HAZRAT
INAYAT KHAN'S LIFE AND WORK.
’I
was transported by destiny from the world of lyrics and poetry to the world of
industry and commerce, on the 13th of September 1910.
... The ocean which I had to cross seemed to me
a gulf between the life that had passed and the life that was to begin.
I
spent my time on the ship looking at the rising and the falling of the waves
and realizing that in this rise and fall the picture of life was reflected the
life of individuals, of nations, of races, and of the world....
This
period, while I was on the way, seemed to me a state which one experiences
between a’ dream and the awakening; the whole part of my life in India became
one single dream, not a purposeless dream, but a dream preparing me to
accomplish something towards which I was proceeding. There were moments of
sadness, of feeling myself removed farther and farther from the land of my
birth; and moments of great joy, with the hope of nearing the Western regions
for which my soul was destined.
At
moments I felt too small for my ideals and aspirations, comparing my limited
self with this vast world. But at others, realizing by the answer which my
heart gave Whose work it was, Whose service it was, Whose call it was, moved me
to ecstasy, as if I had risen in the realization of truth above the limitations
which weigh mankind down....’
Thus
did Hazrat Inayat Khan describe his feelings at the time when he started on his
journey towards the Western world. It evokes something of the romance and
heroism which adhered to the task he was undertaking: that of bringing the Sufi
Message of Spiritual Liberty, as he called it, whose aim was the integration of
spiritual and modern life. In those days mysticism, as a spiritual process of attuning
human consciousness to the realization of the divine, of vitalizing the subtle
link between the soul and God, was hardly any more seriously considered in the
West. In so far as humanity was not absorbed by the furthering of
its material aims, its intellectual interests were mostly dominated by science,
and much of its theology was fundamentalistic. And although in the East
mysticism, whereby man could find an outlet for his spiritual aspirations, had
much longer continued to provide a counterpart to doctrinal religion, it was
too directly linked with the emotional and social aspects of religious
tradition and outlook to be capable of meeting the new challenge of modern
development and the inroads of the West. The result was a real and sometimes
dramatic struggle between the age-old social and religious systems on the one
side, and the new ideas, ideals, and ways of life on the other. This is why
today the educated Oriental mind often roves between religious orthodoxy and
Occidental modernism, while mysticism, as an individual attitude, tends to be
crushed between these two trends. In these circumstances, it is understandable
that the mystic’s royal road known as Sufism had heavily fallen in disrepair.
Sufism was, to quote Hazrat Inayat Khan, intellectually born in Arabia,
devotionally reared in Persia, and spiritually completed in India’. It is
mostly known as an aspect of Islamic mysticism and poetry, brought to its full
development by the great classics of Persia, as Shams-e Tabrez, Jelal ud-Din
Rumi, Hafiz, and many others.
But
this religion of ’love, harmony, and beauty’ is more than that:
it is the essence of all religions.
At
all times religions have had an exoteric aspect which was meant to give
consolation and support to mankind, and an esoteric aspect whereby the divine
truths, which are not suited for everybody, are handed down to posterity. And
whereas the outer religions may differ from age to age and from prophet to
prophet, the inner core remains always the same. It was to make mankind again
aware of the fundamental truths hidden in every religion that Hazrat Inayat
Khan started on his mission.
Coming
from a family of Sufis, being initiated himself by a Sufi Murshid, he named his
message the Sufi Message; but the idiom in which he clothed it was his own, and
he adapted it to the needs of our time. As secular modernism had largely
displaced mysticism as the cultural counterpart of formal religion, Hazrat
Inayat Khan tried to make of Sufi mysticism the spiritual counterpart of
modernism itself.
It
was for this reason that he addressed himself in the first place to the Western
world upon his departure described above. To accomplish this task he left
everything he possessed and cherished behind, though the life and career he
abandoned had been in many respects brilliant and full of promise.
Inayat
was born in Baroda on the 5th July 1882. His father, Mashaikh Rahemat Khan,
came from the Panjab, where he was born in 1843 as a descendant of
an ancient family of Sufi saints,
zamindars (feudal landowners), poets, and musicians.
Inayat’s
mother, Khatija Biy, was the daughter of Chole Ghise Khan
Maulabakhsh, known all over India as one of the greatest musicians and poets of
his time.
