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Ibn ʿArabī (Arabic: ابن عربي) (Murcia, July 28, 1165 – Damascus, November 10, 1240) was an Andalusian Moorish Sufi mystic and philosopher. His full name was Abū 'Abdillāh Muḥammad ibn 'Alī ibn Muḥammad ibn `Arabī ('أبو عبد الله محمد بن علي بن محمد بن عربي ). ibn ‘Arabī was born into a respectable family in Murcia, Taifa of Murcia, on the 17th of Ramaḍān 561 AH (27th or 28 July 1165 AD). Muḥyiddin Muḥammad ibn ‘Alī ibn Muḥammad ibn ‘Arabī was widely known as al-Shaykh al-Akbar; in medieval Europe he was called Doctor Maximus. His father, ‘Ali ibn Muḥammad, served in the Army of ibn Mardanīsh. When ibn Mardanīsh died in 1172 AD, ‘Ali ibn Muḥammad swiftly shifted his allegiance to the Almohad Sultan, Abū Ya’qūb Yūsuf I, and became one of his military advisers. His family then relocated from Murcia to Seville. ibn ‘Arabī’s dogmatic and intellectual training began in Seville, then the cultural and civilized center of Muslim Iberia, in 578 AH. Most of his teachers were the clergy of the Almohad era and some of them also held the official posts of Qadi or Khatib. He was a young boy when his father sent him to the renowned jurist Abū Bakr ibn Khalaf to study the Qur'an. ibn ‘Arabī learned the recitation of the Qur'an from the book of Al-Kafi in the seven different Qira'at. The same work was also transmitted to him by another ‘Abd al-Raḥmān ibn Ghālib ibn al-Sharrāt. At the age of ten, he was well versed in the Qira’āt; afterwards he learned the sciences of Hadith, Fiqh and Sirah from the famous scholars of the time such as Al-Suhayli. Ibn ‘Arabī was about sixteen when he went into seclusion. There is a story that ibn ‘Arabī was at a dinner party which ended with a round of wine. As he took the wine cup to his lips, he heard a voice: “O Muḥammad, it was not for this that you were created!” This gave him an urge to quit worldly pursuits and to embark upon the search of God. Another important cause of this retreat was a vision of the three great Prophets, Jesus, Moses and Muḥammad. As
a consequence of this retreat and the spiritual insights granted to
him, ibn ‘Arabī was sent by his father to meet the great philosopher Averroes.
The meeting was very significant in that ibn ‘Arabī answered his
questions in ‘Yes’ and ‘No.’ Ibn Rushd declared: 'I myself was of the
opinion that spiritual knowledge without learning is possible, but
never met anyone who had experienced it.' Ibn ‘Arabī claimed to have met with Khidr,
The Green Man, a personification of an ancient fertility deity
connected with spring, and a prophet in Islam, three times over the
course of his life. The first occurred while `Ibn Arabi was a youth in
the service of the king, Shaykh al-‘Uryabī. Ibn ‘Arabī said of their
encounter: In 1193 at the age of 28 Ibn ‘Arabī visited Tunis to meet the disciples of Abu Madyan,
notably ‘Abd al-‘Aziz al-Mahdawī and Abū Muḥammad ‘Abdallāh al-Kinānī.
