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Abdul Khaliq al-Ghujdawani
May Allah Be Well Pleased With Him

"The lights of some people precede
their dhikr, while the dhikr of some people precede their
lights. There is the one who does (loud) dhikr so that his
heart be illumined; and there is the one whose heart has been
illumined and he does (silent) dhikr."
Ibn cAta'Allah.
He was known as the Shaikh of Miracles,
One Who Shone Like the Sun, and he was the Master of the high
stations of spirituality of his time. He was a Perfect Knower
(carif kamil) in sufism and accomplished in asceticism. He
is considered the Fountainhead of this Honorable Sufi Order
and the Wellspring of the Khwajagan (Masters of Central Asia).
His father was Shaikh 'Abdul Jamil, one
of the most famous scholars in Byzantine times in both external
and internal knowledge. His mother was a princess, the daughter
of the king of Seljuk Anatolia.
Abdul Khaliq was born in Ghujdawan, a town
near Bukhara in present-day Uzbekistan. There he lived and
passed his life and was buried. He was a descendant of Imam
Malik (r). In his childhood he studied the Qur'an and its
tafsir (exegesis), 'ilm al-Hadith (the study of Prophetic
Traditions), the sciences of the Arabic language, and Jurisprudence
with Shaikh Sadruddin. After mastering Sharica (the legal
sciences) he moved on to jihad an-nafs (spiritual struggle),
until he reached a high station of purity. He then moved to
Damascus, where he established a school from which many students
graduated. Each became a master of fiqh and hadith as well
as spirituality, both in the regions of Central Asia as well
as in the Middle East.
The author of the book al-Hada'iq al-Wardiyya
tells us how he reached his high station within the Golden
Chain: "He met Khidr (as) and accompanied him. He took
from him heavenly knowledge and added it to the spiritual
knowledge he had obtained from his shaikh, Yusuf al-Hamadani.
"One day when he was reading the Qur'an
in the presence of Shaikh Sadruddin, he came upon the following
ayat: "Call unto your Sustainer humbly, and in the secrecy
of your hearts. Verily, He loves not those who transgress
the bounds of what is right" [7:55]. This ayat prompted
him to inquire of Shaikh Sadruddin about the reality of silent
Dhikr and its method. Abdul Khaliq put his question thus:
"In loud dhikr you have to use your tongue and people
might listen to you and see you, whereas in the silent dhikr
of the heart Shaytan might listen to you and hear you, since
the Prophet said in his holy hadith: 'Satan moves freely in
the veins and arteries of the Sons of Adam.' What, then, O
my Shaikh Sadruddin, is the reality of 'Call in the secrecy
of your hearts?' His shaikh replied, 'O my son, this is a
hidden, heavenly knowledge, and I wish that Allah Exalted
and Almighty send you one of his saints to inspire on your
tongue and in your heart the reality of secret dhikr.'
"From that time Shaikh Abdul Khaliq
al-Ghujdawani waited for that prayer to be fulfilled. One
day he met Khidr who told him, 'Now, my son, I have permission
from the Prophet to inspire on your tongue and in your heart
the hidden dhikr with its numbers.' He ordered him to submerge
himself under water and to begin making dhikr in his heart
(LA ILAHA ILLALLAH MUHAMMADUN RASUL ALLAH). He did this form
of dhikr every day, until the Light of the Divine, the Wisdom
of the Divine, the Love of the Divine and the Attraction of
the Divine were opened to his heart. Because of those gifts
people began to be drawn to Abdul Khaliq and sought to follow
in his footsteps, and he took them to follow in the footsteps
of the Prophet .
"He was the first one in this honorable
Sufi Order to use the Silent Dhikr and he was considered the
master of that form of Dhikr. When his spiritual shaikh, al-Ghawth
ar-Rabbani, Yusuf al-Hamadani, came to Bukhara, he spent his
time in serving him. He said about him, 'When I became 22
years of age, Shaikh Yusuf al-Hamadani ordered Khidr to keep
raising me and to keep an eye on me until my death.'"
