SUFISM IN THIRTEENTH AND FOURTEENTH CENTURIES INDIA WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS
ON AMIR KHUSRAU
SUFISM IN THIRTEENTH AND FOURTEENTH CENTURIES INDIA WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON
AMIR KHUSRAU
Dr. Husain Randathani
Sufism developed as a world
movement in twelfth century when it was transformed
into distinct orders or tariqas. By this time there developed a
well-knit network through which the sufis spread their ideas in different parts
of the world. This system guaranteed the transmission of mystical knowledge
acquired by the founders of the order to further generations of sufis through
their successors or khalifas. It was about the same time the movement
reached as a spiritual force in the Indian sub continent.
Though
sufism as a reforming system has reached in India at an early time and
there were sufi settlements in different parts of India, a clear evidence of
sufi activities is found only in the early part of thirteenth century with the
arrival of Khwaja Muinuddin Chishti and his order the Chishti tariqa.
Muinuddin came from Chisht in Afganistan and settled at Ajmir, a remote
place in 12061 when Muhammed Ghori was
founding his empire in India. Ajmir developed into a sufi
centre with the visitors coming from different parts seeking the shaikh’s
blessings. After his death in 1236, a shrine was constructed and it became a
pilgrimage centre which was the first of its kind in the country.
After dividing the country into
spiritual territories called vilayats the Khwaja had sent his disciples
to various parts to spread his mission. Among the disciples, Shaikh Hamiduddin
Nagauri settled at Nagaur where he lived as a cultivator among the peasants
community who found him as a guide and spiritual preceptor. His successors
actively engaged in spiritual practices and when Muhammed bin Tughluq ascended
the throne he constructed a mausoleum for the sheikh and a kahanqah
(monastery) was built for the disciples.
When central Asia and Iran was
hard pressed by the Mongol invasions at the beginning of thirteenth century, the
sufis of the area moved to Delhi where the sultans provided
them all the facilities for preaching. Sultan Iltutmish had moved his capital to
Delhi which was made a seat of learning by constructing the Quvvat al Islam
complex and inviting sufis and scholars to it. He invited Khwaja Bhaktiyar kaki,
a disciple of Muinuddin Chishti to Delhi. Kaki actively worked among the common
people and many of them accepted his mission. He had
nine important disciples among whom Baba Farid settled at Ajodhan and others
spread the Chishti order in and around Delhi.
Shaikh Farid trained and
tutored a very large number of disciples who later on set up independent
spiritual hospices and disseminated the teachings of the Chishti tariqah.
Among them Shaikh Nizamuddin Auliya was the most famous and he was
the greatest sufi saint in the fourteenth century.
He gave the Chishti order an expansive character, his disciples having settled
at various places through out northern and central India. Nizamuddin hailed from
Badaun, a small town ship near Delhi. He belonged to a very poor family and
always suffered to meet the both ends. At Delhi he
often lived with Imadul Mulk, the maternal grand father of Amir Khusrau. He
moved from one place to another without finding an abode to live. Though many
asked the sheikh to meet Sultan Balban for some help he refused to do so. When
Sultan Jalaluddin ascended the throne in 1290 he sent the sheikh some charity
and promised some villages, but the sheikh rejected
the offer2 and decided to suffer all the hardships as a part of his
retreat and renunciation. By the time of Sultan Alauddin Khalji the fame of
Auliya had reached far and wide that the sultan provided all facilities to
sheikh’s visitors by constructing inns and other amenities. However the
successors of Alauddin was not in good terms with Nizamuddin
Auliya. But they could not deferat him or expel him from Delhi. His
popularity was so great that even the sultans dared to do
any harm to the sheikh that will create anarchy in the empire. Auliya
died in 1325 and Sultan Muhammed bin Tughlu q constructed an imposing dome over
his grave. Both Hindus and Muslims were attracted to the shrine and considered
its dust a sacred relic.