Born
in 1833 at Bhiwani, in the state which is now called Uttar Pradesh, Maulabakhsh
travelled widely throughout India, and after a prolonged stay at the court of
the Maharaja of Mysore, who invested him with princely rank, he settled down in
the state of Baroda, which was ruled at that time by the very progressive Maharaja
Sayaji Rao Gaekwar, who did so much to raise it to one of the most modern and
advanced states in India.
Maulabakhsh
took his son-in-law into his household, his Khandan.
This
closely-knit family unit grew in importance as the time went by and played a
considerable part in the development of cultural, especially musical, life in
Baroda.
The
prominent position of the Maulabakhshi Khandan brought its members outside the
narrower Muslim circle and in close contact with leading Brahmin and Parsi
families, a circumstance which has strongly influenced Inayat Khan’s
intellectual growth and way of thinking. All written and oral accounts agree
that even as a child Inayat had a striking personality, and that various traits
seemed to foretell the subsequent course of his development. Extremely lively
and bright, his intelligence readily absorbed whatever sufficiently interested
him, and he was continually inquiring about God, the nature of things, and
points of morality and behaviour. And being a scion of the Maulabakhshi Khandan
it is not surprising that already at an early age he showed a remarkable
proficiency in music.
When
nine years old he sang a famous Sanskrit hymn at a court ceremony, which
brought him reward from the Maharaja and a scholarship. At fourteen he
published his first book on music, called
Balasan Gitmala and written in Hindustani.
He
started teaching music with so much success that before he was twenty he was
made a full professor at Gayanshala, the academy of music founded by his
grandfather in 1886, now the Baroda University Faculty of Music.
It
was, in a way, his musical achievements which helped to awaken and widen Inayat
Khan’s spiritual interest; this interest was closely linked to his love for
beauty in art and music, for in his world cultural and spiritual pursuit went
hand in hand.
Meher
Bakhsh, his cousin, writes in his hitherto unpublished biography: His parents
wondered at times what could be the matter with the child.
Very
often, in the midst of great activity or excitement among his relatives and
friends, Inayat would be very quiet, and he would seem above all things around
him.
More
and more, as he grew up, his search for truth became conscious and consistent.
But before he would find the true purpose of his life, Inayat Khan had still to pass some difficult and sad years.
In
1896 Maulabakhsh died, leaving above all in Inayat’s life a void which none
could fill.
Then
the sudden death in 1900 of his ten years younger brother Karemat Khan made a
deep impression on him, and two years later he lost his mother to whom he was
devoted.
It
was after this last bereavement that Inayat Khan, then aged twenty, started on
his first independent journey, leading him to Madras and Mysore, where he won
renown in the same places where his grandfather had reaped fame and success.
He
returned to Baroda for about one year, during which he published an anthology
of his poems in different Indian languages under the title Sayaji Garbavali; but soon it became clear that another scene was needed for his
development and his activities. Steeped as he was in the Maula- bakhshi music
and musical concepts, he felt the urge to carry them to Hyderabad, the
principal remaining centre of Moghul tradition and culture at the time.
It is probable, however, that he was
also aware of the great spiritual experiences that awaited him there. The first
six months were spent in musical activity and in making acquaintances and
friends; Inayat Khan also wrote at that time his final book on music, the Mincar-i Musicar, by which he made his
grand- father’s musical system available to Urdu readers.
He
was then introduced at the court of the Nizam, H.E.H. Mahbub Ali Khan, who was
very mystically inclined himself and who sensed at once that the musical talent
shown by this young man was but an outer garb covering some wonderful secret.
When
by his questions he sought to fathom it Inayat Khan gave the impressive reply
which Meher Bakhsh mentions in his biography.
’Huzur,’
said Inayat, ’as sound is the highest source of manifestation it is mysterious in itself; and whoever has the knowledge of sound,
he indeed knows the secret of the universe. My music is my thought, and my
thought is my emotion.
The
deeper I dive into the ocean of feeling, the more beautiful are the pearls I
bring forth in the form of melodies. Thus my music creates feeling within me
before others feel it. My music is my religion, and therefore wordly success
can never be a fit price for it; my sole object is to achieve
perfection....
What
I have brought you is not only music merely to entertain, but the appeal of
harmony which unites souls in God.’
The
musician had already grown into the Sufi Pir, and yet he had still to find his
Murshid; his esoteric training was yet to begin!
Although
Inayat Khan had by now received much recognition throughout the whole of India,
his attention and interest were more and more drawn towards the spiritual life,
towards the mysticism so intimately connected with his music.