Shaikh Mu ammad Parsa, a friend and biographer
of Shah Naqshband, said in his book Faslul-Kitab, that the
method of Khwaja Abdul Khaliq al-Ghujdawani in dhikr and the
teachings of his Eight Principles were embraced and hailed
by all 40 tariqats as the way of truth and loyalty, the way
of consciousness in following the Sunnah the Prophet, by leaving
innovation and by scrupulously opposing low desires. Because
of that he became the Master of his time and the First in
this line of spirituality.
His reputation as an accomplished spiritual
Master became widespread. Visitors used to flock to see him
from every land. He gathered around him the loyal and sincere
murids that he was training and teaching. In this regard,
he wrote a letter to his son, al-Qalb al-Mubarak Shaykh Awliya
al-Kabir, to specify the conduct of followers of this Order.
It says:
"O my son, I urge you to acquire knowledge
and righteous conduct and the fear of Allah. Follow the steps
of the pious Salaf (early generation). Hold fast to the Sunnah
of the Prophet , and keep company with sincere believers.
Read jurisprudence and life-history of the Prophet and Quranic
exegesis. Avoid ignorant charlatans, and keep the prayer in
congregation. Beware of fame and its danger. Be among the
ordinary people and do not seek positions. Don't enter into
friendship with kings and their children nor with the innovators.
Keep silent, don't eat excessively and don't sleep excessively.
Run away from people as you would run from lions. Keep seclusion.
Eat lawful food and leave doubtful actions except in dire
necessity. Keep away from love of the lower world because
it might fascinate you. Don't laugh too much, because too
much laughter will be the death of the heart. Don't humiliate
anyone. Don't praise yourself. Don't argue with people. Don't
ask anyone except Allah. Don't ask anyone to serve you. Serve
your shaikhs with your money and power and don't criticize
their actions. Anyone who criticizes them will not be safe,
because he doesn't understand them. Make your deeds sincere
by intending them only for Allah. Pray to Him with humbleness.
Make your business jurisprudence, your mosque your house,
and your Friend your Lord."
The Principles of the Naqshbandi Way
'Abdul Khaliq al-Ghujdawani coined the following
phrases which are now considered the principles of the Naqshbandi
Sufi Order:
1. Conscious Breathing
("Hosh dar dam")
Hosh means "mind." Dar means "in."
Dam means "breath." It means, according to Abdul
Khaliq al-Ghujdawani (q), that
"the wise seeker must safeguard his
breath from heedlessness, coming in and going out, thereby
keeping his heart always in the Divine Presence; and he must
revive his breath with worship and servitude and dispatch
this worship to His Lord full of life, for every breath which
is inhaled and exhaled with Presence is alive and connected
with the Divine Presence. Every breath inhaled and exhaled
with heedlessness is dead, disconnected from the Divine Presence."
Ubaidullah al-Ahrar (q) said, "The
most important mission for the seeker in this Order is to
safeguard his breath, and he who cannot safeguard his breath,
it would be said of him, 'he lost himself.'"
Shah Naqshband (q) said, "This Order
is built on breath. So it is a must for everyone to safeguard
his breath in the time of his inhalation and exhalation and
further, to safeguard his breath in the interval between the
inhalation and exhalation."
Shaikh Abul Janab Najmuddin al-Kubra said
in his book, Fawatih al-Jamal, "Dhikr is flowing in the
body of every single living creatures by the necessity of
their breath -- even without will -- as a sign of obedience,
which is part of their creation. Through their breathing,
the sound of the letter "Ha" of the Divine Name
Allah is made with every exhalation and inhalation and it
is a sign of the Unseen Essence serving to emphasize the Uniqueness
of God. Therefore it is necessary to be present with that
breathing, in order to realize the Essence of the Creator."
The name 'Allah' which encompasses the ninety-nine
Names and Attributes consists of four letters, Alif, Lam,
Lam and the same Hah (ALLAH). The people of Sufism say that
the absolute unseen Essence of Allah Exalted and Almighty
is expressed by the last letter vowelized by the Alif, "Ha."
It represents the Absolutely Unseen "He-ness" of
the Exalted God (Ghayb al-Huwiyya al-Mutlaqa lillah 'azza
wa jall). The first Lam is for the sake of identification
(tacrif) and the second Lam is for the sake of emphasis (mubalagha).
