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Khas Muhammad Shirwani
May Allah Sanctify His Soul

"I weep and he makes me happy.
I become sober and He makes me drunk.
I am rescued and He drowns me.
One time He befriends me,
another time He lifts me.
Another time He fights me
until I become angry.
One time I am playful with Him,
one time I accompany Him,
Another time I avoid Him,
another time I speak to Him.
If you say He is happy you
will find Him angry,
Or if you say He is obligated,
you will find He decides."
Abdul Karim Jili.
He was the Wisest Scholar of his time, Adorned
with the Arts of Science, dressed in the Robes of Piety and
Patience, enlightened with the Essence of Certainty and supported
with the Firmness of Faith. He knew Truth from Falsehood.
He was Unsurpassed in Eloquence and Clarification. He was
a Master of This Way and the First in this Association (Jama`at).
He was the Champion of the Knowers and the Signpost for the
Seekers.
His speeches were exemplary and exquisite
in their eloquence. His proofs and examples were metaphors
that clarified elevated concepts to make them accessible to
the people. All were overwhelmed by his eloquence. If he passed
through a city in Daghestan, the people would line the streets
to see him. Writers used to attend his association for the
sake of his eloquent literary language, jurists for his legal
rulings, philosophers for his logic, speakers for his clarity,
and Sufis for his Manifestation of the Truth.
He was born in Kulal, a district of Shirwan,
south of Daghestan, on the 1st of Muharram, a Monday, in the
year 1201 H./1786 C.E.
He was tall and very fair. His beard was
of mixed color, black and white. His eyes were black. His
voice was high-pitched.
He was one of the Pious, Prayerful Jurists.
He followed and taught the Shafi`i School. He memorized Shafi`i's
"Kitab ul-Umm" (The Mother of Books). He was able
to give judicial decisions (fatawa) at the age of twenty years.
He was respected by all in his city. He received his first
teachings in Tasawwuf from his family.
From His Sayings
He said, "Our Way is controlled by the Qur'an and the
Sunnah."
"I have met, from the Naqshbandi Order,
four types of saints, and of each type, thirty exemplars;
but in the end I chose to follow Shaikh Isma`il ash-Shirwani."
"Allah didn't send anything to this
Earth except as a lesson for His servants to learn from."
They asked him, "Who is the Knower?"
He answered, "The Knower is the one who knows your secret
without your speaking."
He said, "We didn't take Sufism through
speeches and flashy words or by saying, 'Our shaikh said this
and our shaikh said that.' We took Sufism by being hungry
and leaving dunya behind and by disconnecting ourselves from
everyone."
He was asked, "What is the difference
between the Seeker (murid) and the Sought (murad)?" He
replied, "The Seeker is the one who acquired knowledge
through his activities and his learning. The Sought is the
one who receives knowledge through revelation and inspiration.
The seekers move and walk, but the Sought flies, and what
a great difference between the one who walks and the one who
flies."
"Sincerity between Allah and His Servants
is not witnessed by anyone, neither the angels to write it,
nor the devil to corrupt it, nor desire to destroy it."
"Even the Trustworthy (Siddiq) changes
his opinion more than forty times during a single night, although
he is Trustworthy. The Witness (al-Mushahid) is firm in his
view for forty years."
The one who is in the "State of Witnessing"
of the Divine Presence, sees Reality. He will achieve the
three stages of witnessing: Knowledge of Certainty (`ilm al-yaqin);
Vision of Certainty (`ayn al-yaqin); Reality of Certainty
(haqq al-yaqin). The knowledge that he attains will be received
directly from the Divine Presence, which never changes. Therefore
the People of Witnessing are firm in their decisions, which
come from Reality and not from the opinion of the mind.
He said, "A person cannot be called
a wise servant until nothing appears in him that Allah dislikes."
"The Naqshbandi Sufi Order is based
on four characteristics of behavior: -don't speak except when
asked; -don't eat except when weak with hunger; -don't sleep
except when overcome by fatigue; -and don't keep quiet when
you are in His Presence (i.e. ask incessantly from Allah)."
