Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī

Rūmī, in full Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī, also called by
the honorific Mawlānā (b. c. Sept. 30, 1207, Balkh
[now in Afghanistan]—d. Dec. 17, 1273), the greatest
Sufi mystic and poet in the Persian language, famous
for his lyrics and for his didactic epic Mas̄navī-yi
Maʿnavī (“Spiritual Couplets”), which widely
influenced mystical thought and literature
throughout the Muslim world. After his death, his
disciples were organized as the Mawlawīyah order.
Jalāl al-Dīn’s father, Bahāʾ al-Dīn Walad, was a
noted mystical theologian, author, and teacher.
Because of either a dispute with the ruler or the
threat of the approaching Mongols, Bahāʾ al-Dīn and
his family left their native town in about 1218.
According to a legend, in Nīshāpūr, Iran, the family
met Farīd al-Dīn ʿAṭṭār, a Persian mystical poet,
who blessed young Jalāl al-Dīn. After a pilgrimage
to Mecca and journeys through the Middle East, Bahāʾ
al-Dīn and his family reached Anatolia (Rūm, hence
the surname Rūmī), a region that enjoyed peace and
prosperity under the rule of the Turkish Seljuq
dynasty. After a short stay at Laranda (Karaman),
where Jalāl al-Dīn’s mother died and his first son
was born, they were called to the capital, Konya, in
1228. Here, Bahāʾ al-Dīn Walad taught at one of the
numerous madrasahs (religious schools); after his
death in 1231 he was succeeded in this capacity by
his son.
A year later, Burhān al-Dīn Muḥaqqiq, one of Bahāʾ
al-Dīn’s former disciples, arrived in Konya and
acquainted Jalāl al-Dīn more deeply with some
mystical theories that had developed in Iran. Burhān
al-Dīn, who contributed considerably to Jalāl al-Dīn’s
spiritual formation, left Konya about 1240. Jalāl
al-Dīn is said to have undertaken one or two
journeys to Syria (unless his contacts with Syrian
Sufi circles were already established before his
family reached Anatolia); there he may have met Ibn
al-ʿArabī, the leading Islamic theosophist whose
interpreter and stepson, Ṣadr al-Dīn al-Qunawī, was
Jalāl al-Dīn’s colleague and friend in Konya.
The decisive moment in Rūmī’s life occurred on
Nov. 30, 1244, when in the streets of Konya he met
the wandering dervish—holy man—Shams al-Dīn (Sun of
Religion) of Tabrīz, whom he may have first
encountered in Syria. Shams al-Dīn cannot be
connected with any of the traditional mystical
fraternities; his overwhelming personality, however,
revealed to Jalāl al-Dīn the mysteries of divine
majesty and beauty. For months the two mystics lived
closely together, and Rūmī neglected his disciples
and family so that his scandalized entourage forced
Shams to leave the town in February 1246. Jalāl al-Dīn
was heartbroken; his eldest son, Sulṭān Walad,
eventually brought Shams back from Syria. The
family, however, could not tolerate the close
relation of Jalāl al-Dīn with his beloved, and one
night in 1247 Shams disappeared forever. In the 20th
century it was established that Shams was indeed
murdered, not without the knowledge of Rūmī’s sons,
who hurriedly buried him close to a well that is
still extant in Konya.
This experience of love, longing, and loss turned
Rūmī into a poet. His poems—ghazals (about 30,000
verses) and a large number of robāʿīyāt
(“quatrains”)—reflect the different stages of his
love, until, as his son writes, “he found Shams in
himself, radiant like the moon.” The complete
identification of lover and beloved is expressed by
his inserting the name of Shams instead of his own
pen name at the end of most of his lyrical poems.
The Dīvān-e Shams (“The Collected Poetry of Shams”)
is a true translation of his experiences into
poetry; its language, however, never becomes lost in
lofty spiritual heights or nebulous speculation. The
fresh language, propelled by its strong rhythms,
sometimes assumes forms close to popular verses.
