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'A'isha al-Ba'uniyya

ʿĀʾishah bint Yūsuf al-Bāʿūniyyah (عائشة بنت يوسف الباعونية, died the sixteenth day of Dhū al-Qa‘dah, 922/1517) was a Sufi master and poet.[1] She is one of few medieval female Islamic mystics to have recorded their own views in writing,[2] and she "probably composed more works in Arabic than any other woman prior to the twentieth century."[3] Some of her works have been translated to English in the 21st century. "In her the literary talents and Ṣūfi tendencies of her family reached full fruition."[4] She was born and died in Damascus.

Life edit

Her father Yūsuf (born Jerusalem, 805/1402 – died in Damascus, 880/1475) was a qadi in Safed, Tripoli, Aleppo, and Damascus, and a member of the prominent al-Bāʻūnī family, noted through the fifteenth century for its scholars, poets and jurists.[4] Like her brothers ‘Ā’ishah was taught primarily by her father, along with other family members, studying the Quran, hadith, jurisprudence, and poetry, and by her own claim, by the age of eight, ‘Ā’ishah was a hafiza (she had learned the Quran by heart).[5]

Meanwhile, her principal Sufi masters were Jamāl al-Dīn Ismā‘īl al-Ḥawwārī (fl. late ninth/fifteenth century) and his successor Muḥyī al-Dīn Yaḥyá al-Urmawī (fl. ninth-tenth/fifteenth-sixteenth centuries), whom she held in high regard.[6] Probably in 1475, ‘Ā’ishah undertook the pilgrimage to Mecca. She was married to Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad Ibn Naqīb al-Ashrāf (d. 909/1503), from the prominent ‘Alid family of Damascus, also noted for their scholarship; by ‘Ā’ishah's reckoning, Aḥmad was descended from Muḥammad's daughter Faṭimah and her husband ‘Alī, via their son al-Ḥusayn. ‘Ā’ishah and Aḥmad had two known children, a son, ‘Abd al-Wahhāb (b. 897/1489), and a daughter, Barakah (b. 899/1491).[7]

Studies in Cairo and death edit

In 919/1513, ‘Ā’ishah and her son moved from Damascus to Cairo, returning to Damascus in 923/1517. ‘Ā’ishah's goal may have been to secure the career of her son.[8] On the way, their caravan was raided by bandits near Bilbeis, who stole their possessions, including ‘Ā’ishah's writings. It appears that in Cairo, she and her son were hosted by Maḥmūd ibn Muḥammad ibn Ajā (b. 854/1450, d. 925/1519), who was personal secretary and foreign minister to the Mamluk sultan al-Ashraf Qansuh al-Ghuri (d. 922/1516). Ibn Ajā helped ‘Abd al-Wahhāb find work in the chancery and helped ‘Ā’ishah enter into Cairo's intellectual circles;[9] ‘Ā’ishah went on to write him 'several glowing panegyrics'.[8]

In Cairo, ‘Ā’ishah studied law and was granted license to lecture in law and to issue fatwas (legal opinions); "she gained wide recognition as a jurist".[10]

‘Ā’ishah left Cairo in 922/1516, with her son and Ibn Ajā, and alongside al-Badr al-Suyūfī (c. 850–925/1446–1519), al-Shams al-Safīrī (877–956/1472–1549), and several other noted scholars, was granted an audience with Sultan Qansuh al-Ghawri in Aleppo shortly before his defeat at the Battle of Marj Dabiq: 'an extraordinary event befitting her exceptional life'.[11] ʻĀ’ishah then returned to Damascus, where she died in 923/1517.[9]

ʻĀ’ishah "inherited an independence of mind and outlook which is seen in her companionship with her men contemporaries on equal terms". Thus she was a close friend of Abu 'l-Thanā' Maḥmūd b. Ajā, who was the final ṣāḥib dawāwīn al-inshāʼ of the Mamluk era, and corresponded, in verse, with the Egyptian scholar ‘Abd al-Raḥmān al-‘Abbāsī (b. 867/1463, d. 963/1557).[4] 'It is quite apparent from biographies of ‘Ā’ishah and from her own comments in her writings that she was highly regarded as a pious woman and Sufi master.'[12] Her manuscript The Principles of Sufism, which is described as her "key work", has been translated into English by Th. Emil Homerin.[13] In this book, she "outlines her philosophy based on the four principles of repentance, sincerity, remembrance and love."[14]

