Mawlana Jalal al-Din Rume
Rahmatullahi ta'ala alayh
" Everyone is so afraid of death, but the real Sufis just laugh:
nothing tyrannizes their hearts.
What strikes the oyster shell does not damage the pearl."
SHAYKH AL ISLAM IN TURKEY: KONYA GALLERY | ISTANBUL GALLERY
SHAMS TABRIZI | SUFI STORIES | SUFI POETRY | SUFI RELATED QUOTES | SUFI MEDIA
Mevlana and his father settled in Konya, the Seljuk capital, he lived, taught, wrote his masterpieces up to the end of his life, and died in 1273 C.E. (common era).
Although Mevlana is generally believed to be ethnically of Turkish descent, and he lived most of his life in a Turkish city, except for a few verses in Turkish city, except for a few verses in Turkish, his immense work has all been written in Persian, the dominating literary language of that period. On the other hand his son sultan Veled, born in Turkey in 1226, wrote a series of verses in Turkish language.
The most significant and turning point in Mevlana's life is his encounter in 1244 with the wandering mystic dervish Shams a'l-Din of Tabriz (May Allah be pleased with him). Thence forward, Mevlana was a changed man, his devotion to his inspiring master Shams a'l-Din entirely cut him off from his disciples. Because of abuse and threats from the jealous disciples Shams a'l-Din took refuge twice in Damascus, and in 1247 Shams a'l-Din vanished, and it is believed Mevlana's disciples had plotted to kill him.
Mevlana declared that one of his greatest works, DIVAN, consisting of approximately sixty thousand couplets and one million distiches, was inspired by Shams a'l-Din since Mevlana identified himself with his muse. His other great work, MESNEVI-I ME'NEVI, divided into six books and containing a total of over twenty five thousand couplets record several hundred stories, extracts from the Noble Qur'an, stories about wandering dervishes, biblical stories, all with allegorical and philosophical content.
Apart from this vast collection of poems, his prose work contains his sermons, his admonitions, pious anecdotes, his letters dealing with personal and spiritual matters, and his discourses on a wide variety of religious and mystical themes.
Selection of poems and verses from the Master
"During the day I praised you and I didn't know
At night I laid with You and I didn't know
I had thought that I was myself
but I was entirely You and I didn't know"
"You search for the one who is with you.
You look for the looker - closer to you than you.
Don't rush outside.
Thaw like melting ice, and wash your self away."
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'It is God’s kindness to terrify you in order to lead you to safety.'
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''You've no idea how hard I've looked for a gift to bring You. nothing seemed right.
What's the point of bringing gold to the gold mine, or water to the Ocean.
Everything I came up with was like taking spices to the Orient.
It's no good giving my heart and my soul because you already have these.
So- I've brought you a mirror. Look at yourself and
remember me''.
* * * * * *
To the Ones who really see,
The Chosen Lovers,
Love is a shattering Eternal Light.
* * * * * *
Art as Flirtation and surrender
In your light I learn how to love.
In your beauty, how to make poems.
You dance inside my chest,
where no one sees you,
but sometimes I do,
and that sight becomes this art.
* * * * * *
I looked for Him on
the Christian cross, But he was not there. I went to
Hindu temples and shrines – but nothing. I visited
the Ka'aba in Makka, I did not find Him. I
questioned learned scholars, but He outstripped
their understanding. Finally, when I peered into my
own heart – there, and nowhere else, was His home.
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