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Mohiuddin ibn El-Arabi (1165-1240) is one of the great Sufis of the Middle Ages whose
life and writings are shown nowadays to have deeply penetrated the thought of East and West alike. He was known to the Arabs
as Sheikh El-Akbar, 'the Greatest Sheikh', and to the Christian West by a direct translation of this title: 'Doctor Maximus'.
He died in the thirteenth century. When Came the Title? Jafar the son of Yahya of Lisbon determined to find the Sufi 'Teacher of the Age', and
he travelled to Mecca as a young man to seek him. There he met a mysterious stranger, a man in a green robe, who said to him
before any word had been spoken: The Vision at Mosul A Seeker well versed in inducing significant inner experiences still suffered from the
difficulty of interpreting them constructively. He applied to the great sheikh Ibn El-Arabi for guidance about a dream which
had deeply disturbed him when he was at Mosul, in Iraq. He had seen the sublime Master Maaruf of Karkh as if seated in the middle of the fire
of hell. How could the exalted Maaruf be in hell? What he lacked was the perception of his own state. Ibn El-Arabi, from his understanding
of the Seeker's inner self and its rawness, realized that the essentials were seeing Maaruf surrounded by fire. The fire was
explained by the undeveloped part of the mind as something within which the great Maaruf was trapped. Its real meaning was
a barrier between the state of Maaruf and the state of the Seeker. If the Seeker wanted to reach a state of being equivalent to that of Maaruf, the realm
of attainment signified by the figure of Maaruf, he would have to pass through a realm symbolized in the vision by an encircling
fire. Through this interpretation the Seeker was able to understand his situation and to address
himself to what he had still to experience. This mistake had been in supposing that a picture of Maaruf was Maaruf, that a fire
was hell-fire. It is not only the impression (Naqsh) but the correct picturing of the impression, the art which is called
Tasvir (the giving of meaning to a picture), which is the function of the Rightly Guided Ones. The Three Forms of Knowledge Ibn El-Arabi of Spain instructed his followers in this most ancient dictum: There are three forms of knowledge. The first is intellectual knowledge, which is in
fact only information and the collection of facts, and the use of these to arrive at further intellectual concepts. This is
intellectualism. Second comes the knowledge of states, which included both emotional feeling and strange
states of being in which man thinks that he has perceived something supreme but cannot avail himself of it. This is emotionalism. Third comes real knowledge, which is called the Knowledge of Reality. In this form,
man can perceive what is right, what is true, beyond the boundaries of thought and sense. Scholastics and scientists concentrate
upon the first form of knowledge. Emotionalists and experientialists use the second form. Others use the two combined, or
either one alternatively. But the people who attain to truth are those who know how to connect themselves with
the reality which lies beyond both these forms of knowledge. These are the real Sufis, the Dervishes who have Attained. Truth She has confused all the learned of Islam, A Higher Love The ordinary lover adores a secondary phenomenon. I love the Real. The Special Love As the full moon appears from the night, so appears From sorrow comes the perception of her: the eyes More beauties are silenced: her fair quality is Even to think of her harms her subtlety (thought is Her fleeting wonder eludes thought. When description tried to explain her, she overcame it. Because it is trying to circumscribe. If someone seeking her lowers his aspirations (to Attainments of a Teacher People think that a Sheikh should show miracles and manifest illumination. The requirement
in a teacher, however, is only that he should possess all that the disciple needs. The Face of Religion Now I am called the shepherd of the desert gazelles, My heart can take on any appearance. The heart varies in accordance whit variations
of the innermost consciousness. It may appear in form as a gazelle meadow, a monkish cloister, an idol-temple, a pilgrim Kaaba,
the tablets of the Torah for certain science, the bequest of the leaves of the Koran. My duty is the debt of Love. I accept freely and willingly whatever burden is placed
upon me. Love is as the love of lovers, except that instead of loving the phenomenon, I love the Essential. That religion,
that duty, is mine, and is my faith. A purpose of human love is to demonstrate ultimate, real love. This is the love which
is conscious. The other is that which makes man unconscious of himself. Study by Analogy It is related that Ibn El-Arabi refused to talk in philosophical language with anyone,
however ignorant or however learned. And yet people seemed to benefit from keeping compay with him. He took people on expeditions,
gave them meals, entertained them with talk on hundred topics. Someone aked him: 'How can you teach when you never seem to speak of teaching?' Ibn El-Arabi said: 'It is by analogy:' And he told this parable. A man once buried some money for security under a certain tree. When he came back for
it, it was gone. Someone had laid bare the roots and borne away the gold. He went to a sage and told him his trouble, saying: 'I am sure that there is no hope
of finding my treasure.' The sage told him to come back after a few days. In the mean time the sage called upon all the physicians of town, and asked them whether
they had prescribed the root of a certain tree as a medicine for anyone. One of them had, for one of his patients. The sage called this man, and soon found out that it was he who had the money. He took
possession of it and returned it to its rightful owner. 'In a similar manner,' said Ibn El-Arabi, 'I find out what is the real intent of the
disciple, and how he can learn. And I teach him.' The Sufi who knows the Ultimate Truth acts and speaks in a manner which takes into consideration
the understanding, limitations and dominant concealed prejudices of his audience. To the Sufi, worship means knowledge. Through knowledge he attains sight. The Sufi abandons the tree 'I's. He does not say 'for me', 'with me', or 'my property'.
He must not attribute anything to himself. Something is hidden in an unworthy shell. We seek lesser objects, needless of the prize
of unlimited value. The capacity of interpretation means that one can easily read something said by a wise
man in two totally opposite manners. Straying from the Path Whoever strays form the Sufi Code will in no way attain to anything worthwhile; even
though he acquire a public reputation which resounds to the heavens. Al Hallaj was a legendary Iranian Sufi master who lived in between 858 - 922 AD. Al Hallaj was one of the earliest Sufi masters, he lead his life as a dervish wanderer, he would often go into trans where he felt one with all the creation, existence, with God. God), something people at the time found offensive and could not understand, because of that. Al Hallaj was persecuted and found guilty of heresy. He found an unfortunate and brutal death. Al Hallaj before put to death said: Now stands no more between Truth and me Al Hallaj inspired many subsequent Sufi mystics including Rumi. Here are two poems where Rumi talks about al Hallaj, following is al Hallaj's poem on God. In the early morning hour, She ask, "Do you love me or yourself more? He says, "Theres nothing left of me. This is how Hallaj said, I am God, The ruby and the sunrise are one. Completely become hearing and ear, Work. Keep digging your well. Submit to a daily practice. Keep knocking, and the joy inside Hallaj said what he said and went to the origin I cut a cap's worth of cloth from his robe, Years ago, I broke a bunch of roses From Hallaj, I learned to hunt ions, I was a frisky colt. He broke me A person comes to him naked. It's cold. "Jump in and get it," he says. It's a live bear that has fallen in upstream, "How long does it take!" Hallaj yells from the bank.
A little part of a story, a hint. "Before" does not outstrip Him, O Friend! we are near you in friendship, That Friend brought me up with great care and attention; Seek knowledge which unravels mysteries There is a world outside Islam and Disbelief, Whenever I prostrate my head He is the one to whom I bow;
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