Works edit

List of works edit

According to Th. Emil Homerin, the chronology of ʿĀ’ishah's work is not yet known, and indeed the majority has been lost, but ʿĀ’ishah's known original works are:[15]

  • Dīwān al-Bā‘ūniyyah (collection of poems)
  • Durar al-ghā’iṣ fī baḥr al-Mu‘jizāt wa ’l-kha-ṣā’iṣ (The Diver's Pearls, on the Sea of "The Miracles and Virtues")
  • al-Fatḥ al-ḥaqqī min fayḥ al-talaqqī (True Inspiration, from the Diffused Perfume of Mystical Learning') (lost)
  • al-Fatḥ al-mubīn fī madḥ al-amīn (Clear Inspiration, on Praise of the Trusted One)
  • al-Fatḥ al-qarīb fī mi‘rāq al-ḥabīb (Immediate Inspiration, on the Ascension of the Beloved) (lost)
  • Fayḍ al-faḍl wa-jam‘ al-shaml (The Emanation of Grace and the Gathering of the Union)
  • Fayḍ al-wafā fī asmā’ al-muṣṭafā (The Emanation of Loyalty, on the Names of the Chosen One) (lost)
  • al-Ishārāt al-khafiyyah fī ’l-Manāzi al-‘aliyyah (The Hidden Signs, on the "Exalted Stations") (lost)
  • Madad al-wadūd fī mawlid al-maḥmūd (The Aid of the Affectionate God, on the Birth of the Praiseworthy Prophet) (lost)
  • al-Malāmiḥ al-sharīfah min al-āthār al-laṭīfah (Noble Features, on Elegant Reports) (lost)
  • al-Mawrid al-ahnā fī ’l-mawlid al-asnā (The Most Wholesome Source, on the Most Exalted Birthday)
  • al-Munktakhab fī uṣūl al-rutab (Selections on the Fundamentals of Stations)
  • al-Qawl al-ṣaḥīḥ fī takhmīs Burdat al-madīḥ (Reliable Words, on the Quintains of the "Mantle of Eulogy")
  • Ṣilāt al-salām fī faḍl al-ṣalāh wa ’l-salām (Gifts of Peace, on the Merit of Blessing and Salutation) (lost)
  • Tashrīf al-fikr fī naẓm fawā’id al-dhikr (Noble Thought, on the Benefits of Recollection in Verse)
  • al-Zubdah fī takhmīs al-Burdah (The Fresh Cream Quintain of "The Mantle") (lost)

In addition to these, ʿĀ’ishah adapted a range of other texts. Homerin has also published some of the only translations of ʿĀ’ishah's work into English:

  • Th. Emil Homerin, 'Living Love: The Mystical Writings of ʿĀ’ishah al-Bāʿūniyyah (d. 922/1516)', Mamluk Studies Review, 7 (2003), 211-34.
  • Th. Emil Homerin, 'The Principles of Sufism'. By Ā’ishah al-Bāʿūniyyah.[13]

al-Fatḥ al-mubīn fī madḥ al-amīn edit

ʿĀ’ishah's best known work is her al-Fatḥ al-mubīn fī madḥ al-amīn (Clear Inspiration, on Praise of the Trusted One), a 130-verse Badī‘iyya (a form designed to illustrate the badī or rhetorical devices in the poetic repertoire, with each verse illustrating a particular device) in praise of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. Making reference to nearly fifty earlier poets, the work emphasises the breadth of ʿĀ’ishah's learning.[16] This text 'no doubt' inspired ‘Abd al-Ghanī al-Nābulusī's Nasamāt al-Azhār; both writers accompanied their respective badī‘iyyas with a commentary.[4]

