[ Titles of the Tariqa ] [ First Spiritual Inheritors ] [ Imam of the Tariqa ]The
First Spiritual Inheritors of the Prophet 
Historically speaking, the
Naqshbandi tariqat can be traced back to the first of the
Rightly-Guided Caliphs, Abu Bakr as-Siddiq (r), who succeeds the
Prophet (s) in his knowledge and in his role of guiding the
Muslim community. Allah said in the Holy Qur'an "He was the
second of two in the cave, and he said to his friend: 'do not be
sad, for God is with us'" [9:40]. Of him the Prophet (s)
said, "If I had taken to myself a beloved friend, I would
have taken Abu Bakr as my beloved friend; but he is my brother
and my companion."
What distinguishes the Naqshbandi
school from other Sufi orders was the fact that it took its
foundations and principles from the teachings and example of six
bright stars in the firmament of the Prophet (s). These great
figures were: Abu Bakr as-Siddiq, Salman al-Farisi, Jacfar
as-Sadiq, Bayazid Tayfur al-Bistami, cAbdul
Khaliq al-Ghujdawani, and Muhammad Baha'uddin Uwaysi
al-Bukhari, known as Shah Naqshband--the eponymous Imam of the
tariqat.
Behind the word
"Naqshband" stand two ideas: naqsh which means
"engraving" and suggests engraving the name of Allah in
the heart, and band which means "bond" and
indicates the link between the individual and his Creator. This
means that the Naqshbandi follower has to practice his prayers
and obligations according to the Holy Qur'an and the Sunnah of
the Prophet (s) and to keep the presence and love of Allah alive
in his heart through a personal experience of the link between
himself and his Lord.
Besides Abu Bakr as-Siddiq, who
are these stars in the firmament of the Prophet (s)? One of them
was Salman al-Farisi (r). His origin was Isfahan in Persia and he
was the one who advised the Muslims to dig a trench in the battle
of Ahzab. After the Muslims seized al-Mada'in, the capital city
of Persia, he was made Prince and governor of that city and
remained there until his death.
Another star was Jacfar
as-Sadiq. A descendant of the Prophet (s) on his father's
side and of Abu Bakr (r) on his mother's, he rejected all
positions of honor in favor of retreat and spiritual learning and
practice. He was called "The Inheritor of the Prophetic
Station (Maqam an-Nubuwwa) and the Inheritor of the
Truthful Station (Maqam as-Siddiqiyya).
The oldest
recorded occurrence of the term safa was in reference to
his student, Jabir ibn ayyan, in the middle of the second
Hijri century. He was a mufassir al-Qur'an or master in
exegesis, a scholar of hadith, and one of the greatest mujtahids
(qualified to give legal decisions) in Madinah. His Tafsir is
partially preserved in Sulami's haqa'iq at-tafsir.
Layth ibn Sacd, one of the most reliable transmitters
of prophetic traditions, witnessed Jacfar's miraculous
powers as the latter was able to ask for anything, and God would
grant it to him on the spot.
Another star was Bayazid Tayfur al-Bistami whose grandfather was a Zoroastrian.
Bayazid made a
detailed study of the statutes of Islamic law (sharica)
and practiced a strict regimen of self-denial. All his life he
was assiduous in the practice of his religious obligations. He
urged his students (murids) to put their efforts in the
hands of God and he encouraged them to accept a sincere and pure
doctrine of tawhid, knowledge of the Oneness of God.
This doctrine, he said, imposes five obligations on the sincere:
-
To keep obligations according
to the Qur'an and Sunnah;
-
To always speak the truth;
-
To keep the heart free from
hatred;
-
To avoid forbidden food (haram);
-
To shun innovation (bid`a).
Bayazid said that the ultimate
goal of the Sufis is to know God in this world, to reach His Divine Presence, and to see Him in the Hereafter. To that effect
he added: "There are special servants of Allah who, if Allah
veiled them from His vision in Paradise, would have implored Him
to bring them out of Paradise as the inhabitants of the Fire
implore Him to escape from Hell."
Yet another star in the firmament
of the Prophet (s), was cAbdul Khaliq al-Ghujdawani,
who was born in the village of Ghujdawan, near Bukhara in
present-day Uzbekistan. He was raised and buried there. He
studied Qur'an and the Islamic sciences of both external and
internal knowledge until he reached a high station of purity. He
then traveled to Damascus where he established a school from
which many students graduated and went on to become masters of fiqh
and hadith as well as spirituality in their time, both in
the regions of Central Asia and in the Middle East.
`Abdul Khaliq continued the work of his predecessors by formulating the dhikr
(remembrance of God) passed down from the Prophet (s) according to the Sunnah.
In his letters he set down the code of conduct (adab) that the students
of the Naqshbandiyya were expected to follow.
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