The Other Side of Sufism
The Other Side of Sufism
The Other Side of Sufism
Compiled and Edited by Abu Sabhan This compilation is based mainly on critique of Sufism entitled Ilat-Tasawwuf Ya Ibbadallah, by ash-Shaikh Abu Bakr al-Djazairi, a renowned teacher in the Islamic University in al-Madinah al-Munawwarah, Saudi Arabia, and a preacher in the Prophets Masjid there. This booklet is also based on a discourse entitled al-Anwar ar-Rahmaniyyeh, by the late ash-Shaikh AbdurRahman al-Afriqi, in which he exposed the deviant tenets of the alTijaaniyyah Order, along with many other relevant works of different descents
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Among the statutes that Allah has prescribed for us is enjoining the right and forbidding the wrong, saying:
Let there be among you a group of people to call for good conduct, and enjoin the right and forbid the wrong, and those are prosperous ones. (3:104). In His infinite wisdom, Allah the Exalted allows one who is incapable of rectifying wrong by His hand to do so by his tongue, or at least to abhor it in his heart. The inability to do so indicates lack of Iman (faith). The punishment for not enjoining the right and forbidding the wrong is a grave one. The Prophet said: which means, You must enjoin the good and forbid the wrong, or else Allah will soon send upon you His punishment; then you will supplicate Him and He will not respond to you. In another tradition, the Prophet said: which means, Or else, Allah will turn you might against your own selves. 1 It is in application of this ordinance and in response to those concerned Muslims on the North American Continent and elsewhere, that I present this critique on Sufism. It would, Insha Allah, prove useful to put in the hands of those Muslims who are unaware of the hidden dangers of Sufism, and who, due to their shallow knowledge of Islam, or for other reasons, are duped into believing that salvation is attained only by way of ascetic mystical doctrines, and that the relationship between man and Allah is maintained through a few self-appointed priests. Deviation from the right path led some Muslim rulers at certain stages of history to believe the perfection of thought could be reached by mixing Greek philosophies with Islamic beliefs. They contaminated the purity and simplicity of Islam as a way of life. This opened
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2 3
Al-Khawwarij, or the Kharijites: A party of heretics or schematics, including a sect called al-Harooriyyeh, so called because they split with the Muslims, or with the religion of Islam. Among them are those who rebelled against Ali, the fourth Khaleefah, may Allah be please with him. Rawafidh or Rafidheh: An army or military force which has deserted its leader. This term was first applied to a certain sect of the Shiites of al-Khoofeh, Iraq, who deserted Zaid, the great grand son of Ali, when he forbade them to speak against the companions of the Prophet. They had wanted Zaid to renounce the first two califs, Abu Bakr as-Siddiq and Umar bin al-Khattab, may Allah be pleased with them. When he refused to do so, the Rawafidh, who had pledged him allegiance, deserted him. Later this term became applied to all apostate or schismatics speaking against the companions of the Prophet.
4
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This day I have perfected your religion for you and completed My favour upon you, and have chosen for you al-Islam as religion. (Quran 5:3) The Prophet made a point of opening all the speeches with a warning against bidah (innovations) in matters of religion. His warning words signify: Verily, the best of speech is the Book of Allah, and the best of guidance that of Muhammad and the evil of all religious matters is their own innovations. Every innovation is a bidah, and every bidah is a misguidance, and very misguidance is in the Fire. 5 Al-Sunnah is the second decisive source of Islamic jurisprudence. Discarding all or part of it is an act of KUFR (disbelief). In fact, adhering to the Quran and Sunnah is a hedge against deviation as confirmed by the Prophet who said: I have left you with two things after which you shall never go astray, as long as you adhere to them: the Book of Allah and my Sunnah. The two shall never part until they attend my hawd al-Kawther. 6
(i.e. until the Day of Judgment). Adhering to anything other than the two aforementioned Divine sources is deviation itself. We are commanded by Allah to hold only to that which the
5 6
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7 8 9
cf. Quran, 59.7 Ibid. 3.32, 4.61 Ibid. 4.59 Ibid. 8.46 Ibid. 33.21
10 11
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May Allah SWT accept it as a humble effort on my behalf for His Sake and for the Sake of pleasing Him alone. Ameen.
Wa Assalam.
