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Hazrate Mahboub Ali Shah
On the sixth of Ramadan, 1417, the sixteenth of January, 1997, the
twenty-seventh of Daymah, 1375, the beloved (mahbub) master of the
Ni‘matullahi Gunabadi Order of Sufis passed away. He was buried
beside his father in Gunabad, in accordance with his last will and
testament.
In sufi books, it is said that the friends (awliya’) of God are of
two sorts: first, the salik-e majdhub (the attracted wayfarer), and
second, the majdhub-e salik (the wayfaring attracted one). By
definition, the salik-e majdhub is one who first begins to travel
the path, i.e., is a wayfarer (salik), and is then captured by God,
while the majdhub-e salik is one who is captured (majdhub) by God
prior to his travelling the path (suluk). Both are in love with God,
but for the salik-e majdhub love increases along the path, while for
the majdhub-e salik, the intensity of love carries him along the
path. Based on these definitions, Moses, peace be with him, was
among the former, and Jesus Christ, peace be with him, was among the
latter. Among the early
sufi masters, Shaykh Junayd Baghdadi (c. 820-910) was of the former,
and Bayazid Bastami (d. 874) was of the latter.
Among the modern sufi masters, Sultan Alishah Gunabadi was of
the former, and his viceregent and son, Nur Alishah II, was of the
latter. There is a
hadith qudsi called hadith al-nawafil according to which God says:
“Unceasingly My servant approaches Me by supererogatory deeds (nawafil)
and worship, until I love him, …”[1]
This hadith refers to the salik-e majdhub, for it is subsequent to
his works that he is captured by God. On the other hand, since the
majdhub-e salik is drunk with the love of God, he is unable to pay
detailed attention to his works. This is why in the Mathnavi of
Jalal al-Din Rumi, Moses angrily scolds the illiterate shepherd who
speaks of God in a familiar manner. Mawlavi says, “O Moses, they
that know the conventions are of one sort, they whose souls and
spirits burn are of another sort.”[2]
The lovers of God (muhibbin) are the salikin-e majdhub. Those who
have become beloved by God (mahbubin) are the majdhubin-e salik. The
Qur’an refers to the latter in the following verse:( He shall love
them and they shall love Him) (5:54).
Those who are majdhub-e salik do not live to be very old, for the
divine call is always beckoning them, drawing them by the attraction
of divine love away from this world, so that they are killed in the
way of God, as it is stated in the hadith qudsi “Whoever seeks Me,
finds Me; whoever finds Me, knows Me; whoever knows Me, loves Me;
whoever loves Me, I love him; and whomever I love, I kill; and
whomever I kill, I Myself am his compensation (diah).”[3]
Hazrat Hajj ‘Ali Tabandeh was a majdhub-e salik, for which reason
his title in the tariqah is Mahbub Alishah. He died on Thursday,
January 16, 1997. He was the qutb of the Ni‘matullahi Gunabadi sufi
order. The chain of authorization of this order goes through his
great great great grandfather, the well known ‘arif (gnostic) and ‘alim
(Muslim religious scholar) of the nineteenth century (A.H. 14th
century), Hajj Mulla Sultan Muhammad Gunabadi, titled Sultan Alishah
(A.H. 1251-1327/1835-1909 C.E.),[4] to
Shah Ni‘matullahi Wali (A.H. 731-831/1338-1428 C.E.), and through
him via Junayd Baghdadi, Sari Saqati (d. 867) and Ma‘ruf Kharkhi (d.
815) to the Shi‘i
Imams. Of the Twelve Imam Shi‘i
sufi orders, this order has the most adherents, the majority of whom
are Iranian.
Hazrat Mahbub Alishah[5]
was born on November 13, 1947 in Tehran, the third of five children.
