• Apr 16 2025 - 15:56
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Persian mystic and progenitor of fable in Iranian Sufism

In a serene garden, nestled amid huge trees, the turquoise-coloured dome contrasts with the green around. This distinctiveness attracts visitors' attention, guiding them towards the mausoleum that has an element of tranquillity to it.

Persian mystic and progenitor of fable in Iranian Sufism

In a serene garden, nestled amid huge trees, the turquoise-coloured dome contrasts with the green around. This distinctiveness attracts visitors' attention, guiding them towards the mausoleum that has an element of tranquillity to it.

The Persian architecture of the building somehow mimics the philosophy of the great Sufi master, Faridud din Attar, who rests in the tomb at Neyshapur, a city in the northeastern Iranian province of Khorasan e Rezavi, close to the holy city of Mashhad.

The Persian mystic was born as Abu amed Moammad b. Abi Bakr Ebrahim in ca. 540/1145-46. He chose Faridud din Attar as his pen name.

He practiced his family profession of pharmacy and was quite famous among his patients.

“I feel a strange, indescribable calm at this place. Sitting in Attar’s garden is a dream come true. The frugal life this great master lived is mirrored in the peaceful aura that surrounds us here,” Sonia from France told the Press TV website while washing her prayer beads with water at Attar’s tomb.

Attar lived at a time when Mongols attacked Iran, killing millions of people throughout the province of Khorasan. He was killed by Mongols in April 1221 at the age of 78.

Margaret Smith, the British orientalist specializing in Sufism, narrates an interesting story related to Attar’s death.

According to Smith, when the Iranian Sufi master was taken captive by a Mongol, another Mongol offered a ransom of a thousand pieces of silver to save his life.

“His captor was on the verge of accepting, but Attar advised him that he was worth much more. Later, a third Mongol arrived offering a ransom of a sack of straw, whereupon Attar said, 'Take it, that's what I'm worth.' His captor, furious, beheaded him.”

Attar’s mystic works

Attar was proficient in literary sciences and techniques, theology and astronomy, interpretation of the Holy Qur’an and hadiths, medicine and botany, but he is known more today as a gnostic.

He is remembered as one of the most prolific Iranian poets, whose poems are laden with spiritual meanings that exude exceptional wisdom and insight.

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There is a question of authenticity to the works attributed to Attar. However, in the introductions of the “hosrow-Nama”, Attar himself mentioned his other works, including “Asrar-nama”, “Maneq al-tayr, “Moibat-nama, “Elahi-nama, “Jawaher-nama, and “Sar al-qalb”.

His famous work “Takerat al-awlia” is missing from the list, probably because it is a prose work. Experts believe that its attribution to Aṭṭar can hardly be questioned.

Attar was the principal Muslim mystic poet of the second half of the twelfth century. Known for his radical theology of love, Attar’s poetry is still learned by heart and sung throughout Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, and the Indian subcontinent.

His masterpiece "Mantiq al-tayr”, or "The Conference of Birds", is considered to be the finest example of Sufi poetry in the Persian language after Rumi’s masterpiece Masnavi.

Mantiq al-tayr or The Conference of the Birds

The mythopoetic parable traces the journey of the world's birds in their search for King Simorgh, the legendary Lord of Creation.

The birds symbolize seekers on their journey to self-realization. Psycho-spiritual studies of the work suggest that the travel of the birds explains three significant concepts of psycho-spiritual value: the unrealized self, the process of self-realization, and the realized self.

In “Mantiq-al-tayr”, each bird represents a human fault that prevents humankind from attaining enlightenment.

The main message of the parable is the attainment of unification or tawhid as propagated by Islam.

The spiritual journey undertaken by birds gives a peep into Attar's profound, multi-dimensional view of existence.

At the end of the journey, the birds meet Simorgh, and they simultaneously experience themselves as many (Si-morgh, 30 birds) and also as one (Simorgh). Attar regards this as a complete transformation and unification.

 

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Tadhkirat-ul-Awliya

The book is a collection of the lives of Muslim saints and mystics. It is Attar's only known prose work. It begins with Imam Jaʿfar al-adeq (AS), Oways Qarani, and asan Bari, and ends with allaj, 

The compelling account of the execution of the mystic Mansur al-Hallaj, who had uttered the words "I am the Truth" in a state of ecstatic contemplation, is considered the most well-known extract from the book.

Ilahinama

The book deals with the concept of self-realization and the process of understanding God’s greatness. Attar says that when a person learns about his own physical and spiritual existence, he realizes the greatness of God’s great wisdom and incomparable power.

This book explains that self-knowledge is enlightenment leading to the knowledge of the wisdom of the universe and nature, as well as human and divine mysteries.

A mystic poet who influenced Rumi and Hafiz

Experts say that after Attar’s death, most of the poets in the Persian language were influenced by his style of writing.

Among the vast troupe of his followers, Moulana Jalal al-Din Rumi (d. 1273) and Hafiz Shirazi (d. c.1389) stand out.

“Rumi’s verse is steeped more deeply in the fragrance of Attar’s poetry. His Mathnawi, which is the natural continuation of the mathnawiof Attar, represents the high point of all the previous Persian Sufi epics that began with the ‘Hadiqat al-Haqiqa’ of Sana’i, and was then expanded and elaborated upon in ‘Attar’s ‘Mantiq al-tayr’ and other mathnawis,” says Hossein Mohyeddin Elahi Ghomshei, an Iranian philosopher and a well-known author on mysticism.

نیجریه ابوجا

نیجریه ابوجا

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