He stayed there for less than a year. Ibn `Arabi met Khidr for the
second time while he was returning from Tunis. One night, traveling by
boat, he saw a man walking on the water towards him. Upon reaching the
boat, Khidr stood on the sea and showed him that his feet were still
dry. After that Khiḍr conversed with Ibn ‘Arabī in a language which is
peculiar to him. Ibn ‘Arabī had his third meeting with
Khidr upon reaching Andalusia in late 590 AH. Khidr performed a miracle to provide evidence for a skeptical companion of Ibn ‘Arabī. The
next five years were a time when Ibn ‘Arabī entered into a different
world. Having been brought up under the instruction and guidance of
various spiritual masters of the West, he now came into his own as a
Muhammadan heir. As from this point the real genius of Ibn ‘Arabī began
to emerge and he became universal. Shortly after his return to
Andalusia from North Africa in 1194 AD, Ibn ‘Arabī’s father died and
within a few months his mother also died. Now the responsibility of the
upbringing of his two young sisters fell upon his shoulders. His cousin
came to him with the request that he should take up his wordly duties,
and give up the spiritual life. It was a time of
great uncertainty for Seville because of War. The third Sultan, Abū
Yūsuf Ya’qūb al Manṣūr offered him a job but Ibn ‘Arabī refused both
the job and an offer to marry off his sisters and within days he left
Seville heading toward Fez, where they settled. In
Fez Ibn ‘Arabī met two men of remarkable spirituality, one of them was
a sufi Pillar (awtād), his name was Ibn Ja’dūn. The second was known as
al-Ashall (literally “the withered,” due to a withered hand). It was a
happy period of his life, where he could utterly dedicate himself to
spiritual work. In Fez in 593 AH, when he was leading a Prayer in the
al-Azhar Mosque, he experienced a vision of light: “I lost the sense of
behind [or front]. I no longer had a back or the nape of a neck. While
the vision lasted, I had no sense of direction, as if I had been
completely spherical (dimensionless).” In
the year 597 AH / 1200 AD, he was in Morocco and took his final leave
from his master Yūsuf al-Kūmī, who was living in the village of
Salé at that time. This shows that he had finally completed his
training under the teachers of his early years and was now ready to go
to a new world. On his way to Marrakesh of that year he entered the
Station of Proximity (maqām al-qurba). “I entered this station in the
month of Muḥarram in 597 AH… In joy I began to explore it, but on
finding absolutely no one else in it, I felt anxiety at the solitude.
Although I was realized in [this station], but I still did not know its
name”. Later Ibn ‘Arabī finds Abū ‘Abd al-Raḥmān al-Sulamī in
it and he told Ibn ‘Arabī that this station is called, the station of
proximity (maqām al-qurba). His
next stop was Tunis 598 AH where he happened to
see Syakh ‘Abd al-‘Aziz al-Mahdawī whom he had met about six years
before. At the same time he continued writing works like Inshā’
al-Dawā’ir for his friend al-Ḥabashī. Resuming his travels, he arrived
in Cairo in 598 AH / 1202 AD where he met his childhood friends, the
two
brothers, ‘Abdallāh Muhammad al-Khayyāt and Abū al-Abbās Aḥmad
al-Ḥarrārī and stayed at their house in the month of Ramaḍān. That was
a period of great devastation, terrible famine and plague for
Egypt. Perhaps the death of his companion Muḥammad al-Haṣṣār was due to
this plague. Ibn ‘Arabī saw this devastation with his own eyes and a
passage of Rūh al-Quds tells us that when people made light of Allāh’s statutes He imposes the strictures of His Law upon them.
Ibn ‘Arabī resumed travelling toward Palestine, and his route took him to all the major burial places of the great Prophets: Hebron, where Abraham and other Prophets are buried; Jerusalem, the city of David and the later Prophets; and then Medina, the final resting place of Prophet Muhammad.
At
the end of his long journey he finally arrived at Makkah, the mother of
all cities, in 598 AH (July 1202 AD). The Makkan period of Ibn ‘Arabī’s
life can be viewed as the fulcrum of his earthly existence; he spent 36
years of his life in the West and the upcoming 36 years in the East,
with about 3 years in Makkah in between. This three year period both
connects and differentiates the two halves of his life. It was in
Makkah that he started writing the very best of his works Al-Futūḥāt
al-Makkiyya, It was in Makkah that his status as Seal of Muhammadian
sainthood was confirmed in the glorious vision of the Prophet; it was
in Makkah that he had the dream of the two bricks and his encounter
with the Ka‘ba; it was in Makkah that the love of
women was first evoked in his heart by the beautiful Niẓām, who became
the personification of wisdom and beauty.
It was in Makkah that he first savoured the pleasures of married life,
marrying and becoming a father. His first wife was Fāṭima bint Yūnus
and their first son Muḥammad ‘Imāduddin was probably born in Makkah.
Again it was in Makkah that he produced the very
best of his works, like the first chapters of Futūḥāt, the Rūḥ al-Quds,
the Tāj al-Rasā’il, the Ḥilyat al-Abdāl and a collections of hadīth
qudsī named “Mishkat al-Anwār”. It is also worth mentioning that in
Makkah he met some of the eminent scholars of Ḥadīth of his time.
