Wintertime: The Season of the Believer 

Destur Medat Sheykh Lokman Efendi HZ

As I am writing this, snow is falling outside my window in large cotton wool clumps, slowly covering the streets and the cars, and weighing down pine tree branches with layer upon layer of pure white. Upstate New York still feels like a foreign place for me, a transplanted Californian, who now calls the Dergah and this way home, more than any specific state or country. I’ve been here a little over a year and a half and been through one winter, which was long, but relatively painless except for one freak snowstorm in May that left us without power or heat for a couple of days. Sheykh Lokman Efendi HZ said it was good practice for hard times that may come when we least expect it, and I echoed that to myself, as I worried about when the house would be warm again. With our Sheykh’s himmet, it wasn’t long before the wires were all repaired and summer finally showed up fashionably late, yet beautiful.   

Where I come from, it doesn’t snow, except very lightly in some eastern mountains, about an hour outside of the city. In fact, the region is (like all of Southern California) a desert, though the people who settled and developed it would have you believe otherwise. They transformed it into a “Mediterranean” paradise on earth; a place that has come to signify wealth, beauty, gratuity, and desire. They did the landscaping to match all that: palm trees, luxurious flowering plants, exotic tropicals, and lots of green grass, all impostors sucking up the scarce imported water to maintain an elaborate mirage. As a person who has worked with plants for years and always loved them, this constructed “Eden” had its benefits, however like all fake and contrived things, the image cracks up close. It turns out that all those exotic species need even more water to thrive in a desert environment and this particular desert is prone to catching fire on a regular basis. This forces the inhabitants to rebuild the mirage, which they do vigorously, while also never learning their lesson: that you can’t make a lasting paradise on earth to suit your whims, there’s larger divine laws ruling over mankind’s eager construction. Perhaps one of the most poignant realizations I had living there was that some plants actually need to freeze, to thrive. The fake desert paradise couldn’t even live up to its own hype, some things just simply wouldn’t grow there despite all their claims to the contrary. Yes friends, the cold is like a secret key to some of the most beautiful trees and bountiful crops that cover our tables in the height of summer; no buds set to make flowers and then form fruit without a biting cold that puts all warmth in its grave.     

Sheyhk Efendi always reminds us that the cold and snow bring their own gifts to the believer. Just as we revel in the spring and summer and the visible, dramatic color changes of fall, the winter is something we must come to value as an opportunity to make teffekur. He tells us it is a mercy that humans are compelled to cover themselves in the cold. It’s a simple and natural way to run away from sin: from showing too much and seeing too much in these times when the entire world seems to want to flaunt all of their secrets. Everyone happily wears a burka when it’s 10 below zero. It’s a time to stay inside and not be busy with the outside world and the traps of dunya more than what is absolutely necessary. The cold has a way of ordering your priorities and reminding you of your smallness and weakness, two things which are essential to the perspective of a believer. The warmth of anger, of ego and nafs are not enough to survive a snowstorm and the freezing wind laughs at your stubbornness. The cold demands you break your addiction to control and false power; that you admit your own vulnerability and dependence upon Allah SWT for every facet of your existence and comfort.  

Sheykh Efendi also tells how Sahib el- Seyf (KS) used to say the snow is the shroud that covers the earth: an icy keffin reminding us to reflect on death, to slow down, to contemplate by the wood stove, or the tea kettle, the impermanence of our mortal lives and the certainty of their end. How beyond this great sign is Allah SWT’s power to raise everything from that stiff cold into a burst of  rapturous spring. That with this great power, Allah SWT will raise ALL things again. The very absence of green life becomes a reminder of it, of Allah’s promise to raise everyone and everything again on judgment day, so that we might complete the seasons of our journey back to Him SWT. May our graves be gardens upon our deaths and a restful place until that day when there is no shade. May we all be the thinking believers that reflect on such great signs given by our Sheykhs and may their stations be raised higher and higher, amin.   

 

With the blessings and permission of our Sheyhh we end with the dua of the Holy Prophet AS: 

اللَّهُمَّ اغْسِلْ خَطَايَاىَ بِمَاءِ الثَّلْجِ وَالْبَرَدِ، وَنَقِّ قَلْبِي مِنَ الْخَطَايَا، كَمَا يُنَقَّى الثَّوْبُ الأَبْيَضُ مِنَ الدَّنَسِ، وَبَاعِدْ بَيْنِي وَبَيْنَ خَطَايَاىَ كَمَا بَاعَدْتَ بَيْنَ الْمَشْرِقِ وَالْمَغْرِبِ

“O Allah! Wash away my sins with the water of snow and hail, and cleanse my heart from the sins as a white garment is cleansed of filth, and let there be a far away distance between me and my sins as You have set far away the East and the West from each other.”