"The purity of the heart depends on
the purity of the Dhikr and the Dhikr's purity depends on
the absence of any hidden shirk (worshipping Allah with another)."
"The speech of Prophet is from the
Divine Presence and the speech of Sufis is from Witnessing
(mushahada)."
"The way of the Sufis to Allah is by
struggle against their selves."
"The State of Unique and Sincere Oneness
is reached when the servant goes back from the End to the
Beginning, and he becomes as he was before he existed."
"The knowledge of Oneness (tawhid)
has been veiled from the eyes of the External Scholars since
long ago. They can only talk about its outer shape."
"What causes the heart to feel happiness
and peace when it hears a beautiful sound? It is a consequence
of Allah's having spoken to the spirits when they were atoms
in His Presence and having asked them, 'Am I not Your Lord?'
The sweetness of His Speech became imprinted on them. Thus
in this world, whenever the heart hears anything of Dhikr
or music, it experiences happiness and peace, because these
are a reflection of that sweetness."
About His Miracles
For twenty years he did not eat except once a week. His daily
practice of remembrance (wird) consisted of 350 rak`ats of
prayer.
Shaikh Ahmad al-Kawkasi said, "One
time I was travelling from the city across the forest to another
city on important business. On my way snow was falling heavily,
and a great wind was blowing. Then the snowfall cleared, and
in its stead rain poured down, making all the roads like rivers.
I had no choice but to pass through that forest. I entered
the forest as night was approaching and got lost in the middle.
The skies were pouring rain, night was overtaking me, the
flood was increasing, and I didn't know where to go. I came
to a river running through the woods. The flood made that
river like an ocean, full of waves. The bridge over it was
wrecked, but I had to cross. The river was raging, rising
higher and higher, until it reached up to my legs, and then
reached up the legs of my horse. I feared drowning for myself
and my horse. I raised my hands and asked my Lord, "O
Allah, help me in this difficulty." Immediately I heard
a voice behind me saying, "O Ahmad, why are you calling
me and bringing me from my house?" I looked and I saw
Shaikh Khas Muhammad behind me, but he was huge. He said,
"Hold my hand and cross the river with me." I felt
fear. He said, "When you are with Us you must not feel
fear." Then we crossed the river. He walked on the river,
and I was walking with him on the water. We crossed to the
other side. He said, "Now you are safe," and he
disappeared. When I reached my destination and went to the
mosque, I saw him sitting there. I asked him, "How did
you come?" He said, "O Ahmad, for Us there are no
boundaries. We can be anywhere and everywhere at any time."
His Jihad
Benningsen and Wimbush describe the influence of Shaikh Isma`il
ash-Shirwani and his khalifs in Daghestan thus: "The
Naqshbandiya tariqat was to play a very important role in
Caucasian history. Iron discipline, total dedication to its
ideals, and the strict hierarchy on which it was based explain
the epic resistance of the Caucasian mountaineers to Russian
conquest - -a resistance that lasted from 1824 to 1855-- in
which not only all the leaders of the movement but also the
local authorities (na'ibs) and the majority of the fighters
were Naqshbandis. It can be said that the nearly fifty-year-long
Caucasian wars made an important contribution to the material
and moral ruin of the Tsarist empire and hastened the downfall
of the Russian monarchy. "The brotherhood achieved another
deep and long-lasting result: it transformed the half-pagan
mountaineers into strict orthodox Muslims, and introduced
Islam into the animist areas of upper Chechnia and among the
Circassian tribes of the western Caucasus."... "The
subsequent massive migration of the Caucasian Muslims to Turkey
did not destroy the Naqshbandiyya in Daghestan and Chechnia;
its roots had spread too wide and too deep."
Khas Muhammad died on the 3rd of Ramadan,
a Sunday, in the year 1260 H. / 1844 C.E. while returning
to Daghestan from pilgrimage to Makkah. He was buried in Damascus.
He passed the authority of the Tariqat to his successor, Sayyiddina
ash-Shaikh Muhammad Effendi al-Yaraghi (q), according to the
will of their common shaikh, Sayyidina Isma`il ash-Shirwani
(q).
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