|
|

JALALUD'DIN RUMI,
THE THIRTEENTH-CENTURY Persian lawyer-divine and Sufi, widely considered
literature's greatest mystical poet, understood very well the uncontrollable
and idiosyncratic impact of poetry. Yet one wonders if even he, for all
his intuitive grasp of language, humanity and the cosmos foresaw the deep
and diverse influence his own work would have on readers throughout the
world seven centuries after his death-or the myriad meanings enthusiasts
would draw from his sprawling and contradictory poems. In the Islamic
world today, Rumi is read for much the same reasons he was revered during
his life: for his excellence as a poet; for his rare ability to empathize
with humans, animals and plants; for his personal refinement; and, above
all else, for his flawless moral center and ability to direct others towards
good conduct and union with Allah.
Rumi's work also has been read in the West for centuries and there have
been informed references to him in the work of Ralph Waldo Emerson and
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and many other eminent writers. But in recent
years the popularity of his work in the West has increased to a surprising
extent: according to the Christian Science Monitor, Rumi ranked as America's
best-selling poet in 1997. His biography, or at least the highlights of
his difficult but victorious life, should prove as inspiring as his poetry
to his diverse and growing readership.
The key events of Rumi's life-or those that appear to have shaped his
poetry to a great extent-seem to have been his insecure childhood spent
with his family roaming between countries at the time of the Mongol
invasion; his close relationship with his father, the mystic Baha al-Din;
his great popularity as an Islamic professor; and his unusually intense
spiritual and emotional love for the dervish Shams al-Din of Tabriz.
Many Western readers prize his work less as a moral lodestar and resource
for merging with the Absolute, and more as a vehicle for illuminating
our own highly secular age. Although, to be sure, these readers also
are drawn to the ecstatic and transcendental qualities of the great
mystic's work. Western admirers tend to extract Rumi from his historical
context and embrace him as one of their own. Not a few have seized on
his poetry as a springboard for their own creative expressions, including
New York clothes designer Donna Karan, who in 1998 unveiled her spring
line of fashions while musical interpretations of Rumi's work by the
health writer Deepak Chopra played in the background. Composers Philip
Glass and Robert Wilson have written "Monsters of Grace,"
an operatic extravaganza that can be enjoyed with three-dimensional
viewing glasses and a libretto of one hundred and fourteen Rumi poems
interpreted by American poet Coleman Barks.
Top
Quick-thinking American entrepreneurs seem to devise new means to capitalize
on Rumi's soaring popularity nearly every month. Recently, several versions
of "Rumi cards," a new method of fortune-telling, combining
snippets of the poet's work and aspects of the Tarot, have appeared
in U.S. bookstores. And, for those who peruse the World Wide Web, it
is possible to dial up "rumi.com" and be informed that, "In
the name of God, Most Gracious, Most Merciful, Jalalu'ddin Rumi.com
is coming soon."
Commercialism aside, the differences between the Islamic and Western
view of Rumi probably become most apparent when exploring the subject
of love, a central preoccupation of the poet's work. Western readers
have been captivated by Rumi's frequent and masterful use of romantic
imagery, which, coupled with the medieval lack of prudery have caused
some to regard him chiefly as a love poet. Many are fascinated with
Rumi's mystic identification and all-encompassing spiritual love for
his mentor Shams al-Din of Tabriz. Some construe this relationship as
a conventional love affair, given Rumi's frequent declarations of his
overwhelming longing for Shams after Shams' mysterious departure. Indeed,
in 1998, the gay magazine The Advocate published a piece in which it
was argued that Islamic scholars have obscured a likely gay relationship
between the poet and Shams. Other Western readers are charmed by the
lack of priggishness and the nearly Chaucerian quality contained in
some of Rumi's depictions of heterosexual couplings.
Yet Islamic scholars consistently have interpreted the relationship
between Rumi and Shams as an example of the Sufi call to open one's
heart to another human, in order to open one's heart to God. At the
same time, Rumi's frequent use of ardent, earthy imagery to describe
his affinity with his beloved Shams also is in keeping with the conventions
of Persian love poetry, which sometimes used sexual imagery to depict
platonic love between men.
Similarly, anecdotes of sexual love are not necessarily viewed as mindless
endorsements of licentiousness by Islamic readers, but sometimes as
ironic and cautionary commentaries on human nature. And in other ways,
Islamic readers enjoy a very different Rumi. To the Islamic mind, there
are no necessary divisions between the secular and spiritual realms,
or between man and God. Rumi's bawdiest jokes, his most erotically-charged
images, his cosmopolitan grasp of cultures and religions outside his
own, and his fluent knowledge of law, history, literature and nature
are not viewed as ends in themselves: they are only devices for expediting
readers' connection with Allah and the unseen world. For all the dazzling
breadth and variety of the Mathnawi, Rumi's six-volume masterpiece,
the work also may be said to have had only a single purpose: communion
with the Absolute.
