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* [http://www.khamush.com/sufism/hallaj.html Selected poetry by al-Hallaj in English translation]
* [http://www.khamush.com/sufism/hallaj.html Selected poetry by al-Hallaj in English translation]
* [http://www.sunnah.org/aqida/Hallaj_doctrine.htm Doctrine of Al-Hallaj by Al-Qushayri]
* [http://www.sunnah.org/aqida/Hallaj_doctrine.htm Doctrine of Al-Hallaj by Al-Qushayri]
* [http://www.poetseers.org/spiritual_and_devotional_poets/sufi/al_hallaj Articles at Poet Seers]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060307161709/http://www.poetseers.org/spiritual_and_devotional_poets/sufi/al_hallaj/ Articles at Poet Seers]
* [http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/all-hallaj-quotations.html al-Hallaj at the Internet Medieval Source Book]
* [http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/all-hallaj-quotations.html al-Hallaj at the Internet Medieval Source Book]



Revision as of 05:50, 1 June 2017

Mansur al-Hallaj
The execution of Mansur Al-Hallaj (manuscript illustration from Mughal India, circa 1600)[1]
Personal
Born858 CE
Died26 March 922 CE[4]
EraAbbasid
CreedIslam, Sunni[2][3]
Senior posting

Mansur al-Hallaj (Template:Lang-ar Abū 'l-Muġīṭ Al-Ḥusayn bin Manṣūr al-Ḥallāğ; Template:Lang-fa Mansūr-e Ḥallāj) (c. 858 – 26 March 922) (Hijri c. 244 AH – 309 AH) was a Persian[5][6] mystic, writer and teacher of Sufism.[7] He is most famous for his saying: "I am the Truth" (Ana 'l-Ḥaqq), which many saw as a claim to divinity, while others interpreted it as an instance of mystical annihilation of the ego which allows God to speak through the individual. Al-Hallaj gained a wide following as a preacher before he became implicated in power struggles of the Abbasid court and was executed after a long period of confinement on religious and political charges. Although most of his Sufi contemporaries disapproved of his actions, Hallaj later became a major figure in the Sufi tradition.

Life

Early years

Al-Hallaj was born around 858 in Fars province of Persia to a cotton-carder (Hallaj means "cotton-carder" in Arabic) in an Arabized town called al-Bayḍā'.[8] His grandfather was a Zoroastrian.[7] His father moved to a town in Wasit famous for its school of Quran reciters.[8] Al-Hallaj memorized the Qur'an before he was 12 years old and would often retreat from worldly pursuits to join other mystics in study at the school of Sahl al-Tustari.[8] During this period Al-Hallaj lost his ability to speak Persian and later wrote exclusively in Arabic.[7][8]

When he was twenty, al-Hallaj moved to Basra, where he married and received his Sufi habit from ‘Amr Makkī, although his lifelong and monogamous marriage later provoked jealousy and opposition from the latter.[8] Through his brother-in-law, al-Hallaj found himself in contact with a clan which supported the Zaydi Zanj rebellion, which had elements of Shi'i school of thought.[8] He retained from this period some apparently Shi'i expressions, but he remained faithful to Sunnism.[2][3][8]

He later went to Baghdad to consult the famous Sufi teacher Junayd Baghdadi, but he was tired of the conflict that existed between his father-in-law and ‘Amr Makkī and he set out on a pilgrimage to Mecca, against the advice of Junayd Baghdadi, as soon as the Zanj rebellion was crushed.[8]

Pilgrimages and travels

In Mecca he made a vow to remain for one year in the courtyard of the sanctuary in fasting and total silence.[8] When he returned from Mecca, he laid down the Sufi tunic and adopted a "lay habit" in order to be able to preach more freely.[8] At that time a number of Sunnis, including former Christians who would later become viziers at the Abbasid court, became his disciples, but other Sufis were scandalized, while some Muʿtazilis and Shias who held high posts in the government accused him of deception and incited the mob against him.[8] Al-Hallaj left for eastern Iran and remained there for five years, preaching in the Arab colonies and fortified monasteries that housed volunteer fighters in the jihad, after which he was able to return and install his family in Baghdad.[8]

Al-Hallaj made his second pilgrimage to Mecca with four hundred disciples, where some Sufis, his former friends, accused him of sorcery and making a pact with the jinn.[8] Afterwards he set out on a long voyage that took him to India and Turkestan beyond the frontiers of Islamic lands.[8] About 290/902 he returned to Mecca for his final pilgrimage clad in an Indian loin-cloth and a patched garment over his shoulders.[8] There he prayed to God to be made despised and rejected, so that God alone might grant grace to Himself through His servant's lips.[8]

