|
Abul cAbbas, al-Khidr
On him be Allah's Blessings and Peace

"Whoever enters the Way without a guide will take a hundred
years to travel a two-day journey.
The Prophet said, 'In this Way, you have no more faithful
companions than your works.'
How can these works and this earning in the way of righteousness
be accomplished without a master, O father?
Can you practice the meanest profession in the world without
a master's guidance?
Whoever undertakes a profession without a master becomes the
laughingstock of city and town."
Rumi, Mathnavi.
Abul 'Abbas is Khidr , whom Allah mentioned
in the Holy Qur'an [18:65f.] as the servant of Allah who met
with the Prophet Musa . He preserved and maintained the Reality
of the Golden Chain until the next link in the Chain, Abdul
Khaliq, could assume his destined station.
Bukhara relates in the Book of Prophets
that the Prophet said, "Al-Khidr ("the Green Man")
was so named because he sat on a barren white land once, after
which it turned luxuriantly green with vegetation."
The important role of Khidr as the murshid
(initiator) of saints may be illustrated by the importance
of his role as the murshid of prophets, particularly of the
Prophet Masa . Moses was a highly powerful prophet, one of
the five greatest Allah sent to this world: Noah, Abraham,
Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad, Peace and blessings be upon them.
Yet with the high knowledge of Moses, Allah caused him to
be in need for Khidr, even though Khidr was not a prophet.
This is to teach us, as Allah said in the Holy Qur'an, that
"Above every knower there is a greater knower" (Yusuf,
76).
The story of Moses' encounter with Khidr
is related in Surat al-Kahf (65-82) and goes thus: Moses and
his servant found one of Allah's servants whom Allah had honored
uniquely and had taught knowledge from His Own Presence. Moses
said to him, "I would like to accompany you." He
answered him: "You cannot bear to accompany me."
Moses was surprised and insisted he could. Khidr said: "You
cannot, but if you do, do not ask about what I am doing no
matter what you see me do. On that condition alone you may
follow; but if you want to ask questions, don't follow me."
This means that Khidr was going to do something that Moses
does not understand, although he was the Messenger of this
great religion. He was in need of Khidr to learn something.
They took a boat and crossed Tabaraya River
in Palestine. When they were in the middle of the river, Khidr
made a hole in the boat in order for it to sink. Moses was
unable to keep quiet: "Why are you doing this childish
act? Those people gave you the boat, are you now scuttling
it?" Khidr replied: "Did I not tell you you were
unable to keep company with me?" Moses had not yet understood,
even though he was prophet and could read hearts, that there
was something he did not know. They continued and found a
young boy. As soon as they saw him, Khidr killed him. Moses
said: "What are you doing? You sank a boat, and now you
kill a child? This is against all laws!" Again Khidr
said: "Did I not tell you you could not keep company
with me? The third time you ask me, we will part ways."
Then they reached a city where they asked for food. No one
gave them any food, and they kicked them out. On their way
out, they found a wall about to fall down. Khidr rebuilt that
wall and made it straight. Moses said: "Why are you doing
this? No one accepted us as their guests in this city, and
you are building their wall for them?" Khidr said: "This
is the point where we separate, for you did not understand
the wisdom of what I am doing.
"O Moses, what we do is what Allah
tells us to do. First I caused this boat to sink because there
is a tyrant who is taking every boat from the poor people
on this side of the city. In order for these people not to
lose their boat, I am causing it to sink. That tyrant is going
to die tomorrow, and tomorrow, they can retrieve their boat
and use it safely. I killed the child because Allah did not
want that child to cause his parents, who believe in you,
to leave and run away from your religion. Allah will give
them better children than him. I built the wall which belonged
to a man who was in life very generous to poor people. When
he passed away, he left a treasure buried under the wall for
his two orphans. Were that wall to come down, people would
see the treasure and take it. I built it back in order for
the two children to get their treasure later. You did not
understand God's wisdom."
That was Moses who, with all the honor bestowed
on him by God, found himself ignorant before Khidr. How can
we, who know so little in comparison to Moses, consider ourselves
knowledgeable if Moses himself, with all his knowledge in
the Divine Presence, was unable to understand certain things?
This is a lesson in humility for human beings, and particularly
for scholars and religious leaders. Your knowledge is not
worth mentioning. There are others more and highly more knowledgeable
than you. As high or deep as you travel into knowledge, there
is deeper depth and higher height than where you stand.
That is why, when someone sits to give advice,
he must sit with complete humbleness and complete respect
for the listener, and he cannot consider himself higher than
them, otherwise that light will never come to their hearts.
That is also why each is in need for a guide, as was shown
by the Guide of guides himself, the Prophet , when he took
Jibral as a guide for Revelation, and when he took a guide
in travelling to Madina.
This is how Ibn cArabi (q) in Fusus al-hikam
explains the three acts of Khidr witnessed by Masa :
"Moses was tested 'by many ordeals'
[20:41] the first of which was the murder of the Egyptian
[28:14-15], an act which he committed by Divine impulsion
and with the approbation of God deep inside him, without however,
his perceiving it; nevertheless he felt no affliction in his
soul for having killed the Egyptian, although he himself was
not acquitted until he had received a Divine revelation on
the subject. For all prophets are interiorly preserved from
sin without their being conscious of it, even before they
are warned by inspiration.
"It is for that reason that al-Khidr
showed him the putting to death of the boy, an action for
which Moses reproached him, without remembering his murder
of the Egyptian, upon which al-Khidr said to him: 'I have
not done it of my own initiative,' recalling thus to Moses
the state in which he, the latter, found himself when he did
not yet know that he was essentially preserved from all action
contrary to the Divine Order.
"He showed him also the perforation
of the boat, apparently made to destroy the people, but which
has, however, the hidden sense of saving them from the hand
of a 'violent man.' He showed this to him as an analogy to
the ark which hid Moses when he was thrown into the Nile;
according to appearances, this act was equally to destroy
him, but according to the hidden sense, it was to save him.
Again his mother had done that for fear of the 'violent man,'
in this case Pharaoh, so that he would not cruelly kill the
child...
"Moses arrived then at Madyan, there
met the two girls and for them drew water from the well, without
asking from them a salary. Then he 'withdrew to the shade,'
that is to say to the Divine shadow, and said: 'O my Lord,
I am poor with regard to the blessings Thou bestowest on Me';
he attributed, then, to God alone the essence of the good
that he did and qualified himself as poor (faqir) towards
God. It was for that reason that al-Khidr reconstructed before
him the crumbling wall without asking a salary for his work,
for which Moses reprimanded him, until Khidr reminded him
of his action of drawing water without asking for reward,
and other things too, of which there is no mention in the
Koran; so that the Messenger of God -- may God bless him and
give him Peace! -- regretted that Moses did not keep quiet
and did not remain with al-Khidr, so that God could tell him
more of their actions."
Of Khidr's sayings to Sahl at-Tustari (q)
according to Ibn cArabi:
"Allah created the Light of Muhammad
from His Light... This Light stayed before Allah for 100,000
years. Allah directed His Gaze upon it 70,000 times every
day and night, adding to it a new light from His Light every
time. Then, from that Light, He created all creations."
When the Prophet left this world and condolence
came, they heard a voice from the corner of the house saying,
"Peace, God's mercy and blessings be upon you, members
of the Family of the Prophet !" cAli (r) then asked if
they knew who this was, and he said it was Khidr . Bayhaqa
transmitted it in Dala'il an-Nubuwwa.
|