Letters
of a Sufi Master
By: Ad-Darqawi, Shaikh Al-'Arabi
Lings, Martin
Burckhardt, Titus
Publcation Date: 12/98
Publisher: Fons Vitae
Binding: Trade Paper, 64pp.
ISBN:1887752161
Our Price: $11.95
Related Books: Islam
and Sufism, Prophets,
Saints, Sages and Teachers
This precious translation of selections from
the letters of Shaikh ad-Darqawi, the founder of a
major branch of the Shadhiliyyah Order in North Africa in the
13th/19th century, belongs to a class of Sufi literature that has not as
yet received enough attention outside of the Islamic world.
Each letter is a precious gem of wisdom, an indispensable key to open
certain doors which stand before every traveler upon the Path. Almost
all the letters concern the method and the operative aspects of the Way
based on the central techniques of the invocation or dhikr. In
this domain they must be considered among the most direct instructions
given on Sufic method to be found in all Sufi literature, where
generally masters have preferred to refer to the actual spiritual
techniques through allusion. Occasionally, however, fundamental facets
of Sufi doctrine are also discussed.
"The sickness that is afflicting your heart is one of those things
which strike men whom God loves, for 'of all men the most sorely tried
are the Prophets, after them the saints, then those who resemble them,
closely or remotely.' So do not be downcast, since this happens most
often to men full of sincerity and love, to cause them to go forward
towards their Lord. By this suffering their hearts are purified and
transformed into pure substance. Lacking such encounters with reality,
nobody would reach the knowledge of God, far from it, for 'if there were
no arenas for souls, the runners would not be able to run their course'
as it is said in Ibn 'Ata-Illah's Hikam, in which he also says:
'In the variety of signs and changing states I came to recognize Thine
intention in regard to me, that of showing me all things, so that there
might be nothing in which I would not know Thee.' In the same sense, the
initiates have said: 'It is in times of upheaval that men stand out from
amongst men.' In the Koran it is said : Do the people then reckon that
they will be left in peace because they say 'we believe,' and that they
will not be tried? (XXIX,1)."
In making available these letters in English, Titus Burckhardt
has rendered a service to those seeking spiritual instruction. He has
also enriched Sufi literature in Western languages and made available
one more document of extraordinary power and beauty belonging to the
recent past.
"During his early years in Morocco, Titus Burckhardt immersed
himself in the Arabic language and assimilated the classics of Sufism in
their original form. In later years, through his translations, he was to
share these treasures with a wider public. One of his most important
works of translation was of the spiritual letters of the renowned
18th-century Moroccan Shaikh Mulay al-'Arabi ad-Darqawi.
These letters manifest a deep and lively insight into timeless
metaphysical truths and, at the same time, are a precious document of
practical spiritual counsel."
--William Stoddart
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