He attended elementary school in Gunabad, and at the same time
pursued elementary Islamic studies under the local religious
scholars, although his primary teacher was his father. He moved to
Tehran to attend high school, then to Mashhad for a year at the
university there before completing his university education at the
University of Tehran, where he studied Persian literature under
Prof. Sayyid Ja‘far Shahidi with an emphasis on sufi texts. His B.A.
thesis is entitled The Course of Sufism through the Literature of
the Sixth and Seventh Centuries A.H.. During his university study he
taught Persian literature in high schools, and after graduating from
the university, in accordance with the instructions of the Order to
be gainfully employed, he began working as director of public
relations for the Ministry of Oil, where he was employed until 1989,
when he was granted retirement at his request, in accordance with
his father’s orders. He married in 1977, and has two sons, Reza and
Rahmatullah.
During this entire period, he was under the spiritual tutelage of
his father, who gave him instructions prior to his initiation in the
tariqah, such as the manner of observance of prayer, supererogatory
fasting, daily reading of the Qur’an, maintanence of ritual purity,
vigils, etc…
It was at the age of eighteen, prior to entering the university of
Mashhad, while he was in Gunabad for the summer, that he asked his
grandfather, Hajj Muhammad Hasan Salih Alishah, then qutb, to be
initiated into the order. His grandfather cast him away with a stern
look which so affected him that after the usual Thursday night sufi
session, majlis, he told his mother what had happened and asked her
to intervene on his behalf. She went to her father-in-law, who
responded that it was not an appropriate time because the boy’s
father was away sick in Mashhad, and because he was too young.
During his year of university studies in Mashhad, Hazrat ‘Ali
Tabandeh made frequent trips to Gunabad to ask for initiation (bay‘at).
Each time he was rebuked. The following summer, he asked Hajj Shaykh
Sayyid Hibbatullah Jazbi[6]
to intercede, to whom the qutb responded with silence. At this
point, the young aspirant decided that he would stop making
requests. At noon the next day, when Hazrat Salih Alishah went to
make wudu,[7] he
spotted the youth, who said nothing. “Why don’t you say something?”
he asked him. This sentence moved the young man so deeply that he
fell at the feet of his grandfather in tears and fainted. When he
came to, he found himself in the company of his mother and
grandmother who were crying with the profound emotion that charged
the hours prior to his initiation, which took place later that
night. Both his father and Shaykh Jazbi were asked by the qutb to be
present in the room of initiation.
After his initiation, he went to Tehran, to continue his university
studies, and he was placed in the charge of Shaykh Jazbi who was
instructed to train him in Islamic studiesand spiritual wayfaring.
After graduating from the university, his father ordered Shaykh
Jazbi to provide him with further training in the religious sciences
and in spiritual discipline. Shaykh Jazbi died in 1985, and until
that time, he was under his guidance.
In A.H. 1386/1966 C.E., he made his obligatory Hajj, and in the
following years he had the good fortune to make other pilgimages to
Mecca. Also in 1966, his grandfather passed away, and with the
succession of his father to the position of qutb, his spiritual
training became more strenuous. After fifteen years of this
intensive spiritual discipline, his father intended to give him
permission to lead congregational prayers, but the qutb hesitated
until in a dream he was told by his father, Hazrat Salih Alishah, to
grant the permission to his grandson. In the dream, they were at
majlis, and Hazrat Salih Alishah asked where ‘Ali was. They called
him, and Hazrat Salih Alishah gave ‘Ali an aba (cloak) and told him
to lead the prayer and that they would pray behind him.[8]
The authorization reads as follows:
In the Name of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate
Praise be to Allah, Lord of the worlds, and blessings and peace
with the best of His creatures, and the most noble of His people,
Muhammad, the seal of the prophets, and with his twelve successors,
the pleasing [to God].
The brethren in faith should beware that the dear light of my eyes,
إajj ‘Ali
Tabandeh—may Allah grant him success in his journey on the path of
Allah and God-wariness, and may Allah keep him from calamities—is
authorized from this date to convene congregational prayers, and it
is appropriate for the fuqara, may Allah grant them success,
everywhere to follow him [in prayer]. I beg the kind Allah to grant
him and all the brethren in faith success in obedience. It is hoped
that the light of my eyes will increase his own inability and need
toward the throne of God, and that he will maintain his humility and
modesty toward his brethren, especially the authorized ones.
