|
A Sufi Saint in the Twentieth Century Shaikh Ahmad al-Alawi: His Spiritual Heritage and Legacy The Islamic Texts Society (1993) ISBN 0946621500 Paperback Index First published by Allen & Unwin (1961) 242 pp. Price: $29.99
|
"Almost a prerequisite for any serious study of Sufism in European languages": this was the verdict of Seyyed Hossein Nasr in his review of the first edition of this book. According to the Journal of Near Eastern Studies, it is "one of the most thorough and intimately engaging books on Sufism to be produced by a Western scholar." Certainly there is nothing second-hand about it.
The author lets the Sufis speak for themselves and, in a series of unusual and absorbing texts mainly translated from Arabic, he gives a vivid picture of life in a North African Sufi order. Against his background stands the unforgettable figure of the Algerian Shaikh who was head of the order from the death of his Master in 1909 until his own death in 1934. The last few chapters are mainly devoted to his writing, which included some penetrating aphorisms, and which end with a small anthology of his remarkable mystic poems which, as one reviewer has remarked, "remain beautiful poetry even in their English translation."
Martin Lings,
formerly Keeper of Oriental Manuscript in the British Museum and the British
Library, is the author of three works on Islamic mysticism, Muhammad: His Life
Based on the Earliest Sources, What is Sufism? and The Book of Certainty, all
published by The Islamic Texts Society.
‘A masterly study of a man whose sanctity recalled the golden age of medieval mystics. In this well documented book Dr Lings draws on many rare sources...and has made some important original contributions.’
A. J. Arberry
‘What Martin Lings adds by way of commentary is of the greatest significance and may serve as a key to a deeper understanding of Islam as a whole.’
Titus Burckhardt
[Return to Catalogue] [Fons Vitae books] [Sufism] [Secure book orders] [Islamic Studies]
Excerpt from Book : Chapter 'Seen from
Outside'
The narrative which follows is by Dr Marcel Carret. It speaks for itself and
needs no introduction; and having read it, the reader will no doubt understand
why I have chosen to begin with it rather than with anything else, although at
its outset the Shaikh is already fifty years old.
‘I met the Shaikh Al-Alawi for the first time in the spring of 1920. It was not
a chance meeting, for I had been called in to him in my capacity as doctor. It
was then only a few months since I had started a practice at Mostaganem.
‘What could have prompted the Shaikh to consult a doctor, seeing that he
attached so little importance to the petty misfortunes of the flesh. And why had
he chosen me, a newcomer, from among so many others?
‘It was from him himself that I eventually learned the answers to these
questions: not long after my arrival at Mostaganem, I had set up a clinic in the
Arab town of Tigitt exclusively for the use of Moslems, and three times a week I
gave consultations there for a minimum fee. Moslems have an instinctive
repugnance for State-organized dispensaries, and my clinic, which was set up in
their very midst and arranged to suit their tastes and customs, was a success.
Echoes of this came to the ears of the Shaikh.
‘His attention was attracted by this initiative on the part of a newly arrived
French doctor who, unlike most Europeans, apparently did not look down on
Moslems from the heights of a disdainful pride. Without my knowing it, and
without the least attempt at investigation on his part, he was benevolently
informed by his disciples as to how I looked, What I did, my movements, my way
of treating the sick and my sympathetic attitude towards Moslems. As a result,
the Shaikh Al-‘Alawi already knew me quite well when I was still ignorant of his
very existence. A rather serious attack of influenza which he had during the
spring of 1920 made him decide to send for me.
‘From my first contact with him I had the impression of being in the presence of
no ordinary personality. The room I was shown into, like all rooms in Moslem
houses, was without furniture. There were simply two chests which, as I found
out later, were full of books and manuscripts. But the floor was covered from
end to end with carpets and rush mats. In one corner was a rug-covered mattress,
and here, with some cushions at his back, sitting straight upright,
cross-legged, with his hands on his knees, was the Shaikh, in a motionless
hieratic attitude which seemed at the same time perfectly natural.
‘The first thing that struck me was his likeness to the usual representations of
Christ. His clothes, so nearly if not exactly the same as those which Jesus must
have worn, the fine lawn head-cloth which framed his face, his whole
attitude—everything conspired to reinforce the likeness. It occurred to me that
such must have been the appearance of Christ when he received his disciples at
the time when he was staying with Martha and Mary.
‘My surprise stopped me for a moment on the threshold. He too fixed his eyes on
my face, but with a far-away look, and then broke the silence by asking me to
come in, with the usual words of welcome. His nephew, Sidi Muhammad, acted as
his interpreter, for although the Shaikh understood French well he had some
difficulty in speaking it, and in the presence of a stranger he made as if he
did not know it at all.
‘I asked for some sandals to cover my shoes, so as not to defile the carpets and
the mats, but he said that this was quite unnecessary. A chair was brought for
me, but it seemed so ridiculous in such surroundings that I declined it, saying
I would rather sit on a cushion. The Shaikh smiled almost imperceptibly, and I
felt that by this simple gesture I had already gained his sympathy.
‘His voice was gentle, somewhat subdued. He spoke little, in short sentences,
and those about him obeyed in silence, waiting on his least word or gesture. One
felt that he was surrounded by the deepest reverence.
‘I already knew something of Moslem ways, and realizing that I had to do
something with someone who was not just ‘anyone’, I was careful not to broach
too abruptly the subject for which I had been called in. I let the Shaikh
question me, through Sidi Muhammad, about my stay in Mostaganem, what had
brought me there, the difficulties I had met with, and how far I was satisfied.
‘During this conversation a young disciple had brought in a large brass tray
with some mint-flavoured tea and some cakes. The Shaikh took nothing, but
invited me to drink when the tea had been served, and himself pronounced the
“Bismillah” (in the Name of God) for me as I raised the cup to my lips.
‘It was only after all this usual ceremony was over that the Shaikh decided to
talk to me about his health. He said that he had not sent for me to prescribe
medicines for him; certainly, he would take medicine, if I thought it was
absolutely necessary and even if I thought it would help him, but he had no
desire to do so. He simply wanted to know if the illness he had contracted a few
days previously was a serious one. He relied on me to tell him quite frankly,
and without keeping anything back, what I thought of his condition. The rest was
of little or no importance.
‘ I felt more and more interested and intrigued: a sick man who has not the cult
of medicines is rare enough as it is, but a sick man who has no particular
desire to get better and who simply wants to know where he stands is still a
greater rarity.’
Table of Contents
| Part One: The Path and the Order. | |
| 2. | Seen from Outside. |
| 3. | The Origins of Sufism. |
| 4. | Seen from Within. |
| 5. | The Spiritual Master. |
| Part Two: The Doctrine. | |
| 7. | Oneness of being. |
| 8. | The Three Worlds. |
| 9. | The Symbolism of the Letters of the Alphabet. |
| 10. | The Great Peace. |
| 11. | Gnosis |
| 12. | The Ritual Purification. |
| 13. | The Ritual Prayer. |
| Part Three: Further Dimensions. | |
| 15. | Selections from his Aphorisms. |
| 16. | Selections from his Poetry |
| Appendix I: List of his Writings. | |
| Appendix II: The Spiritual Chain. | |
[Return to Catalogue] [Fons Vitae books] [Sufism] [Secure book orders] [Islamic Studies]
