Monday, July 3, 2017

Sarmad Kashani: The Mad Sufi Martyr


My grandfather used to tell me Sarmad's tale as a cautionary note against challenging orthodoxy and patriarchy. He had correctly guessed that I possessed germs of rebellion-- and thought by recounting the cautionary tale of  Sufi who lives his life defying the social norms and then paid the ultimate price with his head--he could dissuade me instead I became fascinated with Sufi rebels and religious iconoclasts----- and there is no figure more iconoclastic than that of Sarmad. 

Much later I came across the Sadeqain's Sarmad Sar Be Kaaf series and was converted to the cult of Sarmad which had such luminaries as Iqbal and Abdul Kalam Azad among its ranks. 


Among recurring motifs in Sadequain's work is the image of a headless man holding his lopped head in his hand, studying itself.

In another variation of this motif, the severed head is looking back at the vacant spot, while the brush is drawing the self-portrait of the head in blood. In death looking at Life. 

This dislodged head was of Sarmad Kashini; martyred at the orders of Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb. It survived history's amnesia by turning its owner into a fountainhead of stories and myths
Sarmad was a Sufi, and he was murdered in a mosque by order of the Muslim king for heresy and accused of being an apostate.


Sarmad’s story and his eventual martyrdom reflect his rebellion against the tyranny using religion to legitimize itself.


His stature as a poet is often mentioned along with Ferdosi, Nizami, Saadi, Hafez, Jami and Omar Khayyam. Yet we know so little of this great Armenian who became a Sufi saint, a
nd walked stark naked initially in the streets of Lahore, and then moved to Delhi, where he taunted emperor Aurangzeb for his “murderous acts in the name of religion.”



The great mosque in Delhi, Jama Masjid, where Sarmad was killed, is still standing, a monument to this great man. He was killed in a very inhumane way: just his head was cut off. His head rolled down the steps of the Jama mosque.


Some Sufis run around naked and break the rules of shariah,as a means to rebel against the strict rules and dogmas of ulama. Most of these Sufis are known as the “Malamatiyas” or the blameworthy who discard shariah laws and show their own liberalized way of achieving union with God.For them, love was the ultimate means of achieving this.


Perhaps, Sarmad is the most famous Malamatiya Sufi saint of his time.


Who was Sarmad?


Very little is known about his early life. Some say that he was an Armenian while some claim that he was a Jew who later converted to Islam.We know that he dwelled in an open space just next to where today stands the Badshahi Mosque. 

Many years later the great Ustad Daman was to also live there, and often, in a lighter mood, would claim that he slept where Sarmad used to sleep.


According to the eminent Persian scholar and historian Henry George Keene: “Sarmad was the poetical name of an Armenian merchant who came to India in the reign of the Emperor Shah Jehan. In one of his journeys towards Thatta, he fell so passionately in love with a Hindu boy that he became ‘distracted and would go about the stress naked’.


A LOVER:
At Thatta in a musical concert, Sarmad happened to see the youthful Abhay Chand, who was the son of a rich Hindu trader. It was love at first sight for Sarmad and Abhay. Abhay Chand’s melodious voice that he rendered at a ghazal pierced the tender heart of Sarmad so much that he never recovered from the feeling of love. Sarmad began to attend the concert daily not caring that the ship on which he came had sailed away.

Abhay Chand also responded to his love with equal devotion and soon, the two began to live together at Sarmad’s place. Soon gossips started to abound in Thatta about the two men living in unnatural conditions. When this gossips spread, Abhay Chand’s parents took him away and confined him in his house.


The pain of separation was too much for Sarmad who tore of his clothes and began to roam the streets of Thatta in a state of frenzy seeking his beloved Abhay Chand. Following the incident, he was to live in a state of total nudity for the rest of his life.
Sadeqain; Sar Be Kaaf series





Meanwhile, Abhay Chand’s conditions were no better and at last, his parents gave in to their sons wish and let him reunite with Sarmad. But they were ostracized by the people of Thatta and so they moved to Lahore. Here they stayed for 13 years where Sarmad composed some of his most moving verses on love and God. 


