All of life is a pilgrimage. All of life is a seeking of that primordial One-ness. Of God. A yearning towards the One who is our Beginning. Our End. Our All and Everything. And as Blessed Augustine has said in his Confessions, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in Thee, O Lord.”“In the middle of the journey of our life I came to myself within a dark wood where the straight way was lost. ”
― Dante Alighieri, The Divine Comedy
This was my discovery of the deep ocean of Sufism. Sufism — not simply the ‘mystical side of Islam’ as it is often described, but this depth of spiritual tradition which is truly central to Islam in its totality. (This truth I would only discover much later.)Inside this new love, die. Your way begins on the other side. Become the sky. Take an axe to the prison wall. Escape. Walk out like someone suddenly born into color. Do it now. You are covered with thick cloud. Slide out the side. Die, and be quiet. Quietness is the surest sign that you have died. Your old life was a frantic running from silence. The speechless full moon comes out now.
This was my discovery of the deep ocean of Sufism. Sufism — not simply the ‘mystical side of Islam’ as it is often described, but this depth of spiritual tradition which is truly central to Islam in its totality. (This truth I would only discover much later.)Inside this new love, die. Your way begins on the other side. Become the sky. Take an axe to the prison wall. Escape. Walk out like someone suddenly born into color. Do it now. You are covered with thick cloud. Slide out the side. Die, and be quiet. Quietness is the surest sign that you have died. Your old life was a frantic running from silence. The speechless full moon comes out now.
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Rumi? I had never heard of Rumi. So naturally, I immediately abandoned the magazine and bought a book of Rumi’s poetry. It was the popular Coleman Barks translation. And amazingly, this was a major milestone in my life. Here, in the poetry of Rumi, did I find a new way to connect to God. To know Him. God was no longer the stern, distant Judge, nor the arbitrary Calvinist ‘monster,’ nor the abstract ‘Ultimate Reality’. Here was my Beloved — face to face with me. He was a God Whom I LOVED. And who loved me. I felt absorbed into the ocean that was the Love of God. I have never felt or experienced anything like it. “There is a candle in your heart, ready to be kindled. There is a void in your soul, ready to be filled. You feel it, don’t you?” asked Rumi. And yes, I did feel it. I yearned for this New Love.
This was my discovery of the deep ocean of Sufism. Sufism — not simply the ‘mystical side of Islam’ as it is often described, but this depth of spiritual tradition which is truly central to Islam in its totality. (This truth I would only discover much later.)
My discovery of Sufism was not my first encounter with Islam, however. Aside from reading about the central tenets and pillars of Islam as a teen, 9/11 was my first real encounter — as it was for many Americans… and American converts to Islam. After the terrorists attacks, in October of 2001, the local Islamic Center held an open house which I attended. I ate with the Muslim men there. I prayed with them. Listened to them. Attended lectures and speeches about what it is to be Muslim. My interest piqued. I signed up for courses on Islam in college. In a course on Islamic Civilization, I listened to the Quran beautifully recited for the very first time. I was deeply moved. I was inexplicably drawn to it. But my interest, then, was still mostly political and academic in a post-9/11 America.
Rumi, however, was the gateway. He provided the missing key. By 2003, I yearned to become Muslim. I saw the beauty of it. The depth. The truth of it. I spoke with the Imam about conversion. I hung out at the local Islamic Center. I made Muslim friends. It was a beautiful and joyful moment."
this is terrifying- what kind of Islam is this person going to believe in if central to his understanding of Islam is Rumi? if he wanted hippie philosophy he could have stuck with Christianity, there is plenty of hippie philosophy amongst Christians.... if you go and try to understand Islam through people like Rumi... I worry you might go so off-course you could end up with an interpretation of Islam where you actually end up outside of Islam without realizing.... to my understanding, for example, Ibn Arabi the famous Sufi went so far with his deviant views that the scholars actually declared him to be kaffir