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Book
of Wisdoms
al-Hikam al-‘Ata'iyy
©Nuh Ha
Mim Keller 2000
Infinitude
is the native land from whence Allah has created the soul, then summoned
it again upon the tongue of His messengers (Allah bless them and give them
peace) from its exile. This is the first of a series of articles the
interpreter has been asked to write on "traditional Islamic
spirituality," a science that deals with answering this summons, lifting
the heart from the narrowness of the self to the limitlessness of the
knowledge and love of the Divine.
People
have spoken and written much about Sufism, as the discipline is known, but
these articles shall endeavor to understand it in its own context by
translating, Allah willing, Ibn ‘Ata' Illah’s famous Book of Wisdoms
(al-Hikam al-‘Ata'iyya), a classical manual of spiritual development,
together with some commentary on it. One either has a tariqa and a sheikh or
one does not, and Ibn ‘Ata' Illah is writing without apology for those who
do, although the insights he raises may interest many others.
The
interpreter conveys this knowledge by the authorization of Sheikh ‘Abd al-Rahman
al-Shaghouri, from Muhammad Sa‘id al-Kurdi, from Muhammad al-Hashimi, from
Ahmad al-‘Alawi, from Muhammad al-Buzidi, from Muhammad Qaddur al-Wakili,
from Abu Ya‘za al-Mahaji and Muhammad ibn ‘Abd al-Qadir, from al-Arabi al-Darqawi,
from ‘Ali al-Jamal, from al-‘Arabi ibn ‘Abdullah, from Ahmad ibn
‘Abdullah, from Qasim al-Khassasi, from Muhammad ibn ‘Abdullah, from
‘Abd al-Rahman al-Fasi, from Yusuf al-Fasi, from ‘Abd al-Rahman al-Majdhub,
from ‘Ali al-Sanhaji al-Dawwar, from Ibrahim al-Fahham, from Ahmad Zarruq,
from Ahmad al-Hadrami, from Yahya al-Qadiri, from ‘Ali ibn Wafa, from
Muhammad Wafa Bahr al-Safa, from Dawud al-Bakhili, from Ibn ‘Ata' Illah al-Iskandari
the author of the work (Allah be well pleased with them all of them), who
says:
1.
One of the signs of relying on deeds is loss of hope when a misstep occurs.
The
sheikh begins his book with this key aphorism because it is of the adab
or "proper way" of travelling the spiritual path to focus upon tawhid
or the "Divine Oneness," in this context meaning to rely upon Allah,
not on works, since
"Allah
created you and that which you do" (Qur’an 37:96).
The
method of the spiritual ascent is threefold, consisting of knowledge (‘ilm),
practice (‘amal), and the resultant state (hal) bestowed by Allah. Knowledge
here means everything conveyed to us by the Holy Prophet (Allah bless him and
give him peace), which is the content of the Sacred Law or shari‘a.
The practice of this knowledge, inwardly and outwardly, with heart and limbs,
is the spiritual path or tariqa. The resultant state, Allah’s drawing
near to the heart that thus draws near to Him, is the dawning of the Divine
Presence upon the soul, termed by Sufis "ultimate reality" or haqiqa.
Ibn
‘Ata' Illah, as a spiritual guide, is concerned in this work with the second
moment of this ascent, that of way and works, so begins his book by letting
the traveller know that the matter of his spiritual progress is in Allah’s
hands alone. Discouragement at the inevitable mistakes one makes in the path
is a sign of relying on one’s deeds rather than on Allah.
Works,
whether prayer, or the dhikr or "remembrance" of Allah, or
fasting, or jihad, do not cause one to reach the end of the path, but are
merely proper manners before the majesty of the Divine while on it. Just as
putting one’s net in the sea does not produce fish, though one must keep it
there so that if Allah sends fish they can be caught—so too works are a net,
and their spiritual outcomes are from Allah. Abu Hurayra (Allah be well
pleased with him) heard the Holy Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
say:
"None
of you shall be saved by his works." A man said, "Not even you
yourself, O Messenger of Allah?" He said, "Not even me myself,
unless Allah envelopes me in mercy from Him. But aim to do right" (Muslim,
4.2169: 2816).
Imam
Nawawi comments:
The
outward purport of these hadiths [n: of which Muslim relates several] bears
out the position of those who are in the right, that no one deserves reward
and paradise for his acts of obedience. As for the words of Allah Most High
"Enter
paradise for that which you have done" (Qur’an 16:32),
"That is
paradise, which you have been bequeathed for what you used to do"
(Qur’an 7:43),
and
similar verses that indicate that paradise is entered by virtue of works, they
do not contradict these hadiths. Rather, the meaning of the verses is that
entering paradise is because of works, although divinely given success (tawfiq)
to do the works, and being guided to have sincerity in them, and their
acceptability are the mercy of Allah Most High and His favor (Sharh Sahih
Muslim, 17.160–61).
The
true spiritual path is one of gratitude. Abu Sulayman al-Darani used to say,
"How can a sane man be conceited about his spiritual works, when his
works are but a gift from Allah and a blessing from Him that he should thank
Him for" (Nata’ij al-afkar, 1.114). And Abu Madyan has said,
"The heartbrokenness of the sinner is better than the forcefulness of the
obedient" (Diwan, 50).
