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  • Nude Mystic In Bigot's Empire

    NUDE MYSTIC IN BIGOT'S EMPIRE
    By Sadia Dehlvi

    Deccan Chronicle
    http://www.deccanchronicle.com/editorial/op-ed/nude-mystic-bigot%E2%80%99s-empire-345
    April 3 2012

    Close to the eastern gate of Delhi's Jama Masjid, there is a dargah
    painted half green, half red. The red colour signifies the martyrdom
    of the Sufi, Sarmad Shaheed, and the green colour is a symbol of the
    calm personality of his mentor Syed Abul Hasan, popularly called Hare
    Bhare Sahab. Inscribed on a board on the wall is a verse from the
    Quran, "And call not those who are slain in the way of Allah dead:
    nay, they are living, only ye perceive not..."

    An Armenian Jew, Sarmad mastered the Judaic texts and then studied
    with famous Islamic scholars. He converted to Islam and took the name
    of Muhammad Saeed. Sarmad hailed from Kashan in Iran. The son of a
    rich merchant, he established himself as a successful trader. He set
    out for India to sell Persian ceramics. In 1631, AD, Sarmad arrived
    in Sindh. After a decade, his wanderings took him from Lahore to
    Hyderabad until he finally arrived in Delhi.

    Sarmad was intolerant of authority, refusing to show respect even
    to emperor Aurangzeb. It was Sarmad's nudity which deeply annoyed
    Aurangzeb. Once, as Aurangzeb's procession was passing through the
    streets of Delhi, he saw Sarmad sitting by the roadside. The king
    ordered the march to halt and demanded that the mystic cover himself.

    The saint looked at him with wrathful eyes and said, "If you think I
    need to cover my nudity, why don't you cover me yourself?" When the
    emperor lifted the blanket that lay beside Sarmad, he saw the bloodied
    heads of all the family members he had secretly murdered. Bewildered,
    Aurangzeb looked at Sarmad, who said, "Now tell me, what should I
    cover - your sins or my thighs?"

    Another famous tale recounts how Sarmad would recite just the
    first part of the Muslim kalimah (declaration of faith), "La illaha
    illallah" (there is no god but God) and would leave out the other half
    affirming Prophet Mohammed as the Messenger of God. A board of state
    jurists questioned Sarmad as to why he refrained from completing the
    declaration. Responding to this accusation of heresy, Sarmad replied,
    "I am so engrossed in negation, I have not yet reached the spiritual
    station of affirmation yet."

    Found guilty of blasphemy, Sarmad was executed in 1660 AD in the
    compound of the Jama Masjid. His tomb lies on the steps adjacent to
    the mosque. According to one legend, after Sarmad was beheaded, his
    body seized the chopped head from the ground and ran up the stairs of
    Jama Masjid, threatening to destroy Aurangzeb's kingdom. In another
    version of the same incident, the moment Sarmad's head was severed
    from the body, it fell to the ground and everyone in the audience
    heard it recite the full kalimah. It is believed that had Sarmad's
    Master not intervened and calmed the dead Sufi's fury, Sarmad's wrath
    would have destroyed Delhi.

    Sadia Dehlvi is a Delhi-based writer and author of Sufism: The Heart
    of Islam


    From: Baghdasarian
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