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Jalal-Al-Din
Rumi
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Jalal-Al-Din Rumi
full name(Jalal al-Din Mohammad Ibn Mohammad Ibn Mohammad Ibn Husain al-Rumi)
was born in 604 A.H. (1207/8 C.E.) at Balkh (now Afghanistan). His
father Baha al-Din was a renowned religious scholar. Under his
patronage, Rumi received his early education from Syed Burhan-al-Din.
When his age was about 18 years, the family (after several migrations)
finally settled at Konya and at the age of 25, Rumi was sent to Aleppo
for advanced education and later to Damascus. Rumi continued with his
education till he was 40 years old, although on his father's death Rumi
succeeded him as a professor in the famous Madrasah at Konya at the age
of about 24 years. He received his mystical training first at the hands
of Syed Burhan al-Din and later he was trained by Shams al-Din Tabriz.
He became famous for his mystical insight, his religious knowledge and
as a Persian poet. He used to teach a large number of pupils at his
Madrasah and also founded the famous Maulvi Order in Tasawwuf. He
died in 672 A.H. (1273 C.E.) at Konya, which subsequently became a
sacred place for dancing derveshes of the Maulvi Order.
His major contribution
lies in Islamic philosophy and Tasawwuf. This was embodied
largely in poetry, especially through his famous Mathnawi. This
book, the largest mystical exposition in verse, discusses and offers
solutions to many complicated problems in metaphysics, religion, ethics,
mysticism, etc. Fundamentally, the Mathnawi highlights the
various hidden aspects of Sufism and their relationship with the worldly
life. For this, Rumi draws on a variety of subjects and derives numerous
examples from everyday life. His main subject is the relationship
between man and God on the one hand, and between man and man, on the
other. He apparently believed in Pantheism and portrayed the various
stages of man's evolution in his journey towards the Ultimate.
Apart from the
Mathnaui, he also wrote his Diwan (collection of poems) and
Fihi-Ma-Fih (a collection of mystical sayings). How- ever, it is the
Mathnawi itself that has largely transmitted Rumi's message. Soon
after its completion, other scholars started writing detailed
commentaries on it, in order to interpret its rich propositions on
Tasawwuf, Metaphysics and Ethics. Several commentaries in different
languages have been written since then.
His impact on
philosophy, literature, mysticism and culture, has been so deep
throughout Central Asia and most Islamic countries that almost all
religious scholars, mystics, philosophers, sociologists and others have
referred to his verses during all these centuries since his death. Most
difficult problems in these areas seem to get simplified in the light of
his references. His message seems to have inspired most of the
intellectuals in Central Asia and adjoining areas since his time, and
scholars like Iqbal have further developed Rumi's concepts. The
Mathnawi became known as the interpretation of the Qur'an in the
Pahlavi language. He is one of the few intellectuals and mystics whose
views have so profoundly affected the world-view in its higher
perspective in large parts of the Islamic World.
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