Dr. Zubair Fattani
dr_fattani@hotmail.com
Tasawwuf can be called the inwardness of Islam. Islam, like most
other faiths, to a greater or lesser extent consists firstly of certain
beliefs, such as the existence of God, the coming of the Judgement, reward and
punishment in the next life, and the outward expression of these beliefs in
forms of worship, such as prayer and fasting, all of which are concerned with
man's relationship to God. Secondly, it consists of a system of morality which
concerns man's relationship with man, and has its outward expression in
certain social institutions and laws, such as marriage, inheritance, civil and
criminal laws. But it is obvious that the basis of
this faith, the spirit that gives it life, is man's relationship with God.
Forms of worship are simply the physical vehicles of this relationship, and it
is this relationship again which is responsible for the origin, the
significance and the ultimate sanction of the principles of morality and their
formulation into a specific social and legal system. If the interior converse
with the Supreme Being and inspiration from Him are present, then they are
comparable to the soul within the body of the exterior religion; if they die
away, or in proportion to the extent they wither or become feeble, the outward
form of the faith becomes like a soul-less body, which by the
inexorable law of nature swiftly succumbs to corruption. It is therefore man's
direct relationship with his Maker which is the breath and life of religion,
and it is the study and cultivation of this relationship that the word
Tasawwuf connotes.
It may be wondered why the words "Sufi", which means "woollen-clothed"
and "Tasawwuf" which means "the path of the Sufis," i.e., the woollen-clothed
ones, should have become so universal in order to denote something which
belongs properly to the realm of the spirit. This name is symbolic rather than
descriptive. To be a Sufi does not require a person to literally wear woollen
clothes, but presumes an inner quality which was at one time characteristic of
those who wore them. In the early generations of Islam, through the closeness
to the time of the Noble Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihe Wa Sallam) and the
illumination of his incomparable spirituality, which encompassed so completely
the inner and the outer, the comprehension of the inwardness of Islam
enwrapped in its outward expressions was so general that no group of people
who devoted themselves specially to this aspect of the faith was
distinguishable. It was only when the inevitable course of
development of human affairs began to run and the original trunk of
universality to throw out branches of specialisation, that Islamic knowledge
was progressively divided into the interior and the exterior, and the general
word Ilm (Knowledge) began to denote more the academic study of the Qur'an,
Hadith, and Fiqh than their spiritual content, contrary to its Qur'anic use in
the sense of "Knowledge of Allah". At this stage that body of Muslims who
devoted themselves more particularly to the cultivation of the spiritual
heritage of their Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihe Wa Sallam), began to use the term
Ma'rifat (Recognition of Allah) and Arif (One who recognises Allah) to denote
this inward aspect of knowledge, and indeed still do to the present day. So it
was possible that instead of Sufis they might have been
termed Ahle-e-MaarifatI or Arifin. But every aspirant to spiritual development
is not an Arif, and the average human mind seeks more the outer badge than the
inner reality, which in this case is anyway difficult to describe; so the
habit observed in certain Godly persons (in reaction to the excessive luxury
of the times) of wearing coarse woollen clothes, which were then the mark of
extreme poverty, was taken as the symbol of all those who sought the inner
life, and this term's convenience and simplicity has withstood all the
vagaries of time and place throughout the Islamic world.
The visible formulations of Islam are therefore both enlivened by
the spiritual and moral force behind them, and so they are the manifestations
of this force and at the same time they are the means of attaining these
spiritual and moral qualities; this can be said to constitute their main
purpose. Thus these two aspects of Islam are mutually generative, each one
producing the other. It can be seen from the Word of Allah, the Qur'an, that
wherever something concerning man's outward actions is decreed, its inward
content and purpose is also stressed. Take Prayer for instance. Allah says:
"Observe Prayer for my remembrance" (20:14); or "The believers have attained
success; who are lowly in their prayers" (23:1, 2), emphasising that the
object of Prayer is not the mere outward performance, but to remember Him with
a humble heart. In the case of fasting Allah says: "Fasting has been decreed
for you, as it was decreed for those who came before you, that you may be
God-fearing" (2:183). Regarding sacrifice on the occasion of Pilgrimage
(Hajj), He says: "It is not their blood or their flesh which reaches Him, but
the devotion from you" (22:37). On the subject of marriage: "It is one of His
signs that He has made for you mates of your own kind that you may find peace
in them, and He has created affection and kindness between you" (30:21). On
spending for the poor: "They (the righteous) give food to the needy, the
orphan and the prisoner, for the love of Him. They
say: We feed for the sake of Allah only, and desire no reward or thanks from
you" (76:8, 9). If we reflect on these and other similar indications in the
Qur'an, we are led to the conclusion that if it is necessary to develop within
ourselves those qualities which are their soul; that these two are
complementary and one cannot exist in a sound state without the other. When
the word Shariat is used, one immediately calls to mind the basic beliefs of
Islam, without which a person cannot be reckoned a Muslim, and the external
decrees comprising forms of worship, rules of behaviour and civil and criminal
laws. In short it is the outwardness of Islam which is normally referred to by
this term. But we have seen that within this outer Shariat there exists an
inner Shariat of equal importance, which constitutes both its inspiration and
its goal. Like the word "Ilm" (Knowledge) which originally comprised both the
inward realisation of divine truths as well as outward knowledge of Islamic
tenets, the term "Shariat" (the road) should really include the devotion of
the heart to Allah as well as specific beliefs, and the attainment of moral
excellence as well as submission to the law. But just as "Ilm" came to mean
only book knowledge, so "Shariat" came to mean only the law; as a result, the
Sufis, the devotees of the spirit of Islam, began to use the word Ma'rifat'
for inner relationship with God, and in place of the word "Shariat" they chose
the word Tariqat (the path) to
denote the way to spiritual perfection. Just as the outer "Shariat" consists
of two parts, belief and practice, so also does the inner "Shariat" manifest
itself in two main fields.
