani says:
"Help me against the eye and the heart, for, what the eye sees, the
heart desires. I must make a dagger with a steel blade, To hit the eye
in order to liberate the heart."
This poet should also have hit his ears so as not to desire what he
hears! What an example of a perfect man who cannot control himself except
by getting rid of his organs and limbs!
We have many examples of such weak and abject-producing morality in
literature, but we should remember that human beings are prone to err and
go to excess. When we compare other schools of thought with the genuine
Islam, we realize that Islam must have come from God. Socrates concentrates
on one aspect of man while each one of Plato, Avicenna, Mohyedin Arabi,
and foreign scholars stress other specific aspects. But all of them are
led astray. If so, then how can a prophet rely only on his human brain
and produce such a fine, progressive and comprehensive school of thought?
All those thinkers are children compared with him, and he is their teacher
who speaks last and best.
There is another school of thought about a perfect man that is based
on love and self-realization. This school dates back to several
thousand years, and has produced lofty ideas in ancient Indian books, some
of which have also been translated into Persian, such as Upanishads.
The great scholar Tabatabai who had read this book was greatly impressed
by its lofty thoughts. In this school, self-realization is the basis of
all human accomplishments. Socrates and various prophets as well as the
Prophets of Islam express this point. But this school concentrates on the
above single point only. Gandhi's collection of essays and letters called
'This is my faith", is a fine book in which he says: "I discovered three
principles by the study of Upanishads, which have been my guide in life:
firstly, there is only one reality and that is to know the self. This is
the point by which he criticizes the West and says those in it have understood
the world, but not discerned themselves, and for this reason they have
brought misfortune upon themselves and the world.
Secondly, he who understands himself will understand God and others.
Thirdly, there exists only one power, the power of dominating oneself.
If one can dominate oneself, it would be possible for him to dominate everything
else. Gandhi also says there is one goodness and that is to
desire for others what one desires for oneself. Indian philosophy is based
on self-realization, contemplation, and renunciation of desires and discovery
of one's reality, which, in turn, produces affection.
In modern times, that is, in the last three centuries, a number of schools
of thought have appeared which have a social tendency. One school considers
a perfect man as a classless individual, and believes that belonging to
a class, particularly a high class, is the sign of being imperfect and
perfection means equality with others. Another school like existentialism
emphasizes liberty and social awareness and responsibilities. Another school
agrees with this, but says that being quarrelsome is a requisite for this
attitude.
Another school believes in enjoyment, a school that is somewhat close
to the school of might. It says that one should get maximum benefit out
of the blessings of creation to attain perfection. Those who consider knowledge
as the height of perfection desire it in order to know nature and thereby
dominate it to serve mankind. Thus, for them knowledge is a means, not
an end. Such people belong to the school of maximum enjoyment.
These were the various views that have been expressed about a perfect
man, and we will elaborately describe the views of Islam in this connection
and show the relative value of Intellect, might, social responsibilities
etc. in it. Another manifestation of man's perfection is the way he faces
death, because the thought and fear of death is a weak point in man which
produces many miseries and submission to much cruelty.
If there is no fear of death, the whole life will be transformed. Very
great men are those who face death courageously or even seek it cheerfully
and smilingly, not a death which is suicide, but one which is for a goal
to attain which they feel to have a mission and responsibility. Suicide
means abandoning responsibility, while death for the sake of duty is happiness.
This kind of death is welcomed only by saints for whom death is nothing
other than a change of abode, or as Imam Hossain says "It is like crossing
a bridge to reach a place which is inconceivable." It is reported
that when he was being beheaded, there sat a smile on his lips.
Such men have both a great power of attraction and repulsion; they have
very loyal friends as well as wicked enemies that knowingly oppose what
is right. The noble Imams of Islam were such perfect men and models for
their society
Thus, man is the only creature who can separate "self" from himself,
whereas stones, plants and other living creatures are unable to remove
from themselves the qualities given to them in creation. But man should
acquire his humanity, which has nothing to do with his biological aspects.
As Sa'di says:
"Man’s body is ennobled by his soul, and this fine garment is not a
sign of humanity:"
Being born a human being does not make him human. He has the potentiality
of being human in the same way that he has the potentiality of being learned.