There would seem to be cause for the belief,
expressed by chroniclers, that much of this poetry
was composed in a state of ecstasy, induced by the
music of the flute or the drum, the hammering of the
goldsmiths, or the sound of the water mill in Meram,
where Rūmī used to go with his disciples to enjoy
nature. He found in nature the reflection of the
radiant beauty of the Sun of Religion and felt
flowers and birds partaking in his love. He often
accompanied his verses by a whirling dance, and many
of his poems were composed to be sung in Sufi
musical gatherings.
A few years after Shams al-Dīn’s death, Rūmī
experienced a similar rapture in his acquaintance
with an illiterate goldsmith, Ṣālāḥ al-Dīn Zarkūb.
It is said that one day, hearing the sound of a
hammer in front of Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn’s shop in the bazaar
of Konya, Rūmī began his dance. The shop owner had
long been one of Rūmī’s closest and most loyal
disciples, and his daughter became the wife of
Rūmī’s eldest son. This love again inspired Rūmī to
write poetry. After Ṣālāḥ al-Dīn’s death, Ḥusām
al-Dīn Chelebi became his spiritual love and deputy.
Rūmī’s main work, the Mas̄navī-yi Maʿnavī, was
composed under his influence. Ḥusām al-Dīn had asked
him to follow the model of the poets ʿAṭṭār and
Sanāʾi, who had laid down mystical teachings in long
poems, interspersed with anecdotes, fables, stories,
proverbs, and allegories. Their works were widely
read by the mystics and by Rūmī’s disciples. Rūmī
followed Ḥusām al-Dīn’s advice and composed nearly
26,000 couplets of the Mas̄navī during the following
years. It is said that he would recite his verses
even in the bath or on the roads, accompanied by
Ḥusām al-Dīn, who wrote them down. The Mas̄navī,
which shows all the different aspects of Sufism in
the 13th century, often carries the reader away with
loose associations of thought, so that one
understands what subjects the master had in mind at
a particular stage of his life. The work reflects
the experience of divine love; both Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn and
Ḥusām al-Dīn were, for Rūmī, renewed manifestations
of Shams al-Dīn, the all-embracing light. He called
Ḥusām al-Dīn, therefore, Ḍiyāʾ al-Ḥaqq (“Light of
the Truth”); ḍiyāʾ is the Arabic term for sunlight.
Rūmī lived for a short while after completing the
Mas̄navī. He always remained a respected member of
Konya society, and his company was sought by the
leading officials as well as by Christian monks. His
burial procession, according to one of Rūmī’s
contemporaries, was attended by a vast crowd of
people of many faiths and nationalities. His
mausoleum, the Green Dome, is today a museum in
Konya; it is still a place of pilgrimage, primarily
for Turkish Muslims.
Ḥusām al-Dīn was Rūmī’s successor and was in turn
succeeded by Sulṭān Walad, who organized the loose
fraternity of Rūmī’s disciples into the Mawlawīyah,
known in the West as the Whirling Dervishes because
of the mystical dance that constitutes their
principal ritual. Sulṭān Walad’s poetical accounts
of his father’s life are the most important source
of knowledge of Rūmī’s spiritual development.
Besides his poetry, Rūmī left a small collection
of occasional talks as they were noted down by his
friends; in the collection, known as Fīhi mā fīhi
(“There Is in It What Is in It”), the main ideas of
his poetry recur. There also exist sermons and a
collection of letters (Maktūbāt) directed to
different persons. It is impossible to systematize
his ideas, which at times contradict each other, and
changes in the use of symbols often puzzle the
reader. His poetry is a most human expression of
mystical experiences, in which readers can find
their own favourite ideas and feelings—from
enthusiastic flights into the heavens to
matter-of-fact descriptions of daily life.
Rūmī’s use of Persian and Arabic in his poetry,
in addition to some Turkish and less Greek, has
resulted in his being claimed variously for Turkish
literature and Persian literature, a reflection of
the strength of his influence in Iran and Turkey.
The influence of his writings in the Indian
subcontinent is also substantial. By the end of the
20th century, his popularity had become a global
phenomenon, with his poetry achieving a wide
circulation in western Europe and the United States.
Annemarie Schimmel
Ed.