The first is man's attitude to his Maker. From the Qur'an and the
teachings of the Noble Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihe Wa Sallam) we learn that
this attitude should be inspired by love, hope, fear, gratitude, patience,
trust, self-sacrifice and complete devotion; and that He should be felt to be
constantly near. This is the inwardness of belief. The second is man's
attitude to his fellow men: Allah and His Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihe Wa Sallam)
have taught us that this should be inspired by sympathy, justice, kindness,
unselfishness, generosity, sternness on matters of principle, lenience
wherever possible, and that we must avoid pride jealousy, malice,
greed, selfishness, miserliness, and ill-nature. These qualities will not be
found explained in the books of Fiqh, it required a group of people distinct
from the jurists to determine and develop the science of the soul. Of these
two parts of the inner Shariat, it is the first i.e. man's relationship with
God, which is the root, the moral attitude of man towards his fellow being
derived from it. It is the realisation that all men are creatures of the One
God, and that He wishes us to treat them with mercy and kindness, and at times
justice, which should reflect His own sublime qualities, and that if we
succeed in this we shall win His pleasure. That is the real basis of
morality. Some have made the mistake of imagining that morality can exist by
itself without the foundation of religion, and have tried to promulgate a
non-religious ethical code as a substitute for faith. This is nothing but a
mental illusion. It comes about this way: through the medium of religious
teaching, a certain moral outlook permeates a whole society and colours not
only the specifically religious life, but education and social customs and
habits of thinking and acting. When at a later stage some people take to
agnosticism and rebel against the established faith, they are unable to
separate themselves from this moral attitude which has now become the very
stuff of their mental being. Without realising the origin of their morality,
they fall into error of considering it self-existent, and imagine that they
can reform society by simply calling upon people to be ethical. But it is a
matter of observation that such inherited moral attitudes, when cut off from
the tree of religion to which they owe their being, very quickly decay, and it
is not long before the very basis of morality is questioned and finally
denied, and non-moral philosophies are openly proclaimed. Whereas the morality
based on faith in God, derived from a revealed Book and given life by the
consciousness of Divine pleasure, has in it the seeds, not of decay, but of
growth and fruition.
That it is man's inner relationship with Allah, which gives meaning and value to his outward expression of belief and the performance of his religious duties, is asserted most pointedly in one of the most famous sayings of the Noble Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihe Wa Sallam). The following incident is reported by Hazrat Omar, the second Khalifa.
"We were sitting with the Messenger of Allah one day when a man appeared with very white clothes and very black hair, with no signs of travel on him. None of us recognised him. He came and sat before the Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihe Wa Sallam) with his knees touching his knees, and his hands placed on his thighs. He then said; "O! Muhammed tell me, what is Islam?" The Prophet replied: "Islam is that you testify that there is no God but Allah, and Muhammed is the Messenger of Allah, and that you establish prayer, pay Zakat, fast the month of Ramadan and make the pilgrimage to the House of Allah, if you are able." The man said: "You are right", and we wondered that he both asked and confirmed the answer. Then he said: "What is Iman?" The Prophet replied: "Iman is that you believe in Allah, His Angels, His Books, His Messengers and the Last Day, and that you believe in the predestination of good and evil." The man said: "You are right. Now tell me what is Ihsan (good performance)?" The Prophet replied: "That you worship Allah as if you are seeing Him and if you do not see Him, He surely sees you."
Then after asking about the Last Day, the man left, and the Noble Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihe Wa Sallam) informed his companions that this was the Angel Gabriel who came to teach them their religion... (Bukhari, etc).