A biologist or a physician cannot show this humanity to us. It is something
which is not denied even by the most materialistic school of thought, and
yet there are no material criteria for it.
We begin the discussion with the school of intellect. According to ancient
philosophers, the essence of man is his intellect. As man's body is not
a part of his personality. His spiritual and psychological peculiarities,
too, are not a part of his true personality. Only his power of thinking
is the measure of that personality. What he sees is nothing but a tool
and a means for his thought; so are his desires. A perfect man is he who
has attained perfection in reflection, and has understood the world of
existence as it is. According to this school, intellect is capable of discerning
the reality of the world, and can, like a mirror, truly reflect
that reality in itself. Islamic philosophers who accept this view believe
that this is what Islamic faith, which is mentioned in the Qur'an, means.
To them, it means understanding the universe, its origin and process, its
system, the direction of its return, faith in God and angels as the steps
of existence, faith in the world as a created thing, faith in the idea
that God has not left the world to itself but guides it through prophets,
and faith in the fact that everything has come from God and returns to
Him, namely Resurrection These Philosophers consider this discernment to
be philosophical and general, and not a scientific one which is a partial
understanding.
The schools that have opposed the intellectual school are the Illuminati
or Platonian philosophers, and the Gnostics and school of love, and the
school of traditions and annals. In modern times and in the last four centuries,
the school of sentiments has risen against the school of intellect, and
it claims that intellect is in the service of the senses and can only make
use of the product of the senses, like a factory turning raw materials
into some substance or object. Nevertheless, the intellectual school holds
its own against various onslaughts.
Let us see how the school of intellect compares with the view of Islam.
The first point is the validity and genuineness of intellectual understanding.
Many schools deny this validity for intellect. In Islamic texts, however,
we come across an extraordinary support of intellect, which is not seen
in any other religion. Compare Islam with Christianity, and you will see
that Christianity gives intellect no right to interfere in matters related
to faith, and it is the duty of the clergy to check every reflection and
reasoning in the question of faith.
Islam, on the contrary, believes that nothing but intellect has the
right to interfere in religion, For example, when you are asked as to how
you came to believe in the first principle which is monotheism, your answer
must only be that it was through intellect. If your reason is based on
imitating the elders or following the example of others, such a belief
is not acceptable, and it should only come through reasoning.
The Qur'an constantly speaks of reasoning. Annals and traditions, too,
consider intellect to be great importance, so much so that the first chapter
of such books is devoted to intellect. Imam Musa ibn Jafar (as) says that
God has sent two signs for man, the internal messenger, which is man's
intellect, and the external prophet, which means those men who, are to
guide human beings. These two are complements to one another, and without
them man cannot attain happiness. Sometimes, it is said that a wise man’s
sleep is worthier than an ignorant man's worship and the former's refraining
from fasting is better than the latter's fasting; and his remaining stationary
is wiser than the latter's movement. No prophet was ever ordained by God
before he was granted intelligence. We consider our Prophet as having divine
wisdom and this is in contrast with Christian belief in which
intellect and religion are quite apart.
From the viewpoint of philosophers, the essence of man is his intellect,
and all other things such the senses, memory, imagination, talents and
aptitude are tools and the means for that intellect. Islam does not confirm
this point, but says that intellect is one of the branches of man's existence
and not the whole of it. The idea of philosophers, who declare that faith
is limited to only understanding, does not correspond with what Islam says.
In Islam, faith is a reality which is more than mere understanding. It
is also inclination, submission. humility and love. An astronomer knows
the stars, but he has no love and inclination for them. A mineralogist
does not necessarily have a feeling for mines and minerals. A person may
have the knowledge of something, and dislike it at the same time. In politics
very often one knows one's enemy better than oneself. For example, in Israel
there may be individuals who know the Arabs and Muslims better than the
Arabs and Muslims know themselves. In the same way in Egypt or Arabia,
there may be specialists on Israel. But do these specialists also have
an inclination towards the country of their study? Very often, this knowledge
is combined with hatred.
The Qur'an gives the best examples of those who know God, the prophet
and basic principles of religion highly, and yet they are pagans and infidels.
Does Satan not know God and yet act against God? He knows God better than
any other creature and has worshipped Him for thousands of years, Has he
not been an angel for thousands of years in the company of other angels?