15 Sha‘ban al-Mu‘azzam
1401
28 Khordad 1360
[18 June 1981]
Faqir Sultan
Husayn Tabandeh Reza Alishah
[signed and
signeted]
Four years
later, in Ramadan 1405/1985, he was authorized by his father as
shaykh, to serve through the guidance and initiation of novices. The
letter of authorization is translated here:
In the Name of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate
Peace and blessings to our master and our prophet, Muhammad and
to his pure folk
.
To the honorable brethren of
Ni‘matullahi Sultan Alishahi Order. The light of my eye, my dear,
Hajj ‘Ali Tabandeh, God protect him and grant him success in
wayfaring and in godwariness, who, according to my orders has been
under the guidance of my honorable brother,
Hajj Sayyid Hibatullah Jazbi, may Allah grant him pardon and grant
him a central place in His paradise, to practice the training and
disciplining of the soul, and for some time has been authorized to
conduct congregational prayer, from this date is authorized in the
initiation of the aspirants and guidance of the seekers. He should
act according to the oral instructions given to him, and guide them,
and consider the guidance of one of them as an act of worship. Of
course, he should increase his feeling of incapability and need
toward the threshold of God, and he should have perfect kindness
toward his brethren, and not neglect humility and modesty. He should
give priority to the previously authorized shaykhs. I have given him
the title Mahbub ‘Ali.
I hope that he will be granted and profit by grace through
the love of ‘Ali and his great progeny, which love is our pride. Of
course, the brethren should obey him and consider obedience to him
as obedience to this faqir.
Wa al-salam ‘alaykum wa rahmatullah wa barakatuh.
21 Ramadan 1405 coinciding with the day of the martyrdom of Hazrat
Mawla [‘Ali], peace be with him,
[corresponding to 10 June 1985].
Signed and signeted: Faqir
Sultan Husayn Tabandeh Gunabadi Reza Alishah.
After his appointment as
Shaykh he began looking after the affairs of the
fuqara as required by his decree. He began to visit various
cities both in and out of Iran for the purpose of the guidance of
the fuqara and
seekers of the path, until he gradually attained the capacity to
serve as his father’s vicegerent. In a letter to Shaykh Jazbi,
Hazrat Reza Alishah mentions his decision about the appointment. His
father was apprehensive about appointing him as his nominated
successor. One night, in Indian Kashmir, Hazrat Reza Alishah had a
dream in which he saw his father and master, Hazrat Salih Alishah,
asking him why he would not write the decree to nominate his son as
his successor. In the dream he answered that perhaps some would
oppose him, and endanger his life. His father responded that God and
the Pure Imams, peace be with them, and the
awliya’ and we will preserve him. This dream was like an
inspiration, but still he hesitated. So, he decided to make
istikharah
(bibliomancy) with the Qur’an, and the following
ayah was read: “And
the king said, ‘Bring him to me that he may be released into my
presence’ andwhen he had talked with him, he said, ‘Indeed, today
you are in our presence, established and trusted.’” (12:54). Thus,
after heartfelt inspirations and divine reaffirmations, he wrote the
decree for his son to be his successor on the holiday of ‘Ayd al-Ghadir
1406/1986, as follows:
In the Name of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate
And He is the Guide to the Straight Path and the Upright Way
And I salute and wish peace to the aim
of His creation and His most noble creature, the seal of the
prophets, the best of those who have ascended to heaven to the
position of dignity and selection (istifa’), our master and our
prophet Muhammad Mustafa[9]
(s) and to his folk and companions, the guiding Imams, lanterns in
the gloom, especially to his trustee and immediate viceregent, our
guardian the Commander of the Faithful, ‘Ali ibn Abi Talib and the
eleven Imams of his progeny, peace be with them.
To the wayfarers of the right path of
Murtada[10]
and the fuqara of
the Ni‘matullahi
Gunabadi Order, may Allah grant them
success, may it no longer remain hidden and covered from them that
my honorable offspring, Hajj ‘Ali Tabandeh—may Allah grant him
success in wayfaring and God-wariness (taqwa)
and help him—for some years now has taken several steps forward in
wayfaring, and observes the manners of the pure
shari‘ah and has
good character, and according to some orders given by this
faqir has been
occupied with the spiritual
jihad and meditation (muraqibah).