Fayḍ al-faḍl wa-jam‘ al-shaml edit

Fayḍ al-faḍl wa-jam‘ al-shaml (The Emanation of Grace and the Gathering of the Union) is a collection of over 300 long poems in which ʿĀ’ishah 'described mystical states and praised variously Muhammad, the founder of her order 'Abd al-Qadir Jilani, and her own Sufi shaykhs. She used technical Sufi terminology and typical Sufi poetic motifs such as wine and love in her poems'.[1] They seem to date from throughout ʿĀ’ishah's life up to her move to Cairo, and show her command of almost all Arabic poetic forms of the time.[16]

Al- Muntakhab fi Usul al-Rutab (Selections on the fundamentals of stations) edit

In this work, she attempted to articulate and clarify some of her mystical beliefs and practices in a separate Sufi compendium. She notes at the outset that the stages of the mystical folk are innumerable, yet all of them are based on four fundamental principles of the path towards God: tawbah (repentance), ikhlas (sincerity), dhikr (recollection), and muhabbah (love).

Principle 1: Tawbah (Repentance)

(1) remorse for past misdeeds, (2) desisting immediately from current offenses, and (3) never returning to sin. She further notes that each member of the body has a share in repentance. The heart must resolve to leave sin and be remorseful, while the eyes should be down cast; the hands should cease to grasp; the feet should stop hurrying, and the ears should stop trying to listen in. This is repentance for the common people. The repentance of the elect goes further by opposing the lust of concupiscence (nafs), and by averting the gaze of the heart away from pleasure and prosperity, while abstaining from all transient things. Such repentance is required for the love for God, who

said (2:222): "Verily, God loves those who turn in repentance. . . ."

Higher still is the repentance of the elect of the elect. They turn away from considering anything but God, including spiritual states and blessings, until God reveals His beauty to them, eradicating everything but Himself.

Principle 2: Ikhlas (Sincerity)

Sincere obedience to God should be motivated only by the desire to draw closer to Him. The believer should have no thought of attaining praise or glory among people, for sincerity requires the utmost humility. Therefore, concupiscence (nafs) is to be disciplined, while the heart must be blind to the opinions of others, as the spirit guards against pride.Sincerity, she says, is like water helping the tiny seeds of good works to grow, while hypocrisy is a cyclone that will sweep away the fields of one's labor.

Principle 3: Dhikr (Recollection)

Essential to both repentance and sincerity is the third principle, dhikr, or "recollection" of God. ‘A’ishah begins her section on this pivotal topic with God's promise in the Quran (2:152): "Remember Me, and I will remember you," and she elaborates on this reciprocal relationship of recollection between God and His faithful worshippers in a series of mystical interpretations: "Remember Me with sincerity, and I will remember you among the spiritual elect; remember Me in your striving, and I will remember You with witnessing; . . . remember Me in your passing away, and I will remember you in your abiding; . . . remember Me in your hearts, and I will remember you in nearness to Me; remember Me in your spirits, and I will remember you in moments of enlightenment; remember Me in

your heart secrets, and I will remember you in illuminations!"

Principle 4: Mahabbah (Divine Love)

This leads naturally to mahabbah, or "love," the subject of the final and longest section of Al-Muntakhab. She opens with God's command to Muhammad in the Quran (3:31): "Say: 'If you love God, then follow me and God will love you.'" She quotes Qushayri saying true love of God requires lovers to efface themselves completely as their beloved wears them out. This love relationship is possible because God created human beings in the best of forms and, so, He has a special affection for them.

She then goes on to mentioning Levels as well as the signs of divine love being bestowed on someone.

For the common believer, the seeds of love are planted by reading the Quran and following the custom of the Prophet, and then nourished by complying with divine law. This love will thwart the temptations of Satan, provide solace in times of adversity, and make service to God delightful. By contrast, love among the spiritual elite strikes like a bolt of lightning, leaving the lovers dumbfounded and confused. This overwhelming love causes the spiritual elite to pass away in God's love for them, which is beyond any description or allusion.

She then turns to the signs of love, which include intimacy with God and estrangement from the world, awe before God and contentment with His will, performing pious deeds, loving others who love God, and passing away in the beloved from all things.

Her writing here reflects an invitation to chase the path of love like she often does in her poems:

"I see love, an ocean without a shore. If you are love's chosen ones, plunge in!"

