Shams Tabrizi Pdf
By Shams Tabrizi and Mehrdad Soltanzadeh. Kindle Edition. Read this and over 1 million books with Kindle Unlimited. $2.99 $ 2 99 to buy. Get it TODAY, Jan 28. Divan-e Shams Tabrizi or Divan-e Kabir. Most of the eBooks and Rumi related Articles listed in this post are in Adobe Acrobat (PDF) format. Shams of Tabriz’s 40 Rules of Love. Is it available in pdf? Can any 1 give me book? Shams is a very interesting personality. Shams Tabrizi - Wikiquote. Intellect takes you to the door, but it doesn't take you into the house. Shams- e- Tabr. Shams lived together with Rumi in Konya, in.
Bowl of Reflections, early 13th century.. According to, a devotee and intimate friend of Rumi who spent forty days with him, Shams was the son of the Imam Ala al-Din. In a work entitled Manāqib al-‘arifīn ( Eulogies of the Gnostics), Aflaki names a certain ‘Ali as the father of Shams-i Tabrīzī and his grandfather as Malikdad. Apparently basing his calculations on 's Maqālāt ( Conversations), Aflaki suggests that Shams arrived in Konya at the age of sixty years. However, various scholars have questioned Aflaki’s reliability. Shams received his education in and was a disciple of Baba Kamal al-Din Jumdi.
Before meeting Rumi, he apparently traveled from place to place weaving baskets and selling girdles for a living. Despite his occupation as a weaver, Shams received the epithet of “the embroiderer” ( zarduz) in various biographical accounts including that of the Persian historian Dawlatshah. This however, is not the occupation listed by in the Maqālat and was rather the epithet given to the, who worked as an embroiderer while living in anonymity in Tabriz. The transference of the epithet to the biography of Rumi’s mentor suggests that this Imam’s biography must have been known to Shams-i Tabrīzī’s biographers.
The specificities of how this transference occurred, however, are not yet known. Shams’ first encounter with Rumi [ ] On 15 November 1244, a man in a black suit from head to toe came to the famous inn of Sugar Merchants of. His name was Shams Tabrizi. He was claiming to be a travelling merchant. Download Software Lotto Italiano Estrazioni. As it was said in 's book, 'Makalat', he was looking for something which he was going to find in. Eventually he found Rumi riding a horse. One day was reading next to a large stack of books.
Shams Tabriz, passing by, asked him, 'What are you doing?' Rumi scoffingly replied, 'Something you cannot understand.' (This is knowledge that cannot be understood by the unlearned.) On hearing this, Shams threw the stack of books into a nearby pool of water. Rumi hastily rescued the books and to his surprise they were all dry. Rumi then asked Shams, 'What is this?' To which Shams replied, 'Mowlana, this is what you cannot understand.'
(This is knowledge that cannot be understood by the learned.) A second version of the tale has Shams passing by who again is reading a book. Regards him as an uneducated stranger.
Shams asks Rumi what he is doing, to which Rumi replies, 'Something that you do not understand!' At that moment, the books suddenly catch fire and Rumi asks Shams to explain what happened. His reply was, 'Something you do not understand.' Another version of the first encounter is this: In the marketplace of Konya, amid the cotton stalls, sugar vendors, and vegetable stands, Rumi rode through the street, surrounded by his students. Shams caught hold of the reins of his donkey and rudely challenged the master with two questions.
“Who was the greater mystic, Bayazid [a Sufi saint] or Muhammad?” Shams demanded. 'What a strange question! Muhammad is greater than all the saints,' Rumi replied. 'So, why is it then that Muhammad said to God, ‘I didn’t know you as I should have,’ while Bayazid proclaimed, ‘Glory be to me!
How exalted is my Glory! [that is, he claimed the station of God himself]?' Rumi explained that Muhammad was the greater of the two, because Bayazid could be filled to capacity by a single experience of divine blessings.