Abhay Chand would sing these verses in his melodious voice and Sarmad would break into a dance of ecstasy. For Sarmad, his love for Abhay Chand was a means to realize God, for Sarmad believed that God manifested in all his living beings and so he could not be separated from his beloved. Sarmad’s search for God in all of his creations blurred the lines of caste and creeds drawn by the society. This he clearly explains in this beautiful verse:

Who is the lover, beloved, idol and idol-maker but You?
Who is the beloved of the Kaaba, the temple and the mosque?
Come to the garden and see the unity in the array of colours.
In all of this, who is the lover, the beloved, the flower and the thorn?


From Lahore, the couple migrated to Golcunda in South from where, after a few years, they migrated to Agra in the North. In 1657, they came to Delhi and settled down at the Dargah of Khwaja Harey Bharey. Here Sarmad began to have a large following and the whole city of Shahjahanabad would move at his single instruction.


Sarmad was anti-orthodoxy and taunted the Mullahs.

It was him who said:
                     ‘In the shadow of great mosques does evil prosper.’

Homosexuality is prevalent in Sufi poetry; I would leave the matter of its legality to God and not make windows into souls of men but Attar believed that taboo love breaks the folds of the ego and can free the bird of soul inside. 



DARA SHIKOH & SARMAD:
People flocked round Sarmad and many found him to be a man of great sanctity and supernatural powers.  Darashokoh was a polymath and an occultist who liked mad saints. 
It was Dara Shikoh who brought the miraculous powers of Sarmad to the notice of his father, Emperor Shah Jehan. The occultist prnce and the mad fakeer discussed jewish kabblaha nd mysteries of hindu scriptures which Dara was translating and Sarmad had studied.

The following letter which Prince Dara Shikoh had addressed to Sarmad shows the high regard the royal pupil had for his saintly master:


"My Pir and Preceptor, Everyday I resolve to pay my respects to you. It remains unaccomplished. If I be I, wherefore is my intention of no account? If I be not, what is my fault? Though the murder of Imam Hussein was the will of God: Who is (then) Yazid between (them). If it is not the Divine Will, then what is the meaning of “God does whatever He wills and commands whatever He intends”? The most excellent Prophet used to go to fight the unbelievers, defeat was inflicted on the army of Islam. The exoteric scholars say it was an education in resignation. For the Perfect what education was necessary?"


Sarmad’s reply to the above epistle consisted of two lines, in verse, which when translated says:


My dear Prince, What we have read, we have forgotten
 Save the discourse of the friend which we reiterate.


MARTYR;

In the beginning of the reign of Aurangzeb, he was put to death outside the Jamia Masjid Delhi on account of his disobeying the orders of that emperor, who had commanded him not to go about naked. This event took place in the year 1661. 

After Dara was martyred as an apostate ( and the course of Indian history changed forever)  and Aurangzeb usurped the throne, he set about killing all of Dara’s close associates and soon, then his attention turned towards Sarmad. Sarmad’s popularity disturbed him and he feared Sarmad might someday incite the people to rebel against him.


When Aurangzeb had usurped the throne, he taunted Sarmad about the succession of his favorite disciple, Dara Shikoh, to the throne, which he had promised him.

Sarmad calmly replied: “God has given him eternal sovereignty and my promise is not falsified.” 


Once as Aurangzeb went to Jama Masjid to offer Friday pray
ers, he spotted Sarmad sitting nude in the street. When he rebuked Sarmad for violating shariah by being naked, Sarmad asked him to cover him with a blanket lying nearby. 

When Aurangzeb picked up the blanket, the story goes that the heads of all he had killed during his ascent to the throne rolled out of it. 

To this, Sarmad told the emperor, “Should I hide your sins or my nakedness?” 

Sarmad’s fearless attitude was too much for Aurangzeb who soon called on his chief Qazi, Mullah Qawi, and plotted to do away with Sarmad.