Safeguarding your breath from heedlessness
will lead you to complete Presence, and complete Presence
will lead you to complete Vision, and complete Vision will
lead you to complete Manifestation of Allah's Ninety-Nine
Names and Attributes. Allah leads you to the Manifestation
of His Ninety-Nine Names and Attributes and all His other
Attributes, because it is said, "Allah's Attributes are
as numerous as the breaths of human beings."
It must be known by everyone that securing
the breath from heedlessness is difficult for seekers. Therefore
they must safeguard it by seeking forgiveness (istighfar)
because seeking forgiveness will purify it and sanctify it
and prepare the seeker for the Real Manifestation of Allah
everywhere.
2. Watch Your Step
("Nazar bar qadam")
It means that the seeker while walking must
keep his eyes on his feet. Wherever he is about to place his
feet, his eyes must be there. He is not allowed to send cast
his glance here or there, to look right or left or in front
of him, because unnecessary sights will veil the heart. Most
veils on the heart are created by the pictures which are transmitted
from your eyes to your mind during your daily living. These
may disturb your heart with turbulence because of the different
kinds of desire which have been imprinted on your mind. These
images are like veils on the heart. They block the Light of
the Divine Presence. This is why Sufi saints don't allow their
followers, who have purified their hearts through constant
Dhikr, to look at other than their feet. Their hearts are
like mirrors, reflecting and receiving every image easily.
This might distract them and bring impurities to their hearts.
So the seeker is ordered to lower his gaze in order not to
be assailed by the arrows of devils.
Lowering the gaze is also a sign of humility;
proud and arrogant people never look at their feet. It is
also an indication that one is following the footsteps of
the Prophet , who when he walked never used to look right
or left, but used to look only at his feet, moving steadfastly
towards his destination. It is also the sign of a high state
when the seeker looks nowhere except towards his Lord. Like
one who intends to reach a destination quickly, so too the
seeker of Allah's Divine Presence is moving quickly, not looking
to his right or his left, not looking at the desires of this
world, but looking only for the Divine Presence.
Imam ar-Rabbani Ahmad al-Faruqi (q) said
in the 295th letter of his Maktubat:
"The gaze precedes the step and the
step follows the gaze. The Ascension to the high state is
first by the Vision, followed by the Step. When the Step reaches
the level of the Ascension of the Gaze, then the Gaze will
be lifted up to another state, to which the Step follows in
its turn. Then the Gaze will be lifted even higher and the
Step will follow in its turn. And so on until the Gaze reaches
a state of Perfection to which it will pull the Step. We say,
'When the Step follows the Gaze, the murid has reached the
state of Readiness in approaching the Footsteps of the Prophet,
peace be upon him. So the Footsteps of the Prophet are considered
the Origin of all steps.'"
Shah Naqshband (q) said, "If we look
at the mistakes of our friends, we will be left friendless,
because no one is perfect."
3. Journey Homeward
("safar dar watan")
It means to travel to one's homeland. It
means that the seeker travels from the world of creation to
the world of the Creator. It is related that the Prophet said,
"I am going to my Lord from one state to a better state
and from one station to a higher station." It is said
that the seeker must travel from the Desire for the forbidden
to the Desire for the Divine Presence.
The Naqshbandi Sufi Order divides that travel
into two categories. The first is external journeying and
the second is internal journeying. External travel is to travel
from one land to another searching for a perfect guide to
take and direct you to your destination. This enables you
to move to the second category, the internal journey. Seekers,
once they have found a perfect guide, are forbidden to go
on another external journey. In the external journey there
are many difficulties which beginners cannot endure without
falling into forbidden actions, because they are weak in their
worship.
The second category is internal journeying.
Internal journeying requires the seeker to leave his low manners
and move to high manners, to throw out of his heart all worldly
desires. He will be lifted from a state of uncleanness to
a state of purity. At that time he will no longer be in need
of more internal journeying. He will have purified his heart,
making it pure like water, transparent like crystal, polished
like a mirror, showing the realities of all matters essential
for his daily life, without any need for external action on
his part. In his heart will appear everything that is needed
for his life and for the life of those around him.
4. Solitude in the Crowd
("khalwat dar anjuman")
"Khalwat" means seclusion. It
means to be outwardly with people while remaining inwardly
with God. There are also two categories of seclusion. The
first is external seclusion and the second is internal seclusion.