 

Amin Allahuma Amin, Fatiha

THE SULTAN OF LOVERS

 

As the veiling of Seyyidul Muezzinin, Hz. Bilal al-Habeshi (RA) is approaching, we will try to look closer at his life and exemplary personality. (20, Muharram / 18 August)

As the veiling of Seyyidul Muezzinin, Hz. Bilal al-Habeshi (RA) is approaching, we will try to look closer at his life and exemplary personality. (20, Muharram / 18 August)

Hz. Bilal ibn Rabah (RA), was a slave because he was the son of two prisoners in Mecca, and the child of a prisoner was considered a slave at the time. His parents, on the other hand, were royalty in their native land. He was a prince who had become lost in the Arabian deserts, where the wild inhabitants of Jahiliyya treated him with the ferocity of ignorance. But when the news of Islam arrived, Hz. Bilal’s heart was set on fire, and while he was unable to attend the Holy Prophet’s sohbet, he was moved to tears (AS). The light of faith that surrounds Bilal’s heart, became an endless source of courage for him, so much so that, despite being a slave, he did not hesitate to openly announce his religion despite the suffering, pressure, and persecution imposed by his master and the other disbelievers.

Mevlana Jelaleddin Rumi (KS) is explaining the history, saying, “Hz. Bilal gave up his body to the punishment of thorns and the whips of his master who said, “Why do you remember Ahmad, Ahmad? You wicked slave, you disbelieve in my religion?” And while he was being beaten in the sun with thorns, Hz. Bilal called out with nobility, “Ahad, Ahad!” Finally the cries of Ahad reached the ears of Siddiq al-Akbar, who was passing through the neighborhood. His eyes filled with tears and his heart was troubled, because from that Ahad he smelled the perfume of a Loving Friend of Allah. (He told Hz. Bilal to keep his Islam secret), but the next day he passed the neighborhood again and heard the beatings and heard Ahad, Ahad. Hz. Bilal (said he could not keep his Love for Allah and His Prophet a secret). He said, “If my body becomes full of holes from the torture of thorns, then my spirit and my body are a rosegarden of happiness. My body is exposed to the whipping of my master, but my spirit is in love and flying in the Love of the Wadud. The perfume of my Beloved approaches my soul the Ittar of my Yaar is coming to me.” (This is why) when the Holy Prophet (AS) came back from the Miraj, he said to Bilal, “How dear you are to me, how dear you are!” (Masnavi).

Hz. Bilal who was freed by Hz. Abu Bakr, became the muazzin of Islam, the first one who called ezan. Hz. Abu Hurayra (RA) said, “We were with Rasulallah (AS) when Hz. Bilal stood to call ezan. Holy Prophet (AS), he then fell silent. The Prophet (AS) said, “Whoever says like this, with Yaqin, he will enter Paradise.” (Nasai) However, so many people were against Hz. Bilal. There were people who did not like Hz. Bilal calling ezan. They said that when he said Ashhadhu an-la ilaha il-Allah, he said it with a seen instead of a sheen, that he mispronounced the words. Imam Ahmad Faruq al-Sirhindi al-Rabbani (KS) says about this incident, “Rasulallah (AS) said, “The seen of Bilal, is sheen to Allah.” Therefore, Bilal’s “wrong way” is better than a normal person’s “correct way.”” (Maktubat). It was him who called ezan on top of the Kaaba on the Day of Conquest in order to infuriate the disbelievers.

After the Holy Prophet’s passing, Hz. Bilal could not stay in Madinah out of sadness. So he moved to Damascus. One night, he had a dream that Rasulallah (AS) came to his dream and said, ‘Ya Bilal, you do not visit us anymore?’ And Hz. Bilal ran back to Madinah. He ran. And when he entered Masjid el-Nebevi, Hz. Hasan and Hz. Huseyin were there, and they said, ‘Ya Bilal, please call the Ezan.’ And he knew his heart could not take it, but because they were the beloved grandsons of Rasulallah and they were insisting, he called. And during the time of Rasulallah (AS), when he was not veiled from this world, Hz Bilal he used to point to the Prophet when he would say Ashadu anna Muhammadan Rasulallah. And when he reached this part of the Ezan, and his Beloved was not there, his soul could not handle that pain, and he lost his consciousness. And all the people of Madinah, when they heard that Hz. Bilal was calling the Ezan, they all came out of their houses, they were rushing out, and they were thinking that Prophet had come back.

 

Sultan el-Evliya Sheykh Mevlana Muhammad Nazim Adil el-Hakkani (KS) is describing the last moments of Sayyidina Bilal (RA), saying:

“Sayyidina Bilal- Allah bless him- he was on his deathbed lying and he was so happy and enjoyful, it is difficult to bring a description for his enjoyment and his pleasure! They were asking:

“O Bilal, O Companion of the Seal of Prophets! We are looking that every moment you are approaching to death. What is that- you are so happy!”

