Saturday, June 27, 2009

Background to the Ismaili Dawat in the Northern Areas of Pakistan

Early life of Hakim Nasir-i Khusraw and his education:

Pir Nasir himself has referred to his vast and extensive learning in several places of his Diwan, such as:

WHATEVER KIND OF KNOWLEDGE I HEARD OF
I SAT ADJACENT TO ITS DOOR (TO ACQUIRE IT).

Not any kind of knowledge was left
Of which I did not benefit more or less

There is an interesting account of his learning in a spurious Sargudhasht (autobiography) attributed to him. In the Sargudhasht there are many things which have nothing to do with Pir Nasir’s life but the description of his ducation seems to be quite close to what is found in his Diwan, which is summarized by Mawlawi cAbd ar-Razzaq Kanpuri, who translated his Safar-namah into Urdu, as follows:

After the four stages (of growth), when he attained the rational faculty, he was sent to school in his sixth year. By the age of nine he had memorized the entire Qur’an. During the following five years he studied literature, grammar, prosody, and arithmetic. After acquiring elementary education, he studied astrology, astronomy, geomancy, Euclid and the Almagest for three years. At the age of seventeen he began his studies in literature, jurisprudence, exegesis of the Holy Qur’an and Hadith. He studied specifically Imam Muhammad Shaybani’Js amic-i Kabir and Siyar-i Kabir and in connection with his Qur’anic studies he studied some three hundred commentaries, both those included in the syllabus and others on his own initiative.


Thereafter he studied Greek philosophy for fifteen years. He remained in Balkh until adulthood. In addition to Persian which was his mother tongue, he knew Arabic, Turkish, Greek, Hebrew and Hindustani (Sindhi). His knowledge of Hebrew is confirmed by his Safar-namah.

At the age of thirty-two he studied the Old Testament, the Psalms and the Gospel under Jewish scholars and then he studied them critically himself for a further six years. He also studied the Metaphysical Logic and Physical Logic system expounded by the sage Jamasb, medicine and mathematics and finally Sufism, Spiritualism, Evocation and Talismans. At the approximate age of forty-four, Nasiri Khusraw emerged as a matchless sage, philosopher, scholar, dialectician and poet. He acquired all these sciences in Balkh, Bukhara, Iraq and in the province of Khurasan, where the leading authorities of these sciences lived at that time. Nasir was so well known in his time for his erudition that even the Jewish and Christian scholars sought his help to study their own religious books.

Hakim Nasir’s Wisdom-filled Dream:

He says in his Safar-namah: I used to drink wine. The Holy Prophet said: "Tell the truth, even if it be against your own selves". One night in a dream I saw someone saying to me:

How long will you continue to drink this wine, which destroys man’s intellect? If you were to stay sober, it would be better for you.

In reply I said: The wise have not been able to come up with anything other than this to lessen the sorrow of this world.

To be without one’s senses is not repose, he answered. He cannot be called wise who leads men to senselessness. Rather, one should seek that which increases reason and wisdom. Where can I find such a thing? I asked. He said: He who seeks, finds. And then he pointed toward the qiblah and said no more.

Some scholars think that the dream which Pir Nasir-i Khusraw has mentioned is an example of him having been influenced by an Ismaili Dai. This is most probably true, because he quite often uses allegorical and parabolic language in his writings. It is true that a great Dai prohibited him to drink and indicated to him the Imam of the time, who is the fountainhead of intellect. Such a systematic and luminous dream is not possible if one is drunk.

Pir Nasir-i Khusraw in Yumgan:

Professor Bertels in his work "Nasir-i Khusraw and Ismailis" has written that the valley of Yumgan became the true seat of the Hujjat of Khurasan (i.e Nasir-i Khusraw). He writes that it is not wrong for people to say "Shah Nasir", because the close circle of the dawat considered him to be the king of knowledge and wisdom. He says that Nasir-i Khusraw in Yumgan continued the chain of dawat.

He used to send letters inviting people to the Ismaili Tariqah, as is found in his Diwan:


HAR SAL YAKI KITAB-I DAWAT
BA-ATRAF-I JAHAN HAMI FIRISTAM

I send a letter of dawat every year to all
directions of the world;

TA DANAD KHASM-I MAN KIH CHUN TU
DAR DIN NAH DAIF-U KHWAR-U SUSTAM
So that the adversary may know that in religion
I am not weak, abject and idle like you

In many of his qasa’id he says: Although I live in a cave far from and cut off from my familiar country, in the eyes of my friends I am esteemed and respected. As he says in his Rawshana’i-namah:

ZA HUJJAT IN SUKHANHA YAD MIDAR
KIH DAR YUMGAN NISHASTAH PADSHAHWAR
Remember these words of the Hujjat
Who sits in Yumgan like a king.
The above-mentioned book notes that Pir Nasir had correspondence from Yumgan with the centre of the dawat in Egypt. It also notes that Pir Nasir wrote most of his philosophical works in Yumgan, including Rawshana’inamah, Jami u’l-Hikmatayn and Zadu’l-Musafirin (pp. 185- 86).