Imprisonment and execution

After returning to his family in Baghdad, al-Hallaj began making proclamations that aroused popular emotion and caused anxiety among the educated classes.[8] These included avowing his burning love of God and his desire to "die accursed for the Community", and statements such as "O Muslims, save me from God" ... "God has made my blood lawful to you: kill me".[8] It was at that time that al-Hallaj is said to have pronounced his famous shath "I am the Truth".[8] He was denounced at the court, but a Shafi'i jurist refused to condemn him, stating that mystic inspiration was beyond his jurisdiction.[8]

The Execution of Mansur Hallaj. Watercolor from Mughal India circa 1600.[9]

Al-Hallaj's preaching had by now inspired a movement for moral and political reform in Baghdad.[8] In 296/908 Sunni reformers made an unsuccessful attempt to depose the underage caliph Al-Muqtadir.[8] When he was restored, his Shi'i vizier unleashed anti-Hanbali repressions which prompted al-Hallaj to flee Baghdad, but three years later he was arrested, brought back, and put in prison, where he remained for nine years.[8]

The conditions of Al-Hallaj's confinement varied depending on the relative sway his opponents and supporters held at the court,[8] but he was finally condemned to death in 922 on the charge of being a Qarmatian rebel who wished to destroy the Kaaba, because he had said "the important thing is to proceed seven times around the Kaaba of one's heart."[10] According to another report, the pretext was his recommendation to build local replicas of the Kaaba for those who are unable to make the pilgrimage to Mecca.[7] The queen-mother interceded with the caliph who initially revoked the execution order, but the intrigues of the vizier finally moved him to approve it.[10] On 23 Dhu 'l-Qa‘da (25 March) trumpets announced his execution the next day.[10] The words he spoke during the last night in his cell are collected in Akhbar al-Hallaj.[10] Thousands of people witnessed his execution on the banks of the Tigris River. He was first punched in the face by his executioner, then lashed until unconscious, and then decapitated[11][12] or hanged.[7] Witnesses reported that Al-Hallaj's last words under torture were "all that matters for the ecstatic is that the Unique should reduce him to Unity," after which he recited the Quranic verse 42:18.[10] His body was doused in oil and set alight, and his ashes were then scattered into the river.[7] A cenotaph was "quickly" built on the site of his execution, and "drew pilgrims for a millennium"[13] until being swept away by a Tigris flood during the 1920s.[14]

Some question whether al-Hallaj was executed for religious reasons as has been commonly assumed. According to Carl W. Ernst, the legal notion of blasphemy was not clearly defined in Islamic law and statements of this kind were treated inconsistently by legal authorities.[15] In practice, since apostasy was subsumed under the category of zandaqa, which reflected the Zoroastrian legacy of viewing heresy as a political crime, they were prosecuted only when it was politically convenient.[15] Sadakat Kadri points out that "it was far from conventional to punish heresy in the tenth century," and it is thought he would have been spared execution except that the vizier of Caliph Al-Muqtadir wished to discredit "certain figures who had associated themselves" with al-Hallaj.[16] (Previously al-Hallaj had been punished for talking about being at one with God by being shaved, pilloried and beaten with the flat of a sword, not executed because the Shafi'ite judge had ruled that his words were not "proof of disbelief."[16])[17]

Teachings and practices

Al-Hallaj addressed himself to popular audiences encouraging them to find God inside their own souls, which earned him the title of "the carder of innermost souls" (ḥallāj al-asrār).[7] He preached without the traditional Sufi habit and used language famililar to the local Shi'i population.[7] This may have given the impression that he was a Qarmatian missionary rather than a Sufi.[7] His prayer to God to make him lost and despised can be regarded as typical for a Sufi seeking annihilation in God, although Louis Massignon has interpreted it as an expression of a desire to sacrifice himself as atonement on behalf of all Muslims.[7] When al-Hallaj returned to Baghdad from his last pilgrimage to Mecca, he built a model of the Kaaba in his home for private worship.[7]

Al-Hallaj was popularly credited with numerous supernatural acts. He was said to have "lit four hundred oil lamps in Jerusalem's Church of the Holy Sepulchre with his finger and extinguished an eternal Zoroastrian flame with the tug of a sleeve."[11]

Among other Sufis, Al-Hallaj was an anomaly. Many Sufi masters felt that it was inappropriate to share mysticism with the masses, yet Al-Hallaj openly did so in his writings and through his teachings. This was exacerbated by occasions when he would fall into trances which he attributed to being in the presence of God.