For Islamic readers, Rumi remains an important commentator on the Koran
and a brilliant exponent of Sufi philosophy, the strain of Islam that
stresses direct and ecstatic communion with Allah over Aristotelian
questioning. Rumi, who was strictly educated in religious law and philosophy,
is viewed in the Islamic world as a spiritual descendant of two other
great Sufi writers, Sana'i and Attar. He shared with those two writers
the goal of eliminating corruption from religious practice and institutions.
He also is widely seen as the vindicator of his father, Baha al-Din,
an Islamic preacher whose metaphysical and mystical leanings often were
greeted with skepticism because of a prevailing bias towards Aristotelian
inquiry in his native Khorosan, today known as Afghanistan.
In Turkey today, Rumi is revered by many as the founder
of the Mevlevi Order, which is associated with the colorful "whirling
dervishes," the Sufis who twirl themselves into joyful merger with
the Absolute. Indeed, Rumi himself helped make popular the once questionable
practice of this mystic dance by twirling, first in the marketplace,
and later, to the astonishment of many, at a funeral for a beloved friend.
Iran, which has assumed the role of the preserver of Persian culture,
has in recent years offered its respects to the poet through an abundant
outpouring of new scholarly essays.
Top
So, why are there so many views of Rumi, and so many ways to read him?
How can so many types of contemporary readers connect so intimately,
and apparently quite sincerely, with this long-dead medieval writer?
In his work, Rumi tells us over and over that he is attempting to put
into language the nature and significance of the invisible universe,
a task he freely admits can only be achieved in part. In "The Story
of Solomon and the Hoopoe," Rumi writes: "Do thou hear the
name of every thing from the knower? Hear the inmost meaning of the
mystery of He That Taught the Names. With us, the name of every thing
is its outward appearance, with the Creator, the name of every thing
is its inward reality."1
The best explanation for Rumi's popularity may simply be that he was
a very wonderful poet-uniquely capable of transcending "outward
appearances" and conjuring up the mystical "inward reality,"
yet entirely realistic and modest about the limitations of his words-and
there are very few such writers in the world. It also must be remembered
that the Mathnawi, Rumi's longest work, is a Persian classic and by
itself would ensure his literary immortality.
Another part of Rumi's very broad appeal may derive from his genuinely
cosmopolitan character; if many types of people today feel linked to
Rumi, it may be because in his lifetime he enjoyed unusually good relations
with diverse groups. Born in or near Balkh in the province of Khorosan,
in what is now Afghanistan-an area with Buddhist, Islamic, Christian,
Zoroastrian and Jewish traditions-Rumi apparently was familiar with
all those religions and often friendly with their practitioners. After
the death of his first wife, an Islamic woman, Rumi chose as his second
wife a woman many people believed to be of Christian origin. This second
marriage took place, somewhat remarkably, at the time of the Crusades,
when large portions of the Christian and Islamic worlds were preoccupied
with conquering each other. The hagiographers tell us that there was
no more beautiful tribute to Rumi's universality than his funeral, a
forty-day marathon of grieving attended by distraught, weeping Muslims,
Christians, Jews, Greeks, Arabs and Persians.
Then again, the loose, rambling structure of Rumi's work-especially
the Mathnawi, which is full of free associations and abrupt changes
of topic-makes for a grab-bag style of poetry, capable of engaging many
different people because it contains a wealth of topics. Some of the
slightly chaotic quality of Rumi's works may be attributed partly to
the fact that he did not write it down himself. Rather, he dictated
his poems and musings to scribes who followed him about, attempting
to keep up with his fast-paced mind. The scholar Annemarie Schimmel
in the Triumphal Sun tells us something about the conditions under which
Rumi's mysterious changeable poetry was produced:
The looseness of the Mathnawi, which most readers find difficult to
appreciate, is reminiscent of the form of mystical sessions [which Rumi
held with his disciples]; the master gives some advice or expresses
an opinion; some visitor or disciple may utter a word; he takes it up,
spins a new tale out of it, is caught by some verbal association- very
common in the Islamic languages with their almost infinite possibilities
of developing different meanings from one Arabic root-then, he may become
enraptured and recite some verses, and thus the evening passes in an
enchanted atmosphere; but it would be difficult to remember the wonderful
stories and points the next day in any logical sequence.2
As for Western readers, there is another important reason for Rumi's
surprisingly strong appeal today: his ability to evoke ecstasy from
the plain facts of nature and everyday life. One often gets the sense
that merely to draw breath, or catch sight of another creature, are
immensely pleasurable events. Many of Rumi's poems convey feelings of
great joy in being able to play any sort of role at all in the natural
order. And such confident expressions of belonging and pleasure are
too rare in the technologically sophisticated, but socially fragmented
modern world. Consider this translation of a section of the Mathnawi,
by Jonathan Star:
My soul wants to fly away when your presence calls it so sweetly.