Editions edit

  • al-Mawrid al-ahnā fī ’l-mawlid al-asnā and al-Fatḥ al-mubīn fī madḥ al-amīn, in ‘Ā’ishah al-Bā‘ūniyyah al-Dimashqiyyah, ed. by F. al-‘Alawī (Damascus: Dār Ma‘add, 1994)
  • Dīwān Fayḍ al-faḍl wa-jamʻ al-shaml, ed. by Mahdī Asʻad ʻArār (Bayrūt : Dār al-Kutub al-ʻIlmīyah, 2010). ISBN 9782745167637

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Qutbuddin, Tahera. 'Women Poets' 2014-02-07 at the Wayback Machine, in Medieval Islamic Civilisation: An Encyclopedia, ed. by Josef W. Meri, 2 vols (New York: Routledge, 2006), II 865-67 (p. 866).
  2. ^ Homerin 2006, p. 390.
  3. ^ Homerin 2009, p. 21.
  4. ^ a b c d Khalidi, W. A. S. 'AL-BĀ'ŪNĪ', in The Encyclopaedia of Islam, new edn by H. A. R. Gibb and others (Leiden: Brill, 1960-2009), I 1109-10 (p. 1109).
  5. ^ Homerin 2009, p. 22.
  6. ^ Homerin 2003, pp. 213–14.
  7. ^ Homerin 2006, pp. 392–93.
  8. ^ a b Homerin 2003, p. 215.
  9. ^ a b Homerin 2006, p. 393.
  10. ^ Stewart, Devin J. 'Degrees, or Ijaza', in Medieval Islamic Civilization: An Encyclopedia, ed. by Josef W. Meri, 2 vols (New York: Routledge, 2006), I 201-204 (p. 203), citing Najm al-Gazzi, al-Matba'ah al-Amirikaniyah, 1945-58, pp. 287-92.
  11. ^ Homerin 2003, p. 211.
  12. ^ Homerin 2003, p. 216.
  13. ^ a b Homerin 2016.
  14. ^ "Before the canon: the non-European women who founded philosophy | Aeon Essays". Aeon. Retrieved 2021-10-19.
  15. ^ Homerin 2009, pp. 21, 23.
  16. ^ a b Homerin 2009, pp. 23–24.

References edit

  • Homerin, Th. Emil (2003). "Living Love: The Mystical Writings of ʿĀ'ishah al-Bāʿūniyyah (d. 922/1516)" (PDF). Mamluk Studies Review. 7: 211–234.   Text was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
  • Homerin, Th. Emil (July 2006). "Writing Sufi Biography: The Case of 'Ā'ishah al-Bā'ūn?yah (d. 922/1517)". The Muslim World. 96 (3): 389–399. doi:10.1111/j.1478-1913.2006.00135.x.
  • Homerin, Th. Emil (2009). "ĀʾISHAH al-Bāʿūniyyah". In Lowry, Joseph Edmund; Stewart, Devin J. (eds.). Essays in Arabic Literary Biography II: 1350–1850. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. pp. 21–27. ISBN 978-3-447-05933-6.
  • Homerin, Th. Emil (2016). The Principles of Sufism. New York University Press. ISBN 9781479829248. Retrieved 2021-10-19. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)

