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The great
Turkish mystic and poet Mevlana Celaleddin-i Rumi was born in Belh, in
Afghanistan, on September 30, 1207 A.D. His father Bahaeddin Veled, who was
known as Sultan-ul Ulema (the king of the learned men), was a renowned scholar
who, however, raised the ire of the established academia of his times by
critisizing the tenets of Greek philosophy. This and the start of the Mongol
invasions made him decide to leave Belh. This was when Mevlana was only five
years old. The family, which reached
Anatolia after stopping
in Yemen and Damascus, lived in Larende (Karaman)
for seven years; and then, upon the invitation of the
Selcuk Sultan Alaeddin
Keykubat, Bahaeddin Veled settled in
Konya in
Central Anatolia
in 1220. Meanwhile Mevlana
married Gevher Hatun in Karaman; his son, Sultan Veled, was born in 1226 in
the same town. Bahaeddin Veled, Mevlana's father, was a cultured scholar and
mystic.
His knowledge, his discourses
and his environment played a significant role in shaping and
educating Mevlana, who advanced so rapidly that when his father
died in 1230, he had already become a scholar and a teacher at
the tender age of 23. Thus it would not bean exaggeration to say
that Mevlana had learned the fundamentals of philosophy and
mysticism from his father.
If a day won't come
when the monuments to institutionalized religion lie in ruin
.....then my beloved,
then we are really in trouble!
When Bahaeddin Veled died in 1230, a friend and
a student of his, Burhaneddin Muhakkik Tirmizi, came to
Konya and functioned as
Mevlana's teacher for 9 years, before he relocated in
Kayseri and died there
in 1242.
Mevlana also was educated in the two major
university centers of the time, Aleppo and Damascus; he was a well rounded
scholar who had accumulated much theological and scientific knowledge. He had
such command of Turkish,
Persian, Arabic, Greek that he could write poetry in all four languages.
Mevlana, who first met Semseddin Tebrizi in
1244, so fell under his spell that the emergence of Mevlana as mystic poet is
traced to the effect Semseddin Tebrizi had on him. Much, most of it speculative,
has been said about the personality and identity of Semseddin Tebrizi, this
wielder of such a powerful effect on the spirit of Mevlana, himself the
strangest of personalities.
Everything seems to point to Semseddin Tebrizi's
being a sufi master of such
extraordinary knowledge and power that he could touch and light the torch in
Mevlana's heart, in a sense transforming him. It was also Sems, who taught
Mevlana the ritual dance-like practice callled
Sem'a and the latter
concieved it almost as a form of
prayer or meditation. Sems,
who must have reached rarefied spiritual heights, was a fearless man who would
make no concessions to the prejudices, of the masses or the learned, either in
behavior or in speech. So he made a great number of enemies and was not at all
popular in Konya.
Therefore he left Konya
and went to Damascus in 1245; but returned to
Konya when Mevlana
implored him to, such was the older man's attachment to Sems. Two years later,
in 1247, Sems dissappeared in a mysterious manner and was never heard of again.
Mevlana Celaleddin-i Rumi's masterpiece, his six
volume Mesnevi consisting of 25700 couplets, is regarded as the most outstanding
work of Persian-Islamic
mysticism. It is not clear when Mevlana started writing the Mesnevi, though it
is known that he started on the second volume of his magnum opus in 1264.
This masterpiece of
Islam's mystic literature
was written in the form of poetry which included philosophical, mystical, and
spiritual messages and could in a sense be considered allegories which carry
deep spiritual and religious meanings.
His second masterpiece, Divan-i Sems, though
smaller in size is no less important from a literary and mystical standpoint.
Divan-i Sems or (Divan-i Kebir as it is sometimes called) is a collection of
verses (gazels) in which Mevlana reached heights of poetry,
music and mysticism.
It is regarded as the mature expression of his consciousness of universal unity
(Vahdet-i Vucud).
Apart from these two masterpieces, Mevlana
produced works, called Fihi Ma-Fih, Mecalis-i Seba and Mektubat (or Letters)
which have all been translated into
Turkish, and also, in part
or in full, into Arabic, English, French and German.
Following a short bout with an illness Mevlana
died in Konya on December
17, 1273, whereupon Husameddin Celebi, a student and a disciple of his, stepped
into his place on the insistence of Mevlana's son Sultan Veled, upon the
former's death in 1284,
Sultan Veled in turn became the master and made important contributions to the
emergence of the sect which is called Mesnevi after Mevlana's name.
Crowns titles and riches love covets not
and when love's gaze falls upon a yearning heart
behold
the doors to His heart will open wide.
Mevlana was not only a great
poet and philosopher
but first and foremost he was a mystic, a spiritually touched man. His mind and
heart had reached for heights and depths of the spiritual world. In his vision
there were two universes which coincided in Man. The inner world was like an
endless infinite ocean, which could only be felt and seen with the eyes of the
heart, while the outer world was but like the passing foam which appears on the
surface of the waves emenating from that ocean.
of the secret wine
all drank but just a sip-so as to become
so as to exist.
But I
drank barrels and barrels of that wine
so as to become
a mirror-pure.
Mevlana also integrated a dualist approach in
his mind: In approaching issues pertaining to daily life he is a rationalist,
but in approaching spiritual and mystical matters he recognizes only the mastery
of the heart and emotions. According to him, the only way to approach absolute
being is through love; and God's love is everywhere, permeating everything. If
one were to love another being in the name of God, one would find a pathway
leading to the absolute. According to him everything in the universe, every
being, even matter itself - all are but manifestations of God and exist in God
and are united in the Absolute Being. Thus Mevlana views all existence as a
united whole. In a sense, one could call his vision that of Unity Consciousness.
This vision impelled Mevlana to transcend all differences and prejudices, and
formed the basis of his immense tolerance and of his real and deep humanism.
With these characteristics, Mevlana and his thought transcended the boundaries
of his time and thus he and his writings are still relevant and fresh in this
day and age, some 700 years after. The universality of his thought finds its
reflection in, for example, the famous verses where he says:
Come!
Come whoever you are.
Doesn't matter if you are an unbeliever.
Doesn't matter if you have fallen a thousand times.
Come!
Come whoever you are. For this is not the door of hopelessness.
Come,
Just as you are!
With the tens of thousands of verses he wrote,
and with the depths of spirituality he phantomed which helped him grasp
qualities of timelessness and humanistic universality, Mevlana and the sect
which was founded after him, have not only influenced the
Anatolian - Turkish
civilizations but indeed have had far-reaching influences on the intellectual
and artistic life of many individuals and nations.
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