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He has chosen you (to conform to His religion) and has imposed no difficulty upon you in religion, the religion of your father Ibrahim. He named you Muslims both before (in the preceding Divine Scriptures) and in this Book. (22:78)
Ibn Kathir elaborated on this verse, saying: Allah has chosen the Muslims, honoured them, and distinguished them exclusively of other nations by the most honourable Messenger and the most perfect religion, and He has not overburdened them with more than they can bear.12
12
Imadud-Din Ibn Katheer, Tafseer al-Quran al-Adtheem. Exegets of the Great Quran
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13 14 15
W. Montgomery Watt, Islamic Philosophy and Theology, 1985, pp.37, 38 . N. Fatemi, Sufism, pp.49 M. Ibn Arabi, The Bezels of Wisdom, pp.3
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Muhiyddin Ibn Arabi, one of the leading authorities on Sufi mysticism, who captured the imagination and the adulation of Sufis around the world, was born in the year 560 A.H. (1165 A.D.), and pursued the study of the occult and the metaphysical doctrines of the Sufis. In his book Such learning and accompanying practices, R.J. Austin wrote, Often led Ibn Arabi, even while he was still young man in Seville, to spend long hours in the cemeteries communing with the spirits of the dead.16 He talked about his cemetery revelations as matters of fact, and managed to compile a massive compendium on Sufism entitled Al-Futoohat Al-Mekkiyyah (the Meccan Revelations). Of this, Ibn Arabi wrote, Some works I wrote at the command of God sent to me in sleep, or through mystical revelations. The other striking impression that Ibn Arabi wanted to leave on the readers of his Meccan Revelation is that he, too, as a spiritual and mystical figure, experienced the heaviness of revelation, resembling that of the Prophet.17 He noted that sometimes the pressure of mystical revelation was so strong that he felt compelled to finish a work before taking a rest.18 Allah the Exalted particularly condemns such claimants, saying:
16 17 18
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And who is more disbelieving than he who forges a lie against Allah, or says, It has been revealed to me, when nothing has been revealed to him, or who says, I will send down the like of which Allah has sent down. (6:93)
According to the Quran, revelation is of two kinds. The first is the revelation that came from Allah to His Prophets and Messenger through an angel, such as Jibreel (Gabriel). This came to an end with the death of the Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon him). The second is the Satanic communication, of which Allah says:
Shall I inform you on whom the Satan descends, on every habitual liar and sinner.(26: 221,222)
Muslims believe that the Prophet is the last of the Prophets, with whom the line of Prophethood is closed. Therefore, anyone who claims to be a prophet or a recipient of Divine revelation is an imposter and a heretic. And besides, it sounds quite eerie for a young man to spend long hours in cemeteries communing with the spirits of the dead. The Prophet was told by Allah SWT:
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Indeed, communion of this nature could very well lead to a theory such as pantheism. In order to substantiate his theosophical and pantheistic doctrine and make it appear Islamic, Ibn Arabi resorted to ta weel, which is giving far-fetched interpretations to selected verses of the Quran or Prophetic traditions from the Sunnah, changing their apparent meaning to one which falls in line with his beliefs, a technique which was used before him by all the Batini or secretive sects that strayed away from the path of Islam. He referred to Almighty Allah as Creator-Creature, and took pains to present the Divine Being in a theosophical context, and to convince his readers that Allahs creation springs from nothing other than His fundamental being.19 Thus, the God that Ibn Arabi believed in is, in reality, all the elements that constitute the universe: human, animal and every other existing thing. As an example he depicted his own master, as a divine reality. And to make sure his readers did not misconstrue his heresy, he further emphasized: In relation to existence, He (God) is the very essence of existing things. Thus in a certain sense, relative beings are elevated in themselves, since in truth they are none other than He who bears the name Abu Said al-Kharraz.20 From this heretical concept of Allah, one may deduce without limit, principles which contradict the prescripts and fundamental tenets and creeds evident in the Quran and the Sunnah. For example, man, as alleged by Son of Plato,21 is nothing less than God Himself, and since Firawn (Pharaoh) was a man, his declaration of being a god would have been true according to Ibn Arabis pantheistic doctrine. Furthermore, if nothing exists in reality but God, then every animal, regardless of its family, is in reality god also. And since all existing things have one essence, wine is nothing but water, and every forbidden (Haram) thing is lawful (Halal). There can never be more abhorrent heretical belief than pantheism. Allah the Exalted is far removed from what Ibn Arabi and his followers ascribe to Him. Allah says:
19 20 21
Ibid. Ibid. Because Ibn Arabis thinking is fundamentally Platonic, he was given the surname Son of Plato. Ibid.