He knows the prophets too, and is well aware of Resurrection and hereafter.
And yet the Qur'an calls him an unbeliever (Chapter "Saad", Verse 74).
If what the philosophers say about understanding were true, Satan would
then be the top believer. But he is not, and opposes the truth that he
knows so well.
The Qur’an says in Chapter "Fig" (Teen) Verse 1 to 6:
1)"I swear by the fig and olive,
2) And Mount Sinai,
3) And this city made secure,
4) Certainly we created man in the best make.
5) Then we rendered him the lowest of the low.
6) Except those who believe and do good.
The Verses 1 to 5 are the basis of theoretical wisdom and Verse 6 is
practical wisdom.
So far, three points have been explained in connection with the school
of intellect:
1) Intellect is the basis, its perceptions are reliable, and it can
secure true knowledge.
2) Intellect is not the whole of human essence, and Islam does not confirm
it as such.
3) What is called Islamic faith is the perception of intellect or understanding.
But what is important is that faith is preliminary to action and has
no genuineness of its own, and this, in turn, brings two schools of thought
face to face. What is meant by the genuineness of faith? Is it because
faith is the basis of human deed, and one should constantly endeavor according
to a plan and for a goal, using faith as its foundation? For, activity
is inherent in man’s nature and this requires a basis of thought and belief,
a matter which can be compared to building a one-room house as a goal,
and all other acts or things or parts such as the base and walls etc. are
subsidiary to that goal.
In today's social schools, such as communism, a set of views and beliefs
exists which is based on materialism. There also exists a series of social,
political, economic and moral principles, which are considered as the foundation,
but not the goal. Materialism cannot be considered as a goal for a communist.
This inclination was due to a stupid conflict of the church with such social
and political thoughts and especially with freedom, so that this view became
prevalent in Europe that man must be free and have a right in society and
forget God, or believe in God and forsake the right and liberty. Thus,
in order to find a solution, they rejected religion as a foundation. A
communist thinks wrongly that without materialism, no social, political
and economic principles can be explained.
Recently a number of communists have appeared in the world who say that
materialism is not a necessity, and communism could be had without materialism.
For them faith in those mental principles has no genuineness of its own,
and these are used only as a basis of world vision on which they can build
up their school.
In Islam there is faith in God, angels, prophets, Imams and Resurrection,
but do these faiths figure only as the basis of thought and belief without
being genuine in themselves? No, this is not true. In Islam while faith
is the foundation of thought and belief and Islamic ideology is built on
them, this foundation has a genuineness of its own, and here philosophers
are right in thinking that faith has its own authenticity. If its value
is for action, then action without faith is nothing at all. Faith is one
pillar of happiness, and action is another. In Islam the perfection of
man in this world, and especially the hereafter, depends on his faith,
for, in Islam the spirit is really independent.
The spirit has its own perfection, and is everlasting, and if it does
not attain perfection, it is deficient and cannot secure happiness. The
Qur’an says in Chapter "The Israelites", Verse 72:
"And whoever is blind in this world, he shall (also) be blind in the
hereafter; and more erring from this way."
Here by blindness is of course not meant physical blindness, but mental
and spiritual blindness, which prevents man from discerning truth and having
faith in it. If someone performs even all the good deeds possible in this
world, enjoys the good and forbids the evil, and lives like an ascetic,
and devotes his life to the service of mankind, but at the same time he
does not understand God and Resurrection and the world of existence, he
is undoubtedly blind here and will also be blind in hereafter. The Qur'an
says in Chapter "Ta Ha", Verse 125:
"He shall say: My Lord! Why hast Thou raised me blind, and I was a seeing
one indeed? He will say: Even so: Our communications came to you, but you
neglected them; even thus shall you be forsaken this day"
Nahjul-Balagha believes in the genuineness of faith, and says
about men of God that when they call God and beg forgiveness, they feel
within themselves the breeze of salvation, and there are people in every
era who have communion with God, Fakhr Razi says in a quatrain; "I fear
that I may pass away without having truly understood the world, and without
going out of my physical being into my spiritual existence."
In Islam, knowing God, and knowing angels as the media of the world
of existence, and knowing prophets and saints who are, in another respect,
the media of God's blessing to us, and the knowledge of the reason for
our coming to this world and where we are going to, and of our ultimate
return to God like every other created thing, all these understandings
are genuine, and, at the same time, they are the basis of Islamic ideology.
