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Tayfur Abu Yazid al-Bistami
May Allah Be Well Pleased With Him
"I have planted love in my heart
and shall not be distracted until Judgment Day.
You have wounded my heart when You came near me.
My desire grows, my love is bursting.
He has poured me a sip to drink.
He has quickened my heart with the cup of love
Which he has filled at the ocean of friendship."
Attributed to Bayazid.
His Life
Bayazid's grandfather was a Zoroastrian from Persia. Bayazid
made a detailed study of the statutes of Islamic law (sharica)
and practiced a strict regimen of self-denial (zuhd). All
his life he was assiduous in the practice of his religious
obligations and in observing voluntary worship.
He urged his students (murids) to put their
affairs in the hands of Allah and he encouraged them to accept
sincerely the pure doctrine of tawhid (the Oneness of God).
This doctrine consisted of five essentials: to keep the obligations
according to the Qur'an and Sunnah, to always speak the truth,
to keep the heart free from hatred, to avoid forbidden food
and to shun innovations (bidca).
His Sayings
One of his sayings was, "I have come to know Allah through
Allah, and I have come to know what is other than Allah with
the light of Allah." He said, "Allah has granted
his servants favors for the purpose of bringing them closer
to Him. Instead they are fascinated with the favors and are
drifting farther from Him." And he said, praying to Allah,
"O Allah, You have created this creation without their
knowledge and You have placed on them a trust without their
will. If You don't help them who will help them?"
Bayazid said the ultimate goal of the Sufi
is to experience the vision of Allah in the Hereafter. To
that effect he said, "There are special servants of Allah
who, if Allah veiled Himself from their sight in Paradise,
would implore Him to take them out of Paradise just as the
inhabitants of the Fire implore Him to release them from Hell."
He said about Allah's love for His servant,
"If Allah loves His servant He will grant three attributes
that are the proofs of His Love: generosity like the generosity
of the ocean, and favor like the favor of the Sun in its giving
of light, and modesty like the modesty of the Earth. The true
lover never considers any affliction too great and never decreases
his worship because of his pure faith."
A man asked Bayazid, "Show me a deed
by which I will approach my Lord." He said, "Love
the friends of Allah in order that they will love you. Love
his saints until they love you. Because Allah looks at the
hearts of His saints and He will see your name engraved in
the heart of His saints and He will forgive you." For
this reason, the Naqshbandi followers have been elevated by
their love for their shaikhs. This love lifts them to a station
of continuous pleasure and continuous presence in the heart
of their beloved.
Many Muslim scholars in his time, and many
after his time, said that Bayazid al-Bistami was the first
one to spread the reality of Annihilation (fana'). Even that
strictest of scholars, Ibn Taymiyya, who came in the 7th Century
A.H., admired Bayazid for this and considered him to be one
of his masters. Ibn Taymiyya said about him, "There are
two categories of fana': one is for the perfect Prophets and
saints, and one is for seekers from among the saints and pious
people (saliheen). Bayazid al-Bistami is from the first category
of those who experience fana', which means the complete renunciation
of anything other than God. He accepts none except God. He
worships none except Him, and he asks from none except Him."
He continues, quoting Bayazid saying, "I want not to
want except what He wants."
It was reported about Bayazid that he said,
"I divorced the lower world thrice in order that I could
not return to it and I moved to my Lord alone, without anyone,
and I called on Him alone for help by saying, O Allah, O Allah,
no one remains for me except You. At that time I came to know
the sincerity of my supplication in my heart and the reality
of the helplessness of my ego. Immediately the acceptance
of that supplication was perceived by my heart. This opened
to me a vision that I was no longer in existence and I vanished
completely from myself into His self. And He brought up all
that I had divorced before in front of me, and dressed me
with light and with His attributes."
Bayazid said, "Praise to Me, for My
greatest Glory!" And he continued saying, "I set
forth on an ocean when the [earlier] prophets were still by
the shore." And he said, "O My Lord, Your obedience
to me is greater than my obedience to You." This means,
O God, You are granting my request and I have yet to obey
You.