Amongst them was Abū Shujā’ Ẓāhir bin Rustam, father of the beautiful
Niẓām and Yūnus ibn Yaḥyā al-Ḥāshimī, who had been a pupil of the great
‘Abd al-Qādir al-Jīlānī in Baghdad. He not only introduced Ibn ‘Arabī
to the Prophetic tradition but also transmitted to him the teachings of
the most famous saint in Egypt in the ninth century, Dhū’l-Nūn
al-Miṣrī. Yūnus ibn Yaḥyā also invested him in front of the Ka‘ba with
the Khirqa (Mantle) of ‘Abd al-Qādir al-Jīlānī. It is believed that
after wearing this Khirqa Ibn ‘Arabī formally joined the Qadriyya
Tarīqa.
Apart
from all this, several visions were granted to him in Makkah. The first
took place at night during his circumambulations of the Kaaba when
he met a young beautiful girl Qurrat al-‘Ayn. In the
second vision, during his circumambulations of the Kaaba, he met the
mysterious figure who had appeared at the beginning of his ascension
and here at Makkah. He said to Ibn ‘Arabī, you should circumambulate in
my footstep and observe me in the light of my moon, so that you may
take from my constitution that which you write in your book and
transmit to your readers. The third vision also occurs at
Kaaba in a spiritual conversation with the Ḥaram and the Zamzam stream;
Kaaba ordered him to circumambulate it and the Zamzam told him to drink
this pure water but a soft refusal made Kaaba angry and he took revenge
on a cold and rainy night in the year 600 AH. Shaykh heard the voice of
Kaaba loud and clear; later in a meditation God taught him the lesson
and to express this gratitude Ibn ‘Arabī composed a collection of
letters in rhymed prose, entitled the Tāj al-Rasā’il, in homage to the
Kaaba. The next vision is also related to Kaaba, in the year 599 AH in
Makkah Ibn ‘Arabī saw a dream which confirmed once again his accession
to the office of the Seal of the Muhammadian Sainthood. He saw two
bricks – one of Gold and the other of Silver – were missing from two
rows of the wall of Kaaba. He says: “In the mean time I was observing
that, standing there, I feel without doubt that I was these two bricks
and these two bricks were me …. And perhaps it is through me that God
has sealed sainthood”. In the year 599 AH during circumambulating the
Kaaba, he encountered the son of Caliph Hārūn
al-Rashīd, who had been dead for four centuries and was famous for
choosing Saturday for work to gather food for rest of the week. Ibn
‘Arabī asked him: “Who are you?” He replied: “I am al-Sabtī ibn Hārūn
al-Rashīd.” Later Ibn ‘Arabī asked him: “What was the reason of
choosing Saturday for work?” He replied: “As God has made this universe
in six days from Sunday to Friday, and he rested on Saturday (This is
refuted by the Quranic verse "We created the heavens and the earth and
all that is between them in six days, nor did any sense of weariness
touch Us"), so I, as His servant worked on Saturday and devoted
myself to worshipping Lord for the rest of the week.” In another
glorious vision at Kaaba Ibn ‘Arabī saw his forefathers and asked one
of them his time, he replied he had been dead around forty thousand
years ago. Finally, at Kaaba, behind the wall of Hanbalites, Ibn ‘Arabī
was granted the privilege of being able to join a meeting of the seven
Abdāl.
Ibn Arabī’s life, spanning between 600 to 617 AH is full of journeys, he
frequently kept crossing and re-crossing Syria, Palestine, Anatolia,
Egypt, Iraq and the Hejaz,
yet this physical activity stood in no way in his spiritual pursuits
and obligations. The two dimension activity had indeed the same
spiritual provenance and was motivated by the sublime purpose of higher
life unrelated to egocentricity. The year 600 AH witnessed a meeting
between Ibn Arabi and Shaykh Majduddīn Isḥāq ibn Yūsuf, a native of
Malatya and a man of great standing at the Seljuk court.
This time Ibn ‘Arabī was travelling north; first they visited the city
of Muḥammad and in 601 AH they entered Baghdad. This visit besides
other benefits offered him a chance to meet the direct disciples of
Shaykh ‘Abd al-Qādir Jīlānī. Ibn Arabi stayed there only for 12 days
because he wanted to visit Mosul to see his friend ‘Alī ibn ‘Abdallāh
ibn Jāmi’, a disciple of Qaḍīb al-Bān. There he spent the month of
Ramaḍan and composed Tanazzulāt al-Mawṣiliyya, Kitāb al-Jalāl
wa’l-Jamāl and Kunh mā lā Budda lil-MurīdMinhu. Here
he was invested with the khirqa of
Khiḍr , transmitted to him by ‘Alī ibn ‘Abdallāh ibn Jāmi’. Later the
group travelled north and arrived at Malatya, Majduddīn’s hometown and
then to Konya. In Konya Ibn ‘Arabī met with Awḥaduddīn Ḥamīd Kirmānī,
who became his friend like Majduddīn. He transmitted to Ibn ‘Arabī
teachings and stories of the many great spiritual masters of the East.
