MastanKhan
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Husayn ibn Mansur al-Hallaj
This is the story of Husayn ibn Mansur al-Hallaj who was born in Madina
al-Bayda, a little village in the ancient province of Fars, in southern
Persia, in the year 224 A.H./857 C.E., two years before his Master
al-Junayd, may Allah be pleased with them both.
He grew up in Wasit and in Tustar where the cultivation of cotton was the
main occupation of most of the people. His father was a cotton-carder from
which he gained his name of al-hallaj-one who cards cotton.
Even when he was a young child al-Hallaj felt drawn towards a spiritual
life, and at the age of sixteen he attached himself to the Shaykh Sahl
at-Tustari whom he accompanied when he moved from Tustar to Basra in `Iraq.
He served this Shaykh for two years and then, when he was eighteen years
old, he left him and went to Baghdad.
However, the young Hallaj did not stay long in Baghdad, and soon returned
to Basra where he became a student of `Amr al-Makki. This Shaykh, a
companion of al-Junayd, was a scholar to whom the great Master wrote some
of his well-known Rasa'il.
Al-Hallaj remained with `Amr al-Makki for a period of about eighteen
months, until an estrangement came between them when his Master offered
al-Hallaj his daughter in marriage. He preferred to marry a lady who
remained his only wife, the daughter of another holy person, Ya`qub ibn
Aqta. They had three sons, one of whom was Hamid who recorded much of the
existing information about Hallaj's later life.
As a result of this estrangement with his Shaykh `Amr al-Makki, al-Hallaj
again left Basra and once more travelled to Baghdad, where this time he
went to see al-Junayd and asked his permission to become his student.
Junayd accepted him and became his Guide and Master and the guardian of his
spirit.
As his Guide, al-Junayd came to know everything about al-Hallaj's heart,
which was very sensitive and exactly like that of a child. He knew his soul
and what Allah, Most High, had created in his spirit. He saw that this new
student was a specially ecstatic and passionate (`ashiq) lover with a very
pure Eye, who was completely in love with everything about his Beloved from
Whom he feared to be separated for a moment.
Al-Junayd's Way, as we know, was that of perfect sobriety, in which the
Secret of God's Love had to be deeply contained, and only revealed to
whoever could be trusted to guard It. In accepting al-Hallaj as his
student, he knew that he was committing himself to a difficult
responsibility. But he also knew that Allah, the All-Mighty, the All-Wise,
had created al-Hallaj's spirit just as He had created his own spirit, and
that whatever He Ordered and Willed must come to pass.
In al-Hallaj's case the Secret of the Love seized and intoxicated his
entire being. His longing and yearning for Allah was such that only in his
total destruction by Him could he find the Union which was the sole purpose
and goal of his life. This was the Beauty (al-jamal) and the Majesty
(al-jalal) of his bondsmanship to Allah, and like a great river flowing
from its source to the ocean, nothing could hinder or stop its course.
Al-Junayd, his Master and teacher, counselled al-Hallaj to seek solitude
and silence for himself, but at the same time he knew that his student's
heart was full of yearning to help all the people whom he met, and to whom
his spirit was moved to speak to about the One Beloved and His Love.
Al-Junayd also knew that it was for this reason that al-Hallaj could not
remain in any one place for long. But he was always urged to go here and
there, so that he travelled further and further from his native land, his
outward journeys inspired by his inward searching and walking with his
Beloved.
In all his travels Junayd's spirit never left his holy student, and he was
surrendered to what Allah wanted of him. For he knew that every soul which
He has created is in His Hands, and he whom He has chosen for Himself does
not choose for himself, but it is Allah, through the heart of His slave,
Who chooses for him.
Al-Hallaj, may Allah be pleased with him, while he was still a youth said,
"And already love had engraved Him in my heart with its red-hot iron of
desire-what a branding!"
Husayn ibn Mansur al-Hallaj
This is the story of Husayn ibn Mansur al-Hallaj who was born in Madina
al-Bayda, a little village in the ancient province of Fars, in southern
Persia, in the year 224 A.H./857 C.E., two years before his Master
al-Junayd, may Allah be pleased with them both.
He grew up in Wasit and in Tustar where the cultivation of cotton was the
main occupation of most of the people. His father was a cotton-carder from
which he gained his name of al-hallaj-one who cards cotton.
Even when he was a young child al-Hallaj felt drawn towards a spiritual
life, and at the age of sixteen he attached himself to the Shaykh Sahl
at-Tustari whom he accompanied when he moved from Tustar to Basra in `Iraq.
He served this Shaykh for two years and then, when he was eighteen years
old, he left him and went to Baghdad.
However, the young Hallaj did not stay long in Baghdad, and soon returned
to Basra where he became a student of `Amr al-Makki. This Shaykh, a
companion of al-Junayd, was a scholar to whom the great Master wrote some
of his well-known Rasa'il.
Al-Hallaj remained with `Amr al-Makki for a period of about eighteen
months, until an estrangement came between them when his Master offered
al-Hallaj his daughter in marriage. He preferred to marry a lady who
remained his only wife, the daughter of another holy person, Ya`qub ibn
Aqta. They had three sons, one of whom was Hamid who recorded much of the
existing information about Hallaj's later life.
As a result of this estrangement with his Shaykh `Amr al-Makki, al-Hallaj
again left Basra and once more travelled to Baghdad, where this time he
went to see al-Junayd and asked his permission to become his student.
Junayd accepted him and became his Guide and Master and the guardian of his
spirit.
As his Guide, al-Junayd came to know everything about al-Hallaj's heart,
which was very sensitive and exactly like that of a child. He knew his soul
and what Allah, Most High, had created in his spirit. He saw that this new
student was a specially ecstatic and passionate (`ashiq) lover with a very
pure Eye, who was completely in love with everything about his Beloved from
Whom he feared to be separated for a moment.
Al-Junayd's Way, as we know, was that of perfect sobriety, in which the
Secret of God's Love had to be deeply contained, and only revealed to
whoever could be trusted to guard It. In accepting al-Hallaj as his
student, he knew that he was committing himself to a difficult
responsibility. But he also knew that Allah, the All-Mighty, the All-Wise,
had created al-Hallaj's spirit just as He had created his own spirit, and
that whatever He Ordered and Willed must come to pass.
In al-Hallaj's case the Secret of the Love seized and intoxicated his
entire being. His longing and yearning for Allah was such that only in his
total destruction by Him could he find the Union which was the sole purpose
and goal of his life. This was the Beauty (al-jamal) and the Majesty
(al-jalal) of his bondsmanship to Allah, and like a great river flowing
from its source to the ocean, nothing could hinder or stop its course.
Al-Junayd, his Master and teacher, counselled al-Hallaj to seek solitude
and silence for himself, but at the same time he knew that his student's
heart was full of yearning to help all the people whom he met, and to whom
his spirit was moved to speak to about the One Beloved and His Love.
Al-Junayd also knew that it was for this reason that al-Hallaj could not
remain in any one place for long. But he was always urged to go here and
there, so that he travelled further and further from his native land, his
outward journeys inspired by his inward searching and walking with his
Beloved.
In all his travels Junayd's spirit never left his holy student, and he was
surrendered to what Allah wanted of him. For he knew that every soul which
He has created is in His Hands, and he whom He has chosen for Himself does
not choose for himself, but it is Allah, through the heart of His slave,
Who chooses for him.
Al-Hallaj, may Allah be pleased with him, while he was still a youth said,
"And already love had engraved Him in my heart with its red-hot iron of
desire-what a branding!"
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