He has satisfied this faqir,
and has been authorized to lead congregational prayers and to
initiate the seekers. After the spirit of this sinful
faqir, Sultan Husayn
Tabandeh Reza Alishah quits the bodily frame, leaves the world to
join his Beloved, this dear offspring will be obligated to the
service of the fuqara
of the Ni‘matullahi Order, the looking after the wayfarers
and the guidance of the seekers. It is hoped that this offspring
will keep in mind the pleasure of God under all conditions and that
his weakness and brokenness [before Allah] will grow. May he also be
well mannered, humble, kind and forgiving, with the public, and with
those who are bad to him, may he be forgiving, ignore their faults,
and pardon them. And if someone intends to inquire and understand
the truth, he should intend to remove their doubts and encourage
them in accordancewith the noble verse: “and
dispute with them in the best way” (16:125). He should have
complete kindness and respect for the shaykhs and those authorized
to lead prayers, and for each of them who renews his covenant, he
should renew their authorizations. With the
fuqara, also, he is to be as a father with the utmost caring,
tolerance and forbearance.
In relation to the family and relatives, he is to be
completely kind and well mannered, and to treat the elders with
respect. Of course, I expect that the family and relatives will
swiftly hurry to renew their covenants with him, and that they will
not fall short in this, and also the
fuqara should make their renewals as soon as possible and not
fall short in this. Especially the relatives and family who have a
fondness for and firm faith in their religious path should quickly
make their renewals and maintain unity and agreement, and endeavor
in heart and conduct to uphold the banner of
faqr. I gave him,
the light of my eyes, the honor of the title Mahbub Alishah. I hope
that the love of the awliya’[11]
and their satisfaction will be kept in mind through all
situations, and that he will give directions to others to combine
the precepts of the sacred
shari‘ah and the manners of the tariqat
of ‘Ali, which
must be observed completely by the
fuqara of our Order.
I bid you farewell, my brethren, and I wish you peace, and I request
your supplications.
And He is the Guide to the Straight
Path and the Upright Way
Hazrat Reza Alishah on different occasions has reconfirmed his
appointment. In the summer of 1989, when he became very ill,
suffering from different ailment, at the request of the
fuqara, he travelled
to Sweden and Germany. In Hanover, he was confined to the hospital
and was going to have an serious operation. Thus, he wrote a
telegram to his successor, as follows:
Hu
121[12]
To my son, Hajj ‘Ali Tabandeh, Mahbub
Alishah, may Allah grant him success, God has invited me to meet
him, and so, I leave you with God; after me, the guardianship of the
fuqara of the Ni‘matullahi [Order] and the guidance of the
seekers will be with you. The decree and further instructions will
be given to you by your mother. Do not neglect the previous
instructions regarding matters of the heart, good social relations,
respect and kindness to the family, humility and good behavior
toward the brethren and others. In all situations, observe the
satisfaction of God, the great personages of the religion, and my
satisfaction. Be careful about patience, tolerance and forgiveness.
Give my regards to the entire family and to the
fuqara in the
majlis. I beg the
prayers of each of them.
25 Muharram 1410,
6 Shahrivar 1368,
28 August 1989,
Faqir Sultan Husayn Tabandeh.
But before sending this telegram, his son, having heard of his
father’s poor condition in the hospital, anxiously travelled to
GermanyAfter he recovered from the operation, they returned to Iran,
but Hazrat Reza Alishah remained very ill, and, much to his chagrin,
he was not able to participate fully in all the sessions of the
Order.
From the spring of 1992, the physical condition of Hazrat Reza
Alishah became critical. In the following summer, his condition
deteriorated to the point that he was taken against his will to the
hospital. After spending a few weeks in the hospital, one day he
apologized to the nurse for having caused so much trouble, and
mentioned that he would be leaving the next day. The nurse was
suprised to hear that a patient in such poor condition would be
released from the hospital. She asked the doctor about it, but he
professed complete ignorance of the matter. That night his son, Hajj
‘Ali Tabandeh, came to look after him. After the Morning Prayer, the
father’s condition worsened and he began to bid his son farewell.
