The Masnavi, Book One (Oxford World's Classics)


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Contents
ix


Why the Prophet Conquered Mecca Yet Said,
‘The World is a Carcass’
240
Explanatory Notes
244
Glossary of Proper Names
267
Contents
x


I N T RO D U C T I O N
Rumi and Su
fism
Rumi has long been recognized within the Su
fi tradition as one of
the most important Su
fis in history. He not only produced the finest
Su
fi poetry in Persian, but was the master of disciples who later
named their order after him. Moreover, by virtue of the intense
devotion he expressed towards his own master, Rumi has become the
archetypal Su
fi disciple. From that perspective, the unprecedented
level of interest in Rumi’s poetry over the last couple of decades in
North America and Europe does not come as a total surprise. Once
his poetry 
finally began to be rendered into English in an attractive
form, which coincided with an increased interest in mysticism
among readers, this Su
fi saint who expressed his mystical teachings
in a more memorable and universally accessible form than any other
started to become a household name.
Rumi lived some 
300 years after the first writings of Muslim
mystics were produced. A distinct mystical path called ‘Su
fism’
became clearly identi
fiable in the late tenth and early eleventh cen-
turies with the compilation of the manuals and collections of biog-
raphies of past Su
fi saints. The authors of these works, who were
mostly from north-eastern Persia, traced the origins of the Su
fi trad-
ition back to the Prophet Mohammad, while at the same time
acknowledging the existence of comparable forms of mysticism
before his mission. They mapped out a mystical path by which the
Su
fi ascends towards the ultimate goal of union with God and know-
ledge of reality. More than two centuries before the time of the
eminent Su
fi theosopher Ebn Arabi (d. 1240), Sufis began to
describe their experience of annihilation in God and the realization
that only God truly exists. The illusion of one’s own independent
existence began to be regarded as the main obstacle to achieving this
realization, so that early Su
fis like Abu Yazid Bestami (d. 874) are
frequently quoted as belittling the value of the asceticism of some of
his contemporaries when it merely increased attention to themselves.
An increasing number of Su
fis began to regard love of God as the


means of overcoming the root problem of one’s own sense of being,
rather than piety and asceticism.
1
The Su
fi practice that is discussed the most in the early manuals
of Su
fism is listening to music, commonly referred to as ‘musical
audition’ (sama
). Listening to music, which often accompanied the
love poetry and mystical poetry that Su
fis themselves had begun to
write, while immersed in the remembrance of God and unaware of
oneself induced ecstasy in worshippers. The discussions in Su

manuals of spontaneous movements by Su
fis in ecstasy while listen-
ing to music and the e
fforts made to distinguish this from ordinary
dance, suggest that already this practice had started to cause a great
deal of controversy. Most of the Su
fi orders that were eventually
formed developed the practice of making such spontaneous move-
ments while listening to music, but the whirling ceremony of the
followers of Rumi is a unique phenomenon.
2
Although it is trad-
itionally traced back to Rumi’s own propensity for spinning round
in ecstasy, the elaborate ceremony in the form in which it has
become famous today was established only in the seventeenth
century.
3
The characteristics of the Su
fi mystic who has completed the path
to enlightenment is one of the recurrent topics in Su
fi writings of the
tenth and eleventh centuries, but students of Su
fism at the time
would tend to associate with several such individuals rather than
form an exclusive bond with one master. By the twelfth century,
however, the master–disciple relationship became increasingly
emphasized, as the 
first Sufi orders began to be formed. It was also
during this century that the relationship between love of God and
His manifestation in creation became a focus of interest, especially
among Su
fis of Persian origin, such as Ahmad Ghazali (d. 1126) and
Ruzbehan Baqli (d. 
1209).
4
The former’s more famous brother was
1
Translations of representative samples of the key texts of early Su
fism are available
in M. Sells, 

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