There are conflicting reports about his most famous shath, أنا الحق Anā l-Ḥaqq "I am The Truth, " which was taken to mean that he was claiming to be God, since al-Ḥaqq "the Truth" is one of the Ninety Nine Names of Allah. The earliest report, coming from a hostile account of Basra grammarians, states that he said it in the mosque of Al-Mansur, while testimonies that emerged decades later claimed that it was said in private during consultations with Junayd Baghdadi.[7][8] Regardless of the details, this utterance has become inseparably associated with his execution in the popular imagination, owing in part to its inclusion in his biography by Attar of Nishapur.[7] In another controversial statement, al-Hallaj claimed "There is nothing wrapped in my turban but God, " and similarly he would point to his cloak and say, ما في جبتي إلا الله Mā fī jubbatī illā l-Lāh "There is nothing in my cloak but God." He also wrote:

I saw my Lord with the eye of the heart

I asked, ‘Who are You?’

He replied, ‘You’.[18]

Works

Al-Hallaj's principal works, all written in Arabic, included:[10]

  • Twenty-seven Riwāyāt (stories or narratives) collected by his disciples in about 290/902.
  • Kitāb al-Tawāsīn, a series of eleven short works.
  • Poems collected in Dīwān al-Hallāj.
  • Pronouncements including those of his last night collected in Akhbār al-Hallāj.

His best known written work is the Book of al-Tawasin (كتاب الطواسين),[19] in which he used line diagrams and symbols to help him convey mystical experiences that he could not express in words.[7] Ṭawāsīn is the broken plural of the word ṭā-sīn which spells out the letters ṭā (ط) and sīn (س) placed for unknown reasons at the start of some surahs in the Quran.[19] Two of the chapters are devoted to a dialogue of Satan (Iblis) and God, where Satan refuses to bow to Adam, although God asks him to do so. His refusal is due to a misconceived idea of God's uniqueness and because of his refusal to abandon himself to God in love. Hallaj criticizes the staleness of his adoration (Mason, 51-3). Al-Hallaj stated in this book:[20]

If you do not recognize God, at least recognize His sign, I am the creative truth —Ana al-Haqq—,
because through the truth, I am eternal truth.

Classical era views

Few figures in Islam provoked as much debate among classical commentators as al-Hallaj.[21] The controversy cut across doctrinal categories.[21] In virtually every major current of juridical and theological thought (Imami, Maliki, Hanbali, Hanafi, Shafi'i, Ash'ari, and Maturidi) one finds his detractors and others who accepted his legacy completely or justified his statements with some excuse.[21] His admirers among philosophers included Ibn Tufayl, Suhrawardi, and Mulla Sadra.[21]

Although the majority of early Sufi teachers condemned him, he was almost unanimously canonized by later generations of Sufis.[21] The principal Sufi interpretation of the shathiyat which took the form of "I am" sayings contrasted the permanence (baqā’) of God with the mystical annihilation (fanā’) of the individual ego, which made it possible for God to speak through the individual.[15] Some Sufi authors claimed that such utterances were misquotations or attributed them to immaturity, madness or intoxication, while others regarded them as authentic expressions of spiritual states, even profoundest experience of divine realities, which should not be manifested to the unworthy.[15] Some of them, including al-Ghazali, showed ambivalence about their apparently blasphemous nature while admiring the spiritual status of their authors.[15] Rumi wrote: "When the pen (of authority) is in the hand of a traitor, unquestionably Mansur is on a gibbet"[22]

Modern views

The writings of al-Hallaj are important to Sufi groups. His example is seen by some as one that should be emulated, especially his calm demeanor in the face of torture and his forgiving of his tormentors. Many honor him as an adept who came to realize the inherent divine nature of all men and women. While many Sufis theorize that Hallaj was a reflection of God's truth, scholars of the other Islamic schools of thought continue to see him as a heretic and a deviant.[citation needed]