Ibn
‘Ata' Illah in this aphorism is apprising the traveller not to be veiled
from the true path by his own high resolve. While irada or
"will" is presupposed by the way, indeed the word murid or
"disciple" is derived from it, the path ultimately sublimates it
into its opposite through tawhid, disclosing it to be a mere cause,
conjoined with the soul’s ascent not out of logical necessity but out of
Allah’s pure largesse. For this reason some sheikhs term a traveller of the
former spiritual vantage a murid or "desirer," and one of the
latter a faqir or "needy." The prophet Moses (upon whom be
blessings and peace) said when he reached the land of Midian,
"My Lord, I
am truly in need of what good You have sent down to me" (Qur’an
28:24).
This
humble sincerity of slavehood, or we could say realism, enables the genuine
spiritual traveller to benefit in the path from both his good and his evil.
He
benefits from his good by not seeing it as from himself, for as Abu Bakr al-Wasiti
says, "The closest of all things to Allah’s loathing is beholding the
self and its actions" (‘Uyub al-nafs, 39), that is, because it
contradicts tawhid, for Allah says,
"Whatever
blessing you have, it is from Allah" (Qur’an 16:53).
And
he benefits from his evil by his faith (iman) that it is evil, which is itself
an act of obedience; and by repenting from it, which rejoices Allah Most High.
Anas ibn Malik (Allah be well pleased with him) relates from the Holy Prophet
(Allah bless him and give him peace) that he said:
Truly,
Allah rejoices more at the atonement of His servant when he repents to Him
than one of you would if he were on his riding camel in an empty tract of
desert, and it got away from him with all his food and water on it, and he
gave up all hope of finding it, so he came to a tree and laid down in its
shade, having despaired of ever seeing it again. While lying there, he
suddenly finds it standing beside him, and he seizes its halter, and
overjoyed, cries, "O Allah, You are my slave, and I am your lord,"
making a mistake out of sheer joy" (Muslim, 4.2104: 2747).
The
secret of true repentance (tawba) in the spiritual path is this divine
rejoicing it is met with from Allah Most High. Abul Hasan al-Shadhili, the
sheikh of Ibn ‘Ata' Illah’s own sheikh, used to daily pray to Allah:
"And when we disobey You, show us even greater mercy than You do when we
obey You" (Invocations, 27).
Ibn
‘Ata' Illah made this the first aphorism of his Book of Wisdoms to
apprise the traveller that when failings happen, there is also work to be
done: to repent to Allah, to realize that Allah is generous, and to hope for
the best from the spiritual path. The mark of relying on Allah is that one’s
hope is undiminished. The mark of relying on one’s self is that it soars
until there is a misstep, when it plummets along with its injured pride.
Discouragement in the path is an incomprehension of the Divine Omnipotence,
while certitude in the path and in one’s Lord is of the adab of those
who know Allah.
Abu
Madyan al-Ansari, Shu‘ayb, and al-‘Arabi al-Shawwar. Al-Minan al-rabbaniyya
al-wahbiyya fi al-ma’athir al-Ghawthiyya al-Shu‘aybiyya. Compiled by al-Shawwar,
Edited by Muhammad al-Hashimi (as Diwan al-Qutb al-Rabbani al-‘Arif
bi Llah al-Ghawth al-Samadani al-Shaykh Sayyidi Shu‘ayb Abu Madyan ibn al-Husayn
al-Ansari [. . .]). Damascus, Matba‘a al-Taraqqi, 1357/1938.
al-Ansari,
Zakariyya, Mustafa al-‘Arusi, and ‘Abd al-Karim al-Qushayri. Nata’ij
al-afkar al-qudsiyya fi bayan ma‘ani Sharh al-Risala al-Qushayriyya.
[al-‘Arusi’s commentary on al-Ansari’s Sharh of al-Qushayri’s al-Risala.]
4 vols. Cairo. 1290/1873. Reprint. Damascus: ‘Abd al-Wakil al-Durubi, n.d.
Muslim
ibn al-Hajjaj. Sahih Muslim. Ed. Muhammad Fu’ad ‘Abd al-Baqi. 5
vols. Cairo 1376/1956. Reprint. Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, 1403/1983.
Muslim
ibn al-Hajjaj, and Yahya ibn Sharaf al-Nawawi. Sahih Muslim bi Sharh al-Nawawi.
18 vols. Cairo 1349/1930. Reprint (18 vols. in 9). Beirut: Dar al-Fikr,
1401/1981.
al-Shadhili,
Abul Hasan, and sheikhs of the Shadhiliyya tariqa. Invocations of the
Shadhili Order. Ed. and tr. by the writer. Amman: Dar Abul Hasan, 1418/1998.
al-Sulami,
Abu ‘Abd al-Rahman. ‘Uyub al-nafs wa adwiyatuha. Ed. Muhammad
Amin al-Faruqi. Damascus: Dar al-‘Uruba, 1418/1997.
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