Here the word Ihsan, which means "to perform something in the
best manner" is explained as "the worship of Allah as if you are seeing Him,
and if you do not see Him, He surely sees you." This means that the
consciousness of the presence of Allah, and the feeling of love and awe which
accompany it, must permeate both our faith and practice (Iman and Islam) and
it is in proportion to this consciousness that our excellence in religion can
be judged. Clearly this sense of presence is not to be confined only to
worship, but to all our actions (one version of the above incident, in fact,
has "to work for Allah as if you are seeing Him"). It is precisely this
awareness of the nearness and presence of Allah the Sufis have as their
ultimate goal in all their activities.
So far we have been speaking of the Muslims' relationship with Allah in a general way. But Tasawwuf has a more specific content, that is to say, it aims at bringing the novice to the direct spiritual experience. The fountainhead of Islam (a fact which is often forgotten) is the direct spiritual experience of the Noble Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihe Wa Sallam) by means of which the message of God was conveyed to man. This spiritual experience had many forms, and was continuous throughout the period of the Prophet's prophethood, starting from the initial vision of the Angel when the call to the divine mission was sounded, and persisting throughout the inspiration of the Divine Book, with other manifestations such as the Hadith-Qudsi (Divine Inspirations apart from the Qur'an itself) and revelations of the next world. It is illustrated particularly in the Me'raj (The Ascension), which culminates in the vision of the Supreme Reality. When the essence of prophethood is the spiritual experience, it would be strange indeed if some portion of this aspect of the prophetic life were not inherited by the Prophet's companions and those who followed them. So we find a tradition of spiritual experience alongside that of the more obvious branches of religious teaching concerned with beliefs and practices. In the early stages it was not considered proper to publish such experiences and considerable reticence was observed; it was thought sufficient only to hint at them. As time passed, reticence was lessened and gradually the science of Tasawwuf was outwardly formulated, although the very nature of these most inward matters makes some reticence inevitable at all times.
Abu Huraira, one of the intimate companions of the Prophet (Sallallahu
Alaihe Wa Sallam) used to say: "I acquired two vessels from the Messenger of
Allah (Sallallahu Alaihe Wa Sallam). One of them I published, but if I
published the other my throat would be cut." This is an interesting allusion
to the danger of making a show of spiritual experiences are believed, then
some people out of ignorance are inclined to raise the one who is spiritually
gifted almost to divinity, if not to make him into God Himself. If they are
disbelieved, the doubters become guilty of denying what is true, and deprive
themselves of certain special benefits which it is the Will of God that they
should have. This is the reason why Sufis' have always counselled great
caution in the matter of describing some of their spiritual states in detail
as these can only be appreciated in the tasting, and not in the description.
In spite of the obvious references in the Qur'an, the Hadith and the lives of
the Companions, some have tried to deny this spiritual heritage of the Noble
Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihe Wa Sallam) and claim that the early Muslims were
only "ascetics" and not "mystics." But to perceive spirituality where it
exists is not given to everyone, even to perceive it at all; let it suffice to
say that the extraordinary dedication to Allah and His Prophet (Sallallahu
Alaihe Wa Sallam) and their commands by the leading companions and followers
would be inexplicable without a
profound spiritual experience.
I have said that in the early period the outer and the inner
aspects of Islam, that is, the outward observance and its spiritual content,
were not divided but formed a homogeneous whole, but as time passed and
specialised knowledge increased, it became necessary and inevitable that a
body of Muslims should devote themselves more particularly to the inwardness
of Islam which came to be known as Tasawwuf. If we consider the development of
Tasawwuf as a science, that is the science of the soul, we find that it
provides a close comparison with the development of other sciences based on
the principles of the Divine Book and the life of Allah's Messenger (Sallallahu
Alaihe Wa Sallam). To take the science of Hadith as an example, we find that
during the first century, which was the time of the Companions and the
followers, things remained very much in the original form of personal teaching
from those who sat in the company of the Great Ones, with
little sign of elaboration and formulation. During the second century we begin
to find more or less comprehensive collections and criticisms of Hadiths and
the formulation of rules of classification, which culminate, in the third
century, in critical recensions based on now thoroughly elaborate and
determined principles. In the case of Fiqh we find a similar process after the
first century, of the direct and practical teaching of the companions and
followers' the second century produces elaborate compendia of legal decisions
and formulation of principles of jurisprudence which again by the third
century had been built up into a relatively independent
science. Tasawwuf, too, was constructed into a spiritual science on the firm
foundations of the spiritual heritage of the Prophet of God (Sallallahu Alaihe
Wa Sallam). Here again, the elaboration begins in the second century in the
recorded sayings and treatises and books of the early Sufis, and in the third
century Tasawwuf appears as a fully developed and formulated spiritual
science. It is just as gratuitous to talk critically of later innovations in
the matter of Tasawwuf as it is in the matter of Fiqh, Hadith and Tafsir.