My soul wants to take flight, when you whisper, "Arise."
A fish wants to dive from dry land into the ocean, when it hears the
drum beating "Return."
A Sufi, shimmering with light, wants to dance like a sunbeam when darkness
summons him.3
In short, Rumi's work responds to an increasing need many of us have
for an instinctive and mystical response to the ordinary events of life,
and for a more joyful daily existence. For, although Rumi's work is
peppered throughout with biting social commentary, cynicism and a mordant
wit, the overall effect of reading his poetry is very encouraging, as
if some small portion of his vast inner state has been transferred to
the reader. Moreover, Rumi was indeed a very great love poet-whether
his work is interpreted in an earthy, secular context, or within a strictly
spiritual framework. His aching longing for Shams and his poetical dissections
of the many states of love provide readers with a vocabulary for exploring
the wide array of their own emotional and spiritual states. The love
documented by Rumi is very complex, a privilege and a torment, laced
with many shades of sadness and joy and bewilderment. There is little
sentimentality for its own sake in Rumi's work; his meditations on love
often shed light upon its turbulent and unsettling aspects, while also
illuminating its transformational potential. In the Divan-e, Rumi writes:
Top
You are in love with me, I shall make you perplexed.
Do not build much, for I intend to have you in ruins.
If you build two hundred houses in a manner that the bees do;
I shall make you as homeless as a fly.
If you are the mount Qaf in stability.
I shall make you whirl like a millstone.
These sorts of meditations on love probably are eagerly read today by
many in the West, not just for their superb imagery, but because readers
today desperately want to probe love more fully and participate in its
most mysterious and inchoate aspects. Yet we find ourselves in a culture
that sometimes approaches love as a dull series of kitschy moments,
the better to patronize it.
Rumi's contemporary relevance can also be found in the frequently severe
and unsettling circumstances of his life. Like many people in both the
Islamic and Western worlds today, Rumi lived through extraordinary social
and political tumult. It appears that the poet was able to convey the
chaotic nature of poetry and life very convincingly because his own
life was placed in uncertainty and danger on many occasions, during
both his childhood and his adult years, sometimes due to political instability,
and other times due to profound inner change. Many modern readers, finding
themselves in tumultuous conditions, take comfort in the way the poet
transcended and triumphed over harrowing circumstances.
The area in which Rumi's family lived during his early childhood was
under threat of the Mongol invasion. There are many indications that
the terror unleashed in the Islamic world by the Mongols was the principal
reason his family left its native Khorosan while Rumi was still a young
child. However, a few texts suggest that Rumi's father decided to leave
because he did not enjoy the level of influence he felt he deserved
as a distinguished Islamic thinker.
In either case, Rumi, perhaps at the tender age of ten or twelve, along
with many of his relatives, fled Khorosan, an area in which the family
had lived for generations. They began an approximately ten-year, fifteen
hundred-mile trek and eventually reestablished themselves in Konya in
Asiatic Anatolia, or modern Turkey. Along the way, young Rumi lost his
mother, one of his father's four wives, and most probably experienced
numerous other sorrows and deprivations. Scholars have suggested that
Rumi's imperturbable inner state and his mystic sensibility were cultivated
in large part as a defense against the transience, loss and terror he
endured during his childhood.
After settling in Konya, Rumi apparently had a fairly stable early
adulthood, becoming his father's intellectual successor and traveling
to meet other scholars. Initially, he settled into the fairly conventional
life of an Islamic lawyer-divine and scholar and enjoyed great prestige
in Konya. Yet he was to purposefully rattle his own secure existence
at the age of thirty-seven when he suddenly formed his extraordinary
mystical friendship with the eccentric dervish Shams al-Din of Tabriz.
After encountering Shams, Rumi's life changed as much as it had when
he had left Khorosan as a child. As the literary critic Fatemeh Keshavarz
so aptly puts it: "Shams awakened in Rumi the wayfarer who had
to free himself of rational and speculative knowledge to seek new horizons."
If encountering Shams was an experience of freedom and enlightenment
for Rumi, losing the dervish was one of great loss and heartbreak, intensified
by the possibility that Shams was murdered by one of Rumi's own sons.
Rumi's fascinating and itinerant, if sometimes harrowing childhood,
as well as his watershed encounter with his mystical Beloved Shams,
and his subsequent creation of brilliant lyrics, are stories which can
be grasped by both medieval and modern people. These stories, as much
as Rumi's poetry, resound with people today caught up in social upheaval
beyond their control, as well as those who deliberately unravel their
own conventional security in search of more meaningful lives.
Taken
from: www.khamush.com
Rumi, A Spiritual Biography (Lives & Legacies) by Leslie Wines
Excerpt kindly provided by Eileen Judd
Top
|