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How a Sufi Found His Lord: The Beginning of the Quest
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THE BEGINNING OF THE QUEST
The history of my religious quest begins with the study of the Quran itself.
It had its germ in the testimony of the Quran to the books of Moses, David
and Jesus, which appeared to me to be very striking, and I began to wonder
where they could be found. Again and again I would read references to Moses,
David and Jesus and to their books and wonder what their teachings could be!
The writers of mysticism speak of the two eternal passions of the self, the
desire of life and the desire of knowledge: severally representing the
hunger of heart, and that of the intellect for ultimate truth. If my desire
to get acquainted with the teaching of God's revelation granted to previous
prophets corresponded to the hunger of intellect, the desire to know more
about Him, the hunger of heart for Him, was awakened in me by the
study of books on Islamic mysticism. The result of it was a growing
dissatisfaction with the form of religion based on legalism.
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By observance of the rituals of Islam, so far I had derived the sense of
self-satisfaction which comes to a man who has fulfilled his obligations
which he is expected to do, but in the depth of my soul the real hunger
and thirst remained unsatisfied. There existed now an urge for a search
for something unknown and unnamed. I had come to realize that the true
satisfaction of soul was not to be attained through a legalistic system
or formal beliefs but by an inner experience. The study of mysticism had
informed me that it was through the esoteric knowledge and practice of
mysticism alone that the true knowledge of God could be attained.
Nevertheless I stuck to the religious practices with greater tenacity,
for thus had the saints of Islam done. Finding regular hours of prescribed
prayers inadequate for the satisfaction of my soul, I added extra hours
to them. Now I began to spend hours in Mosque and cemetery. There was
a restlessness in my heart and I was seeking to have it satisfied.
Mysticism was now to be the goal of my life, and a search for its knowledge
now started. My unguided study of mysticism must have been of a strange
character. For my early acquaintance with mysticism was through that
class of its literature in which it is mixed up so much with magic and
incantation, and naturally such a study would prove fascinating to an
average boy of my age. From the sources of Islamic literature I had learnt
already a good deal about the existence of the invisible beings such as
jinn and angels, and that these mysterious and subtle beings were
capable of influencing human destiny. The study of books on the lives of
the Muslim saints showed that they had a wonderful power over these
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beings who were at their beck and call. In fact, the saints of Islam
in their practice of supernatural deeds were associated so closely with
magic and jinn, that to be able to write effective charms and to
have the invisible beings at one's command to me were the signs of great
mystics and saints. The study introduced me to a new world which was
of an absorbing interest to me. An eager hunt, therefore, started for
such literature; books, manuscripts and pieces of paper containing some
magical secrets were added to my collection, and soon it grew to be of
such a magnitude that any magician could have been proud to possess it.
I was then only a boy of thirteen! The books were not enough to satisfy
my desire for such knowledge, and I went about seeking men who knew this
hidden and mysterious knowledge. Moreover, the secrets were not fully
divulged through printed or even written materials, so I was given to
understand, but must be learnt directly from the masters who were adept
in them, and so I began to mix freely with people who had any reputation
of knowing the art.
In my mad search for magic, one evening I had a strange experience which
greatly enhanced my enthusiasm for jinn and magic. I was accosted one
evening by a stranger who on the pretext of having me read something to
him took me to a house. There behind the closed door of a room I was
introduced to a man sitting on a charpoy with a book opened in
front of him. The man directed me to take my seat on the floor in front
of an earthen lamp placed on a brick. At his instruction as I fixed my
gaze at the steady flame of the lamp I saw in a few minutes things which,
looking back now, seem to be an impossibility, yet I
personally experienced them. In that flame I saw an open ground being
swept by a number of men. This being reported to the magician, I was
told to ask the men sweeping the ground for the favour of the assembling
of the tribunal. Soon a table and chairs were fetched and placed in order;
next came a number of dignified men in procession who took their seats
round the table, and one occupying its head in the manner of a presiding
officer. I was asked to convey the salutation of the magician to them,
and then they were requested to produce the thief who had stolen the
property of so and so, along with the articles stolen by him. The thief
was next brought and made to stand facing me, and the stolen articles
were displayed on the table. The magician closely questioned me as to
the description of the thief and the list of the articles thus exhibited.
Next I was asked to request for the name and address of the thief to be
written and shown to me. This was done, but the writing was illegible
to me, and so at my further request it was exhibited in a clear and
bold handwriting which I remember to this day! When finally the thanks
and the salutations of the magician were conveyed to them, the entire
scene in the flame vanished, and nothing remained but the steady flame
of the lamp.*
This experience led me to study and practice charms with greater zest.
Neighbours and friends began to look upon me as a magician and would
surround me for amulets for all kinds of things; a man
*Mr. Lame in his book "The Modern Egypt" has described a similar seance
at which he himself was present and had himself asked for Lord Nelson
and a friend of his to appear through the medium, and has given the charm
used on this occasion and the method used for such a seance.
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in search of an employment or seeking promotion in his office, a wife
to win back the lost affection of her husband, a father for the return
of his runaway child, mothers for the recovery of their children suffering
from some unknown disease, and many others with diverse needs and wants
would come to me with requests for prayers and amulets.
The study and practice of magic, however, proved to be a stepping-stone
to something higher and nobler than mere theurgy or a desire to attain
to the position of thaumaturge. It indicated the deep conviction within
me that there are other planes of being than those which senses report
to man. It was an indication of the belief that behind the surface
phenomena there is a supernatural world unperceived by sensations but
realizable in the soul's experience.
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