Hazrat
Sheikh Ahmad Sirhind
"Verily,
Allah has intelligent slaves. They abandoned
the
world, and were cautious of its tribulations.
They
looked to it, and when they realized that it is
not
an abode for those who are truly alive, they made
it
a transitory station, and took righteous actions as a vehicle."
-
Imam Shafi
BRIEF FACTS:
Birth name: Imam-e-Rabbani Sheikh
Ahmad Farooqi Sirhindi
Birth date: 14 Shawwal 971
Born in: Sirhind, India
IN DEPTH:
Introduction
Hazrat Sheikh Ahmad Sirhind,
also known as Imam-e-Rabbani [the Imam of Wise Guidance] and Mujaddid Alf
Thaani [meaning the reviver of the second millennium], is a great Sufi saint
of the Naqshbandi golden chain [also known as a Silsila or Tariqa].
He was given these
titles as accolades for his undeniable work & effort to revive the spirit
of Islam and oppose the corruption prevalent during the time of the Mughal
Empire. His significant religious influence in India still holds
great impact upon its Sufi roots even to this day.
Most of the branches
which stem from the Naqshbandi order today, such as the Mujaddidi, Saifi,
Tahiri and Qasimiya branches, trace their spiritual lineage through Sheikh
Sirhindi, often referring to themselves as "Naqshbandi Mujaddidi"
due to this connection.
He is also a
descendant of the noble Companion and second Khalifa of Islam, Hazrat
Sayyidina Umar Farooq [R.A].
Early Life &
Sufism
Sheikh Ahmad Sirhindi
was born after midnight, on 14 Shawwal 971 in the village of Sirhind,
near the city of Chandigarh in present-day India.
His mother relates,
"After the birth of my son Ahmad, I fell unconscious whereupon I had a
vision, and saw that my home was full of Awliya Allah (Saints) who were all
congratulating me on the birth of my son".
His father relates,
"On the day of the birth of my son, I had a vision in which I saw
Allah's Messenger (s.a.w) reciting first the Azan and then the Takbir in the
ears of my son."
Being born into a
pious family descending from Sayyidina Umar Farooq, he received most of his
early education from his father, Sheikh Abdul Ahad. He memorised the Qur'an
thus becoming a Hafiz, and then was then sent to Sialkot in Pakistan,
where he learned logic, philosophy and theology, also studying advanced texts
of Tafsir and Hadith before he returned home.
At a young age, Sheikh
Sirhindi had also made rapid progress in the Suharwardiya, Qadriya, and
Chishtiya orders of Sufism, and was given permission to initiate and train
followers at the age of 17.
While busy spreading
the teachings of these Tariqas, he felt a void within himself and
continuously searched to fulfil it. He then found an interest in the
Naqshbandi order, as he saw through the secrets of the other three Tariqas
that it was, in reality, the best and most favourable.
In his words, the
Naqshbandi Tariqa is "the mother of all Tariqas."
His spiritual progress
eventually brought him into the presence of the Ghaws and Qutb of his time,
Sheikh Mohammad Baqi. Through the guidance and supervision of this great
Saint, Sheikh Sirhindi progressed up the spiritual ladder and soon became a
Master of this order, his mystical insight and piety inspiring all those who
learnt from him.
Imprisonment by the
Emperor
One proof of the
Sheikh's steadfastness on the Haqq is as follows. When the emperor Jahangir
came to the throne, his wife, who held Shia beliefs, influenced him strongly
and many of the people around him, including some advisors, were Rafidhites.
Without any fear or worry, Sheikh Sirhind wrote books and articles that refuted
their beliefs. It wasn't long before these people became his enemies, and
began to tell the emperor, 'This Sheikh is very dangerous. His beliefs are
corrupt, and he is against you and will not bow down before you."
Eventually, the
emperor commanded that the Sheikh be imprisoned in Gwalior Fort for an
unlimited period.
A great miracle is
reported by his son, Sheikh Sayyid, who says, "He was under very intense
security in jail, where guards surrounded his room on every side. Yet every
Friday, he would be seen in the mosque. No matter how much security he was
under, he would disappear from prison and miraculously appear in the
mosque."