The supporters of Mansur have interpreted his statement as meaning, "God has emptied me of everything but Himself. " According to them, Mansur never denied God's oneness and was a strict monotheist. However, he believed that the actions of man, when performed in total accordance with God's pleasure, lead to a blissful unification with Him.[23] There was a belief among European historians that al-Hallaj was secretly a Christian, until the French scholar Louis Massignon presented his legacy in the context of Islamic mysticism in his four-volume work La Passion de Husayn ibn Mansûr Hallâj.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ The Walters Art Museum. The Hanging of Mansur al-Hallaj, from a manuscript of Diwan of Amir Khusrow, a.k.a. Hasan Dihlavi
  2. ^ a b Gavin D'Costa, Vatican II: Catholic Doctrines on Jews and Muslims, quote: "...focused on the Sunni mystic al-Hallaj...", Oxford University Press, p. 186
  3. ^ a b N. Hanif (2002), Biographical Encyclopaedia of Sufis: Central Asia and Middle East, quote: "Al Hallaj, in fact, remained always a Sunni, with a strong leaning towards hard asoeticism in observing the Ramadan fasts...", Sarup & Sons, p. 188
  4. ^ Britannica Ready Reference Encyclopedia, Vol.4, Page 249, ISBN 81-8131-098-5
  5. ^ Irwin, edited by Robert (2010). The new Cambridge history of Islam, Volume 4 (1. publ. ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 47. ISBN 978-0-521-83824-5. Perhaps the most controversial Su! was the Persian mystic al-Hallaj (d. 309/922). {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); |first1= has generic name (help)
  6. ^ John Arthur Garraty, Peter Gay, The Columbia History of the World, Harper & Row, 1981, page 288, ISBN 0-88029-004-8
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Jawid Mojaddedi, "ḤALLĀJ, ABU’L-MOḠIṮ ḤOSAYN b. Manṣur b. Maḥammā Bayżāwi" in Encyclopedia Iranica
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Louis Massignon, Louis Gardet (1986). Encyclopedia of Islam, 2nd ed., Vol. 3, "Al-Halladj". Brill. pp. 99–100.
  9. ^ Brooklyn Museum. The Execution of Mansur Hallaj, from the Warren Hastings Album.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Louis Massignon, Louis Gardet (1986). Encyclopedia of Islam, 2nd ed., Vol. 3, "Al-Halladj". Brill. p. 101.
  11. ^ a b Kadri 2012, p. 238.
  12. ^ Massignon 1982, p. 1:560-625.
  13. ^ Massignon 1982, p. 1:231.
  14. ^ Kadri 2012, p. 239.
  15. ^ a b c d e Carl W. Ernst (1997). Encyclopedia of Islam, 2nd ed., Vol. 9, "Shath". Brill. pp. 361–362.
  16. ^ a b Kadri 2012, p. 237.
  17. ^ Massignon 1982, p. 1:475.
  18. ^ http://www.mohammedrustom.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Rumis-Metaphysics-of-the-Heart-MRR-1-2010.pdf
  19. ^ a b al-Hallaj, Mansur (1913). Kitab al-Tawasin (ed. Louis Massignon). Librairie Paul Geuthner.
  20. ^ Kitaab al-Tawaaseen, Massignon Press, Paris, 1913, vi, 32.
  21. ^ a b c d e Louis Massignon, Louis Gardet (1986). Encyclopedia of Islam, 2nd ed., Vol. 3, "Al-Halladj". Brill. p. 104.
  22. ^ Mathnawi Book 2: line 1398 Translated by Nicholson p.293. Persian: چون قلم در دست غداري بود / لاجـرم منصور بـر داري بـود
  23. ^ Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World, Thompson Gale, (2004), p.290

Further reading

Browne, Edward G. (1998). Literary History of Persia. Richmond: Curzon Press. ISBN 0-7007-0406-X.
Ernst, Carl W. (1985). Words of Ecstasy in Sufism. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-87395-917-5.
Massignon, Louis (1983). "Perspective Transhistorique sur la vie de Hallaj". Parole donnée. Paris: Seuil: 73–97. ISBN 202006586X.
Mason, Herbert (1983). Memoir of a Friend: Louis Massignon. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press. ISBN 058531098X.
Michot, Yahya M. (2007). "Ibn Taymiyya's Commentary on the Creed of al-Hallâj". In A. SHIHADEH (ed.), Sufism and Theology. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press: 123–136.
Mojaddedi, Jawid (March 1, 2012). "ḤALLĀJ, ABU'L-MOḠIṮ ḤOSAYN b. Manṣur b. Maḥammā Bayżāwi". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved December 3, 2012.
Rypka, Jan (1968). History of Iranian Literature. Dordrecht: Reidel Publishing Company. ISBN 90-277-0143-1.
Shah, Idries (1964). The Sufis. Garden City: Doubleday. OCLC 427036.

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