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..There is none like unto Him; He is the All-Hearing, the All-Seeing. (42:11) And it does not befit believers to make far-fetched interpretations of the essence of Allah or His attributes. True Muslims accept them as they are given in the Quran or in the authentic traditions of the Prophet. The above verse is an informative statement which connotes a command from Allah to the believers not to impute to Him an attribute or name other than those given to Him by Himself or by His Messenger Muhammad in authentic traditions. Nor are they allowed to subject Allah to similitude or examples. There is a clear warning in Allahs word:
So put not forward similitudes for Allah (as there is nothing similar to Him, nor He resembles anything). Truly! Allah knows and you know not. (16:74)
The Sufis, like their masters, would have us believe that their doctrines originated in the Quranic verses. They interpret certain verses freely, both linguistically and theologically, to corroborate their beliefs and give them Quranic sanction. Besides giving Quranic verses different interpretations, they also reduce them to symbols and codes and juxtapose them in a metaphysical perspective. To give an example of the seriousness of this perversion of language by the Sufis, the following verse is cited which signifies:
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O mankind, reverence your Lord Who created you from a single person, and created therefrom his (female) mate, and from them both (Adam and Eve) scattered countless men and women. (4:1)
From these straightforward words, one can easily understand that Allah created Adam first, and, according to numerous verses, He fashioned him from earthly matter, and subsequently He created Eve from one of Adams ribs, as stated in the authentic traditions. In an attempt to substantiate his pantheistic beliefs, Ibn Arabi gave the above verse the following meaning: From him (Adam) came forth the mate and child, who all came from the Universal Nature, that is, God, Who is manifested in her (Natures) many forms in the form of Adam, in the form of Eve and in the form of the progeny.22 The Divine element, according to him, inhabits every being. Glory be to God, Ibn Arabi exclaimed, Who created things, being Himself their essence. 23
22 23
A.E. Affifi, The Mystical Philosophy of Ibn Arabi Ibid. pp. 135
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Monism: the doctrine that only one being exists (Oxford English Dictionary)
Vedanta: The chief Hindu philosophy, dealing mainly with the Upanishadic (book of Hinduism) doctrine of the identity of Brahman and Atman, which reached its highest development circa 800 A.D. through the philosopher Shankara. (Random House Dictionary)
26 27
Yoga: Although by definition its a mental and physical exercise however mostly used by heretics as a Union of the self with the supreme being.(Ibid)
28 29
Zoroastrianism: Majoosi, An Iranian religion, supposedly founded circa 900 B.C. by Zoraster, believing in supreme diety, Ahura Mazda, and a cosmic struggle between a spirit of good, Spenta Mainayu, and a spirit of evil, Angra Mainayu. Now chiefly represented by the Gabars of Iran and the Parsees of India. (R.H. Dictionary) Buddhism: a religion originated in India by Buddha, and later spreading to China and other Asian countries, holding that life is full of suffering caused by desire, and that the way to end that suffering is through enlightenment that enables one to halt the endless sequence of births and deaths to which one is otherwise subject. (Ibid)
30 31
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32 33 34 35
R.W.J. Austin, introductory note on Chapter 3 of Ibn Arabis, The Bezels of Wisdom, p.71 Sahih Muslim Cf. footnote 32. Ibn Arabi, op. cit.
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And they (Noahs people) said, Do not abandon your gods, neither Wad, Suwa, Yaghooth, Yaooq nor Nasr.(71:23)
On which Ibn Arabi commented: If they (Noahs people) had abandoned them, they would have become ignorant of the Reality to the extent that they them, for in every object of worship there is a reflection of Reality, whether it be recognized or not.36 The Reality to which Ibn Arabi refers is nothing but the divinity of his pantheistic beliefs. Yet his disciples, the Sufis, still argue that their doctrines are based on the teachings of Islam. However, the fact remains that their cardinal doctrines are not far from the Christian doctrine of incarnation, promoted by Mansoor el-Hallaj, one of the infamous Sufi leaders, who was crucified for claiming identity with God. I am He Whom I love, he exclaimed, He Whom I love is I; we are two souls cohabiting one body. If you see me you see Him and if you see Him you see me.37
36 37
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The following are the most important fundamentals of Sufism judged by the Quran and Sunnah so Muslims can warn themselves and others of how devastating it is for them:
v Structure of Sufi Orders v The Certified Sheikh v Al-Ahd (The Covenant of Allegiance) v The Ritual of Sufi Wird v Al-Khalwah (Seclusion) v Al-Kashf (Unveiling) v Al-Fanaa (Annihilation) v Manifest and Hidden Knowledge v Al-Aqtaab v Al-Awliyaa
38 39
Ibid. Ibid.
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Ibid. Ibid.
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2) THE CERTIFIED SHEIKH Another fundamental of the Sufi orders structure is the certified sheikh, necessary to give the murid his wird. This can also be given by the sheikhs deputy. But the sheikh himself is the supreme authority, the one from whom the khulafa (officials of the order) derive their positions. When a murid takes an oath it is really to the sheikh, although most will do it through the medium of their local deputy. In the sheikhs hands ultimately lies the invocation of formal sanctions for the murid. The main two laws pertaining to such a right are: v The murid must not argue with his sheikh nor ask from him any proof for what he orders the murid to do. v Whoever opposes his sheikh has broken the ahd (the covenant), and is cut off from the sheikh. Even if he stays bodily close to the sheikh, the door of Meddad (assistance) is closed to him.42 The Sunni Muslims believe that any single act of worship must be substantiated by the Quran and Sunnah only. Allah the Exalted says:
Say (to them), Produce your proof if you are truthful. (2:111)
42
Ibid.