Sarmad was dragged to the Qazi’s court where he was accused of defying the shariah by living naked. Sarmad had befitting replies to all of the Qazi’s accusations, and this frustrated him even more. 


To make him relent, the Qazi had Abhay Chand flogged in front of Sarmad. The whip lashed Abhay Chand’s body, but miraculously, the pain was inflicted on Sarmad.

 Sarmad cried out, “GOD who does not let me see my beloved is like an iron cage that smothers the spirit and bruises the heart.”

For the Qazi, Islam was a set of stern and inflexible laws.
For Sarmad, it was nothing but a message of love, he was accused of denying the Prophet’s miraj, as Sarmad had written:

The mullah6 says that Ahmad went to the heavens;
Sarmad says the heavens were inside Ahmad.


This, however, was ruled ambiguous, and therefore insufficient. 


The charge that stuck was that he was an atheist, since he said only “La ilaha” (There is no god) without completing the traditional phrase with “illa’llah” (except God). 

The Qazi demanded that Sarmad recite the kalimah shahada (acceptance of oneness of God), which “La Ilaha Illallah, Muhammad-ur Rasul Allah” (there is no God but Allah, and Muhammad SWT is the messenger of Allah), in order to prove that he was a true Muslim.

He answered:

Presently I am drowned in negation;
I have not yet attained the station of affirmation.
If I said the whole phrase in this state,
I would be telling a lie.


This the judges considered blasphemy, and thus sentenced him to be executed.
Sarmad refused to go beyond “La Ilaha,” which means there is no God, as he had still not found the end of his search for God. This enraged the Qazi who awarded him death sentence. And so Sarmad was dragged through the streets of Delhi and promptly beheaded for being an apostate.



The next day he was taken to the place of execution, near the Jama Masjid, and when he saw the executioner’s gleaming sword, he smiled, lifted his eyes to heaven, and declared:



May I be sacrificed for You.
Come, come, for in whatever guise
You come, I recognize Yo
u.
It is said that when the condemned man was being led away from the tribunal to the place of execution, he uttered, extempore, a long poem of immense beauty, the last lines of which are:



There was an uproar and we opened our eyes from eternal sleep 
Saw that the night of wickedness endured, so we slept again 

Aqil Khan Razi, the court chronicler of Aurangzeb, writes that when the executioner was about to inflict the fatal blow, Sarmad uttered:


The nakedness of the body was the dust of the road to the friend
That too was severed, with the sword, from our head.

According to another popular version Sarmad uttered:

My head was severed from the body by that flirt, who was my companion
The story was shortened, otherwise, the headache would have been too severe


But as the story goes, he emerged victorious in death

Sarmad picked up his severed head much to the fright of his executioners. He started climbing the stairs of the Jama Masjid, while mocking the emperor and his false men of God all the while. This account has been given in many historical books even emperor's own historian.

In death, Sarmad had found God, testifying to the truth of his own understanding of Islam. 

Just as he was about to enter the mosque, a voice called him out from the grave of Harey Bharey and asked him to relent as he had reached the end of his journey and had united with God at last. 

Sarmad turned round and went to Harey Bharey’s tomb. 

There he was buried by the side of Harey Bharey, where they share a common dargah today. And the curse of Sarmad fell on Aurangzeb as the Mughal Empire gradually crumbled in front of his very eyes and all of his sons murdered each other. 


SARMAD"S TOMB;

is Situated in front of the imposing Jama Masjid near the Meena Bazar, the small shrine largely remains unnoticed by many visitors who visit the great mosque daily. The shrine in the vicinity where Sarmad shares his resting with another famous Sufi saint Khwaja Harey Bharey (the evergreen one). Harey Bharey was Sarmad’s preceptor and his tomb was where Sarmad had settled down when he first came to Delhi.


The unique feature of this dargah, which is a dual shrine of Sarmad and Harey Bharey, is the colour of the wall which is green on Harey Bharey’s side and blood red on Sarmad’s side. This is to depict Sarmad’s martyrdom because of which he has been given the title of “Shaheed” (martyr). Red ceramic tiles lined his side of the flooring and red threads hung by his grave’s railings by devotees hoping for their wishes to be granted. Incense sticks and candles continuously burn on the side while qawwali singers vent out numbers in praise of their Pir as the evening sets in.

