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Who is Rumi ?
Islamic mysticism - Sufism Jalaluddin Rumi was born in 1207 C.E. ( i.e. Common Era aligned with A.D.) in Balkh. This city was then in the Persian province of Khorasan but is now in Afghanistan. Balkh was then a prominent city and his family had a tradition of service there in legal and religious offices. Despite this background he moved, in his youth and with his family about 1218 C.E., away from Balkh in order to avoid the warlike Mongols who were then conquering extensively under the leadership of their Khans.
The family travelled to Baghdad, to Mecca on pilgrimage, and to
Damascus and eventually settled at Kerman near Konya in what is now
western Turkey. This part of the world was then known to its inhabitants as Rum, a name derived from the Byzantine Roman Empire that had formerly held it. Jalaluddin's name in religion and literature - Rumi - is itself derived from Rum.
Rumi is today thought of being a Persian mystic and poet and is
closely identified with Sufism and Sufi mysticism. This Sufism being a
mysticism within Islam where devotees sought a mystical union with God. In about 1244 C.E. Rumi befriended Shams ad-Din (Sun of Religion), a wandering dervish or Sufi devotee who was formerly from Tabrìz, who became his mentor. For over two years he and Shams ad-Din were very closely associated in a platonic friendship and living in the same house. Sufis had a tradition of such close platonic friendships based on a commonality of spiritual endeavours.
Rumi had previous to this all absorbing friendship been busy as a
teacher and leader of a Molavi discipleship. His former pupils
were most discomfited by the friendship with Shams and threatened
violence.
One of these friendships again inspired poetry, notably the epic poem
Masnavi I Ma'navi (Spiritual Couplets), which has had an immense
influence on Islamic literature and thought. Rumi had taught that "Muslims, Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians should be viewed with the same eye" and it is said that people drawn from five faith backgrounds followed his funeral bier. His mausoleum, the Green Dome in Konya, is today a place of pilgrimage for many thousands. |
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