Amir Khusrau, the parrot of
Hindustan, was a very close disciple of Nizamuddin.3 His fore fathers
migrated to India from Balkh during the time of Sultan Iltutmish. He could learn
Arabic, Persian and Hindustani from the court and became a fine poet in his
early ages. He was a poet and Historian and a sufi as
well. He dedicated five masnavis to Alauddin Khalji along with the
history of his reign. Khusrau is believed to have invented several melodies and
the musical instrument, the sitar meaning seven bars. They were designed to
produce novelty in sufi sama (music) rituals
in which he himself participated. Though Khusrau was very close to court circles
his real dedication remained within the sufi movement
and on the completion of his official duties he would escape to Shaikh
Nizamuddin Auliyas monastery. When the Shaikh died Amir Khusrau was with
Giyasudin Tughluq on his Bengal expedition. On hearing the news of the death he
hastened to Delhi and recited the following verse by standing besides the grave
of Auliya with tears
“The beloved sleeps on her cough
With her face covered
With her curled lock
Oh ,
Khusrau! Return to
Your own house for the
Entire world is now covered by
night’’
In the words of A.A.Rizvi “the
curled lock in sufi symbolism represents mysteries and the home is eternity.
Khusrau was in fact predicting his own death, and he became so overwhelmed at
his loss that he apparently was unable to weep for the Shaikh.’3
Khusrau survived a further six months after the Shaikh’s death and died in
September 1325.
Music formed a major part of
the life and biography of Amir Khusrau. Nothing in
music could be named and not found connected to Khusrau, not even the mystical
dance performed by the Sufis. During the sama mehfils
(music session) at the khanqah of Hazrat Nizamuddin, dancing was not allowed.
But during one such performance, Khusrau stood up to dance. Hazrat requested
him: “Dance in such a way that your hands are raised to the sky as if calling to
God, and your feet should hit the earth as if denouncing it.” And it is
so, the sufis raise their arms and whirl while
stamping their feet on the ground
Khusrau's love for India's flora and its favourable climate is evident in many
other places. While arguing on why India is the most beautiful place to live in
the world, he uses the example of Adam, who when exiled from heaven to earth,
first set his foot in Sri Lanka, the Indian continent, according to the
Biblical and Islamic traditions. He was sent to India, since the only place, as
favourable as heaven, was India. If he was sent to Khorasan, Arab or China, he
wouldn't have survived the extreme climate there for more than a few hours.
Amir Khusrau, who had delved deep into the Hindu religious literature, said:
(Though Hindus do not believe in
the
religion
in which we do,
In many matters they and we
believe in
the
same thing.)4
Nizamuddin
Auliya had many important disciples besides Amir Khusrau. Hasan Sijsi, the poet
and Ziauddin Barani, the historian are important. Many
disciples actively engaged in sufi preaching in different parts of
Hindustan. In Delhi Shaikh Nasiruddin Chiragh remained as his successor and when
Muhammed Bin Tughluq asked him to move to his second capital at Daulatabad he
decided to remain in Delhi itself. He was behind the installation of Firoz Shah
Tughluq on the throne after the death of Muhammad bin Tughluq. He came to be
known as Chiragh i Delli (The lamb of Delhi) and after his death in 1356 he was
buried in Delhi and his grave became a centre of attraction to the people.
The Chishti saints lived under
conditions of awful poverty and they looked down up on possession of private
property as a serious impediment to the growth of one’s spiritual personality.5
They considered fasting to be a remarkable expedient for weakening those desires
that lead never to happiness but either to disillusionment or further desire.
They reduced their diet in order to control the calls of the flesh. Once Shaikh
Nizamuddin was asked why he was taking very little food, he replied,
”So many poverty stricken people are sleeping without dinner in the
corners of the mosque s and before the shops. How can this
food go down my throat.’’6 A Chishti hospice or khanqah is a
simple hall where all the inmates lived a community life. They all slept,
studied, prayed on the ground and no discrimination ,
not even on the basis of seniority, was permitted to prevail in the hospice. If
food was available, all would partake it; if not all would suffer jointly the
pangs of hunger.
