Attar: Muslim Saints and Mystics (Tazkarotol-Oulia) Part 1

 

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Hasan of Basra

Al-Hasan ibn Abi ‘l Hasan al-Basri was born at

Medina in 21 (642), the son of a slave captured in

Maisan who afterwards became a client of the

Prophet Mohammad’s secretary Zaid ibn Thabet.

 

Brought up in Basra, he met many Companions

of the Prophet including, it is said, seventy of

those who fought at the Battle of Badr. He grew

up to become one of the most prominent figures

of his generation, being famous for his uncompromising piety and outspoken condemnation of

worldliness in high places. Whilst the Mo’tazelite

theologians claim him as the founder of their

movement (and ‘Amr ibn ‘Obaid and Wasel ibn

‘Ata’ are counted amongst his pupils), in Sufi

hagiography he is revered as one of the greatest

saints of early Islam. He died at Basra in 110

(728). Many of his speeches—he was a brilliant

orator—and sayings are quoted by Arab authors

and not a few of his letters have been preserved.

The conversion of Hasan of Basra

The beginning of Hasan of Basra’s conversion was as

follows. He was a jewel merchant and was called

Hasan of the Pearls. He traded with Byzantium, and

had to do with the generals and ministers of Caesar. On

one occasion, going to Byzantium he called on the

prime minister and conversed with him a while.

“We will go to a certain place,” the minister told

him, “if you are agreeable.”

“It is for you to say,” Hasan replied. “I agree.”

So the minister commanded a horse to be brought

for Hasan. He mounted with the minister, and they set

out. When they reached the desert Hasan perceived a

tent of Byzantine brocade, fastened with ropes of silk

and golden pegs, set firm in the ground. He stood to

one side. Then a mighty army, all accoutred in the

panoply of war, came out; they circled the tent, said a

few words, and departed. Philosophers and scholars to

the number of nigh four hundred arrived on the scene;

they circled the tent, said a few words, and departed.

After that three hundred illumined elders with white

beards approached the tent, circled it, said a few

words, and departed. Thereafter more than two hundred moon-fair maidens, each bearing a plate of gold

and silver and precious stones, circled the tent, said a

few words, and departed.

Hasan relates that, astonished and filled with wonder, he asked himself what this might be.

“When we alighted,” he went on, “I asked the minister. He said that the Caesar had a son of unsurpassable beauty, perfect in all the branches of learning and

unrivalled in the arena of manly prowess. His father

loved him with all his heart.”

Suddenly he fell ill—so Hasan related on the authority of the minister. All the skilled physicians proved

powerless to cure him. Finally he died, and was buried

in that tent. Once every year people come out to visit

him. First an immense army circles the tent, and they

say: “O prince, if this circumstance that has befallen

thee had come about in war, we would have all sacrificed our lives for thee, to ransom thee back. But the

circumstance that has befallen thee is at the hand of

one against whom we cannot fight, whom we cannot

challenge.” This they say, and then return.

The philosophers and the scholars come forward,

and say: “This circumstance has been brought about by

one against whom we cannot do anything by means of

learning and philosophy, science and sophistry. For all

the philosophers of the world are powerless before

him, and all the learned are ignorant beside his knowledge. Otherwise we would have contrived devices and

spoken words which all in creation could not have

withstood.” This they say, and then return.

Next the venerable elders advance, and say: “O

prince, if this circumstance that has befallen thee could

have been set right by the intercession of elders, we

would all have interceded with humble petitions, and

would not have abandoned thee there. But this circumstance has been brought upon thee by one against

whom no mortal man’s intercession profits anything.”

This they say, and depart.

Now the moon-fair maidens with their plates of gold

and precious stones advance, circle the tent, and say:

“Son of Caesar, if this circumstance that has befallen

thee could have been set right by wealth and beauty, we

would have sacrificed ourselves and given great moneys, and would not have abandoned thee. But this circumstance has been brought upon thee by one on

whom wealth and beauty have no effect.” This they

say, and return.

Then Caesar himself with his chief minister enters

the tent, and says: “O eye and lamp of thy father, O

fruit of the heart of thy father, O dearest beloved of thy

father, what is in thy father’s hand to perform? Thy

father brought a mighty army, he brought philosophers

and scholars, intercessors and advisers, beautiful maidens, wealth and all manner of luxuries; and he came

himself. If all this could have been of avail, thy father

would have done all that lay in his power. But this circumstance has been brought about by one before

whom thy father, with all this apparatus, this army and

retinue, this luxury and wealth and treasure, is powerless. Peace be upon you, till next year!” This he says,

and returns.

These words of the minister so affected Hasan that

he was beside himself. At once he made arrangements

to return. Coming to Basra, he took an oath never to

laugh again in this world, till his ultimate destiny

became clear to him. He flung himself into all manner

of devotions and austerities, such that no man in his

time could exceed that discipline.

Hasan of Basra and Abu Amr

It is related that Abu Amr, the leading authority on the

reading of the Koran, was teaching the Koran one day

when suddenly a handsome boy arrived to join his

class. Abu Amr gazed at the child improperly, and

immediately he forgot the whole Koran, from the p of

“Praise” to the n of “jinn and men”. A fire possessed

him, and he lost all self-control. In this state he called

on Hasan of Basra and described to him his predicament.