The Sheikh's state of
patience and gratitude was such that he never wished ill upon his enemies,
nor did he allow his family and followers to do so. Many thousands of
prisoners in Gwalior Fort embraced Islam at the hand of the Sheikh, and a
very many of these took Bayt (pledge of allegiance) at his hands, attaining
high stages of Wilayat (sainthood) as a result of his company.
The Sheikh would say,
"If the Emperor had not imprisoned me, so many thousands of people would
have been deprived of the Light of Islam."
This imprisonment
allowed him to fulfil the Sunnah of Prophet Yusuf, as he endured the
hardships of captivity with the utmost patience. The Sheikh wrote to his
family and friends from the prison, saying, "Although hardship is indeed
distasteful, it is a blessing. Praise Allah and do not spend even a moment in
neglect. Always be busy in one of three things; the first is recital of
Qur'an, the second is Salaah, and the third, abundance of Zikrullah
(Remembrance of Allah). Always be pleased with whatever state Allah has given
you. Pray that Allah gathers us all in Paradise, and that our meeting
each other in this Duniya is for the Aakhirah itself."
Despite all the
hardship suffered by the Sheikh in prison, the emperor noticed that he was
unmoved from his original stance.
In addition, the
Karamat (miracle) of the Sheikh had come to the emperor's notice, in that thousands
of thieves and bandits had attained guidance and become pious people through
the company of the Sheikh. It was at this point that the emperor began to
regret imprisoning the Sheikh. Around this time, the Emperor Jahangir had a
dream in which he saw Sayyidina Rasulallah (s.a.w) saying, "O Jahangir,
you have imprisoned a very great person!"
After this dream, the
emperor Jahangir sorely regretted his actions and demanded the immediate
release of the Sheikh. The Sheikh was brought to the Emperor, who apologized
and asked the Sheikh to forgive him. The emperor now began to treat the
Sheikh with the utmost respect and would even serve him himself. Indeed, his
love for the Sheikh increased so much that Jahangir would find absence from
the Sheikh unbearable. Shah Jahan was also amongst the Mureeds of the Sheikh,
and other members of the ruling group, including scholars and ministers,
continued to join the Silsila Mujaddidia right up to and including the reign
of Alamgir Aurangzeb.
Shariah & Sufism
The Sufi path is based
on Shariah, which is fundamental to the ways of Tasawwuf and Islam. The two
concepts do not contradict each other, as clarified by Sheikh Sirhindi in
this small excerpt from one of his letters:
"The Shariah has
three parts: knowledge, action, and sincerity of motive (ikhlas); unless you
fulfil the demands of all these parts, you do not obey the Shariah. And when
you obey the Shariah, you obtain the Pleasure of God, which is the most
supreme good in this world and the Hereafter.
The Qur'an says,
"The Pleasure of God is the highest good." Hence, the Shariah
comprehends all the good of this world and the next, and nothing is left out
for which one has to go beyond the Shariah.
The Tariqa [Order] and
the Haqiqa [Reality] for which the Sufis are known, are subservient to the
Shariah, as they help to realize its third part namely, sincerity (ikhlas).
Hence they are sought in order to fulfil the Shariah, not to achieve
something beyond the Shariah.
The raptures and
ecstasies which the Sufis experience, and the ideas and truths which come to
them in the course of their journey, are not the goal of Sufism. They are
rather myths and fancies on which the children of Sufism are fed. One has to
pass over them all and reach the stage of satisfaction (Raza) which is the
final goal of ‘Suluk’ [travelling, i.e. the Sufi path] and ‘Jazba’
[overwhelming love]."
[taken from the
Maktubat of Sheikh Ahmad Sirhind, also known as his Collection of Letters,
Vol. 1:36]
Writings of Sheikh
Ahmad Sirhind
Though he wrote many
books, the most famous of his works are a collection of 536 letters,
collectively entitled Collected Letters or Maktubat. These letters were
addressed to the Mughal rulers of his time and other contemporaries and they
were compiled during his lifetime.