Before the sun shines in all its glory, the sun must set and the sky
darken.[13]
He passed away in his beloved son’s arms. When the sun rose, Hajj
‘Ali Tabandeh remarked to it, “You have never risen on my father
when he was asleep. ”[14]
On Wednesday 11 Rabi‘ al-Awwal 1413, 18 September 1992, his spirit
left his body and joined the Beloved.
His corpse was taken to Baydukht where an elaborate funeral was
held, and he was buried in the shrine of his great grandfather
beside the grave of his father, in accordance with his last will and
testament. With the authorization (izn)
that had been given by Hazrat Reza Alishah, Hajj ‘Ali
Tabandeh became Hazrat Mahbub Alishah, the
qutb and master of
the Order.
Despite the short period during which he provided guidance, a
period not lasting more than four years, in harmony with “the names
sent down from the heavens,”[15]
he became the beloved (mahbub)
of the fuqara, and
of his friends and enemies alike. He was so fond of God, that his
body could not bear the burden of his spirit, and he anxiously
awaited union with Him. He repeatedly mentioned to his intimates
that his period of guidance would be short, and that in this respect
he resembled his great grandfather, Hazrat NurAlishah II. The death
of his father and master made him so sad that never fully recovered
from it. In this way, he was like Mawlana Rumi after the murder of
Shams.he was most fond of the following quatrain by Baba Tahir:
I see you in
the desert when I look there,
When I gaze at
the sea, I see you there,
Wherever I
look, in the mountains or plains,
It is your graceful figure at which I stare
He observed the rules of shari‘ah with precision, even though he was a
majdhub-e salik,
which demands full attention to the love of God rather than the
external aspects of religion, as was the case with Jesus (‘a)
in contrast to Moses (‘a).
In sessions, he used to remind the
fuqara of the need
to combine the rules (ahkam)
of shari‘ah with the
manners (adab) of tariqat, and he also emphasized this in his proclamations.
However, the main topic of his discourses in the sessions with the
fuqara was love. For
example, when he spoke of the tragedy of Karbala, he would
emphasized that Imam Husayn (‘a)
was the most exalted manifestation of love;[16] and
when he commented on the Qur’an, he usually spoke of the story of
the love between Joseph and Zulaykha;[17]
and when he requested that someone recite poetry, he preferred
poetry about Layli and Majnên.[18]
He concerned himself with the problems
of the furara, and
would visit them often in their homes, even after the morning prayer
if there were no other opportunity. In accordance with his father’s
decree, he sought to uphold the banner of
faqr.
Despite lack of free time for this purpose, he was especially fond
of studying the works of the sufis. He himself has written books and
delivered lectures in the sessions and on occassions such as the
memorial services of ‘Ashura for the martyrdom of Imam Husayn (‘a),
some of which have been published. The most important of his works
are the following.
{
Khorshid-e Tabandeh (The Radient Sun: A
Biography of Hazrat Reza Alishah)
(Tehran: Haqiqat, 1373/1994).
{
Zuhur al-Ishq al-A‘la (The Most Exalted
Manifestation of Love: A lecture given on the occasion of Ashura
a.H. 1416)
(Tehran: Haqiqat, 1374/1995).
{
‘Ahd Ilahi (The Divine Covenant: Two
lectures given on the occasion of ‘Ashura a.H. 1414, 1417)
(Tehran: Haqiqat, 1376/1997).
{
Hudur-e Qalb (Presence of the Heart: On
the rememberance of God in the heart),
(unpublished).
{
Risaleh dar Jabr wa Tafwid (An Essay on
Determinism and Free Will)
(unpublished).