Therefore, neither faith should be sacrificed for deeds, nor deeds for
faith. Consequently, it can be said that the perfect man of philosophers,
on the whole, is not perfect, for, he possesses a partial perfection by
seeking that perfection only in his intellect, Such a man is full of knowledge
but without yearning, zeal and motion.
In Gnosticism, knowledge and intellect have been much scorned. Islam
while accepting love and heart does not scorn intellect, reasoning and
logic but respects them. That is why in later periods of Islam, there appeared
a group that respected both love and intellect. Sheikh Shahabeddin Sohrverdi
of the Sect of Illuminati is one of them, and to a greater extent is Mulla
Sadra Shirazi who thinks this way of love and intellect must follow the
Qur'an, and has no desire to scorn the heart like Avicenna, or Sufis who
look down upon intellect.
Another matter that is found in Gnosticism and is unacceptable to Islam,
is its introvert nature which dominates its extrovert side, and its individualistic
aspect which almost obliterates its social side. In Gnosticism, a perfect
man is engaged with his own self and that is all. But in Islam, in addition
to love, righteousness, self-purification and spirituality, a perfect man
is also an extrovert and sociable.
The companions of Imam Mahdi (as) are said to be monks at night and
lions in daytime, The Qur1an speaks of both aspects in Chapter
"lmmunity" (Bara'at) Verse 112:
"They who turn (to Allah), who serve (Him), who praise (Him), who fast,
who bow down, who prostrate themselves, who enjoin what is good and forbid
what is evil, and who keep the limits of Allah; and give good news to the
believers."
In this Verse, the points mentioned upto the subject of prostration
are internal acts of devotion, and the remainder of the Verse is related
to social duties.
Qur'an refers to similar matters in Chapter "Victory" (Fat'h), Verse
28:
Muhammad is the Apostle of Allah, and those with him are firm of heart
against the unbelievers, compassionate among them selves; you will see
them bowing down, prostrating themselves, seeking grace from Allah and
pleasure; their marks are in their faces because of the effect of prostration;
that is their description in the Old Testament and their description in
the New Testament; like as seed produce that puts forth its sprout, then
strengthens it, so it becomes stout and stands firmly on its stem, delighting
the sowers that He may enrage the unbelievers on account of them; Allah
has promised those among them who believe and do good, forgiveness and
a great reward."
In this Verse, the first part speaks of the social side of the Prophet
and his companions, while the next part refers to acts of worship and devotion.
But in this devotion, they are trying to win God's satisfaction which is
the highest thing for them,
This devotion to win God’s satisfaction is extravagantly seen in the
perfect man of the Sufis. Some Gnostic leaders who have been deeply
influenced by Islamic teachings, and have often pointed it out observe
this weak point. And yet there has been an excess of introversion, so that
extroversion has been effaced.
There is another aspect and that is mortifying the self, by which is
meant purification and avoiding selfishness, egotism and egoism, but the
Gnostics, in emphasizing these things, have forgotten the positive aspect
of purification which is magnanimity and qualities that are beyond materialism
and biology, that is, non-material human values.
Without a survey and analysis of various schools of thought, we cannot
fathom the depth of Islamic views in this connection. We mentioned before
that the Gnostics have scorned the intellect and have exalted love to a
position much higher than intellect, but it is an extravagant attitude
to consider reflection, reasoning and logic as invalid.
It is said that Avicenna who lived in late fourth century and the beginning
of the fifth century of Hejira and was a great Philosopher of the
intellectual school, was a contemporary of a very distinguished Gnostic
called Abu-Sa'id Abol-kheyr. Avicenna lived in the Transoxania region of
Balkh and Bokhara, but after refusing Sultan Mahmood's invitation to join
his court, he fled in fear to Neishapur where he met Abu~Sai’d. It is narrated
that these two retired into privacy together for three days to discuss
their views and came out of their privacy only for the purpose of offering
congregational prayer. After this visit, Avicenna was asked about his impression
of Abu~sa'id and he said: "He sees what we know." And when Abu-Sa'id was
asked about Avicenna, he said: "This blind man follows with his stick the
way that we see and follow", an answer which shows a contempt for intellect.