isha, uniyya, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, technical, most, readers, understand, please, help, improve, make, understandable, experts,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details November 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions November 2016 This article should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message ʿAʾishah bint Yusuf al Baʿuniyyah عائشة بنت يوسف الباعونية died the sixteenth day of Dhu al Qa dah 922 1517 was a Sufi master and poet 1 She is one of few medieval female Islamic mystics to have recorded their own views in writing 2 and she probably composed more works in Arabic than any other woman prior to the twentieth century 3 Some of her works have been translated to English in the 21st century In her the literary talents and Ṣufi tendencies of her family reached full fruition 4 She was born and died in Damascus Contents 1 Life 1 1 Studies in Cairo and death 2 Works 2 1 List of works 2 2 al Fatḥ al mubin fi madḥ al amin 2 3 Fayḍ al faḍl wa jam al shaml 2 4 Al Muntakhab fi Usul al Rutab Selections on the fundamentals of stations 3 Editions 4 Notes 5 ReferencesLife editHer father Yusuf born Jerusalem 805 1402 died in Damascus 880 1475 was a qadi in Safed Tripoli Aleppo and Damascus and a member of the prominent al Baʻuni family noted through the fifteenth century for its scholars poets and jurists 4 Like her brothers A ishah was taught primarily by her father along with other family members studying the Quran hadith jurisprudence and poetry and by her own claim by the age of eight A ishah was a hafiza she had learned the Quran by heart 5 Meanwhile her principal Sufi masters were Jamal al Din Isma il al Ḥawwari fl late ninth fifteenth century and his successor Muḥyi al Din Yaḥya al Urmawi fl ninth tenth fifteenth sixteenth centuries whom she held in high regard 6 Probably in 1475 A ishah undertook the pilgrimage to Mecca She was married to Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad Ibn Naqib al Ashraf d 909 1503 from the prominent Alid family of Damascus also noted for their scholarship by A ishah s reckoning Aḥmad was descended from Muḥammad s daughter Faṭimah and her husband Ali via their son al Ḥusayn A ishah and Aḥmad had two known children a son Abd al Wahhab b 897 1489 and a daughter Barakah b 899 1491 7 Studies in Cairo and death edit In 919 1513 A ishah and her son moved from Damascus to Cairo returning to Damascus in 923 1517 A ishah s goal may have been to secure the career of her son 8 On the way their caravan was raided by bandits near Bilbeis who stole their possessions including A ishah s writings It appears that in Cairo she and her son were hosted by Maḥmud ibn Muḥammad ibn Aja b 854 1450 d 925 1519 who was personal secretary and foreign minister to the Mamluk sultan al Ashraf Qansuh al Ghuri d 922 1516 Ibn Aja helped Abd al Wahhab find work in the chancery and helped A ishah enter into Cairo s intellectual circles 9 A ishah went on to write him several glowing panegyrics 8 In Cairo A ishah studied law and was granted license to lecture in law and to issue fatwas legal opinions she gained wide recognition as a jurist 10 A ishah left Cairo in 922 1516 with her son and Ibn Aja and alongside al Badr al Suyufi c 850 925 1446 1519 al Shams al Safiri 877 956 1472 1549 and several other noted scholars was granted an audience with Sultan Qansuh al Ghawri in Aleppo shortly before his defeat at the Battle of Marj Dabiq an extraordinary event befitting her exceptional life 11 ʻA ishah then returned to Damascus where she died in 923 1517 9 ʻA ishah inherited an independence of mind and outlook which is seen in her companionship with her men contemporaries on equal terms Thus she was a close friend of Abu l Thana Maḥmud b Aja who was the final ṣaḥib dawawin al inshaʼ of the Mamluk era and corresponded in verse with the Egyptian scholar Abd al Raḥman al Abbasi b 867 1463 d 963 1557 4 It is quite apparent from biographies of A ishah and from her own comments in her writings that she was highly regarded as a pious woman and Sufi master 12 Her manuscript The Principles of Sufism which is described as her key work has been translated into English by Th Emil Homerin 13 In this book she outlines her philosophy based on the four principles of repentance sincerity remembrance and love 14 Works editList of works edit According to Th Emil Homerin the chronology of ʿA ishah s work is not yet known and indeed the majority has been lost but ʿA ishah s known original works are 15 Diwan al Ba uniyyah collection of poems Durar al gha iṣ fi baḥr al Mu jizat wa l kha ṣa iṣ The Diver s Pearls on