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Saif an-Nasr, Seera of Hamidiyyeh, 1956 M. Gilsenan, Saints and Sufis in Modern Egypt, Oxford Press 1973
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All the Muslim ummah is agreed upon the fact that the Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon him) did not conceal any knowledge from his ummah, nor did he distinguish any of his companions with any particular knowledge. He conveyed the Divine Message as Allah commanded him in the best manner, for which he deserves to be the best of all the Prophets and Messengers of Allah. Allah the Glorious says in the Holy Quran:
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And who is more disbelieving than he who forges a lie against Allah, or says, It has been revealed to me, when nothing has been revealed to him?(6:93)
The Prophet has severely warned those who forge lies against him, saying: Do not forge lies against me, because he who does so enters the Fire.46 And he also said: He who wilfully or intentionally forges a lie against me, let him occupy his seat in the Fire.47
3) AL-AHD (The Covenant of Allegiance) The covenant is one of the cardinal principles of Sufism, upheld by all Sufi orders. It is taken during a ceremony in which the sheikh and murid hold hands, fingers interlaced and eyes closed. Then the sheikh or deputy administers the oath to the murid that he takes the sheikh as his leader and his guide before Allah the Most High, according to the way and the tareeqah (order) of the sheikh, that he shall adhere to this order throughout his life, never converting to another, and that he pledges loyalty and obedience to the sheikh. Then the sheikh recites the verse, Verily, those who take the allegiance to you take it to Allah.(48.10) Then he instructs the murid in the wird . He then asks, Have you accepted me as a sheikh and spiritual guide before Allah the Most High? The murid replies, I have accepted, and the sheikh says, And we have accepted. Then, sheikh and murid alternately recite the profession of faith, or the testification of faith, and the ceremony ends with the murid kissing the sheikhs hand.
46
Sahih Muslim
47 Ibid
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48 49 50
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ii)
iii)
iv)
Abu Naeem al Asbahani reported in his book Hilyatul Awliyaa that Mutarrif al-Shikh-khir said: Once I visited Zaid bin. Soohan while he was with a group of people circulating a sheet of paper on which were written statements such as, Allah is our Lord, Muhammad is
51 52 53
Masaail al-Imam Ahmad vol.ii p.185 Al-Jami li-Ahkaam al-Quran, Vol. i p.273 Ali H. Abdul Hameed, Al-Baiah Between Sunnah and Bidah pp.23
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4) THE RITUAL OF SUFI Wird The wird is another central principle of the Sufi orders, which literally means a set portion of the Quran, or any other specific act of worship, which the worshipper commits himself to recite or perform, either at a particular time or occasion or on a regular basis. But according to Sufism, the wird, or dhikr, is a practice of repeating the name of Allah, and a set of invocations assigned to the murid by his sheikh or deputy as a liturgy of communion. They involve beseeching the dead, and seeking help from sources other than Allah. The Sufi dhikr is of two forms, the dhikr al-khafiy or hidden dhikr with the repetition being in the mind or muttered in a low voice; and the dhikr al-jaliy, the open recitation, in which the Sufi murid recites aloud. Sufis distinguish three types of dhikr: the dhikr of the common people (al-awaam), which involves uttering repeatedly the Kalimah, meaning, There is no God but Allah, Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah; the dhikr of the upper class, which involves uttering repeatedly the single name of God, Allah, or the word haiy (the living); and the dhikr of the elite, which involves uttering repeatedly the divine pronoun hu (He). The last two types of dhikr have never been unique to Islam. Sufi dhikr, however, is not limited to the above three types: In many cases it includes litanies and hymns, or as the Sufis prefer to call them, tawassulaat (supplications or petitions), to the Prophet and his family. Supplicating beings other than Allah entails associating partners with Him, a practice which is not only condemned by Allah and His Messenger but it renders a worshippers good deeds null and void. Allah says:
54
Ibid.