“Master,” he wept bitterly, “such is the situation. I

have forgotten the whole Koran.”

Hasan was most distressed to hear of his situation.

“Now is the season of the pilgrimage,” he said. “Go

and perform the pilgrimage. When you have done that,

repair to the mosque of Khaif. There you will see an

old man seated in the prayer-niche. Do not spoil his

time, but let him be until he is disengaged. Then ask

him to say a prayer for you.”

Abu Amr acted accordingly. Seated in a corner of the

mosque, he observed a venerable elder and about him

a circle of people seated. Some time passed; then a man

entered, clad in spotless white robes. The people made

way before him, greeted him, and conversed together.

When the hour of prayer arrived, the man departed

and the people departed with him, so that the elder

remained alone.

Abu Amr then approached and saluted him.

“In Allah’s name, help me,” he cried.

And he described his predicament. The elder, much

concerned, raised his eyes to heaven.

“He had not yet lowered his head,” Abu Amr

recounted, “when the Koran came back to me. I fell

down before him for joy.”

“Who recommended me to you?” the elder asked.

“Hasan of Basra,” Abu Amr replied.

“Anyone who has an imam like Hasan,” the old man

commented, “what need has he of another? Well,

Hasan has exposed me. Now I will expose him. He rent

my veil, and I will rend his as well. That man,” he went

on, “in the white robes who entered after the afternoon

prayer and left before the rest, and the others did him

reverence—that man was Hasan. Every day he prays

the afternoon prayer in Basra and then comes here,

converses with me, and returns to Basra for the evening

prayer. Anyone who has an imam like Hasan, why

should he ask me for a prayer?”

Hasan of Basra and the fire-worshipper

Hasan had a neighbour named Simeon who was a fireworshipper. Simeon fell ill and was at death’s door.

Friends begged Hasan to visit him; he called, to find

him in bed, blackened with fire and smoke.

“Fear God,” Hasan counselled him. “You have

passed all your life amid fire and smoke. Accept Islam,

that God may have mercy on you.”

“Three things hold me back from becoming a

Muslim,” the fire-worshipper replied. “The first is, that

you speak ill of the world, yet night and day you pursue worldly things. Secondly, you say that death is a

fact to be faced, yet you make no preparation for

death. In the third place, you say that God’s face shall

be seen, yet today you do everything contrary to His

good pleasure.”

“This is the token of those who know truly,” Hasan

commented. “Now if believers act as you describe, what

have you to say? They acknowledge the unity of God;

whereas you have spent your life in the worship of fire.

You who have worshipped fire for seventy years, and I

who have never worshipped fire—we are both carried

off to Hell. Hell will consume you and me. God will pay

no regard to you; but if God so wills, the fire will not

dare so much as to burn one hair of my body. For fire is

a thing created by God; and the creature is subject to the

Creator’s command. Come now, you who have worshipped fire for seventy years; let us both put our hands

into the fire, then you will see with your own eyes the

impotence of fire and the omnipotence of God.”

So saying, Hasan thrust his hand into the fire and

held it there. Not a particle of his body was affected or

burnt. When Simeon saw this he was amazed. The

dawn of true knowledge began to break.

“For seventy years I have worshipped fire,” he

groaned. “Now only a breath or two remains to me.

What am I to do?”

“Become a Muslim,” was Hasan’s reply.

“If you give it me in writing that God will not punish me,” said Simeon, “then I will believe. But until I

have it in writing, I will not believe.”

Hasan wrote it down.

“Now order just witnesses of Basra to append their

testimony.”

The witnesses endorsed the document. Then Simeon

wept many tears and proclaimed the faith. He spoke

his last testament to Hasan.

“When I die, bid them wash me, then commit me to

the earth with your own hands, and place this document in my hand. This document will be my proof.”

Having charged Hasan thus, he spoke the attestation

of faith and died. They washed his body, said the

prayer over him, and buried him with the document in

his hand. That night Hasan went to sleep pondering

what he had done.

“How could I help a drowning man, seeing that I am

drowning myself? Since I have no control over my own

fate, why did I venture to prescribe how God should

act?”

With this thought he fell asleep. He saw Simeon in a

dream glowing like a candle; on his head a crown,

robed in fine raiment, he was walking with a smile in

the garden of Paradise.

“How are you, Simeon?” Hasan enquired.

“Why do you ask? You can see for yourself,” Simeon

answered. “God Almighty of His bounty brought me

nigh His presence and graciously showed me His face.

The favours He showered upon me surpass all description. You have honoured your guarantee; so take your

document. I have no further need of it.”

When Hasan awoke, he saw that parchment in his

hand.”Lord God,” he cried, “I know well that what

Thou doest is without cause, save of Thy bounty. Who

shall suffer loss at Thy door? Thou grantest a Guebre

of seventy years to come into Thy near presence

because of a single utterance. How then wilt Thou

exclude a believer of seventy years?”

 

Source : Sufism.ir