the Sea of The Miracles and Virtues al Fatḥ al ḥaqqi min fayḥ al talaqqi True Inspiration from the Diffused Perfume of Mystical Learning lost al Fatḥ al mubin fi madḥ al amin Clear Inspiration on Praise of the Trusted One al Fatḥ al qarib fi mi raq al ḥabib Immediate Inspiration on the Ascension of the Beloved lost Fayḍ al faḍl wa jam al shaml The Emanation of Grace and the Gathering of the Union Fayḍ al wafa fi asma al muṣṭafa The Emanation of Loyalty on the Names of the Chosen One lost al Isharat al khafiyyah fi l Manazi al aliyyah The Hidden Signs on the Exalted Stations lost Madad al wadud fi mawlid al maḥmud The Aid of the Affectionate God on the Birth of the Praiseworthy Prophet lost al Malamiḥ al sharifah min al athar al laṭifah Noble Features on Elegant Reports lost al Mawrid al ahna fi l mawlid al asna The Most Wholesome Source on the Most Exalted Birthday al Munktakhab fi uṣul al rutab Selections on the Fundamentals of Stations al Qawl al ṣaḥiḥ fi takhmis Burdat al madiḥ Reliable Words on the Quintains of the Mantle of Eulogy Ṣilat al salam fi faḍl al ṣalah wa l salam Gifts of Peace on the Merit of Blessing and Salutation lost Tashrif al fikr fi naẓm fawa id al dhikr Noble Thought on the Benefits of Recollection in Verse al Zubdah fi takhmis al Burdah The Fresh Cream Quintain of The Mantle lost In addition to these ʿA ishah adapted a range of other texts Homerin has also published some of the only translations of ʿA ishah s work into English Th Emil Homerin Living Love The Mystical Writings of ʿA ishah al Baʿuniyyah d 922 1516 Mamluk Studies Review 7 2003 211 34 Th Emil Homerin The Principles of Sufism By A ishah al Baʿuniyyah 13 al Fatḥ al mubin fi madḥ al amin edit ʿA ishah s best known work is her al Fatḥ al mubin fi madḥ al amin Clear Inspiration on Praise of the Trusted One a 130 verse Badi iyya a form designed to illustrate the badi or rhetorical devices in the poetic repertoire with each verse illustrating a particular device in praise of the Islamic prophet Muhammad Making reference to nearly fifty earlier poets the work emphasises the breadth of ʿA ishah s learning 16 This text no doubt inspired Abd al Ghani al Nabulusi s Nasamat al Azhar both writers accompanied their respective badi iyyas with a commentary 4 Fayḍ al faḍl wa jam al shaml edit Fayḍ al faḍl wa jam al shaml The Emanation of Grace and the Gathering of the Union is a collection of over 300 long poems in which ʿA ishah described mystical states and praised variously Muhammad the founder of her order Abd al Qadir Jilani and her own Sufi shaykhs She used technical Sufi terminology and typical Sufi poetic motifs such as wine and love in her poems 1 They seem to date from throughout ʿA ishah s life up to her move to Cairo and show her command of almost all Arabic poetic forms of the time 16 Al Muntakhab fi Usul al Rutab Selections on the fundamentals of stations edit In this work she attempted to articulate and clarify some of her mystical beliefs and practices in a separate Sufi compendium She notes at the outset that the stages of the mystical folk are innumerable yet all of them are based on four fundamental principles of the path towards God tawbah repentance ikhlas sincerity dhikr recollection and muhabbah love Principle 1 Tawbah Repentance 1 remorse for past misdeeds 2 desisting immediately from current offenses and 3 never returning to sin She further notes that each member of the body has a share in repentance The heart must resolve to leave sin and be remorseful while the eyes should be down cast the hands should cease to grasp the feet should stop hurrying and the ears should stop trying to listen in This is repentance for the common people The repentance of the elect goes further by opposing the lust of concupiscence nafs and by averting the gaze of the heart away from pleasure and prosperity while abstaining from all transient things Such repentance is required for the love for God whosaid 2 222 Verily God loves those who turn in repentance Higher still is the repentance of the elect of the elect They turn away from considering anything but God including spiritual states and blessings until God reveals His beauty to them eradicating everything but Himself Principle 2 Ikhlas Sincerity Sincere obedience to God should be motivated only by the desire to draw closer to Him The believer should have no thought of attaining praise or glory among people for sincerity requires the utmost humility Therefore concupiscence nafs is to be disciplined while the heart must be blind to the opinions of others as the spirit guards against pride Sincerity she says is like water helping the tiny