The three volumes were
compiled as detailed below:
Volume 1 - contains
313 letters, and was compiled by Khwaja Yaar Mohammad Badakhshi
Talqani, a Mureed of Sheikh Ahmad Sirhindi.
The volume was named
Durr al-Ma'rifat and was completed in 1025 AH. Sheikh Sirhind ordered that it
end at 313 letters, 313 being a sacred number [a significant figure in Islam,
as there was 313 Muslim soldiers in the famous battle of Badr, in which the
Muslims were victorious].
Volume 2 - was named
as Noor al-Khallaq and contains 99 letters. It was compiled by Khwaja Abdul
Hayy.
Volume 3 - was
compiled by Khwaja Mohammad Hashim Kashmi and contains 124 letters.
The volume was named Ma'rifat al-Haqa'iq.
Anecdotes
- Once, a great Sheikh
wrote to him asking, "The states which you reached and are speaking
about, did the Sahaba receive them, and if they did, did they receive them at
one time or did they receive them at separate times?"
He answered, "I
cannot give you an answer unless you come into my presence."
When the Sheikh went
to him, he immediately unveiled to him his spiritual reality and cleansed the
darkness of his heart. The Sheikh fell prostrate at his feet from the
strength of such Light, and said, "I believe, I believe! I see now that
these states were all revealed to the Sahaba simply by looking at the
Messenger (s.a.w)."
- One time in the
month of fasting, Ramadan, he was invited by ten of his Mureeds to break fast
with them. He accepted the invitation of each of them. When the time came to break
the fast, he was present at each of their houses, breaking the fast, and they
saw him in each of their houses at the same time.
- Once, he looked at
the sky and it was raining. He said, "O rain! Stop until such and such
hour." It stopped until the exact time he had said, after which it
started to rain again.
- One day, the King
ordered that a man be executed. That man came to Sheikh Ahmad Sirhind and
said, "Please write a stay of execution for me." He wrote to the
Sultan, "Don't execute this man." The Sultan, out of respect and
fear for the Sheikh, pardoned the man.
- One time, a Mureed
made the intention to visit Sheikh Ahmad Sirhind. On his way, he was invited
to be the guest of a man who disliked the Sheikh. The Mureed, however, didn't
know this until after dinner, when the host began insulting the Sheikh.
As the Mureed went to
sleep later that night, in his heart he was saying, "O Allah, I came to
visit the Sheikh, not to hear someone curse the Sheikh. Forgive me."
Then he slept and when
he awoke, he found that the man had died. He went quickly to the Sheikh and
began to tell him the story. Sheikh Ahmad Sirhind raised his hand and said,
"Stop! There is no need to tell me what happened. I am the one who
caused it."
Quotes from his
Maktubat
In his famous Maktubat
(collection of Letters), he said:
- "It must be
known that Allah has placed us under His Obligations and His Prohibitions.
Allah said, 'Whatever the Prophet gave you, take it, and whatever he
prohibited you, leave it.' [59:7] If we are going to be sincere in this, we
have to attain to Annihilation and the love of the Essence. Without these, we
cannot reach this degree of obedience. Thus we are under another obligation,
which is to seek the Way of Sufism, because this Way will lead us to the
state of Annihilation and the love of the Essence.
Each Order differs
from the other in its states of perfection; so too does each Order keep the
Sunnah of the Prophet and have its own definition of what that entails.
Every Order has its own way of keeping the Sunnah of the Prophet. Our Order,
through its Sheikhs, requires us to keep all the commands of the
Prophet and to leave all the things he prohibited. Our Sheikhs don't
follow the easy ways (rukhas) but insist on keeping the difficult ways. In
all their seeking, they keep in mind the verse of Qur'an which says, 'Men
whom neither business nor trade will divert from the Remembrance of Allah'
[24:37]."
- "In the journey
leading to the unveiling of the Divine Realities, the seeker moves through
various stages of knowledge of and proximity to His Lord."
- "The entire
process [of reaching Allah] is like threading a needle. The thread seeks the
eye of the needle, passes through and then proceeds down to where it began.
