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Life has many aspects; each aspect
possessing attraction. Living in the conscious world, when man peeks at the
other side into the subconscious, the mystery that unfolds before him is that
this world is divided into groups. Each group has its own point of view and
each group is the voluntary prisoner in the web of its own particular desires.
A gambler, although he knows that gambling is a waste of wealth, continues to
gamble even in poverty. An alcoholic, although aware of the fact that alcohol
is eating away at his lungs, does not give up drinking. Alcohol is taken to
alleviate worries and hardships, but what kind of alleviation is it that ends
up eating man from the inside, rendering him hollow.
The group consisting of the followers of a
religion travels through the maze of beliefs and doctrines. Within this stormy
world of beliefs, there are many sects and denominations. Each sect considers
its own self delivered of sin, while it considers the others to be condemned to
hell, but when inquiry is made of any individual of any of the sects, the lava
of uncertainty and doubt can be seen boiling within him. When the life of
comfort (heaven) and misery (hell) is mentioned to a person who had been busy
in worship and spiritual exercise, from the age of 17 till that of 80, he is
found to experience a level iii uncertainty that can be called by no name other
than hell. Religion persuades man towards a world of certainty. And certainty
is not complete until it becomes an observation.
Religion negates excessiveness, arrogance
and contempt, and feelings of superiority or inferiority, while these emotions
dominate a religious person. Religion invites humankind to gather on one
platform, whereas the religious intellectual spends his entire energy in the
direction opposite to tilts.
The world of sufis, saints, spiritual
leaders ['pir'], and successors to those leaders [sajjadah-nasheen'], is a
strange and magical world. They all have their own view on life— their own
direction. This group says that it is incumbent upon the disciple ['mureed'] to
follow his spiritual mentor [‘murshid’]. That it is not right to discriminate
and prioritize among the various commands of the mentor because a religious
mentor a representative of God. That the spirit weakens, if the spiritual
mentor is not obeyed. The disciple is like a wax figurine in the hands of the
spiritual mentor—he may bend it any direction he may wish. Speaking, writing,
reading, staying quiet, doing or not doing something, all should be left to the
wishes of the religious mentor. That the disciple, in the Matt of the spiritual
mentor, should be such as is a walking stick in the hands of an elderly and
frail man—like a lifeless material object which the mentor may pick up and
place anywhere he wishes. It is said that a religious mentor ordered his
disciple to jump into a well. The disciple, in obedience to the command jumped
into the well, but the thought occurred to him that the mentor would finally
save him. In the estimate of the pir sahib ['religious guide'] the [occurrence
of that thought disqualified the disciple's action [of jumping into the well as
obedience to his command. The thing that is really strange that all these
secrets and symbolism are mentioned by these, whose own life is composed of
doubt and uncertainty.
When we look at the puritanical [zahidaana']
life o[f the self righteous], we see that [such a] puritanical life is, in
fact, a war against nature, and it possesses a character that is diametrically
opposed to nature. This group insists— in fact it is their belief—that against the
superior emotions, the inferior, emotions should be incinerated; that, desires
should be destroyed. Clothes that one wears should he thick, coarse and ugly;
food that one eats should be stale and dry; pessimism should prevail through
the days of one's life; and that man should live as one poor and destitute.
Obviously, a destitute man will spend his life in poverty and starvation. And
the misery and hardship of hunger, thirst, heat and cold will become his life's
achievement. This group calls this self-made life of hardship by the name of
acceptance and obedience to divine will.
Qalander Baba Auliya(RA) states that,
'Religion means that man must have faith within him. Faith is belief and
certainty, and this certainty is not finalized without observation. Entering
into the world of certainty, man realizes that the supreme ruler of the entire
human brotherhood is Allah. Allah desires that men unite and hold tight to His
rope, and that they not create disunity amongst themselves. Those who recognize
the supreme ruler, Allah, are His friends. And a friend the certainty that his
friend will not cause him pain. For this reason, it is instilled within his
soul that he will enter heaven.
Qalander Baba Auliya(RA) states that the relationship between disciple
and his spiritual mentor is like that between and
a teacher and between a child and his father. The spiritual mentor is the
beloved of the disciple. The spiritual mentor trains the disciple according to
the disciple's particular nature. He covers his mistakes, large and small. He
takes him through the ups and downs [of life], and the hardships of the
journey, and brings him to that place where a peaceful life embraces him.
Qalander Baba Auliya(RA) states that a life of
righteousness does not require that man should annihilate his desires and in
the process destroy himself. If man shuns nice clothes and declares that
wearing tattered and patched up clothes is the superior
state of life, all the large and small industries and factories around the world will be shut and hundreds of thousands of people would starve to death.
Allah has not brought forth resources from the belly of the earth for them to
be left unappreciated and unutilized. If eating stale and dry food is the acme
of life there would remain no need for rain—the earth might then turn barren.
It is to beautify the earth that Allah has made the multi-colored
flowers and leaves, fruits and trees, and the mountains and
waterfalls.
Qalander Baba Auliya(RA) states:
The righteous person ['zaahid] should
happily utilize every blessing that
has been bestowed by Allah, but
he should not consider himself the owner of these blessings. If it is dry and
stale bread that he receives from Allah, he should eat it happily, and if it is
a grand feast provided by Allah, he should eat the happily as well. When
everything is present, he should mi full use of it. He should consider Allah
his provider at all times and should remain His grateful servant in all
circumstance.
KHWAJA SHAMS-UD-DEEN AZEEMI
Science has made immense progress, yet many believe that, even with all of the modern tools at our disposal, human beings function at no more than 10% of their mental capacity. This leads to the question of what exactly it is that comprises the remaining 90%. Yet another question that arises is this: If it has taken man four and a half billion years to be able to apply only 10% of his ability, how long will it take for him to make use of the remaining 90%?