seeds of good works to grow while hypocrisy is a cyclone that will sweep away the fields of one s labor Principle 3 Dhikr Recollection Essential to both repentance and sincerity is the third principle dhikr or recollection of God A ishah begins her section on this pivotal topic with God s promise in the Quran 2 152 Remember Me and I will remember you and she elaborates on this reciprocal relationship of recollection between God and His faithful worshippers in a series of mystical interpretations Remember Me with sincerity and I will remember you among the spiritual elect remember Me in your striving and I will remember You with witnessing remember Me in your passing away and I will remember you in your abiding remember Me in your hearts and I will remember you in nearness to Me remember Me in your spirits and I will remember you in moments of enlightenment remember Me inyour heart secrets and I will remember you in illuminations Principle 4 Mahabbah Divine Love This leads naturally to mahabbah or love the subject of the final and longest section of Al Muntakhab She opens with God s command to Muhammad in the Quran 3 31 Say If you love God then follow me and God will love you She quotes Qushayri saying true love of God requires lovers to efface themselves completely as their beloved wears them out This love relationship is possible because God created human beings in the best of forms and so He has a special affection for them She then goes on to mentioning Levels as well as the signs of divine love being bestowed on someone For the common believer the seeds of love are planted by reading the Quran and following the custom of the Prophet and then nourished by complying with divine law This love will thwart the temptations of Satan provide solace in times of adversity and make service to God delightful By contrast love among the spiritual elite strikes like a bolt of lightning leaving the lovers dumbfounded and confused This overwhelming love causes the spiritual elite to pass away in God s love for them which is beyond any description or allusion She then turns to the signs of love which include intimacy with God and estrangement from the world awe before God and contentment with His will performing pious deeds loving others who love God and passing away in the beloved from all things Her writing here reflects an invitation to chase the path of love like she often does in her poems I see love an ocean without a shore If you are love s chosen ones plunge in Editions edital Mawrid al ahna fi l mawlid al asna and al Fatḥ al mubin fi madḥ al amin in A ishah al Ba uniyyah al Dimashqiyyah ed by F al Alawi Damascus Dar Ma add 1994 Diwan Fayḍ al faḍl wa jamʻ al shaml ed by Mahdi Asʻad ʻArar Bayrut Dar al Kutub al ʻIlmiyah 2010 ISBN 9782745167637Notes edit a b Qutbuddin Tahera Women Poets Archived 2014 02 07 at the Wayback Machine in Medieval Islamic Civilisation An Encyclopedia ed by Josef W Meri 2 vols New York Routledge 2006 II 865 67 p 866 Homerin 2006 p 390 Homerin 2009 p 21 a b c d Khalidi W A S AL BA uNi in The Encyclopaedia of Islam new edn by H A R Gibb and others Leiden Brill 1960 2009 I 1109 10 p 1109 Homerin 2009 p 22 Homerin 2003 pp 213 14 Homerin 2006 pp 392 93 a b Homerin 2003 p 215 a b Homerin 2006 p 393 Stewart Devin J Degrees or Ijaza in Medieval Islamic Civilization An Encyclopedia ed by Josef W Meri 2 vols New York Routledge 2006 I 201 204 p 203 citing Najm al Gazzi al Matba ah al Amirikaniyah 1945 58 pp 287 92 Homerin 2003 p 211 Homerin 2003 p 216 a b Homerin 2016 Before the canon the non European women who founded philosophy Aeon Essays Aeon Retrieved 2021 10 19 Homerin 2009 pp 21 23 a b Homerin 2009 pp 23 24 References editHomerin Th Emil 2003 Living Love The Mystical Writings of ʿA ishah al Baʿuniyyah d 922 1516 PDF Mamluk Studies Review 7 211 234 nbsp Text was copied from this source which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4 0 International License Homerin Th Emil July 2006 Writing Sufi Biography The Case of A ishah al Ba un yah d 922 1517 The Muslim World 96 3 389 399 doi 10 1111 j 1478 1913 2006 00135 x Homerin Th Emil 2009 AʾISHAH al Baʿuniyyah In Lowry Joseph Edmund Stewart Devin J eds Essays in Arabic Literary Biography II 1350 1850 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz pp 21 27 ISBN 978 3 447 05933 6 Homerin Th Emil 2016 The Principles of Sufism New York University Press ISBN 9781479829248 Retrieved 2021 10 19 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 27A 27isha al Ba 27uniyya amp oldid 1204749649, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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