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And it has been revealed to you and to those before you: If you attribute partners to Allah, your deed shall surely be in vain and you shall certainly be among the losers.(39:65)
The type of dhikr practiced communally by Sufis is not merely recited; it is rather performed in their hadhrah55. Sufi dhikr ranges from quietism to ecstatic and hysterical behaviour. In many orders, the ritual has a section called samaa in which singing, dancing and playing musical instruments, such as the flute and the drum, are highly important. The dhikr which the Prophet enjoined should be recited individually, and only according to the manner prescribed by him. Making dhikr in a different manner, or communally, is an innovation leading to misguidance. This is particularly true when such a ritual is accompanied by prohibited practices such as music, against which there is a direct reference in the Quran:
And of men is he who take idle talk to lead men astray from the path of Allah. (31:6)
The prominent companions of the Prophet confirmed that the idle talk referred to in the above verse means singing and music56. The Prophet verified this fact in the hadeeth which says: There will be some people who will consider legal fornication, and the wearing of silk, the consumption of intoxicant drinks and the use of musical instruments.57 It is a must for all Muslims to adhere to the two Divine sources of Islam, the Quran and the Sunnah. The Prophets companions (may Allah be pleased with them all) developed great
55 56 57
Ibn Katheer Bukhari, Abu Dawood & at-Tirmidthi Ash-Shatibi, Al-Itisam, Vol.i 133
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5) KHALWAH (Seclusion) The literal meaning of khalwah is seclusion or retreat, but it has a different connotation in Sufi terminology: It is the act of total self-abandonment in desire for the Divine Presence. In complete seclusion, the Sufi continuously repeats the name of God as a highest form of dhikr. In his book, Journey to the Lord of Power, Muhiyid-Did ibn Arabi (1165-1240 A.D.) discusses the stages through which the Sufi passes in his khalwah. He suggests: The Sufi should shut his door against the world for forty days and occupy himself with remembrance of Allah, that is to keep repeating, Allah, Allah Then, Almighty God will spread before him the degrees of the kingdom as a test. First, He will discover the secrets of the mineral world. If he occupies himself with dhikr, He (God) will unveil to the secrets of the vegetable world, then the secrets of the animal world, then the infusion of the world of life-force into lives, then the surface sign (the light of the Divine Names, according to Abdul-Karim al-Jeeli, the books translator), then the degrees of speculative sciences, then the world of formation and adornment and beauty, then the degrees of the qutb (the soul or pivot of the universe see #16)59). Then he will be
58 59
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Khalwah is an obligatory practice to be undertaken by seeker of God, which will give him an infusion of divine knowledge, according to promises of Ibn al-Arabi and his disciples. There are many conditions of Khalwah; they include, according to al-Tijaaniyyah Order: v Entering the place of khalwah the way a masjid (mosque) is entered, performing ablution before entering it, seeking help from the spirits of the sheikhs of the Order, through the medium of the murids own sheikh. v The khalwah place should be dark, and the worshipper should surrender all worldly and exterior religious affairs, as the first step toward surrendering his own existence. 61 v Assiduity in dhikr, or remembrance of Allah, must be maintained in order that the Remembered One may, at the final stage, make Himself manifest to the worshipper. v The heart of the murid must be perpetually attached to his sheikh, who has been appointed by Allah to guide him, so Sufis allege. The shaikh is believed to keep each
60 61
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Thus, the Sufi chieftains gradually drag naive Muslims into the impious belief that their sheikhs are omnipresent. Allah SWT says:
..There is no private talk of three, but He is their fourth; nor of five, but He is their sixth; nor of less than that nor of more, but He is with them wherever they may be. (58:7)
Although it should be accepted in its literal meaning, yet the above verse should not be misconstrued to substantiate the sacrilegious and pantheistic belief that Allah the Exalted essentially exists everywhere. Rather, the verse means that Allah, glory be to Him, encompasses everything with His knowledge. The Prophet did not neglect to mention and make clear to his followers any ways or means that lead to success in the Hereafter, nor did he neglect to warn them against any ways or means that lead to misery in the Hereafter. And since the practice of khalwah is not included in the ways and means of success, it must be included in the ways and means of misery. Moreover, seeking help from anyone other than Allah is a polytheistic practice condemned by Allah in the Quran:
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Say, Call on those whom you think (to be gods) beside Him; (then you will know that they) have no power to remove harm from you, or to avert it. Those whom they call on (they themselves) seek the means (of becoming near to Allah). Whichever of them is nearer (to Allah)? And they hope for His mercy, and fear His punishment. Surely, the punishment of your Lord is (a thing to be) feared.(17: 56 -57)
There is also another condition of khalwah: the murid must keep silent throughout the forty days of his khalwah even if he goes out for some reason. Suffice it to know that keeping silent for a whole day is forbidden by the words of the Prophet: There shall be no keeping silence for a whole day until night.62 Al-Munawee, in his commentary on this hadeeth, says that keeping silent for a whole day is forbidden because it is an imitation of a Christian custom. Furthermore, the Prophet never practiced khalwah after receiving the Divine appointment of the Prophethood, nor did his companions (may Allah be pleased with them all), nor did their followers. On the contrary, the Messenger of Allah encouraged socializing among Muslims and regarded it as praiseworthy, as reported in the following hadeeth narrated by Ibn Umar: Rasulullah (saw) has said: A believer who mixes with people, and has patience over their offensive behaviour, is rewarded more than another believer who does not mix with people and could not tolerate their offense. 63
62 63
