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Poetry
Chaikhana
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About HallajTimeline (9th Century) |
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English version by Original Language |
Your spirit is mingled with mine
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Your spirit is mingled with mine
as wine is mixed with water; whatever touches you touches me. In all the stations of the soul you are I.
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The great Sufi mystic poet, al-Hallaj, was put to death by orthodox religous authorities for poems like this, in which he equated himself with God.
This is the danger faced by most mystics. The sacred experience is one of ecstatic union with the Divine. Where do "you" cease to be, and where does the Divine begin? In mystical union, these questions are artificial since the Divine is everywhere and no tangible sense of you as a separate individual remains. There aren't two in which to have a relationship; there is only the One.
As a result, mystics keep producing ecstatic and dangerous poems like this one and orthodox authorities keep trying to silence or marginalize them.
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Ivan
M. Granger's original poetry, stories and commentaries are Copyright ©
2002 - 2008 by Ivan M. Granger.
All other material is copyrighted by the respective authors, translators and/or
publishers.