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Most people know Hazrat Inayat Khan as the person responsible for taking Sufism
to the West around the beginning of this century. But the story of this unique
musician-mystic's spiritual quest begins much earlier.
Hailing from a renowned family of musicians of Baroda,
Inayat Khan first made his mark as a singer and poet who sought a cross-cultural
commingling where different faiths would be connected through essentially
interrelated ideals. In his teens, he got deeply involved in looking beyond
the ephemeral enraptured emotions that, according to him, often passed
for ecstasy.
It was in
the 1900s that Inayat Khan first met his murshid, Syed Mohammed Abu Hashim Madani.
Much of his later life was inspired by this murshid's wordless but focused teachings.
In fact, it was he who told Inayat Khan at his deathbed to "harmonize the East
and West... Spread the wisdom of Sufism abroad". The Sufi master went on to the
USA, England, Paris and Moscow. Throughout, his message remained that of the basic
unity among all faiths. In 1927, Inayat Khan returned to India, traveled extensively,
and breathed his last in Delhi where his tomb still draws followers from all over
the world.
THE ALCHEMY
OF HAPPINESS
The soul in
Sanskrit, in the terms of the Vedanta,
is called Atman, which means happiness or bliss itself.
It is not that happiness belongs to the soul; it is that the soul
itself is happiness. Today we often confuse happiness with
pleasure; but pleasure is only an illusion, a shadow of happiness;
and in this delusion man may pass his whole life, seeking after pleasure
and never finding satisfaction.
There is a Hindu
saying that man looks for pleasure and finds pain. Every pleasure seems
happiness in outward appearance; it promises happiness,
for it is the shadow of happiness, but just as the shadow of a
person is not the person though representing his form, so pleasure represents
happiness, but is not happiness in reality. According to
this idea, one rarely finds souls in this world who know what happiness
is; they are constantly disappointed in one thing after another. That
is the nature of life
in the world; it is so deluding that if man were disappointed a thousand
times he would still take the same path, for he knows no other. The more
we study life, the more we realize how rarely there is a soul who can
honestly say, 'I am happy'.
Happiness
cannot be bought or sold, nor can you give it to a person who has not
got it. Happiness is your own being, your own self, which is the
most precious thing in life. All religions, all philosophical systems,
have in different forms taught man how to find it by the religious path
or the mystical way; and all the wise ones have in some form or another
given a method by which the individual can find that happiness
which the soul is seeking. Sages and mystics have called this process
alchemy.
The stories of the Arabian Nights, which symbolize mystical
ideas, are full of the belief that there is a philosopher's stone, which will
turn gross metal into gold by a chemical process. This symbolic idea has deluded
men both in the East and the West; many have thought that a process exists by
which gold can be produced. But this is not the idea of the wise; the pursuit
of gold is for those who as yet are only children. For those who have the consciousness
of true reality, gold stands for light or spiritual inspiration. Gold represents
the color of light, and therefore an unconscious pursuit after light has made
man seek gold.
But there is a great difference between real and false
gold. It is the longing for true gold that makes man collect the imitation gold,
ignorant that the real gold is within. He satisfies the craving of his soul as
a child satisfies itself by playing with dolls. If there is anything one can depend
upon, it is hidden in the heart of man, the divine spark, the true philosopher's
stone, the real gold, which is the innermost being of man. A person may follow
a religion and yet not come to the realization of truth; but of what use is his
religion if he is not happy?
Religion does not mean depression and sadness. The spirit of religion
should be happiness. God is happy. He is the perfection of love,
harmony, and beauty. A religious person should be happier than one who
is not religious. If a person who professes religion is always melancholy,
his religion is disgraced; the form has been kept, but the spirit lost.
If the study of religion and mysticism does not lead to real joy and happiness,
it may just as well not exist, for then it does not help to fulfill the
purpose of life. The world today is sad and suffering as the result of
terrible wars; the religion which answers the demand of life today is
one which invigorates and gives life to souls, which illuminates the heart
of man with the divine light which is already there; not necessarily by
any outer form, though for some a form may be helpful, but by showing
that happiness which is the desire of every soul. As for the question
of how this alchemy is practiced, the whole process was explained
by the alchemists in a symbolical way.
They
said gold is made out of mercury; the nature of mercury is to be ever-moving,
but by a certain process the mercury is first stilled, and once stilled
it becomes silver; then the silver has to be melted, and the juice of
a herb is poured on to the molten silver, which is thereby turned into
gold. This, of course, gives only an outline, but one can find detailed
explanations of the whole process. Many childlike souls have tried to
make gold by stilling mercury and melting silver, and they have tried
to find the herb; but they were deluded. The real interpretation of
this process is that mercury represents the nature of the ever-restless
mind. Especially when he tries to concentrate does a person realize
that the mind is ever restless. It is like a restive horse: when it
is ridden, it is more restive than when it is in the stable.
Such is the nature of mind: it becomes more restless when one desires
to control it; it is like mercury, constantly moving. When by a method
of concentration one has mastered the mind, one has taken the first
step in the accomplishment of a sacred task. Prayer is concentration,
reading is concentration, sitting and relaxing and thinking on one subject
are all concentration. All artists, thinkers, and inventors have practiced
concentration in some form; they have given their minds to one thing,
and by focusing on one object have developed the faculty of concentration;
but for stilling the mind a special method is necessary which is taught
by the mystic, just as a singer is taught by the teacher of voice-production.
The secret of this lies in the science of breath.
Breath
is the essence of life, the center of life, and the mind may be controlled
by a knowledge of the proper method of breathing. For this, instruction
from a teacher is a necessity; for since the mystical cult of the East
has become known in the West, books have been published, and teachings,
which had been kept as sacred as religion, have been discussed in words;
but these can never truly explain the mystery of that which is the center
of man's very being. People read these books and begin to play with breath,
and often, instead of benefiting, they injure both mind and body. There
are also those who make a business of teaching breathing exercises for
money, thus degrading a sacred thing.
The science of breath is the greatest mystery there is, and for thousands
of years it has been kept as a sacred trust in the schools of the mystics.
When the mind is under perfect control and no longer restless, one can
hold a thought at will as long as one wishes. This is the beginning
of phenomena. Some abuse these privileges and by dissipating the power
thus obtained they destroy the silver before turning it into gold. The
silver must be heated before it can melt, and with what? With that warmth
which is the divine essence in the heart of man, which comes forth as
love, tolerance, sympathy, service, humility, unselfishness, in a stream
which rises and falls in a thousand drops, each drop of which could
be called a virtue, all coming from that one stream hidden in the heart
of man: the love element; and when it glows in the heart, then the actions,
the movements, the tone of the voice, the expression, all show that
the heart is warm.
The moment this happens a man really lives; he has unsealed the spring
of happiness, which overcomes all that is jarring and inharmonious,
and the spring has established itself as a divine stream. After the
heart is warmed by the divine element, which is love, the next stage
is the herb, which is the love of God. But the love of God alone is
not sufficient; knowledge of God is also necessary. It is the absence
of the knowledge of God that makes a man leave his religion, for there
is a limit to man's patience. Knowledge of God strengthens man's belief
in God, throws light on the individual and on life. Things become clear;
every leaf on a tree becomes as a page of a holy book to one whose eyes
are open to the knowledge of God. When the juice of the herb of divine
love is poured on the heart, warmed by the love of his fellow men, then
that heart becomes the heart of gold, the heart that expresses what
God would express. Man has not seen God, but man has then seen God in
man, and when this happens, then verily everything that comes from such
a man comes from God Himself.