As I left the shrine of Sarmad Shaheed and reflected on this story, I realized that Sarmad’s homosexuality and rebellion was not the main fact that made him unique---what was unique about him was that he had dared to understand God in his own way against the established norms: he exhibited the intellect God has bestowed upon mankind which is the duty of every believer.

There are a lot of stories of Sarmad about his life --I don′t know whether all the legends are true or not, but they must be: they have to be!

Even truth has to compromise with a man like Sarmad!


I love Sarmad because he died for his beliefs ---because he challenged the hypocrisy and those who kill in the name of Religion---they killed him too but it doesn't matter; because he still lives while nobody visits their graves.


Because he was a true Sufi, who shunned power and glory and embraced nothingness.

Sarmad had made love( of a pagan man) the transformative experience and finally, achieved God through this mean.

Orthodoxy and laws of love be damned!

He had just one message for all of us: God is the only God, there is no one between you and God.

 here is no mediator, God is immediately available. 

Just all that is needed is a little madness and a lot of meditation.


For Sarmad, God manifested in the persona of Abhay Chand.He did not believe in walls of the cast and the demarcation lines between faiths---for him, all roads led to the Almighty.


For us, it can be anybody or anything. If God is love, it is everywhere-- that is the message of Sufism.

Another mad ashiq has written this verse of the holy Qura’an, on a signboard on the outer wall of the shrine.

It read, “And call not those who are slain in the way of Allah ‘dead.’ Nay, they are living, only ye perceive not.” 


I think nothing sums up Sarmad’s life better than this. He still lives on as a messenger of love and finding your own path to God and those who killed him ---they were just merchants of hate, now withering away in pages of history.

Send Fatiha for Sarmad Kashani: the Armenian jew who became a martyr of Sufism and love. 






13 comments:

  1. gOD IS gOD AND THERE IS NO PROPHET! i never thought before clicking link to this blog that i be hearing that!

    Don't know who was true or who was wrong... BUT your last, paragraph, words are TRUE....GOD BLESS YOU

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  2. I salute the boldness of shaheed sarmad.

    Surinder Singh

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  3. I salute the boldness of shaheed sarmad.

    Surinder Singh

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  4. i refuse to belief a real sufi will behave that way...this is shameful
    Everything in this world is following its natural course except for a human being who can be so unpredictable , every action\thoughts be it small changes the timeline. it is complex cannot be imagined by a human brain.

    i just wish we do not became a source for spreading falsehood!

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  5. This is beautiful. I really appreciate this blog. Any idea about what happened to Abhay Chand?

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    Replies
    1. None actually, i guess he just disappeared into the wind.

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  6. God is love,this is presesnt in every religion,in every belief system.Yet the same religions that speak of love,is the cause of seperation between people.The contradiction,is the influence of ego,and fear,and the lack of personal investigation/questioning,of the formation of how we came to be our personality,our mindset.In memory of Sarmad,a lover who in love was liberated,was free while being alive.What an achievement..-Phoenix Mort

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  7. Such a well written piece this is. Thank you Sephora :D

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  8. Such a well written piece. Thank you for this Sephora :D

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  9. I have always been fascinated by Sufism.I think this is the only way this strife ridden world can be healed.

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  10. While trying to remember the last few lines Sarmad Shaheed recited just before being martyred I found your page by chance and I feel so blessed and happy to find it. Wasnt he who also said 'parwanay ka soz macchar ko nahi diya jaata' - some people here who are still stuck with dogmas and stigmas would never get the beauty and magnificence of Sarmad's story. i dont even know if you still use this blog page but if you do, do connect with me on instagram at storyteller_sameer

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  11. “There is no fault
    With a mad man
    The fault lies in you –
    Love hasn’t maddened you yet.”

    ReplyDelete