He
found a great friend and guide in Maulana Hashimi, a well-known scholar, who
taught him Persian and Arabic literature and, being a mystic himself,
recognized in Inayat what other friends of his were at a loss to understand.
As
Meher Bakhsh says, ’Hashimi knew that something was being prepared in Inayat
for the years that were in store for him which was beyond words or
imagination.’ It was in Hashimi’s house that Inayat Khan met his Murshid, by
whose help he was to reach the fulfilment of his stay in Hyderabad. Syed
Mohammad Hashim Madani was like Maulana Hashimi and many other leading
Hyderabadi Muslims of Arabic descent, but he was a Pir of the specifically
Indian Chishtia order of Sufis.
For
four years, until his Murshid’s death in 1908, Inayat Khan remained in
Hyderabad as his enraptured disciple, apart from occasional visits to Baroda.
Some
of the poems he composed and sang in honour of his Murshid have been preserved.
Years
later Hazrat Inayat was to devote many of his most beautiful teachings to the
relationship between Murshid and Mureed, and these reflect his recollection of
the profound joy and exaltation he himself had found in this relationship.
The
great process of the spiritual life, that of Fanà and
Bagà which are the Sufi terms for annihilation and resurrection, of losing the
ego and discovering the essence of being, was now becoming a reality to Inayat
Khan.
Inayat
Khan’s remaining years in India were again marked by extensive travels, during which
he went to Ceylon, and from there to Rangoon.
He
and his brothers then went to Calcutta where, apart from a short visit to
Baroda rendered necessary by his father’s death, they stayed until their
departure for the West. This period was the culmination of his life in India;
his music and his mysticism were jointly maturing to a rare perfection.
But
soon his life took another decisive turn; the Western world was to be the scene
of his future work.
Thus
we return to the time so vividly described by Hazrat Inayat in the passage
quoted above. Going from one extreme to another, Inayat travelled from feudal
India straight to the modern world of the United States.
He
was accompanied by his five year younger brother Maheboob Khan and his cousin
and life-long companion Mohammad Ali Khan, both of whom had given up their
promising musical careers in order to remain close to Inayat Khan, whom they
considered not only as their brother but as their master on the spiritual path.
Later
they were joined by their younger brother Musharaff’Khan, six months after they
had arrived in the United States.
In
1912 Inayat Khan and his brothers left the New World and traveled extensively
through Europe, where they were well received, especially in France and Russia.
On
their return from the latter country they first settled in France, but left for
London in 1914 where they were to remain until 1920.
During
the initial period of his stay in the West, Hazrat Inayat Khan’s main
occupation was, according to his memoirs, to study the psychology and the
general conditions there.
With
his brothers he gave concerts of Indian music, on which he also gave many
lectures. Apart from a livelihood, this provided him with an opportunity of
developing the spiritual side of his subject and thus the esoteric teachings of
Sufi mysticism.
In
the course of time he initiated a number of Mureeds here and there, but it was
in England that the first systematic forms were given to the extending
activities.
By
then Sufis were scattered throughout several widely separated countries, and
Inayat Khan felt that in order to weld them closer together he should use his
enforced long stay at one place during the war period to develop a more regular
pattern.
Thus
the Sufi Order came into being as an organized entity, comprising a Khanka or
headquarters and National Societies for the different countries.
Its
activities consisted in the training of the Mureeds, the Sufi initiates, while
concerts and other public activities took place and lectures about Sufism as an
universal ideal were given as well as courses for candidates. In 1920 Hazrat
Inayat Khan moved his family (in 1912 he had married Miss Ora Ray Baker, later
Amina Begum, who bore him four children) again to France. Though it was his
intention to settle eventually in Geneva, where he wished to establish the
headquarters of the expanding Sufi Movement, his family preferred to remain
living near Paris rather than moving to Switzerland.
Consequently
the Sufi Headquarters were organized at Geneva, from whence all Sufi affairs
are conducted, while Inayat Khan’s private residence remained at Suresness, on
the outskirts of Paris.
As
his fame and obligations increased, the extent and frequency of Inayat Khan’s
travels throughout Europe and the United States grew in proportion; it was only
during the summer months that he could return to his residence for any length
of time.
At
first this was intended to be a period of retirement and quiet meditation, but
soon the fact of his being available and comparatively free drew to his home a
number of Mureeds. Hazrat Inayat Khan lectured to them, instructed them
individually, and was at all times ready for everyone seeking his help or the
comfort of his presence.