Like the Chishtis the
Suhrawardi order also found its way to India. Shaikh Bahauddin Zakariyya was
the first peacher of Suhrawardi order in the sub continent. He was close to
Sultan Iltutmish who appointed him as the head of religious affairs, the Shaikh
al Islam. His disciples Sayyid Nuruddin Mubarak Gaznavi Sayyid
Jalaluddin and Qazi Hamiduddin and his successors
actively engaged in the propagation of the order in the country.
Sufism played as a movement for
social and cultural integrity of the Indian society. Sufis looked up on social
service as the supreme object of all their spiritual exercises. The
piri murid system, metaphysical doctrines,
the ethics and percepts, the prayers and litanies, the community life of the
khanqah –together formed a consistent , integrated almost individual whole. The
common people found solace for their worries and mental and physical illness in
the prayers of sufis. That is why we see the Sufis living amongst the people by
bearing their sorrows and worries. They were able to gauge the motives of the
people who came to them and accepted them as
disciples. The constant contact with the needs and the sorrows as well as the
weaknesses and vices of the people were the anvil on which the
sufi’s personality was hammered out. They were
believed to have acquired supernatural powers because of their supernatural
gifts. Muinuddin Chishti said: ”To answer the call of
those in distress, to fulfill the needs of the helpless and to feed the hungry
are the best acts of obediance’’7
The Chishtis and Suhrawardis
maintained different attitude towards state. When the Chishtis completely
abstained from the rulers the suhrawardis accepted their gifts and lived with
them. During the life time Nizamuddin Auliya seven rulers ruled over Delhi, but
he never visited any one of them except Sultan Jalauddin who summoned him to
give his evidences for permitting sama or music in
the sharia. The chishtis declined to accept honours and titles or to
visit the court though the officers of the government came to their assemblies
and princes could regard as their disciples.
In the end of 14th
century we find the Sufism losing its spiritual intensity and becoming more
missionary in character. One aspect of its missionary
activity was the attempt to propagate higher religious and spiritual standards.
This is well represented by the correspondence of later Sufis like Khwaja Diya
Nakhshabi and Shaikh Sharafuddin Yahya Maneri. The other aspect is the
appraisal, assimilation of the spiritual values of
Hinduism. Shaikh Fariduddin and Nizamuddin had connection with yogis who often
visited them and talked on spiritual matters. Nizamuddin had very open mind and
he appreciated the devotion of Hindus. Shaikh nNasiruddin had studied Hindu yoga
practices and asked his followers to follow the yoga practice of holding breath
inorder to concentrate.8 Shaikh Gesu Deraz, the Chishti sufi
mentions of conversing with yogis on Hindu
spirituality and studying it by himself and arguing with gurus on spiritual
matters.9
In
the end of fourteenth century the devotional character of Hindi songs and the
appeal which made to the Sufis brought Hindus and
Muslims closer together. AmirKhusrau had played an important role in
synthesizing the sufi language at par with the Hindi.
Shaikh Nizamuddin was very sensitive to the music of words and to the tender
charm of the Hindustani of the those days. By the
time of Gese Deraz India Music had been studies and
Hindustani devotional songs had come to occupy a very significant position in
the sama gatherings. As told by Mr. Mujib, the ”Sufis made and intuitive choice
of the common ground of spirituality between Hindus and Muslims and opened the
way for a mutual appreciation of aesthetic values which could revolutionize the
whole cultural attitude of Muslims’’10
Reference:
1.
SAA.Rizvi, A History of Sufism in India,Delhi, 1978,p. 122
2.
Siyarul Auliya,
pp.11415
3.He was so
close to his master that once Nizāmuddīn Auliyā' said, "If
sharī'ah allows me I would like him
to be buried with me in the same grave”
4.Amir
Khusrau. Nuh Sipihr, p.163
5.SAA
Rizvi, op.cit.,p.172
6.
K.A.Nizami, Some Aspects of Religion and Politics in India during the
Thirteenth Century, Delhi, 1974,p.199