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Encyclopedia > Al Hallaj


Al-Hallaj (c. 858 - March 26, 922) was a Persian writer and teacher of Sufism. His full name was Abu al-Mughith al-Husayn ibn Mansur al-Hallaj.


He was born around 858 in Tur, Iran to a wool seller. Al-Hallaj's grandfather may have been a Zoroastrian. His father lived a simple life, and this form of lifestyle greatly interested the young al-Hallaj. As a youngster he memorized the Quran and would often retreat from worldly pursuits to join other mystics in study.


Al-Hallaj would later marry and make a pilgrimage to Mecca. After his trip to the holy city, he traveled extensively and wrote and taught along the way. He travelled as far as India and Central Asia gaining many followers, many of which accompanied him on his second and third trips to Mecca. After this period of travel, he settled down in the Abbasid capital of Baghdad.


Among other Sufis, Al-Hallaj was an anomaly, many sufi masters felt that it was inappropriate to share mysticism with the masses, yet Al-Hallaj openly did so in his writings and through his teachings. He would begin to make enemies, and the rulers saw him as a threat. This was exacerbated by times when he would fall into trances which he attributed to being in the presence of God. During one of these trances, he would utter Ana al-Haqq, meaning "I am the Truth" and also, "In my turban is wrapped nothing but God?" which was taken to mean that he was claiming to be God, as Al-Haqq is one of the Ninety Nine Names of Allah.


This utterance would lead him to a long trial, and subsequent imprisonment for eleven years in a Baghdad jail. In the end, he would be tortured and publicly crucified by the Abbasid rulers for what they deemed as a heresy. Many accounts tell of Al-Hallaj's calm demeanor even while he was being tortured, and indicate that he forgave those who had executed him. He died on March 26, 922.


His writings are very important not only to Sufis, but to all Muslims. Many Thelemites also make use of his teachings, especially in terms of his identification as God _ a central gnostic principle. His example is seen by some as one that should be emulated, especially his calm demeanor in the face of torture and his forgiving of his tormentors. Many honor him as an adept that came to realize the inherent divine nature of all men and women. Others continue to see him as a heretic.


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Al-Hallaj



  Results from FactBites:
 
Week 4: Sufi Saints (927 words)
It is said that on the first night of his imprisonment the gaolers came to his cell but could not find him in the prison.
When Hallaj was first confined there were three hundred souls in the prison.
Hallaj made a sign with his finger, and all their bonds burst asunder.
New Page 1 (4219 words)
It was God’s Love which first led al Hallaj into the Sufi order, with the purpose of developing a fuller spiritual understanding of divine Love, and then out of it again into the world, in order to preach God’s Love to the poor and dispossessed.
Al Hallaj is certainly taking a risk of being misunderstood in putting his point in this way, thus misrepresenting what he truly means.
Al Hallaj admits as much when he says that love is necessarily a secret between two lovers, and implies that this is true of divine Love as well as of human love.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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