“Ohhh”, he was saying, “my friends, how you are saying this and I am today with you, tomorrow I am going to be with My Habib, my beloved one, and his Companions! Today (I am) with you, tomorrow (I will be) with the Friend of Allah, (with the) friends of Allah. I am going to reach to them in Heavens.”

The life of Hz. Bilal (RA) is full of lessons in servanthood and sincerity. His example shows that the Holy Prophet (AS) came to break all of the chains of ignorance and tribalism that were surrounding the Arabs of that time. May we follow the Way of Hz. Bilal and be freed from the slavery of our egos and the ignorance of this world.

Amin!

 

The Past Two Years

 

It’s been a while since I’ve written about my experiences with Osmanli Dergah.  Most people know me through the photos that I have published on my Flickr page – though even that has been put on hiatus over the past two years.

 

With the COVID pandemic came a disruption in everyone’s daily lives and routines – and as a murid living hundreds of miles away from the Osmanli Dergah, I was no exception.

 

For the first year of the pandemic, I do not think I visited the Dergah at all.  It felt imprisoning to be away from my Sheykh, my teacher, my mentor for so long.  I witnessed a decline in my spiritual and mental health and began to see the virus for what it was – a small taste of Divine punishment for the people of the End of Times (Ahir zaman).

 

During the second year of the pandemic, I forged a resolve to make the journey upstate and once again sit in the association of my Sheykh.  Taking every precaution to protect myself, and more importantly, the community members there, I scheduled all the necessary tests and sent my results to the medical staff before heading out.

 

When I arrived, the first thing I noticed was how much I missed the mountain air.  It is difficult to describe but think of the feeling you have when you are finally able to remove your face mask after coming home from a long day of work.  It felt like I was breathing for the first time.  Funny how you take the smallest things for granted until they are removed from you.

 

It was not just the air.  There was something different about the Dergah.  Something that I could not put my finger on, but it did not seem to be the same place.

 

Over the year I made several more trips upstate, and with each one, the feeling grew; this was not the same Dergah that I had been going to since my early twenties – something was different.  The most recent visit that I just returned from was during this past Eid el-Fitr.  It was this visit that helped me understand what changed.

 

Sheykh Lokman Efendi often warns us not to be a robot – not to fall into mindless routines.  It was not the Dergah that had changed – it was my perception of it, more specifically,  the value that I gave to it.

 

Prior to the pandemic, I spent years traveling upstate regularly for all the official zikr events and every major Islamic holiday.  Somewhere along the line I fell into the mindset of viewing these visits as just another routine in my life.  Work was one component of life, family was another, hobbies served their purpose, and the Dergah became its own component.  I visited once a month because that’s just what murids who live close enough are expected to do.

 

Humans tend to take the blessings in their life for granted until they are stripped away.  Covid, with all the pain and suffering it brought, came with a hidden blessing – a silver lining.  It helped me lift the veil I had placed over my eyes.  It helped me see the Dergah for the enormous blessing that it is.

 

Being away from my Sheykh and community for so long forced me to witness and experience all the darkness, corruption, and hopelessness that is rampant in the world.  Only upon returning after a year that I understand the beacon of hope which this community is – a protest against the corruption, and a place where people are free to practice their religion in a manner pleasing to Allah and His Prophet (AS).

 

It all started with the dream of Sheykh Abdul Kerim – and that mantle has been lifted and carried forward beautifully by our Sheykh Lokman Efendi.  Elhamdulilah it took two years to realize, but I now see the Dergah for what it truly is – an Ark like Noah’s to provide safety against the ocean of darkness that this world is drowning in.

Learning new skills

Learning new skills is not something that I would look forward to in the past. As a child I was very introverted, preferring my own company to that of others, even refusing to wear new clothes much to the exasperation of my parents.

 

That would change however thanks to my Sheykh and the Murids at the Osmanli Dergahi. As a young man searching for some purpose I stumbled across the Osmanli Dergahi YouTube channel and fell in love with the teachings. A year later I found myself at the Osmanli Dergahi and my first job was to go to the barn with Haji Bilal, one of the very special Murids of Sahibul Saif and Sheykh Lokman Ef\fendi. I explained to him I didn’t know anything about barn work, I had never worked on a farm, didn’t know what I was doing, and in many ways, was more afraid than the sheep I was caring for them!

 

Haji Bilal just smiled and said “I’ll teach you” and after a few weeks much to my amazement he had taught me so much. He taught me how to feed and water the sheep and how to look out for them. It was a truly amazing experience. Every Prophet was a shepherd and with the blessings of my Sheykh I was following their way. I saw how difficult it was to care and look after a flock and tend to their problems and ailments. At one point a yew rejected her lamb so we had to tend to it and feed it milk multiple times a daily and during the night as well. Despite Haji Bilal’s best efforts, “Strong” as we affectionately named him, didn’t survive; as rejected yews rarely do. But he left an indelible mark on me and I still remember his happy face so many years later.

