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NGONGE

Tumbleweed....

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NGONGE   

Emptiness

 

Consider the difference

in our actions and God's actions.

 

We often ask, "Why did you do that?"

or "Why did I act like that?"

 

We do act, and yet everything we do

is God's creative action.

 

We look back and analyse the events

of our lives, but there is another way

of seeing, a backward-and-forward-at-once

vision, that is not rationally understandable.

 

Only God can understand it.

Satan made the excuse, "You caused me to fall,

whereas Adam said to God, "We did this

to ourselves." After this repentance,

God asked Adam, "Since all is within

my foreknowledge, why didn't you

defend yourself with that reason?"

 

Adam answered, "I was afraid,

and I wanted to be reverent."

 

Whoever acts with respect will get respect.

Whoever brings sweetness will be served almond cake.

Good women are drawn to be with good men.

 

Honour your friend.

Or treat him rudely,

and see what happens!

 

Love, tell an incident now

that will clarify this mystery

of how we act feely, and are yet

compelled. One hand shakes with palsy.

Another shakes because because you slapped it away.

 

Both tremblings come from God,

but you feel guilty for the one,

and what about the other?

 

These are intellectual questions.

The spirit approaches the matter

differently. Omar once had a friend, a scientist,

Bu'l-Hakam, who was flawless at solving

empirical problems, but he could not follow Omar

into the area of illumination and wonder.

 

Now I return to the text, "And He is with you,

wherever you are," but when have I ever left it!

 

Ignorance is God's prison

Knowing is God's palace.

 

We sleep in God's unconsciousness.

We wake in God's open hand.

 

We weep God's rain.

We laugh God's lightning.

 

Fighting and peacefulness

both take place within God.

 

Who are we then

in this complicated world-tangle,

that is really just the single, straight

line down at the beginning of ALLAH?

 

Nothing.

We are

emptiness.

 

----

 

When you are with everyone but me,

you're with no one.

When you are with no one but me,

you're with everyone.

 

Instead of being so bound up with everyone,

be everyone.

When you become that many, you're nothing.

Empty.

 

-- Jalaluddin Rumi

 

 

Source

 

----------------------------

I was here first :D

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^^ Waar Sxb dadka ha halaagin...

 

The above poem (contrictory as you have uttered) is standing on a thin line between Kufr and Enlightment...which way you go is heavily relaint on the capacity of one's comprehension assuming somone is well versed in theology & literature and equiped with deep Aqiidah.

 

I await who goes first to either direction smile.gif

 

Cheers

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^^Adigu waligaa wax isku dayimaysid miyaa :D ?

 

I want (prefer) NGONGE to go first for few reasons. For one, it’s not fitting for a man whom we all suspect to have more wisdom than he thus far shared with us to post RUMI’s stuff with no exposition whatsoever. Second, the man, NGONGE that is, despises those who contaminate potentially productive threads with a sole one-line comment. So it’s only fair to hold him to his standards, do you not say yaa L of Z?

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Khayr   

Salamun caliykum waalalyal

 

It is said by some people, that Jalaludin ar-Rumi (what a name! smile.gif )'s Mathnawi was a tafsir/taweel(quranic commentary/exegsis).

 

For some strange reason, I think that the arabic version would be good to have because the English translations are almost always WATERED DOWN.

 

FI Amanillah

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Originally posted by xiinfaniin:

^^Adigu waligaa wax isku dayimaysid miyaa
:D
?

 

I want (prefer) NGONGE to go first for few reasons. For one, it’s not fitting for a man whom we all suspect to have more wisdom than he thus far shared with us to post RUMI’s stuff with no exposition whatsoever. Second, the man, NGONGE that is, despises those who contaminate potentially productive threads with a sole one-line comment. So it’s only fair to hold him to his standards, do you not say yaa L of Z?

Waar Xiinoow, sow anigaas ku leh umadda ha halaagin, waaba adigaa i weydiinaya inaan is halaago. waar ina adeer, gabaygaas waa lagu duugan yahay. ee bal adaa ku dheer luuqadahee isku day. ama khayr ha inoo soo Copy-Paste gareeyo :D

 

Cheers

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NGONGE   

I read it simply as it was written. The bits in between are great questions that send one into a world of contemplation and pondering but are only the building blocks to the final aim of the poem (as I understood it). Of course, I might have got it all wrong but what I think he is saying (and put very simply) is that we are nothing without god.

 

I realise that the poet was said to be a Sufi and can see what sort of undertones and connotations would accompany any of his works, but I posted the poem for the sheer beauty of the words (words that have been translated from the original no less).

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Khayr   

Originally posted by xiinfaniin:

^^Waa gartay; posting it for its sheer beauty. I thought it was another Sufi gimmick!

When I read post, I thought that this part of the poem to be a fitting response

 

These are intellectual questions.

The spirit approaches the matter

differently.
Omar once had a friend, a scientist,

Bu'l-Hakam, who was flawless at solving

empirical problems, but he could not follow Omar

into the area of illumination and wonder.

!

:D

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^^Kharyorw, would you connect the dots as to why you think these bolded parts of the poem are quite fitting a response ‘when you read the post’, as you said.

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NGONGE   

^^^ Looks like married life has kicked in and now Khayer is quite the philosopher. From Abu el Cureef to a Caarif in the space of one poem. :D

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