Thus
out of original retirement grew the Summer School, soon the busiest and most
popular of Sufi activities, and the focal point of Hazrat Inayat’s Sufi
teaching.
The
greater part of his later discourses were delivered at the Summer School held
regularly from 1921 to 1926, the first year at Wissous, near Paris, then in
1922 at Katwijk, Holland, and subsequently at Suresness.
This
period marks the culmination of’ his activities.
The
concentration and unsparing intensity with which he developed his work in
different fields seemed unlimited. It was not in the least exceptional for him
to lecture, on different subjects, three times a day; in addition every free
moment was devoted to receiving, advising, and helping Mureeds individually,
and to directing the Sufi organizations and their varied activities.
After
the closing of what was to be the last Summer School under his guidance, Hazrat
Inayat Khan left for India in October 1926, accompanied only by his secretary,
and arrived at Delhi in the first days of November.
His
fame had already preceded him, and he was continually urged to lecture and to
give instruction. Early in 1927 he went once more to Ajmer, to revisit there
the most celebrated of Indian Sufi shrines, the tomb of Khwaja Moin-ud-Din
Chishti, and again he experienced a deep joy in the marvellous serenity and the
sacred Suma music of’ this holy place.
It
was the fatal cold he contracted on this journey which caused his death on the
5th February 1927 at Tilak Lodge,
Delhi, where he was staying.
Although
his own Murshid and initiator belonged to the Chishtia Order of Sufis, Hazrat
Inayat Khan cannot, strictly speaking, be considered as a link between Chishtia
teaching and the West, for neither his origin nor his education, culture, or
esoteric training should obscure the fact that the essence of the Sufism he
taught is the product of his individual achievement and originality. But
for his personal genius, his inspiration, and his awareness of being entrusted
with a divine message, the attempt of grafting the spirituality of the mystic
on modern life would have failed at its inception.
Having
fully achieved what he himself called ’to make an empty cup of oneself’, he
became the perfect vessel for God’s message; he was able to deliver this
message because his faith was so great that it turned into knowledge, and
because in him there was nothing left that could obstruct the flow of the
divine inspiration.
After
some years the external form of the Sufi Order underwent a marked modification.
At first its activities were intended to cover a great many fields, both
artistic and intellectual; but later the religious aspect of the Sufi message,
the Universal Worship, gained more and more in importance.
This
was mainly due to two reasons. In the first place it was found that for many
members the religious approach proved the most appealing and instructive, but
an even more significant reason was the condition of religion in the West
itself, where most religious communities claim that their way to salvation,
redemption, or spiritual bliss, is the only valid one.
This
must have struck Hazrat Inayat Khan, steeped as he was in the universalism of
the mystic, as the most unfortunate feature of religious life in the West; and
it is this attitude and religious outlook, so common in Western man, which in
many ways is responsible for the increasing stress on religious universalism
in the Sufi Movement, so that the Universal Worship has now grown into its best-known aspect.
The
original name of Sufi Order remained attached to the esoteric activity of the
Sufi Movement.
The
Sufi Movement is directed by a body called International Headquarters, formally
established and incorporated in Geneva in 1923.
Hazrat
Inayat Khan has himself drafted, with great care, the principles which he
wished to see incorporated in the constitution of the Sufi Movement.
While
giving in his Sufi message a method by which the inner life could be developed,
Hazrat Inayat Khan never aimed at constructing a hard-and-fast system.
The
Sufism he taught is essentially an attunement rather than a doctrine, an
inspiration rather than a course.
The
realization of the divine life by a mystic can never be put into words.
Belonging
to a lesser dimension our words are inadequate.
In
trying all the same to convey by these imperfect means something of his
knowledge and experience, the mystic therefore uses those words, concepts, or
explanations which are most suitable in the specific circumstances, even if
they might seem mutually irreconcilable.
Inayat
Khan himself declared that ’contradiction is the music of the message’.
He
took great care not to let the Sufi message harden into another system, in
addition to and apart from all others.
Sufism
does not require acceptance of specific beliefs or concepts; neither does it
define rules or principles regarding behavior, mode of life, or ideals,
applicable to all cases and circumstances.
The
Sufi message aims at providing all those who seek the spiritual life and who
try to understand the mystic’s realization of unity, each along his individual
road, with that enrichment and profound sense of fulfillment which enlighten
the journey towards life’s ultimate joy.