There is a world of difference between elaborations and innovations, which
people with muddled minds find difficult to distinguish.
Although the development of Tasawwuf can be historically compared
with that of the other sciences, there is an intrinsic superiority in Tasawwuf
which should be well remembered. This superiority lies in that the expansion
of the science of spiritual development is based on experience and direct
observation confirmed in its broad pattern by thousands of travellers on the
upward path of the soul, whereas the other sciences mainly owe their
formulation to reason and conjecture. All, of course, are founded on
'Tradition', that is, the Qur'an and its living commentary by the Noble
Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihe Wa Sallam) and his followers, but the process of
later elaboration has this fundamental difference. It cannot be contested that
direct experience, especially when it is common to large numbers of people, is
vastly more authoritative source of knowledge than rational speculation. For
instance, after the data provided by 'Revelation' and 'Tradition' the chief
instrument in the development of Fiqh is Qiyas (analogy) or Rai (opinion). The
main pillar of the science of Hadith is Jarh and Ta'dil, which means the
critical examination of the reliability of the reporters of a certain Hadith
in addition to its subject matter. Obviously these processes are rational and
speculative. The development of Tasawwuf,
however, has consisted of the progressively more detailed expounding of the
spiritual experience constituting the inner heritage of the Noble Prophet (Sallallahu
Alaihe Wa Sallam) and has no content of conjecture and opinion. This vital
element has resulted in a remarkable unanimity among the proponents of this
science throughout the ages and whatever differences there exist are those of
emphasis or mode of expression and do not show any real cleavage in the
essential unity.
We have already alluded to the function of Tasawwuf, which is to
perfect the relationship of man first with his God, and secondly with his
fellow men. Now it is obvious that only very few people have the call to
devote themselves entirely to spirituality and become as it were specialists
in the inner life. This appears to be the result of some innate urge which so
drives those who possess it as not to allow them to follow any other vocation.
This is not to say that even these specially gifted few entirely abandon all
usual worldly activities. On the contrary, we find in Islam, in distinction
from other religious communities, that its greatest scientists of the soul
were mostly married, had children and conducted their household and similar
affairs like other men. It is another matter that during the period of
training for spiritual development a certain retirement, either total or
partial, is usually required, as indeed it is during the acquirement of other
branches of specialist learning. It is also true that even after reaching
expertness many of the Islamic spiritualists paid very little attention to the
earning of their livelihood and spent their whole
time in teaching and giving solace, help and encouragement to the common
people. Their physical wants were looked after by their pupils and admirers,
as was the practice until recently even in the case of those who taught
children how to read and write. In this deliberate neglect of their own
material needs in order to devote themselves more unhamperedly to their
mission, they observed the utmost selflessness and resignation to Allah, and
never expressly or by implication gave any sign of the poverty or even hunger
which they often had to undergo. If they neglected the world, it was only as
far as their own wants were concerned; they never neglected the wants of those
who came to them for spiritual nourishment, or even for physical nourishment
if they had any to spare, for in addition to being at the service of those who
were hungry for the things of the soul they often conducted public kitchens
for the feeding of the poor, and engaged themselves in the healing of the sick
in body as well as those who were sick in spirit, as is well known to those
who have studied their lives.
Just as spiritual specialists are few by the nature of things, so
also the number of the pupils who shape their lives in close conformity to
those of their masters is also very small. These selected followers are those
who, having the inner call, are later charged with the duty of carrying on the
work of teaching and exhortation in a new generation. But the majority of
those who visit these inheritors of the more inward traditions of Islam are
those who, while engaged in their daily vocations, wish to refresh themselves
from the toils of the world at the pure springs of sincerity and devotion
which they find so abundant with the Sufis. It is here that we see
the influence of the Sufis working and giving new life to the whole wide land
of the community. The ordinary men and women who spend a part of their time
with the Sufis acquire some measure of inspiration for their spiritual and
moral betterment, and to this measure their whole lives are affected. It is
the spiritual orientation and the moral attitude which constitute the
fountainhead of human thought, and so of human action. Events in man's
history, and growth, flourishing, and decay of peoples can always be traced
back to these inner sources. The contact of people of the world with the
Sufis, whether they be kings, princes, captains, merchants, administrators,
artisans, or peasants, indirectly affects the whole movement of the nation
along the uneven road of time. It is from these most intimate wells of
inspiration that a certain quality is given to the thought and life of a whole
culture. What a pity that some superficial intellects are unable to perceive
these undercurrents of history. Economics, politics, and social life are all
controlled b the mental processes of man. He can only ignore, at his peril,
these deep directive forces from which his mental processes emerge. The
apparent obscurity and detachment of the Sufi conceal an activity of radical
importance to the whole Muslim nation.