The Centre and Source of Dawat-i Nasiri:

It is clear as broad daylight that the light of the Ismaili dawat spread to Chitral, the Northern Areas, Sariqul and Yarqand, from Badakhshan. The fountainhead of the light of the lamps of knowledge and wisdom and recognition of Imam, which were lit by Pirs, Dais, Mucallims and their representatives was one only, which the celebrated Pir, by the command of the exalted Imam, had prepared with great difficulties in Badakhshan. The treasures of this immense light were in the form of voluminous books, as well as in the form of an army of knowledge able to fight against the darkness of ignorance having been equipped with the knowledge and wisdom of Nasir.

There is no doubt that just as Hazrat Hasan-i Sabbah had established a physical fortress (in Alamut), Pir Nasir made a fortress of knowledge and wisdom in Badakhshan which, Hulegu Khan, or even thousands like him could not destroy.

The proof of this is Pir Nasir’s precious books which are a source of pride not only to the world of Ismailism, but are also found in educational and intellectual centers all over the world. Hakim Nasir-i Khusraw accomplished the duty of dawat with great boldness and wisdom and made the best use of the time available to him. That is, when freedom and opportunity were available, he performed the dawat and jihad with his tongue and when things were made difficult by his adversaries, he used his pen, so that the chain of dawat and sincere advice would continue forever.

Beginning of the Ithna ashari Madhhab in Hunza:

In olden times the religion of Islam was alien to the inhabitants of Hunza. Their rites consisted of cremating the dead or burying them with some of their possessions. From circumstantial evidence, it seems that the traditions of Buddhism and Zoroastrianism were widespread in the area. People used to worship boyn (pl. boyo) which is a small animal like a puppy. The boyo used to live under juniper trees or on rocky land. People placed some offerings of butter, milk or the blood of sheep for them. It was considered a good omen if they appeared and liked the offerings.

It is said that when Ayashu bin Mayuritham became the ruler of Hunza, he married Shah Khatun bint Abdal Khan of Baltistan and it is because of this marriage that the dawat of Islam first came to Hunza from Baltistan in the form of Ithna asharism and then gradually spread in the surrounding areas. Nonetheless, for a long time people used to revere boyo despite being advised against idolatry by the preachers of Islam.

Beginning of the Light of the Ismaili Dawat in Hunza:

In Hunza, the first ruler from the dynasty of Ayashu was Girkis. The fifth ruler from this dynasty cAyashu Sughay bin Mayuritham married Shah Khatun bint Abdal Khan of Baltistan and the Ithna ashari madhhab began in Hunza.

The nineteenth ruler of this line was Silum Khan who, in the last days of his life, personally accepted the Ismaili madhhab and feeling lonely, asked Pir Shah Husayn ibn Shah Ardabil: "Who will perform my funeral rites and ceremonies?" The Pir answered: "God willing, at that time one of the Ismaili Dais will come".

When Silum Khan was on his death bed, he was worried about his funeral rites and prayers and waited for someone to come to fulfil the promise of the Pir. Therefore, he constantly asked his confidantes to see if anyone was coming. Finally the news came that a rider was coming from far away. He was Pir Shah Husayn ibn Shah Ardabil. He consoled Silum Khan according to the promise and when Silum died, he performed his burial rites and the funeral prayer.

Note: Huzurmukhi Khalifah Mihrban Shah (1910-1991) bin Gulbahar Shah told us on the authority of Khisanay Sayyid that during the Imamat of Mawlana Qasim Shah (a.s.), Taj Mughul conquered Hunza after conquering Gilgit. However, it appears that he did not make proper arrangements for the true dawat, and people forgot this sacred madhhab. All this happened approximately six hundred years ago.

Allama Nasir al-Din Nasir Hunzai,
Sunday - 11th April, 1993.

Part 7: Why is the word "Shah" used for Noor Mowlana Hazar Imam?

Part 7: Why is the word "Shah" used for Noor Mowlana Hazar Imam? "You can accept that the inner and spiritual kingdom of ...