Foreword
Shaikh Sharaf-ud-din was the son of Shaikh Yahya. His birth place is Maneri, a village near Patna in Bihar (India). A love of knowledge and the religious life, and signs of spiritual greatness, were found in him from his early childhood. A strange Being was once seen by the cradle of the baby. The mother, frightened, reported the matter to her father, Shahab-ud-din, a great saint. The latter consoled her, saying that the mysterious Presence was no less a Being than the Prophet Khezar’ Himself, and that the baby was expected to be a man of great spiritual advancement. He acquired secular knowledge under Ashraf-ud- in a famous professor of those days. He first refused to marry, but had to yield when, being ill, he was advised by the physician to take to marriage as the remedy for his disease. He left home after the birth of a son, travelled in many places, and was at last initiated (at, or near Delhi) by Najib-ud-din Firdausi. The latter made him his deputy on earth under a deed drawn twelve years earlier under the direction of the Prophet of Islam Himself, asked him to leave the place, and quitted his body shortly after.
On his initiation, Sharaf-ud-din lived for many a long year in woods of Bihia and the Rajgiri Hills. In his later days he adopted - (now a subdivisional town) as his residence, at the request of some of his friends and disciples. He died on Thursday, the 6th of shawwa1, 782 Hijra, in the opening years of the 15th Century A.D. His titular name is Makhdum-ul-Mulk, ‘Master of the Kingdom or the world’. He was equally proficient in secular learning and esoteric Knowledge, and possessed superhuman powers. His tomb at Bihar is still resorted to as a place of sanctity by a large number of devout Mahommedans. He wrote many works, of which three only have yet been published. These are:-
(1) Maktubat-i-Sadi, a ‘Series of a Hundred Letters’ (or rather essays on definite subjects) addressed to his disciple Qazi Shams-ud-din in 747 Hijra.
(2) Maktubiit-i-Bist-o-hasht, a ‘Series of 28 Letters’, being replies to the correspondence of his senior disciple, Mozaffar, the prince of Balkh.
(3) Fawaed-i-Rukni, a number of brief Notes prepared for the use of his disciple Rukn-ud-din.
The present booklet consists of the translation of copious extracts from Maktubat-i-Sadi, the most elaborate and comprehensive of the three published works, with Notes occasionally added from the other two with a view to elucidate or complete the subject in hand. These extracts, it is hoped, will cover the greater part of, if not all, the principles inculcated in these books, and are expected to give the reader a fair knowledge of the Teaching of the Author in all its phases. Matters relating to mere exoteric rites, legends and traditions have been omitted. The translation does not pretend to be always very literal, but an honest attempt has been made to present a faithful rendering of the original to the English-knowing public, that they may be able to better appreciate the Teachings of Islam, and that the Brotherhood of Creeds may have one more advocate to plead its cause before the tribunal of the human intellect.
Contents
7
On Monotheism
9
Turning to God or Conversion
12
On Seeking the Teacher
14
On the Qualifications of a Teacher
16
On Discipleship
18
Discipleship (continued)
19
The Friend of God
20
The Brotherhood of Friends
21
Polytheism and the Friendship of God
22
Lights
24
The Unveiling of the Supersensuous
25
On the Same
27
Illumination
Dreams
29
On Misconceptions
The Outer and the Inner Ailments
31
The Origin of Theosophy
32
Seeking the Path
33
Pillars of the Path
34
Religion, the Path and Truth
35
Accessory to Prayers
36
Purification
The motive
38
Prayer
Invoking the Devine Help
39
The Divine Allegiance
40
The sacred Formula
The Naked Faith
41
The Inner polytheism
42
The Divine knowledge
43
Love and Devotion
45
Seeking God
47
The Way to God
49
Speech and Conduct
50
Magnanimity
51
Knowledge
52
The Step of a Disciple
53
Islam
56
The ‘oble Qualities
57
Contemplation
59
Renunciation
60
62
The Clearing of the Path
Self-Control
63
Truth
64
The Descent from Adam
66
Confidence
69
Pursuit and Renunciation
70
The Company of the Saints
71
Service
73
The Transmutation of Evil Qualities
74
Avarice
76
The Evil of the World
77
Renunciation of the World
78
The Final Doom
79
The Soul
80
The Heart
81
The Desire-Nature (Nafs)
82
Desire
84
The Discipline of the Desire-Nature
85
The same (Continued)
86
Alienation from the Desire-Nature
Self-Toleration
87
Hidden Differences of Stages
88
Heedlessness
89
Sorrow
Conduct
90
Seclusion
92
Death
93
Hell
94
Heaven
95
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