External seclusion requires the seeker to
seclude himself in a private place that is empty of people.
Staying there by himself, he concentrates and meditates on
Dhikrullah, the remembrance of God, in order to reach a state
in which the Heavenly Realm becomes manifest. When you chain
the external senses, your internal senses will be free to
reach the Heavenly Realm. This will bring you to the second
category: the internal seclusion.
The internal seclusion means seclusion among
people. Therein the heart of the seeker must be present with
his Lord and absent from the Creations while remaining physically
present among them. It is said, "The seeker will be so
deeply involved in the silent Dhikr in his heart that, even
if he enters a crowd of people, he will not hear their voices.
The state of Dhikr overcomes him. The manifestation of the
Divine Presence is pulling him and making him unaware of all
but his Lord. This is the highest state of seclusion, and
is considered the true seclusion, as mentioned in the Holy
Qur'an: "Men whom neither business nor profit distract
from the recollection of God" [24:37]. This is the way
of the Naqshbandi Order.
The primary seclusion of the shaykhs of
the Naqshbandi Order is the internal seclusion. They are with
their Lord and simultaneously they are with the people. As
the Prophet said, "I have two sides: one faces my Creator
and one faces creation." Shah Naqshband emphasized the
goodness of gatherings when he said: Tariqatuna as-suhbat
wa-l-khairu fil-jamciyyat ("Our Way is Companionship,
and Goodness is in the Gathering").
It is said that the believer who can mingle
with people and carry their difficulties is better than the
believer who keeps away from people. On that delicate point
Imam Rabbani said,
"It must be known that the seeker at
the beginning might use the external seclusion to isolate
himself from people, worshipping and concentrating on Allah,
Almighty and Exalted, until he reaches a higher state. At
that time he will be advised by his shaikh, in the words of
Sayyid al-Kharraz, 'Perfection is not in exhibitions of miraculous
powers, but perfection is to sit among people, sell and buy,
marry and have children; and yet never leave the presence
of Allah even for one moment.'"
5. Essential Remembrance
("yad kard")
The meaning of 'Yad' is Dhikr. The meaning
of 'kard' is the essence of Dhikr. The seeker must make Dhikr
by negation and affirmation on his tongue until he reaches
the state of the contemplation of his heart (muraqaba). That
state will be achieved by reciting every day the negation
(LA ILAHA) and affirmation (ILLALLAH) on the tongue, between
5,000 and 10,000 times, removing from his heart the elements
that tarnish and rust it. This dhikr polishes the heart and
takes the seeker into the state of Manifestation. He must
keep that daily dhikr, either by heart or by tongue, repeating
ALLAH, the name of God's Essence which encompasses all other
names and Attributes, or by negation and affirmation through
the saying of LA ILAHA ILLALLAH.
This daily dhikr will bring the seeker into
the perfect presence of the One Who is glorified.
The Dhikr by negation and affirmation, in
the manner of the Naqshbandi Sufi Masters, demands that the
seeker close his eyes, close his mouth, clench his teeth,
glue his tongue to the roof of his mouth, and hold his breath.
He must recite the dhikr through the heart, by negation and
affirmation, beginning with the word LA ("No").
He lifts this "No" from under his navel up to his
brain. Upon reaching his brain the word "No" brings
out the word ILAHA ("god"), moves from the brain
to the left shoulder, and hits the heart with ILLALLAH ("except
The God"). When that word hits the heart its energy and
heat spreads to all the parts of the body. The seeker who
has denied all that exists in this world with the words LA
ILAHA, affirms with the words ILLALLAH that all that exists
has been annihilated in the Divine Presence.
The seeker repeats this with every breath,
inhaling and exhaling, always making it come to the heart,
according to the number of times prescribed to him by his
shaikh. The seeker will eventually reach the state where in
one breath he can repeat LA ILAHA ILLALLAH twenty-three times.
A perfect shaikh can repeat LA ILAHA ILLALLAH an infinite
number of times in every breath. The meaning of this practice
is that the only goal is ALLAH and that there is no other
goal for us. To look at the Divine Presence as the Only Existence
after all this throws back into the heart of the murid the
love of the Prophet and at that time he says, MUHAMMADUN RASULULLAH
("Muhammad is the Prophet of God") which is the
heart of the Divine Presence.