He said, "I made four mistakes in my
preliminary steps in this way: I thought that I remember Him
and I know Him and I love Him and I seek Him, but when I reached
Him I saw that His remembering of me preceded my remembrance
of Him, and His knowledge about me preceded my knowledge of
Him and His love towards me was more ancient than my love
towards Him, and He sought me in order that I would begin
to seek Him."
Adh-Dhahabi quoted him in many great matters,
among which were "Praise to Me, for My greatest Glory!"
and "There is nothing in this robe I am wearing except
Allah." Adh-Dhahabi's teacher Ibn Taymiyya explained,
"He didn't see himself as existing any longer, but only
saw the existence of Allah, due to his self-denial."
Adh-Dhahabi further relates, "He said,
O Allah, what is your Fire, it is nothing. Let me be the one
person to go into your Fire and everyone else will be saved.
And what is your Paradise? It is a toy for children. And who
are those unbelievers who you want to torture? They are your
servants. Forgive them."
Ibn Hajar said, in reference to Bayazid's
famous utterances, "Allah knows the secret and Allah
knows the heart. Whatever Aba Yazid spoke from the Knowledge
of Realities the people of his time did not understand. They
condemned him and exiled him seven times from his city. Every
time he was exiled, terrible afflictions would strike the
city until the people would call him back, pledge allegiance
to him, and accept him as a real saint."
Attar and Arusi relate that Bayazid said,
when he was exiled from his city, "O Blessed city, whose
refuse is Bayazid!"
One time Bayazid said, "Allah the Most
Just called me into His Presence and said to me, O Bayazid
how did you arrive in My Presence? I replied, Through zuhd,
by renouncing the world. He said, The value of the lower world
is like the wing of a mosquito. What kind of renunciation
have you come with? I said, O Allah, forgive me. Then I said,
O Allah, I came to you through tawakkul, by dependence on
You. Then He said, Did I ever betray the trust which I promised
you? I said, O Allah forgive me. Then I said, O Allah, I came
to you through You. At that time Allah said, Now We accept
you."
He said, "I stood with the pious and
I didn't find any progress with them. I stood with the warriors
in the cause and I didn't find a single step of progress with
them. I stood with those who pray excessively and those who
fast excessively and I didn't make a footstep of progress.
Then I said, O Allah, what is the way to You? and Allah said,
Leave yourself and come."
Ibrahim Khawwas said, "The way that
Allah showed to him, with the most delicate word and the simplest
explanation, was to 'leave your self-interest in the two worlds,
the dunya and the Hereafter, leave everything other than Me
behind.' That is the best and easiest way to come to Allah
Almighty and Exalted, the most perfect and highest state of
affirming Oneness, not to accept anything or anyone except
Allah the Most High."
One of the followers of Dhul Nun al-Misri
was following Bayazid. Bayazid asked him, "Who do you
want?" He replied, "I want Bayazid." He said,
"O my son, Bayazid is wanting Bayazid for forty years
and is still not finding him." That murid of Dhul Nun
then went to him and narrated this incident to him. On hearing
it Dhul Nun fainted. He explained later saying, "My master
Bayazid has lost himself in Allah's love. That causes him
to try to find himself again."
They asked him, "Teach us about how
you reached true Reality." He said, "By training
myself, by seclusion." They said, "How?" He
said, "I called my self to accept Allah Almighty and
Exalted, and it resisted. I took an oath that I would not
drink water and I would not taste sleep until I brought my
self under my control."
He also said, "O Allah! it is not strange
that I love You because I am a weak servant, but it is strange
that You love me when You are the King of Kings."
He said, "For thirty years, when I
wanted to remember Allah and do dhikr I used to wash my tongue
and my mouth for His glorification."
He said, "As long as the servant thinks
that there is among the Muslims someone lower than himself,
that servant still has pride."
They asked him, "Describe your day
and describe your night." He said, "I don't have
a day and I don't have a night, because day and night are
for those who have characteristics of creation. I have shed
my self the way the snake sheds its skin."
Of Sufism Bayazid said: "It it to give
up rest and to accept suffering."
Of the obligation to follow a guide, he
said: "Who does not have a sheikh, his sheikh is Satan."
Of seeking God he said, "Hunger is
a rain cloud. If a servant becomes hungry, Allah will shower
his heart with wisdom."