What we say is that if we place the view of the Qur'an on one side and
the Gnostic view of intellect on the other, we would realize that they
are incompatible. The Qur'an attributes a great worth to and respect for
intellect, reflection and even pure intellectual reasoning as compared
to Gnosticism.
Imam Ali (as) is considered as the pivot of Gnosticism by all groups
and sects of Shi’a and Sunni (about seventy sects in number),
and only one group follows Abu-Bakr. In Nahjul Balagha" Ali (as)
has, according to Ibn-Abil-Hadid, expressed the nucleus of Gnosticism in
just four lines whereas all Gnostics have discussed this in so many books.
But, the same Ali elsewhere becomes a philosopher whose reasoning no philosopher
can rival. Thus, the perfect man of Islam differs from the perfect man
of Gnosticism in its growth of intellect. Another view of Gnosticism is
that what one wishes to offer others should be from within the self. For
them to become perfect, one should purify oneself, pay attention to God
only and to nothing else, retire within oneself, and sever one's relations
with external things. Thus, they attribute no worth to discussion and reasoning,
and as Rumi, the poet, says.
"The leg of a reasoner is wooden, and a wooden leg is very unruly."
Elsewhere he says:
"If an intellectual discussion is pearl and coral
Something else the essence of life;
Talk of life is in a different rank
And the wine of life is of a different order"
What was the end of the road for the philosopher? It was to be a world
of thought and reflection, a mirror in which to see the world.
What is the end of the road for the mystic? To reach God by self-purification
and love and cover the road under the care of a more perfect being. The
Qur1an says in Chapter "Bursting Asunder" (Inshiqaq),
Verse 6:
"O man! Surely you must strive (to attain) to your Lord, a hard striving
until you meet Him."
It means that after attaining Him, you will have everything, What is
puzzling is that after attaining that rank, one desires nothing but God1s
grace. Abu-Sa'id says in a quatrain:
"What can one do with life after knowing you? What can he do with a
wife, children and household? You turn him crazy and then grant him both
worlds. What does he need for both worlds who is mad for you?"
The above points show what a perfect man is from the viewpoint of Gnostics:
that when he attains God, he becomes His perfect manifestation and a mirror
of His essence. What does Islam think of self-purification? The Qur'an
says in Chapter "The Sun" (Shams), Verse 9:
"He will indeed be successful who purifies it, and he will indeed fail
who corrupts it "
Is self-purification in Islam the way of knowing God, or is the recognition
of God possible through reflection and reasoning? Concerning self-purification,
a sentence of the Prophet is quoted by both Shi 'as and Sunnis,
that is, if anyone can purify himself for God for forty days, i.e.
if he regards God's satisfaction as the only worthy thing and abandons
all desires, he will become a man like Abraham, of whom the Qur'an says
in Chapter "Cattle" (Anam), Verse 162;
"Say: indeed my prayer, my devotion, my life and death are all for God."
Thus, a knowledge that springs from within is acceptable to Islam. God
says to Moses in the Qur'an, Chapter "Cave" (cahf), Verse 65; [2]
"Then they found one from among our servants whom we had granted mercy
from us, and whom we had taught knowledge from ourselves."
The Prophet is also quoted as saying: "Is it not true that devils move
round the hearts of Adam's sons and create dust and gloom whereas Adam's
sons could see the angels with their heart's eye." And again the Prophet
says: "If it had not been for your talkativeness and if it had not been
for your heart which is like a pasture in which every animal grazes, you
would be able to see what I see and hear what I hear." [3]
Thus, it is not necessary to be a prophet to see and hear. Many could
do so; and so could Ali (as). He was ten years old when he accompanied
the Prophet (saw)to the temple and the cave of Harra, and when revelation
came to Muhammad (saw) for the first time which carried him into ecstasy,
Ali, too, could hear the sounds from the occult. He says: "I told the Prophet
that when revelation came I could hear the groans of Satan." The
Prophet said: "O Ali, you can hear what I hear, and see what I see, even
though you are not a prophet." [4]
In this way, the only effect of self-purification is not only to make
the heart pure and sincere and remove carnal desires, but its greater result
is to produce knowledge and wisdom from within. It is narrated that one
day the companions of the holy Apostle said to him: "We fear to be hypocrites."
