In the time of Kaliyug, when the need of the hour is to spiritualise society, the role of the householder seeker is a crucial one. Juggling career, family, multiple relationships and traffic jams, the householder must bloom like the proverbial lotus in the muck of everyday life More>>
Sufi traditions of peace
and coexistence are very powerful as an expression of people's Islam
in our subcontinent, but unfortunately the ruling clergy has never given
them either recognition or validity
The dargah (shrine) of Khwaja Moinuddin Chisti, more popularly
known as Garib Nawaz or the comfort of the poor, is considered,
after Mecca and Medina, to be the most sacred shrine of Muslims from the
Indian subcontinent. The hospice of the great saint and founder of the
Chistiya silsilah (Chisti strain or tradition) of Sufism in India
goes back several hundred years, almost to the earliest period of the
Muslim conquest of India. What is more, it serves as an interesting parallel,
if not contrast, to the ''official'' Islam that clerics and kings in Delhi
usually espoused.
This
dargah, representing years of Sufi traditions, which is open to
everyone regardless of caste, creed, faith, age, or gender, twenty-four
hours a day, not only posed a powerful challenge to the Hindu orthodoxy
of the time, but also to the Muslim orthodoxy represented by the ulema
(orthodox Islamic clerics). While the dominant Hindu practices emphasized
caste hierarchies and exclusion, the dargah of the saint was the
refuge of the most lowly, humble, and oppressed people of the land. While
the Muslim priestocracy preached the supremacy of Islam, the religion
of the conquerors, the Chistis demonstrated their love and acceptance
of people of all faiths.
The
Chistis, unlike many other Sufi traditions or orders, always kept a healthy
distance from the power politics of the court. They practiced extreme
poverty and simplicity. Their fondness for music soon endeared them to
the masses. Like the shrine of any Hindu saint, the dargah of the
Sufis became a center not only of the worship of the pir or guru, but
also a place of healing, refuge, and wish fulfillment. No wonder, people
of all faiths, Hindus and Muslims alike, flock to these shrines even today.
My recent
visit to the great dargah at Ajmer Sharif, India was memorable.
It was a Thursday and the whole sanctuary was clogged with devotees.
As we approached, we were confronted and solicited by the inevitable
money-mongering middlemen who flock such places. But we managed to escape
their clutches.
Once inside,
we seemed to have entered a medieval world. Men, women, and children
in all kinds of attire hurried about here and there. There was a long
line of people trying to get inside the shrine to pay their respects
at the saint's tomb. We too were ushered into the rather full, even
sticky chamber.
So many people
jostled to kiss the cold marble or the silver railing. At the head of
the grave were two khadims or servants of the shrine. They were
collecting heaps of notes for a brief genuflection. I joined the ranks
of the faithful, kneeling down and touching my forehead to the floor.
All around me were people in various attitudes of prayer or solicitation.
As
I was hustled away, I tried my best to jostle for a small space for myself
where I could concentrate for a few moments. Luckily I managed standing
room right opposite the headstone. Slowly, the initial unpleasant sensations
and recoil from the money-mongering dissipated. A peace descended into
my being. I remembered the members of my family and my friends, praying
for their well-being and spiritual progress. I prayed for peace and forgiveness
too, hoping that the spirit of the saint would thrive and guide the people
of this land. I remembered the other saints of the lineage, not only Khwaja
Kutbutddin Bakhtiyar Kaki of Mehrauli, but also Baba Farid Ganjeshakkar,
Hazrat Nizamuddin Aulia, Khwaja Nasiruddin Chirag-e-Dilli, Khwaja Bande
Nawaz of Gulbarga, and the other great masters of the Chistiya silsilah
at Khuldabad, Hyderabad, Aurangabad and elsewhere in the subcontinent.
Coming to this root shrine was like bowing to them all.
Just then
one of the attendants beckoned to me. Placing my head under the green
chadar or sheet, he invoked, in the most moving and sincere manner,
the blessings of the saint on me. I felt loved and protected; my heart
welled up with gratitude and compassion. I knew that my visit had been
successful.
Outside,
the qawalis (Islamic devotional music) were going on. Seated
in front of the shrine, the present gaddi nashin, heir to the
lineage, Syed Umuruddin Baba, son of Syed Kutbuddin Sakhi, sat solemnly.
He was the present Khalifa (representative of Prophet Muhammad
or Allah on earth), and therefore the object of devotion of all those
who sat in the courtyard. While all of us looked at him, he looked only
at the shrine or the sky.
The most
interesting thing was that he was dressed in saffron and looked just
like a Hindu sage or holy man. Even the chaubdars or attendants
wore saffron turbans! As I sat down to listen to the devotional music,
the sparrowsand there were hundreds of them overheadshowered
us with their droppings! This was a different kind of prasad
or dessert indeed! It was clear to me that one had to disregard the
unsavory and focus on the essential if one wished to progress in spiritual
life.
As I left
the shrine, I couldn't help comparing this experience of love, oneness,
and togetherness with the hate-filled words of the Shahi Imam (Islamic
religious head) of Delhi, who had urged his listeners to support jehadi
terrorists in Afghanistan, Israel, and Kashmir. Sufi traditions of peace
and coexistence are indeed very powerful as an expression of people's
Islam in our subcontinent, but unfortunately the ruling clergy has never
given them either recognition or validity. It was interesting that Pakistani
president Pervez Musharraf and his Begum were unable to visit this
dargah of Garib Nawaz during their visit to India last year.
''How could they,'' someone said, ''the Khwaja did not call him because
he did not come with peace in his heart.''