Over the next 20 years Ibn ‘Arabī and Kirmānī remained close friends
and companions. After spending 9 months in Konya, he
returned to Malatya where Kaykā’ūs, one of the Kaykhusraw’s sons, had
been made ruler of Malatya. Majduddīn was appointed as his tutor and
Ibn ‘Arabī also became involved in the young prince’s education.
In
the year 602 AH he visited Jerusalem, Makkah and Egypt. It was his
first time that he passed through Syria, visiting Aleppo and Damascus.
In Jerusalem, he continued writing, and 5 more works were completed.
These are: Kitāb al-Bā’, Ishārāt al-Qur'an. In May 602 AH he visited
Hebron, where he wrote Kitāb al-Yaqīn at Masjīd al-Yaqīn near the tomb
of Ibrāhīm. The following year he headed toward Cairo,
staying there with his old Andalusian friends , including Abū al-‘Abbās
al-Ḥarrār, his brother Muḥammad al-Khayyāt and ‘Abdallāh al-Mawrūrī. In
Cairo Rūḥ al-Quds and Kitāb Ayyām al-Sha’n were read again before Ibn
‘Arabī, with the reader this time being a young man named Ismā’il ibn
Sawdakīn al-Nūrī. Like Badr al-Ḥabashī, Ibn Sawdakīn attached himself
to Ibn ‘Arabī forever. He left valuable
commentaries on the works of Ibn ‘Arabī notably Mashāhid al-Asrār,
Kitāb al-Isrā’ and the Kitāb al-Tajalliyāt. His house in Aleppo was
often used for the reading of Ibn ‘Arabī’s works over the next 40
years. Later in 604 AH he returned to Makkah where he continued
to study and write, spending his time with his friend Abū Shujā bin
Rustem and family, including the beautiful Niẓām. The next 4 to 5 years
of Ibn ‘Arabī’s life were spent in these lands and he also kept
travelling and holding the reading sessions of
his works in his own presence.
In
the year 608 we find him in Baghdad with his friend Majduddīn Isḥāq and
there he met the famous historian Ibn al-Dubaythī and his disciple Ibn
al-Najjār. In Baghdad, he had a terrifying vision regarding the Divine
deception (makr), In which he saw the gates of heaven open and the
treasures of Divine deception fell like rain on everyone. He awoke
terrified and looked for a way of being safe from these deceptions. The
only safe way he found is by knowing the balance of the Divine law.
According to Osman Yahia in Baghdad Ibn ‘Arabī met with the famous Sufi
Shihābuddīn Suharwardī (d. 632), author of the ‘Awārif al-ma’ārif who
was personal advisor to Caliph al-Nāṣir. In this meeting, they stayed
together for a while, with lowered heads and departed without
exchanging a single word. Later Ibn ‘Arabī said about Suharwardī: “He
is impregnated with the Sunna from tip to toe” and Suharwardī said
about Ibn ‘Arabī: “He is an ocean of essential truths (baḥr al-Ḥaqāiq).
In
the year 611 he was again in Makkah, where his friend Abū Shujā had
died two years before. Ibn ‘Arabī performed Ḥajj and started
compilation of his most famous poetic work the Tarjumān al-Ashwāq.
After Ḥajj Ibn ‘Arabī left Makkah, travelling north towards the Roman
lands, probably Konya or Malatya and in the year 610 / 611 he returned
to
Aleppo. In Aleppo this work caused uproar and consternation in certain
quarters, since he came under the blame of writing erotic verses under
the cover of poetic allusions. The jurists from Allepo severely
criticized the claim that this poetry was a mystical or expresses
Divine realities, which made his disciples very upset. Later on the
request of his two disciples, Ibn Sawdakīn and Badr al-Ḥabashī he wrote
a commentary on these poems by the title of “Dhakhā’ir al-A’lāq” in a
great hurry. It was completed in Anatolia in 612. When the jurists
heard this commentary, they felt sorry for unjustly exposing Ibn ‘Arabī
to scathing criticism.