They were true believers and yet they felt this anxiety. The Prophet asked
the reason. They said: "When we come before you, and you preach
of God, resurrection and sin, we have a deep feeling of penitence that
is so pleasant. But when we leave you and go back to our family, we find
ourselves as we had been before. Is this not hypocrisy" The
Prophet answered: "No, this is not hypocrisy which is the act of being
double-faced. What you describe about is about two conditions of the mind,
when it is downcast." Then he continued: "If you remain in the same state
as when you are with me, then the angels will shake hands with you, and
if it becomes a habit with you, you can walk on water without being drowned."
Our Gnostic literature which is considered to be among the masterpieces
of the world, owes everything to Islam, All the delicacy that you find
in the works of Rumi, Hafiz, Sa’di and Naser Khosrawi is derived from Islam.
Hafiz says explicitly that he owes everything to the Qur’an. Sa'di says
something similar in the story of Jacob and Joseph. When Joseph made himself
known to his brothers in Egypt, he gave his shirt to his brothers to carry
to his father who had gone blind with the sorrow of separation from his
dearest son. According to the Qur'an, Jacob on taking the shirt said (Chapter
"Yusuf", 94):
"Most surely I perceive the greatness of Yusuf, unless you pronounce
me to be weak in judgment, "
Sa’di in his poem says; "Someone asked that man who had lost his son,
O wise old man of sound judgment, You got the scent of his shirt from Egypt;
How was it that you could not know of his fall into the well?" He answered:
"Our condition is like lightning, One moment it appears and then it is
gone. If the humble man stays in his own place, He would be exalted in
both worlds."
To confirm the above points. The following passage is quoted from Ali's
utterance from Nahjul-Balagha;[5].. Speaking
of a mystic wayfarer: "He has revived his intellect and killed his passion,
so that divine asceticism has made him delicate and the coarseness of the
spirit is changed into tenderness. In this condition, a spark strikes out
of his interior and illuminates his way, and he follows it until he reaches
his destination which is his safe and permanent dwelling and his ultimate
goal." Thus, a perfect man should have purified his self first.
Islam says that a wayfarer of humanity holds an exalted position in
having covered various stages of travel and reaching a place where there
no longer stands a veil between him and God. He sees Him with the heart's
eye, and he no longer requires any outward manifestations such as
the sky, the earth, nature, leaves of trees etc, in order to discover God.
Someone asked Imam Ali (as) if he had seen God. He answered; "I never worship
a God that I have not seen. But this act of seeing is not with the eye
or in a certain direction, but with the heart and in all directions."
There are, however, some matters in the school of Gnosticism, which
are scorned, contrary to Islam's views, and for this reason the perfect
man of Gnosticism is half-perfect. The views of the Gnostics in this connection
are more important for us than those of philosophers, such as Aristotle
and Avicenna, since the views of the latter are mostly confined to their
books and have not become prevalent among people. Whereas those of mystics,
both in prose and poetry and in the form of parables, have influenced public
thought greatly.
This school offers a number of ideas acceptable to Islam, while in other
respects it is open to criticism, and its perfect man of Islam. The Gnostics,
unlike philosophers, do not consider intellect as a criterion of man, but
only as a means, and the real ego is, for them, related to the heart, not
the physical one, but the center of sentiments and to what is desired by
intellect, A mystic attributes much importance to love and emotion which
are the strongest in man, His love is not a sexual one, but a love that
rises high until it attains God who is his beloved. He also believes that
this love is not confined to man, but exists in all creatures and in all
particles of creation, Rumi compares this love to an ocean over which all
nature and all skies and heavens are like foam. Hafiz says in a poem:
"We have not come to this door for rank and glory, We have taken refuge
here from misfortune. We are wayfarers of love from non-existence, and
we have come so far to the realm of existence,"
The last two lines are almost a translation of a sentence uttered by
Imam Sajjad, the fourth Imam, in praise of God who created the world and
roused it to love Him. Thus, for a Gnostic the ego is what shows love,
not what shows thought,
For a philosopher, man can reach perfection by means of logic, deduction,
reasoning and reflection, whereas for the Gnostic, talk and knowledge are
of no avail, but a pure heart is required, a heart which is purified from
all vices, to turn to God, and drive out the devil form the heart to make
room for the angel which is the light of God. Hafiz says in this connection:
"I intend if it is at all possible, to do something to end my sorrow.