Of his intercession he said, "If Allah
will give me permission to intercede for all the people of
my time I will not be proud, because I am only interceding
for a piece of clay," and "If Allah gave me permission
for intercession, first I would intercede for those who harmed
me and those who denied me."
To a young man who wanted a piece of his
old cloak for baraka (blessing), Bayazid said: "Should
you take all Bayazid's skin and wear it as yours, it would
avail you nothing unless you followed his example."
They said to him, "The key for Paradise
is LA ILAHA ILLALLAH (witnessing that there is no god except
Allah)." He said, "It is true, but a key is for
opening a lock; and the key of such witnessing can only operate
under the following conditions:
1) a tongue which doesn't lie nor backbite
2) a heart without betrayal
3) a stomach without aram or doubtful provision
4) deeds without desire or innovation."
He said, "The ego or self always looks
at the world and the ruh (spirit) always looks at the next
life and macrifat (spiritual knowledge) always looks at Allah
Almighty and Exalted. He whose self defeats him is from those
who are destroyed, and he whose spirit is victorious over
his self, he is of the pious, and he whose spiritual knowledge
overcomes his self, he is of the God-conscious."
Ad-Dailami said, "One time I asked
Abdur Rahman bin Yahya about the state of trust in Allah (tawakkul).
He said, "If you put your hand in the mouth of a lion,
don't be afraid of other than Allah." I went in my heart
to visit and ask Bayazid about this matter. I knocked and
I heard from inside, "Wasn't what Abdur Rahman said to
you enough? You came only to ask, and not with the intention
of visiting me." I understood and I came again another
time one year later, knocking at his door. This time he answered,
"Welcome my son, this time you came to me as a visitor
and not as a questioner."
They asked him "When does a man become
a man?" He said, "When he knows the mistakes of
his self and he busies himself in correcting them."
He said, "I was twelve years the blacksmith
of my self, and five years the polisher of the mirror of my
heart, and for one year I was looking in that mirror and I
saw on my belly the girdle of unbelief. I tried hard to cut
it and I spent twelve years in that effort. Then I looked
in that mirror and I saw inside my body that girdle. I spent
five years cutting it. Then I spent one year looking at what
I had done. And Allah opened for me the vision of all creations.
And I saw all of them dead. And I prayed four takbiras of
janaza (funeral prayer) over them."
He said one time: "If the Throne and
what is around it and what is in it were placed in the corner
of the heart of a Knower, they would be lost completely inside
it."
Of Bayazid's state, al-'Abbas ibn Hamza
related the following: "I prayed behind Bayazid the Dhuhr
prayer, and when he raised his hands to say 'Allahu Akbar'
he was unable to pronounce the words, fearing from Allah's
Holy Name, and his entire body was trembling and the sound
of bones breaking came from him; I was seized by fear."
Munawi relates that one day, Bayazid attended
the class of a faqih (jurisprudent) who was explaining the
laws of inheritance: "When a man dies and leaves such-and-such,
his son will have such-and-such, etc." Bayazid exclaimed:
"O faqih, O faqih! What would you say of a man who died
leaving nothing but God?" People began to cry, and Bayazid
continued: "The slave possesses nothing; when he dies,
he leaves nothing but his own master. He is such as Allah
created him in the beginning." And he recited: "You
shall return to us alone, as we created you the first time"
[6:94].
Sahl at-Tustari sent a letter to Bayazid
which read: "Here is a man who drank a drink which leaves
him forever refreshed." Bayazid replied: "Here is
a man who has drunk all existences, but whose mouth is dry
and burn with thirst."
His Death
When Bayazid died, he was over seventy years old. Before he
died, someone asked him his age. He said: "I am four
years old. For seventy years I was veiled. I got rid of my
veils only four years ago." The 39th Sheikh of the Golden
Chain, Sultan al-Awliya Sheikh Abdullah Daghestani, referred
to this saying in his encounter with Khidr , who told him,
as he was pointing to the graves of some great scholars in
a Muslim cemetary: "This one is three years old; that
one, seven; that one, twelve."
Bayazid died in 261 H. It is said he is
buried in two places, one is Damascus and the other is Bistam
in Persia. The secret of the Golden Chain was passed from
Bayazid al-Bistami to Abul Hassan al-Kharqani
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