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And when Musa came at Our appointed time, and his Lord spoke to him, he said, My Lord, show (Yourself) to me that I may look to You. He (Allah) said, You shall not see Me, but look at the mountain; if it remains in its place, then you shall see Me. And when his Lord manifested Himself on the mountain, He made it level, and Musa fell down unconscious. And when he recovered he said, meaning, Far removed are You from every imperfection, I repent to You, I am the first to believe.(7:143)
64 65
R.S. Nicholson, The Idea of Personality in Sufism, 1923 p.30 Fatemi, op. cit
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Eyes cannot reach Him, but He can reach everything the eyes of His creatures can reach and perceive of.(6:103)
The Prophet (Peace be upon him) indicated the impossibility of seeing Allah when he was asked by his companions whether he had seen Allah. He responded objecting, There was just light; How could I see Him? There is further emphasis on such impossibility in the following hadeeth as reported by Abu Musa Al-Ashari: The Messenger of Allah spoke to us of five things. He said, Verily, Allah the Exalted and Mighty does not sleep, and does not befit Him to sleep. He lowers down the scale and lifts it up (i.e., He makes ample the means of subsistence to whom He wills and makes scanty to whom He wills). The deeds (of His slaves committed by) night are taken up to Him before the deeds committed in the day (following), and the deeds of the day are taken up to Him before the deeds of the subsequent night. His veil is the light. In the hadeeth narrated by Abu Bakr, the veil of Allah is fire. If He lifted it, His splendor and majesty would burn out all of his creation.66 A Sufi leader by the name Abu Mansoor al-Hallaj went so far in disbelief as to claim he was god himself. He was crucified for his blasphemous claim, and for his defiance of Shariah, or Islamic jurisprudence, in Baghdad, Iraq, in 309 A.H. (922 A.D.) He said: I am He Whom I love; He Whom I love is I; we are two souls co-inhabiting one body. If you see me you see Him and if you see Him you see me.67 Abdul-Karim el-Jili, Ibn Arabis closest disciple, went a step ahead of his master, claiming that he was commanded by Allah to bring to the people his own book, The Perfect Man, the theme of which is pantheism. He claimed that the perfect man could represent all the attributes of God, even though Allah the Exalted is far above the qualities of men.
66 67
Sahih Muslim, Ibn Majeh & Musnad Ahmad R.A. Nicholson cit. fn.#64
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7) AL-FANAA (The Annihilation) Al-Fanaa is a key element in the Sufi thought. Once the Sufi becomes assiduous in dhikr, or remembrance of Allah, they claim that he acquires sufficient tranquillity of heart to experience a delusion which helps him pass through the various stages described below. First he is bewildered, then intoxicated with love of the Remembered One, and finally he passes through the stage of fanaa, or annihilation, in which he becomes fully absorbed to the point of becoming unaware of himself or the objects around him. Every existing thing seems to vanish, and he feels free of every barrier that could stand in the way of his viewing the Remembered One and nothing else. To give a better idea of the Sufi concept of Allah, Qunawi, one of Ibn Arabis disciples, writes: It is inconceivable that one thing should love another thing in the respect that thing differs from it. It can only love that thing as a result of the property of some meaning shared between the two of them, in respect of which an affinity is established between them which will lead to the domination of the property of that which brings about unification over the properties which brings about differentiationBut the end of love is unity. In the last analysis, God and the perfect man are one, for being is one.69 But when the tenet of fanaa is weighed in the scale of Islamic law, and judged by the Quran and Sunnah, only the part of the remembrance of Allah holds true, while all the rest of bewilderment, intoxication, annihilation and the claim of viewing Allah is revealed to be a blasphemous path to the tenets of incarnation and pantheism. Allah the Exalted says:
68 69
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There is none like unto Him; He is the All-Hearer, the All-Knower. Like most Sufi tenets, fanaa is mentioned neither in the Quran nor in the Sunnah. It is rather a Sufi gimmick and a satanic deception, originally schemed by mystics among the Jews, Zoroastrians and Christians to adulterate the great religion of Islam.70
8) SUFISM KNOWLEDGE MANIFEST AND HIDDEN KNOWLEDGE Three fundamentals of Sufism which are innovations not sanctioned by the Quran or the Sunnah: a) The division of knowledge into exoteric, or manifest, esoteric, or hidden; b) The division of Islam into shariah (religious sciences) and the sciences of truth; c) The addition to Islam of the Sufi order as the path leading to the truth. Manifest knowledge and the sciences of jurisprudence, they assert, belong to the theologians and scholars of the general run of ordinary Muslims, whereas the hidden knowledge and the knowledge of truth are reserved for the Sufi priests, who preferred to call themselves the elite. They, who claim the right to interpret the Quranic verses and Prophetic traditions in ways not only different from the apparent meanings, but contradict them.71 All these dichotomies of knowledge are blameworthy innovations, of which the Prophet (Peace be upon him) said: The practicing or upholding innovations in religion leads to Hell-Fire. He also said, He who introduces into our religion unwarranted things shall be rejected.72 Sufis support the innovative dichotomies by citing the abnormal things done by al-Khidhr when Musa was in his company, such as making a hole in a ship, killing a boy and restoring a falling wall, as chronicled in Surah al-Kahf (18:60-82). They justify Musas objections to al-
70 71 72
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9) AL-AQTAAB (Plural of Qutb) Al-Aqtaab is the plural form of qutb, which means axis or pivot: the highest station in the Sufi hierarchy of saints. Sufis believe that the universe has a master pivot, which they call alQutb, which is to the universe as the soul is to the body; one the qutb departs, the universe can no longer exist. The secret of the power of the qutb, they allege, is kept by the one who keeps the greatest name of Allah. They also claim that his person reaches the state of qutbhood by acquiring the perfection of knowledge, observation and mushahadah75 which includes witnessing the Divine essence. He who does this is, according to Sufis, the hierarch of the Sufi leaders of his generation. He is called al-Ghaws, or the source of help, and is alleged to be pre-eminently endowed with sanctity and miraculous powers.