The privacy of the heart is not for strangers; once the devil goes out
the angel comes in. Talk of precepts is for the darkness of the longest
night,
Seek the light from the sun and beg it to come out Why sit at the door
of the ungenerous masters of the world? How long do you wait for the master
to come out? Do not abandon mendicancy if you wish to find treasure, By
following the wayfarer who comes forth."
Gnosticism is a school of introversion in which the heart is greater
than the world, even if on one side you place the whole universe, on the
other the heart which is, according to the Qur'an, the divine spirit breathed
into man, Chapter "The Rock" (Halar), Verse 29. They call the world
the 'small man', and the heart the 'great man" or the small and big world,
Rumi says;
"If you are Adam's offspring, stay like him, and see all particles
within yourself,What is in the vat that is not in the stream? What is in the house that
is not in the town? This world is the vat and the heart is the stream'
This world is a room and the heart a wonderful city."
Gnosticism negates extroversion and believes that the attainment of God
must be from within. Hafiz says in another poem:"For long the heart desired Jamshid's Cup,
And begged from strangers what it had itself,It sought from the lost ones at the seashore,
A pearl which was out of the shell of existence.
A lovesick man had God with him at all times.
Yet he saw Him not and cried out: 'O, God,
Last night I took my problem to the Magi priest,
Who could solve it by his confirmation?
I asked: "When was this Cosmorama Cup given
you?"
He said: "That day when He built the azure dome,
And that follow who has risen up the gallows
was guilty of revealing secrets."
Rumi describes in a parable a man who kept on begging God for some of the
treasure which was hidden by so many people under the earth, One night
he dreamt that someone came to him as God's messenger to show him the place
of treasure. He pointed out a certain hill from the top of which the man
should shoot an arrow, and the treasure would be where the arrow fell.
Next day, he found the hill, but he did not know what direction he should
shoot at. He decided to shoot at some direction, but failed to find the
treasure. Every day he tried a different direction, but his labor of digging
the earth with a pickaxe and spade produced nothing.Another night the same fellow appeared in his dream and the man complained
to him for having given him wrong indications. The man was asked if he
had found the hill, and he answered that he had and spoke of having pulled
the bowstring hard to let the arrow fly, The fellow said; "I never told
you to draw the bowstring; I only said; "Let the arrow drop by itself."
Next day, the man went there and put the arrow on the bow and let it
drop, and it fell at his feet. He dug the earth at once and found the treasure.
Rumi concludes the story by saying:
"God is nearer to you than the jugular vein, and yet you
shot your arrow afar.
You got your bow and arrow and made yourself ready. Your shot went afar,
whereas the treasure was near."
One of the recent learned priests said that he had heard the above story
from a preacher who had mastered the "Mathnavi", but the priest did not
know what it signified and asked the priest its meaning. He answered it
in one sentence and said: "It is within your self." Thus, the
outside world as compared to the heart is scorned in Gnosticism, whereas
the words attributed to Imam Ali show that the world is the major thing
and man is a minor one.
If we compare the Gnostic view with the viewpoint of the Qur'an, we
find some positive aspects in it as well as deficiencies. The Qur'an does
not ignore nature and says in Chapter "Ha Mim", Verse 53:
"We will soon show them our signs in the universe and in their own souls,
until it will become quite clear to them that it is the truth."
Of course, we agree that the highest and noblest enlightenment for man
is within himself, but we cannot disregard the outside nature as a manifestation
of God.
Here is a very fine point that the Gnostic view has had a deeper influence
on the public than philosophical ideas on account of their poetic delicacy,
and warmth and beauty. The influence of Rumi, Hafiz and Sa'di is found
in every home. That is the reason why we have devoted more space to this
discussion than to the school of philosophy.
Notes:
[1]. Sa'di's "Golestan", Chapter 3, Story
I.
[2]. This is said to be Khaja Khidhr who
by a miracle Is still alive.
[3]. Me'raj-Sa'ada p.11
[4]. Nahjul-Balagha. Semon 190
[5]. Utterance 220. p.337