Since he knew that his life would not
last long, at the very start of his vicegerency, he appointed his
uncle, Hajj Dr. Nur ‘Ali Tabandeh to be his successor, with the
spiritual title Majdhub Alishah. Hajj Dr. Nur ‘Ali
Tabandeh was known to be advanced in both the exterior and interior
aspects of the way and he was the constant consultant of his father
and himself. Therefore, he wrote the decree of appointment on the
fortieth day after the passing away of Hazrat Reza Alishah, although
he did not make it public at that time. The text of the decree is as
follows:
In the Name of
Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate, and He is the Guide to the
upright religion and the straight path.
Praise be to Allah, the Maker of a vicegerent on the earth,[19] and
blessing and pleace to the best of His creatures and His beloved,
Muhammad ibn ‘Abdullah (s), and to His vicegerents and inheritors
until the raising of the Day of Judgment.
This is to
inform all the brethren in faith and seekers of the way (may Allah
grant them success) that in these days of the time of the
occultation (ghaybah)[20]
in which the affair of guidance toward the clear religion and
initiation of the novices (dastgiri-ye
talibin) into the true Radawiyyah Ni‘matullahiyyah Sultan
Alishahi Way, has reached this
faqir ila Allah
(poor unto God), Hajj ‘Ali Tabandeh, Mahbub Alishah (may Allah
forgive his sins and cover his faults) from hand to hand, from soul
to soul, and I have been appointed to be in the service of the
fuqara and to guide
the servants of God by the great Mawlana, my physical and spiritual
father, Hazrat Aqa-ye Hajj Sultan Husayn Tabandeh Gunabadi, Reza
Alishah (may his grave be purified), according to his testament and
decree. Since this firm divine chain and rope is unbreakable, and
will not be cut off until the day of resurrection, after this
faqir, the guiding and leading of the wayfarers should be
entrusted to my honorable uncle, Hajj Dr. Nur ‘Ali Tabandeh, who has
been struggling in wayfaring toward Allah for some time now, and has
reached the stages of poverty (faqr)
and annihilation (fana),
has pleased my exalted grandfather, Hazrat Aqa-ye Salih Alishah and
my high ranking father Aqa-ye Reza Alishah (may Allah sanctify their
spirits), and has found a pure breast and ample heart. I honored
this great man (may Allah extend His hand to him) in tariqat
with the title
Majdhub Alishah, and since this was through divine
inspiration, I did not consider it permissible to delay it. When
this faqir has been
freed from the bounds and troubles of the corporeal body, and I have
submitted my spirit (jan)
to the Beloved (janan), the
shaykhs should renew
their covenant and obey him. The fuqara, too, are to renew
their covenants, should not consider it permissible to delay this,
and should obey him. In all matter, his pleasure should be
considered as that of this
faqir. And peace be with those who follow the guidance,[21]
and avoid transgression and ruin.
Dated Tuesday, 22 Rabi‘ al-Thani 1413,
equivalent to 28 Mehr 1371, (1992)
corresponding to the fortieth day after the passing away of the
great Mawlana, Hazrat Aqa-ye Reza Alishah, may his spirit be
sanctified,
Faqir Hajj ‘Ali
Tabandeh, Mahbub Alishah
[signed and
signeted]
During the period while Hazrat Mahbub
Alishah was qutb, he
taught the fuqara to
value their faqr and
to put it into practice in their daily lives. For this reason, he
wrote various proclamations on different occasions, including the
previously mentioned proclamation of twelve points on the occassion
of ‘Ashura in 1995. He considered this day to be exemplary, because
on this day Imam Husayn and his followers, as perfect wayfarers,
gave their lives to Allah.[22]
Four years passed since the passing
away of his beloved father, and day after day the pain of separation
and keeness for union increased.
Listen to this reed, for it complains.
It tells of separations.
I want a breast torn asunder by partings,
So that I can tell it of the pain of longing.[23]
In the beginning of the winter of 1996,
because of his illnesses, and at the request of the
fuqara outside Iran, he went to Germany for treatment. This
journey took three weeks, and in the last meeting with the
fuqara in Germany he
said good-bye to them in a strange way, which seemed to signify his
leaving Germany and returning to his homeland in Iran, but really
meant much more.
