About the Book This is the most accessible work in English on the greatest mystical poet of Islam, providing a survey of the basic Sufi and Islamic doctrines concerning God and the world, the role of man in the cosmos, the need for religion, man's ultimate becoming, the states and stations of the mystical ascent to God, and the means whereby literature employs symbols to express "unseen" realities. William Chittick translates into English for the first time certain aspects of Rumi's work. He selects and rearranges Rumi's poetry and prose in order to leave aside unnecessary complications characteristic of other English translations and to present Rumi's ideas in an orderly fashion, yet in his own words. Thorough, nontechnical introductions to each chapter, and selections that gradually present a greater variety of terms and images, make this work easily accessible to those interested in the spirituality of any tradition.
"I consider this work to be of great importance in the field of Islamics in particular and of the humanities in general. It is superbly conceived and guides the reader through the theory, practice, and mystical realization of Rumi's thinking.... I can think of no better way for a Westerner, and nowadays for a Westernized Muslim, to get to know the deeper aspects of the Islamic faith than through a work such as this. As far as I am aware of, it is the first work of its kind, providing the reader with a complete exposition of Rumi's fundamental notions through Rumi's own words. No one else has done this with the thoroughness and meticulousness shown by Chit tick."-Victor Danner, Indiana University.
Introduction Jalal al-Din Rūmī was born in Balkh in present-day Afghanistan in the year A.H. 604/A.D. 1207. His father, Baha' Walad, was a well known preacher, jurisprudent, and Sufi who traced his spiritual lineage to Aḥmad Ghazzālī, brother of the more famous Muhammad Ghazzālī and master of such well-known Sufis as 'Ayn al-Quḍāt Hamadānī. As both a jurisprudent and a Sufi, Baha' Walad was an authority in the exoteric sciences related to the Shari'ah or Divine Law and the esoteric sciences related to the Tariqah or Spiritual Path. In the former capacity he guided ordinary Moslems in their religious duties and in the latter he led a select group of disciples on the way of self-purification and spiritual perfection.
Book's Contents and Sample Pages