There the two ends meet, form a knot and secure the entire thread. They form
a whole; thread, eye and needle, and any material they catch is sewn into the
fabric of the unity."
- "It must be
known to everyone that the Naqshbandi Sheikhs chose to guide their Mureeds
first through the movement from Allah, travelling from the higher states to
the lower. For this reason they maintain the common veils over the spiritual
vision of the Mureed, removing the veil of ordinary consciousness only at the
final step. All other Tariqas begin with the movement to Allah, moving from
the lowest states to the highest, and removing the common veils first."
- It is mentioned in
the Hadith of the Prophet (s.a.w), 'Scholars are the inheritors of the
Prophets.' The knowledge of Prophets is of two kinds: knowledge of laws and
knowledge of Secrets. The scholar cannot be called an inheritor if he does
not inherit both knowledges. If he takes only one knowledge, he is
incomplete. Thus the real inheritors are the ones who take the knowledge of
the laws and the knowledge of the Secrets, and only the saints have truly
received and protected this inheritance."
Final Phase of Life
Once the mission of
the Sheikh had been accomplished, he increasingly began to prefer solitude
and seclusion. One day the Sheikh stated, "It seems that my time for
departure is near." He wrote to his sons, saying, "Yesterday,
during the Muraqaba after the Fajr prayer, I noticed that the robe I would
usually wear was not with me, and it was replaced by another." This
signalled that his role would be passed down to a successor.
Later, the Sheikh
appointed Khwaja Mohammad Masoom as his successor, and instructed
all his Khulafa and Mureeds to take Bayt at the hand of Khwaja Mohammad
Masoom. The responsibility of running the Khanqah was also passed on. If any
new people came to the Sheikh asking to be his Mureeds, the Sheikh would send
them to Khwaja Mohammad Masoom.
Some people related
that during these days, they asked the Sheikh why he had isolated himself so
much from creation.
He replied that his
time for leaving this world was very close and that he had reached the age of
sixty three, exactly the age at which Allah's Nabi (s.a.w) had passed away,
so he knew that he too would pass away very soon. The Sheikh stated:
"O men of Allah!
I have passed on to you everything that has been given to me by Allah and His
Messenger (s.a.w). In the struggle to uphold the true Deen of Islam, I worked
hard and relentlessly all my life. I was a victim of oppression and tolerated
much hardship, but despite the harshest of harsh attempts by various forces
to destroy the cause, I remained steadfast and never allowed myself to be
complacent. Now I am to part from you, and I leave you in the Hands of the
Lord of the Worlds. Our next meeting will be under the banner of Allah's
Messenger (s.a.w) on the Day of Qiyamat."
Upon hearing this,
those present could not hold themselves back and began to weep
uncontrollably, and all began to say, "O Imamul Awliya! There is no
doubt whatsoever that you have striven relentlessly in the struggle to uphold
the Shariah, and to revive the Deen of Islam. And inshAllah, we will testify
to this fact on the Day of Judgement."
After this the Sheikh
made Dua and then proceeded from the Khanqah.
The Passing Away of a
Mujaddid
After six to seven
months of solitude, the Sheikh visited, for the last time, the blessed
shrines of his dear father and his respected grandfather. After this, the
Sheikh fell ill and did not recover, and on the 13th of Safar this illness
was increased by a high fever.
Despite being so ill,
the Sheikh continued to pray Salah in congregation and did not reduce his
habit of Zikr and Muraqaba.
The illness gradually
worsened and at the time of Chasht prayer, on Tuesday 28th Safar 1034 AH
(10th December 1624 AD), the Sheikh left this world and was reunited with the
Merciful Creator at the age of 63.
He was buried in the village of Sirhind,
and his tomb is now a place of shelter, solace and immense blessing for all
those seeking the Truth.
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Great Muslim Saints
The Great Muslim Saints, History of the Great Muslims Saints and their stories. How they became great Muslim saints
Monday 23 July 2012
HAZRAT SHAIK AHMED SIRHIND (RA)
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