This homeland is not Egypt, Syria nor Iraq,
This homeland is a place without a name.[24]
He returned to
Tehran before the beginning of Ramadan. In the last Friday morning
session before Ramadan, he said to the
fuqara, “This is the
last Friday that I am coming to the session.” Those present thought
that he was referring to the fact that there are no Friday morning
sessions during Ramadan.
A few weeks
before his death he gave a sealed envelope to one of the
fuqara to be opened upon the event of his death. The envelope
contained six telegrams with instructions that they be sent to his
shaykhs, in which he
informs them of his death and tells them to renew their covenants
with Hazrat Majdhub Alishah. Among these telegrams are the
following:
Hu Allah
Dubay, the
United Arab Emirates
[Address]
Honorable
Brother, Aqa-ye Hajj Mir Mutalib Mirza’i Mushtaq ‘Ali,
He [God] has
summoned this faqir,
so, the guardianship of the
fuqara is being turned over by Allah to my honorable uncle,
respected scholar (‘alim),
the great ‘arif,
Hajj Dr. Nur ‘Ali Tabandeh, Majdhub Alishah. Your duty is to renew
your covenant with him and to obey him. His rejection and acceptance
is to be considered as that of this
faqir. I bid
farewell to you and to all the
fuqara, and insist
on your obedience to Hazrat Majdhub Alishah.
Wa al-salam.
Faqir ‘Ali
Tabandeh, Mahbub Alishah
Hu
121
Tehran
[Address]
Honorable
brother, Shams al-Din Ha’iri, Irshad ‘Ali,
God has sought me to meet Him. Your duty is to turn to this
faqir’s vicegerent
and successor, my honorable uncle, Dr. Nur ‘Ali Tabandeh, may Allah
keep him. Renew your covenant and obey him. His rejection and
acceptance is to be considered as that of this
faqir. Send my
regards to all the fuqara
and ask their pardon. Finally, I insist on your obedience to
Dr. Nur ‘Ali Tabandeh, Majdhub Alishah.
Faqir ‘Ali
Tabandeh, Mahbub Alishah
Hu Allah
Qom
[Address]
Honorable
brother, Sayyid Ahmad Shari‘at, Fayd ‘Ali, may Allah keep him,
I have chosen
the companionship of my high ranking father and ancestors. Since
this chain is unbreakable, by divine inspiration I am turning over
the trouble of the guardianship of the
fuqara to my learned
uncle, the ‘arif,
Dr. Nur ‘Ali Tabandeh, Majdhub Alishah, may Allah lengthen his noble
shadow. You are to renew your covenant immediately. Turning away
from the command of that great man is arrogance before
God. I leave
you and the rest of the
fuqara to the Exalted God and Hazrat Majdhub Alishah. Of
course, in this regard, a separate decree has been written, which
will be announced at the required time.
Faqir ‘Ali
Tabandeh, Mahbub Alishah, may Allah forgive him.
From the
beginning of Ramadan, his physical condition deteriorated. The day
before his death, he said that he had been unable to sleep for a few
days, yet he was fasting. During the
sahar[25]
of the sixth of Ramadan, he phoned his aunt in Baydukht and said to
her that he was coming there. During these days he was like a guest
invited to a feast and was waiting to go there. He was invited to
the feast of Allah. According to the sufis, fasting has various
stages the highest stage of which is fasting from one’s being, and
the breaking of this fast is the divine encounter at the feast of
Allah.
He passed away
on the morning of Thursday, 6 Ramadan A.H.L. 1417, 16 January 1997.
He died when his corporeal heart stopped, and the dove of his spirit
was released from the cage of his body.
I am the dove
from the garden of heaven, I do not come from the world of earth.
For several
days a cage was made of my body.