6. Returning
("baz gasht")
This is a state in which the seeker, who
makes Dhikr by negation and affirmation, comes to understand
the Holy Prophet's phrase, ilahi anta maqsusdi wa ridaka matlubi
("O my God, You are my Goal and Your Good Pleasure is
my Aim.") The recitation of this phrase will increase
in the seeker the awareness of the Oneness of God, until he
reaches the state in which the existence of all creation vanishes
from his eyes. All that he sees, wherever he looks, is the
Absolute One. The Naqshbandi murids recite this sort of dhikr
in order to extract from their hearts the secret of Oneness,
and to open themselves to the Reality of the Unique Divine
Presence. The beginner has no right to leave this dhikr if
he doesn't find its power appearing in his heart. He must
keep on reciting it in imitation of his Shaykh, because the
Prophet has said, "Whoever imitates a group of people
will belong to them." And whoever imitates his teacher
will some day find this secret opened to his heart.
The meaning of the phrase "baz gasht"
is the return to Allah Exalted and Almighty by showing complete
surrender and submission to His Will, and complete humbleness
in giving Him all due praise. That is the reason the Holy
Prophet mentioned in his invocation, ma dhakarnaka haqqa dhikrika
ya Madhkur ("We did not Remember You as You Deserve to
be Remembered, O Allah"). The seeker cannot come to the
presence of Allah in his dhikr, and cannot manifest the Secrets
and Attributes of Allah in his dhikr, if he does not make
dhikr with Allah's Support and with Allah's Remembrance of
him. As Bayazid said: "When I reached Him I saw that
His remembering of me preceded my remembrance of Him."
The seeker cannot make dhikr by himself. He must recognise
that Allah is the one making Dhikr through him.
7. Attentiveness ("nigah
dasht")
"Nigah" means sight. It means
that the seeker must watch his heart and safeguard it by preventing
bad thoughts from entering. Bad inclinations keep the heart
from joining with the Divine. It is acknowledged in the Naqshbandiyya
that for a seeker to safeguard his heart from bad inclinations
for fifteen minutes is a great achievement. For this he would
be considered a real Sufi. Sufism is the power to safeguard
the heart from bad thoughts and protect it from low inclinations.
Whoever accomplishes these two goals will know his heart,
and whoever knows his heart will know his Lord. The Holy Prophet
has said, "Whoever knows himself knows His Lord."
One Sufi shaikh said, "Because I safeguarded
my heart for ten nights, my heart has safeguarded me for twenty
years."
Abu Bakr al-Qaittani said, "I was the
guard at the door of my heart for 40 years, and I never opened
it for anyone except Allah, Almighty and Exalted, until my
heart did not know anyone except Allah Almighty and Exalted."
Abul Hassan al-Kharqani said, "It has
been 40 years that Allah has been looking at my heart and
has seen no one except Himself. And there is no room in my
heart for other than Allah."
8. Recollection ("yada
dasht")
It means that the reciter of Dhikr safeguards
his heart with negation and affirmation in every breath without
leaving the Presence of Allah Almighty and Exalted. It requires
the seeker to keep his heart in Allah's Divine Presence continuously.
This allows him to realize and manifest the Light of the Unique
Essence (anwar adh-dhat al-Ahadiyya) of God. He then casts
away three of the four different forms of thoughts: the egoistic
thoughts, the evil thoughts, and the angelic thoughts, keeping
and affirming solely the fourth form of thought, the haqqani
or truthful thoughts. This will lead the seeker to the highest
state of perfection by discarding all his imaginings and embracing
only the Reality which is the Oneness of Allah, Almighty and
Exalted.
'Abdul Khaliq al-Ghujdawani had four
khalifs. The first was Shaikh Ahmad as-Siddiq, originally
from Bukhara. The second was Kabir al-Awliya ("the Greatest
of Saints"), Shaikh Arif Awliya al-Kabir (q). Originally
from Bukhara, he was a great scholar in both external and
internal Sciences. The third khalif was Shaikh Sulaiman al-Kirmani
(q). The fourth khalif was cArif ar-Riwakri (q). It is to
this fourth khalif that Abdul Khaliq (q) passed the Secret
of the Golden Chain before he died on the 12th of Rabi'ul-Awwal
575 H.
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