 

Other things I learnt was how to clean the horse stalls and how to gather eggs whilst moving angry hens away from their protected treasure. One of the harder things I had to do was herd a group of boisterous goats and walk them across from the barn to a field and back again at the end of the day. They were truly a difficult group to manage and would constantly refuse to go the way I wanted them too. They had a mischievous charm about them and on saying good-bye to them one of them headbutted my knee in response.

 

One skill I learnt that I was amazed by was how to not be afraid of dogs. Feeding the dogs was a frightening experience- they were big and energetic and would tangle your legs with their chain if you weren’t careful. Initially they weren’t too friendly but after a couple of days they were so happy to see me and would run tail wagging towards their food.

 

This is just a taste of what is really special about this place. If you apply yourself no matter your experience you will learn new skills and you will get better.

 

Our Sheykh Sahib el-Seyf Sheykh Abdul Kerim Al-Kibrisi ar-Rabbani (KS) says “Where there is movement there is blessing there, where there is love there is mercy there” and this is something we try to incorporate into our daily life at the Dergah.

 

Elhamdulillah, thanks to Sheykh Lokman Efendi and Haji Bilal it was something I experienced when I first visited the Osmanli Dergahi.

Are you my Hussein?

I remember staring blankly ahead, as I passed the cars on the dual carriageway. The trip to Luton, from London, was not a long one, ninety minutes at most.  The time was moderate. But spiritually, mentally, and emotionally, the journey seemed much longer.

My family was excited- for years my children had been brought up hearing the sweet words of our teacher, Sheykh Lokman Efendi Hz, on our wi-fi, tablet, phone and computer. Now for the first time they would see their parents’ teacher, face-to-face. Their mother kept asking them, throughout the journey.

“Are you looking forward to seeing Sheykh Efendi? What are you going to say when you first see Sheykh Efendi?”

I could both hear and feel the love and excitement in their voices. It was the first time, in years, that we as a family were travelling somewhere, outside London. The moment seemed perfect and my family was embracing the feeling- but not me.

Five years previously, I had taken beyat with Sheykh Lokman Efendi Hz. In all those years I could count the number of times I had called the Dergah on one hand. As I was clocking up the miles, the voice in my head kept repeating on a loop, ‘How can you show your face there- the disrespect?!’. I was nervous, scared and ashamed. The progress I had made, since my beyat, was nothing. In fact, I felt I had gone backwards. I remembered the broadcasts I had failed to watch, convincing myself I would catch up with them.

In the few conversations I had with my Sheykh, one instruction was clear- stay in touch. I had not even done that. I now found myself driving to meet the one I had disrespected. The thoughts were so relentless that my family had to keep reminding me that I was speeding.

When we finally got to Luton, I had the chance to meet the other murids from England. I could not enjoy any of the embracing or conversing, because the voice in my mind would not stop. As we walked to the location where Sheykh Efendi would be arriving, my mind felt like it was under water. I could hear voices and sounds but none of it was coherent. My heart was beating faster and I felt hot, but the voice…the voice was still constant…unwavering.

I remember seeing the SUV pull up, into the residential car park. As Sheykh Efendi stepped out, wearing his beautiful purple garment, the voice was close to breaking my mind.

As we all sat in the large white tent, looking up from the ground, our Sheykh looked over us, with warm eyes. He was speaking to those on my left, gradually making his way to me. Some of the mureeds Sheykh Lokman recognised, others gave their names.

Eventually, Sheykh Lokman looked at me, with a neutral expression and then smiled.

 

“Selam Aleykum, Sheykh,” I said nervously.

The voice was now a fire, I felt so ashamed to be there. Not only had I failed my Sheykh, but I had let my health deteriorate as well as fallen into stress with other worldly matters.

“Aleykum Selam…what is your name?” asked Sheykh Efendi, softly.

“Hussein,” Sheykh Efendi paused for a moment.

“Kashmiri?” asked Sheykh Efendi, to which one of the other brothers said I was Turkish and from London. At that moment Sheykh Efendi’s eyes widened and stared at me.

“Are you my Hussein?”

The voice in my head stopped dead. I could not speak, I simply nodded and smiled.

There is no fonder memory I have in my life, then this one. With one question, Sheykh took that fire out of my head. I wish I could write what else was shared, that day, but that would be too difficult for me, ish’Allah, maybe when I’m stronger.

From that moment, I felt a security and a love that I had not felt in a very long time. It’s a feeling that is overwhelming, one that I do not deserve, but Sheykh Efendi still showed me that love…to this day. I will never be able to repay a fraction of that.

Whenever I think of the word ‘love’, that is the memory that comes to mind.