73 74 75
Mushahadah: In Sufi terminology, the viewing to Allah with the eye as a result of extensive efforts in the path of Sufism
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deity
worthy
of
worship
but
He,
the
Living,
the
Say, Who provides sustenance for you from the heaven and the earth? Or who is that has power over (the faculties of) hearing and seeing? And who brings forth the living
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Surely, Allah holds the heavens and the earth lest they turn away from their place. And if they did deviate, none can hold them after Him. Verily, He is Forbearing, Most Forgiving.(35:41)
v Another question poses itself here: How did the Sufi aqtaab, out of all the slaves of Allah, know His greatest name? The authentic Prophetic traditions indicate clearly that the name Allah is the greatest name, greater than His other names, such as alHayy (the Everlasting) or al-Qayyum (the Sustainer). Familiarity with this great name does not authorize one to manage the affairs of the universe. Rather, it is a name by which the slave of Allah asks Him to respond to his supplications for things which He may already have decreed. Allah the Glorious may respond, provided the slave does not ask Him for unlawful things.
10) AL-AWLIYAA (Plural of Wali) Al-Awliyaa is the plural of waliy, which means a true, sincere believer or a friend. But the waliy as defined by the leader of the Tijaniyyah Order is he whom Allah distinguishes by handling or delegating his affairs and permitting him to witness His Divine deeds and attributes. The conditions of witnessability and distinguishability produce a very ambiguous definition, since we know that Allah the Exalted does not take anyone other than a pious believer for waliy, and piety can be maintained by the acquisition and application of the knowledge of Allah and His names and attributes as stated in the Quran and the Sunnah, in which lawful things are clearly distinct from unlawful. Ahmad al-Tijani was asked: Who is harder to know, Allah the Exalted or the waliy? To know the waliy is harder than to know Allah the Exalted, he said, due to the fact that the qualities of Allah are distinguished from those of His creatures, whereas the waliys qualities
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76
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And this is My path straight. So follow it, and do not follow (other) ways, lest they lead you away from My path.(6:153) 78
77 78
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His Kursi (footstool) encompasses the heavens and the earth.. (2:255)
The Prophet said: The seven heavens by the side of the kursi (footstool) are naught but as a ring thrown down in a desert land, and such is the Kursi with respect to the Arsh (the Divine Throne).79
v Claim # 2: The Sufis Claim: When you unite with the Beloved (God), then there is neither command nor prohibition in matters of religion.80 Sufis habitually reject the doctrine of the fear of God, the wrath of the Day of Judgment, the fury of the Hell-Fire and the promise of Jannah. Faith based on coercion, they say, is slavery, and God has created man with mind, free will and love. Therefore, the mainspring of Sufism is love not fear and obedience to the religious laws. Allah the Supreme describes His Prophets, saying:
79 80
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They used to vie with one another in good deeds, and they called on Us in hope (for rewards) and in fear (of punishment).(21:90)
Abu Hurairah (May Allah be pleased with him) reported that the Prophet said: When one of you finishes reciting the last tashah-hud (in prayer, and just before making tasleem), let him seek Allahs protection from four things: from the torment of Hell-Fire, from the torture of the grave, from the afflictions of life and death, and from the affliction of the pseudo-Christ (ad-Dajjal).81 Abu Hurairah (May Allah be pleased with him) also said: The Messenger of Allah said to a man, What do you say, (ask Allah for) in your prayer? The man said, I recite tashah-hud, then I ask Allah for Jannah and seek protection of Him from the Fire; by Allah, I do not know you dendeneh (making dua in a low and faint voice) nor the dendaneh of Muaadth. The Prophet replied: We make dendeneh about these two things. 82 Allah the Exalted describes His believers thus:
81 82
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Verily those who fear their Lord with reverence, and those who believe in the signs of the Lord, and those who ascribe no partners to their Lord, and those who give what they give while their hearts are full of fear, because to their Lord they will return.(23: 57-61)
Also in another hadeeth: Aaishah (May Allah be pleased with her) inquired about the verse, Those who give what they give saying, O Messenger of Allah! Is it those who steal and commit fornication are fearful? He said: Nay, daughter of (Abu Bakr) As-Siddiq, rather, those who fast and pray who are afraid (that their acts of worship may not be accepted by Allah).83 Allah the Exalted says:
Say (to men, O Muhammad!), If you love Allah, then follow me; Allah will love you and forgive your sins. (3:31)
Thus the love of Allah necessitates following the commands of the Messenger of Allah with hope for reward and fear of punishment in the Hereafter. Jalal-uddin al-Rumi (d. 1273), an infamous Sufi philosopher, in his book Masnawi, confirms his belief in the theory of evolution. The following lines are recognized as the central theme of Rumis work: I died as mineral and became a plant, I died as a plant and rose to an animal, I died as an animal and I was a man.84
83 84
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We have indeed created mankind from sounding clay and thereafter We made him (the offspring of Adam) as a Nutfah (mixed drops of the male and female sexual discharge) (and lodged it) in a safe lodging (womb of the woman). (23:12-13)
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85 86
In the authentic hadeeth reported by Imam Ahmad, Abu Dawood and others, the Prophet said: My nation shall be divided into 73 sects, all of whom are in the Fire except one. His Companions said, Which one is the save? He replied, (The one whose members adhere to) what I and my companions are adhering to today, In another account, he said, Ahlus Sunnah wal-Jamaah (The Sunni Muslim).
87 88
Abu Dawood (Sahih) & Tirmidhi (Hassan Sahih) at-Tijani, op. cit.
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O Messenger (Muhammad (PBUH))! Convey to the people what has been revealed to you from your Lord, and if you do not, then you have not conveyed His Message (at all). Allah will protect you from mankind. Verily, Allah guides not the people who disbelieve. (5:67)
Imputing distrust to the Messenger of Allah is unanimously agreed upon by Muslim scholars as an act of disbelief. In identifying himself as the person by whom this wird is to be made public, at-Tijani places himself above Abu Bakr as-Siddiq, the best man after the Prophet (Peace be upon him). This is utter flippancy and apostasy. A single recitation of the above wird, which is called Salatul Fatih, is equal to every celebration of praise that has taken place in the universe, and to every dhikr and every supplication major or minor, and is equal to reciting the Quran six thousand times.89 This is apostasy and impiety, and anyone who does not deny it becomes an apostate himself. Is there anything better than the Quran? The person who made such a falsehood obviously did not know Muhammad (Peace be upon him), nor did he know the Message with which he was sent, or why he was sent. Allah the glorious says:
Surely, those who forge lies against Allah do not prosper. (16:116)
89
Ibid, p.96
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90 91 92 93
Tirmidhi (Hasan) Ibid, p.80 at-Tijani, Baqiyyatul Mustafid, pp. 79, 80 at-Tijani, Jawahir al-Maaani. p.129
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Who is more wrongful than he who forges lies against Allah, to lead people astray without knowledge? Surely, Allah does not guide the wrongful.(6:144)
At-Tijani elevates himself above all Prophets by claiming such a privilege. Ash-Shaikh alIfriqi wrote: The Prophet lived with his uncle Abu Talib for years, yet the latter died an unbeliever. So did Abu Jahl and Abu Lahab, who looked at the Prophet. The son of Prophet Noah and the father of Prophet Ibrahim both died as unbelievers too. None of these unbelievers drew benefit from the company of the Prophets. Now compare the blasphemous statements of at-Tijani with words of the man most beloved of Allah, the last of the Prophets and Messengers, Muhammad (Peace be upon him): By Allah, (though) I am the Messenger of Allah, I know not of what is going to happen to me tomorrow.94 Allah, Glory be to Him, addresses His beloved Messenger:
94
Ibid.
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Say: It is not in my power to cause you harm, or to bring you to the Right Path. Say, Surely none can protect me against Allah, nor can I find a place of refuge beside Him. (72: 21, 22)
At-Tijani further claimed that he met the Prophet personally, not in his dreams but while he was awake, and that the Prophet gave him his guarantee of security and freedom from fear in the Hereafter and that whoever says at-Tijani would have the same guarantee if he died in the state of Iman. The answer to this falsehood is a warning from the Prophet himself: "He who will live (long enough) will see many different (ways). Keep yourself to my Sunnah, and the Sunnah of the well-guided khulafa'; hold fast thereto. And beware of innovations (in matters of religion). Verily, every innovation is a bid'ah, and every bid'ah is misguidance, and every misguidance is in the Fire." 95
95
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THE END
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