Happy the day
that I take flight to the bosom of the Friend, Now I beat my wings in hope of reaching His lane.[26] [1] This hadith has been narrated in various sources, including the Shi‘i, ‘Awili al-La’ali, by Ibn Abi Jumhur Ahsa’i (A.H. 838-c. 901)Vol. 4, p. 103: “Unceasingly My servant approaches Me by supererogatory deeds (nawifil) and worship, until I love him, and when I love him, I become his ear by which he hears, and his eye by which he sees, and his tongue by which he speaks, and his hand by which he seizes, and his foot by which he walks.” [2] The Mathnawi of Jalilu’ddin Rumi, tr. Reynold A. Nicholson (London: Gibb Memorial Trust, 1977), translation volume 1, II/1764, p. 312. [3] Hazrat Mahbub ‘Alishih liked this hadith very much, and mentioned it frequently in his speeches, for example in his book, Zuhur al-‘Ishq al-A‘li (Tehran: Haqiqat, 1374/1995), p. 24. [4] His detailed biography, Nibiqah-ye ‘Ilm va ‘Irfin (The Genius of Knowledge and Gnosis), was written by his great grandson, Hazrat Ridi ‘Alishih, second edition, (Tehran: 1350/1971). The Order is called Gunibidi because Hazrat Sultin ‘Alishih was born in the city of Gunibid in northeast Iran’s Khurasin provence. [5] There are two biographies of him in Farsi, one of which has been published as an appendix to Mahbub ‘Alishih’s Khorshid-e Tibandeh, second edition, (Tehran: Haqiqat, 1377/1998) by Muhammad Husayn Khubrahfarshchi. The other was published as an appendix to Mahbub ‘Alishih’s Ahd-e Ilihi (Tehran: Haqiqat, 1376/1997) by Shahrim Pizouki [6] Hijj Shaykh Sayyid Hibbatullah Jazbi was one of the great scholars and shaykhs of the Order, born in 1895 in Isfahan, died in 1985 in Tehran. His biography is given in Risileh-ye Jazbiyeh, ed., Sayyid ‘Ali Reza Jazbi, 2nd ed., (Isfahan: 1999). [7] The minor ablution prescribed by Islam is called wudu. It is required for the performance of the ritual prayer of Islam, and members of the Order are instructed to be constantly in a state of wudu. [8] Haèrat Ridi ‘Alishih describes this dream in an unpublished miscellany called Kashkul-e Tibandeh, ms. p. 240. [9] This title, from the same root as istifi’ means the chosen one, the one selected [by God]. [10] This is the spiritual title of the first Imim, it means one who is pleasing to God. [11] The word awliyi’ is the plural of wali, friend or guardian, and it refers to the saintly personages of Islam, especially the Imams and the spiritual guides. [12] Hu is the third person masculine singular pronoun in Arabic. It is used to refer to God. The number 121 below Hu, according to the abjad system of assigning numerical values to the letters of the Arabic alphabet, is the numerical value for “Yi ‘Ali!” (O ‘Ali!). The Shi‘ite Sufis, particularly the Gunibidis, put Hu, 121, at the head of their letters. [13] The family name of Hazrat Reza Alishah, Tabandeh, is the Persian word for the shining of the sun. [14] Similar words were spoken by Imam Hasan (‘a) when his father, Imam ‘Ali (‘a) was killed. [15] This is a well-known saying in Islamic culture that may originate from a hadith. [16] This is also the title of one of his published lectures, Zuhur al-Ishq al-A‘li. [17] See the twelfth surah of the Qur’in. [18] Two famous lovers about which a wealth of Persian poetry has been written, by Nizimi, Jimi and many others. [19] See Qur’in (2:30). [20] This refers to the major occultation of the Twelfth Imam (‘a). [21] See Qur’in (20:47) [22] According to the Glorious Qur’in: (Allah has raised the strivers with their wealth and lives in rank above those sitting) (4:95). [23] These are the first two verses of the Mathnavi of Mawlini Rumi. [24] This couplet is from Shaykh Bahi’i. [25] This is the precious time prior to the dawn (on average about one and a half hours), about which the sufis say that the gates of heaven are opened for the effusion of God’s grace. The fuqari have been instructed to remain awake during this period. [26] These lines have been attributed to Mawlavi Jalil al-Din Rumi, Jadhabit Illihiyyah: A Selection from the Ghaziliyit-e Shams, ed., Shaykh Asadallah Izadgoshasp, (Tehran: 1999), p. 240. |
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