The
period of extensive travelling came to an end and for the next few
years he seems to have made his home in the Seljuk Kingdom. In the year
612 AH, at Sivas he had a vision anticipating Kaykā’ūs victory at
Antioch over the Franks.
He wrote a poem in which he enlightened the Sultan of the vision and
his future victory. Later Ibn ‘Arabī returned to Malatya and according
to Stephen Hartenstein he met Bahā’uddīn Walad, father of the famous
Persian Poet Jallaluddin Rumi,
the famous Persian poet of that time. Little Rūmī was with his father
and after the meeting when Bahā’uddīn left with his son tagging along
behind him, Shaykh al-Akbar said: “What an extraordinary sight, a sea
followed by an ocean!”. His reading and writings
continued in Malatya, where in 615 AH, we find hearings of Rūḥ al-Quds,
finalization of The Tarjumān al-Ashwāq and compilation of a short
epistle on the technical terms of Sufism: the Iṣṭilāhāt al-ṣūfiyya. The
year 617 was the year of mourning for him as he lost one of his best
friends Majduddīn Isḥāq, Ibn ‘Arabī took charge of the upbringing of
the young Ṣadruddīn and married the widow as it was necessary according
to the customs of the time. Lastly his close
companion and valet, friend and fellow, traveller on the way of God
Badr al-Ḥabashī died.
After
criss-crossing the east for a period of 20 years Ibn ‘Arabī now decided
to settle in Syria and spent the last 17 years of his life in Damascus,
the city was already known quite well to him, he had several contacts
with leading notables there. He was greeted in Damascus as a spiritual
master and a spacious house was provided to him by the Grand Qadi of
the town Ibn Zakī. In Damascus, he devoted himself to writing and
teaching to fulfil the commandment of his Lord: “Counsel My servants.”
The first thing he did was to collect and disseminate the works which
had already been written, copies were made and reading sessions took
place in his house. Kitāb al-Tajalliyāt was one of these first books to
record such a certificate (sima‘) in the presence of his disciple Ibn
Sawdakīn. In the year 621 AH eight more works bore these hearing
certificates, among these were: Kitāb al-Yaqīn, Al-Maqsid
al-Asmá, Kitāb al-Mīm wal-Wāw wal-Nun, Mafātīh al-Ghayūb and
Kitāb al-Ḥaqq. At the same time, Ibn ‘Arabī devoted his attention to
complete the lengthy Futūḥāt, many volumes of this book came into being
in this period. During this period of his life, he imparted direct
instructions to many of his disciples including Ṣadruddīn al-Qūnawī. He
was brought up alongside Ibn ‘Arabī own family in Malatya and after the
death of his real father Qūnawī joined Shaykh al-Akbar in Damascus. He
accompanied and served Kirmānī on his travels in Egypt, Hijaz and Iran.
In his private collection Ṣadruddīn wrote that he had studied 10 works
of Ibn ‘Arabī under him and later Ibn ‘Arabī gave him a certificate to
freely relate them on his authority. He studied and discussed with Ibn
‘Arabī no less than 40 works, including the whole text of Futūḥāt in 20
volumes.
Ibn
‘Arabī had several visions of Muḥammad at Damascus. In 624 AH he had
been told by Muhammad that angels are superior to men. In the same
year, he had another discussion with Muḥammad, this time Muḥammad
replied to him regarding the resurrection of animals: “Animals will not
be resurrected on the Day of Judgement.” In the
third vision he was ordered by the Prophet to write a poem in favour of
al-Anṣār. In this vision Ibn ‘Arabī was informed that his mother was
from al-Anṣār’s tribe. In the fourth vision, at the end of
Muḥarram 627 AH the Prophet came to him once again and handed him the
book Fuṣūṣ al-Ḥikam (The Bezels of Wisdoms). Ibn ‘Arabī started writing
this book with all the purity of his intentions and his deepest
aspirations. He said: “I state nothing that has not been projected
toward me; I write nothing except what has been inspired in me. I am
not a Prophet nor a Messenger but simply an inheritor; and I labour for
my future life”. In the same year
just over two months after receiving the book of the Fuṣūṣ he had a
vision of Divine Ipseity, it’s exterior and interior which he had not
seen before in any of his witnessings.
