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Tribute to Professor Mojaddedi
by Abdullah Shariat
A Brief
Political Biography of Professor Sibghatullah Al-Mojaddedi
Sufism and Shariah
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SUFISM AND SHARI`AH,
FROM SHAYKH AHMAD SIRHINDI
BY FARIDUDDIEN RICE
The Shari`ah is of fundamental importance to the Sufi path. This point is very
strongly made by the great Naqshbandi Sufi, Shaykh Ahmad Sirhindi (also known as Imam
ar-Rabbani), in his letters. Here is a small excerpt from one of his letters, where he
clarifies this topic:
The Shari`ah has three parts: knowledge, action, and sincerity of motive (ikhlas);
unless you fulfil the demands of all these parts, you do not obey the Shari`ah. And when
you obey the Shari`ah you obtain the pleasure of God, which is the most supreme good in
this world and the Hereafter. The Qur'an says: "The pleasure of God is the highest
good." Hence, the Shari`ah comprehends all the good of this world and the next, and
nothing is left out for which one has to go beyond the Shari`ah.
The tariqah ["way"] and the haqiqah ["reality"] for
which the Sufis are known, are subservient to the Shari`ah, as they help to realize its
third part, namely, sincerity. Hence they are sought in order to fulfil the Shari`ah, not
to achieve something beyond the Shari`ah. The raptures and ecstasies which the Sufis
experience, and the ideas and truths which come to them in the course of their journey,
are not the goal of Sufism. They are rather myths and fancies on which the children of
Sufism are fed. One has to pass over them all and reach the stage of satisfaction (rida)
which is the final goal of suluk ["travelling", i.e. the Sufi path] and jadhbah
["overwhelming love"]. The purpose of traversing the stages of of tariqah
and haqiqah is nothing other than the realisation of ikhlas which involves
the attainment of rida. Only one out of a thousand Sufis is graced with the three
illuminations (tajalliyat sih ganah) and gnostic visions, given ikhlas and
elevated to the stage of rida.
[Quoted from "Sufism and Shari`ah: A study of Shaykh Ahmad Sirhindi's Effort to
Reform Sufism," by Muhammad Abdul Haq Ansari, pp. 221-2. Originally from Shaykh Ahmad
Sirhindi's letters, Vol. I:36.]
For those who may not have heard of Shaykh Ahmad Sirhindi, he lived in India in about
the 16th Century, and he reinvigorated and repurified Islam in India, after the highly
destructive anti-Islamic policies of the Moghul ruler Akbar. Most of the Naqshbandi
lineages today stem from Shaykh Ahmad Sirhindi -- this is an indication of his great
influence. I think there is a strong parallel between Shaykh Ahmad Sirhindi's time and the
world today, and so I think we can learn very much from this great Shaykh's life and
writings.
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