In
629 AH the first draft of al-Futūḥāt al-Makkiyya was completed. The
book has hundreds of manuscript in various libraries of the world, the
most important of them is the manuscript of Konya, written by its
author. This book had taken the best part of his thirty years and Ibn
‘Arabī dedicated it to his eldest son, ‘Imāduddīn Muḥammad. It contains
560 chapters of esoteric knowledge and is truly the encyclopaedia of
Islamic Sufism. The book is divided into six sections and these are:
13. Spiritual Knowledge (al-ma‘ārif) 14. Spiritual Behaviour
(al-ma‘lūmāt) 15. Spiritual States (al-aḥwāl) 16. Spiritual Abodes
(al-manāzil) 17. Spiritual Encounters (al-munāzalāt) 18. Spiritual
Stations (al-maqāmāt) Chapter 559 contains the mysteries and secrets of
all the chapters of the book (some may deem it a summary of the whole
Futūḥāt). In the 48th chapter of the Futūhāt, he says that the content
of the message and the form of its presentation have been determined by
Divine Inspiration. Three years later in 632 AH, on the first of
Muḥarram, Ibn ‘Arabī embarked on a second draft of the Futūḥāt; this he
explained, included a number of additions and a number of deletions as
compared with the previous draft. This revision completed in the year
636. After completion of this 2nd draft, he started
teaching it to his disciples. Dr. Osman Yahia has mentioned hundreds of
these hearings or public readings that occur between the year 633 AH
and 638 AH. These hearings show that the Futūḥāt was a primary document
of his concepts and was widespread in his life in comparison with the
Fuṣūṣ al-Hikam, which has only one Samā’ given to only Ṣadruddīn
al-Qūnawī.
Finally
on 22 Rabī‘ al-Thānī 638 AH at the age of seventy-five, Ibn ‘Arabī’s
terrestrial life came to an end. He was present at the house of Qaḍī
Ibn Zakī at the time of death, Jamāluddīn ibn ‘Abd al-Khāliq, ‘Imād Ibn
Naḥḥās and his son ‘Imāduddīn performed his funeral rites. He was buried in the family tomb of the Banū Zakī in the small beautiful district of Al-Salihiyah at Jabal Qāsiyūn. There have been many exceptional commentaries on Ibn 'Arabī's Fuṣūṣ al-Ḥikam: the first, al-Fukūk, was written by his stepson and heir,Ṣadr al-Dīn al-Qunawī, who had studied the book with Ibn 'Arabī; the second by Qunawī's student, Mu'ayyad al-Dīn al-Jandī, which was the first line - by - line commentary; the third by Jandī's student, Dawūd al-Qaysarī,
which became very influential in the Persian speaking world. There were
many others, in the Ottoman world (e.g. 'Abdullah al-Bosnawī), the Arab
world (e.g. 'Abd al-Ghanī al-Nabulusī) and the Persian world (e.g.
Haydar Āmolī). It is estimated that there are over fifty commentaries
on the Fuṣūṣ, most of which only exist in manuscript form. The more famous (such as Qunawī's Fukūk) have been printed in recent years in Iran. A recent English translation of Ibn 'Arabī's own summary of the Fuṣūṣ, Naqsh al-Fuṣūṣ (The Imprint or Pattern of the Fusus) as well a commentary on this work by 'Abd al-Raḥmān Jāmī, Naqd al-Nuṣūṣ fī Sharḥ Naqsh al-Fuṣūṣ (1459), by William Chittick was published in Volume 1 of the Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi Society (1982). The Fuṣūṣ was
first critically edited in Arabic by 'Afīfī (1946). The first English
translation was done in partial form by Angela Culme - Seymour from the
French translation of Titus Burckhardt as Wisdom of the Prophets (1975), and the first full translation was by Ralph Austin as Bezels of Wisdom (1980). There is also a complete French translation by Charles - Andre Gilis, entitled Le livre des chatons des sagesses (1997). The only major commentary to have been translated into English so far is entitled Ismail Hakki Bursevi's translation and commentary on Fusus al-hikam by Muhyiddin Ibn 'Arabi, translated from Ottoman Turkish by Bulent Rauf in 4 volumes (1985 – 1991). In Urdu, the most widespread and authentic translation was made by Bahr-ul-uloom Hazrat Muhammad Abdul Qadeer Siddiqi Qadri Hasrat, the former Dean and Professor of Theology of the Osmania University, Hyderabad.
It is due to this reason that his translation is in the curriculum of
Punjab University. Maulvi Abdul Qadeer Siddiqui has made an
interpretive translation and explained the terms and grammar while
clarifying the Shaikh's opinions. |