Monday, June 10, 2024
Sufi-Shaivite Woman Mystic Lal Ded/Lalla Arifa Who Inspired Rishi-Sufi Saint Shaikh-Ul-Alam
By Ghulam Rasool Dehlvi, New Age Islam
10 June 2024
Shaping the Collective Spiritual Consciousness in Kashmir!
Significantly, it was the Sufi-Shaivite woman mystic—Lalla Arifa—who rendered deep experiences of Shah-e-Hamadan who introduced Sufism to the Valley of Kashmir and greatly influenced her spiritual journey and mystical thoughts, into local poetry in Kashmiri language called, Vakh. The Vakhs of Lalleshwari (Lall’e Vakh) and Sheikh Shruki (The sayings of Sheikh Ul Aalam) unravel limitless devotion, illumination and spiritual ecstasy (wajd) in the search for a deeper personal relationship with the Divine. This rich oral tradition of Divine Union (wisal-e-ilahi) birthed by Shah-e-Hamadan and imbibed by Lalla Arifa and later her disciples like Nund-Rishi has shaped the collective spiritual consciousness of Kashmir
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Sufi-Shaivite woman mystic—Lalla Arifa
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One of the key preceptors of Rishi-Sufi mysticism in Kashmir was the celebrated female Sufi poet Lalla Arifa—more popularly known as Lal Ded, and Lal Diddi and Lalleshwari. For around seven centuries, Lalla Arifa has been venerated both by Muslims and Hindus of Kashmir and is indisputably regarded a proponent of a plural ethos in the valley.
Born in a brahmin family in 1335 AD near Srinagar, the capital of Kashmir, she renounced her domestic material life at the age of 24 after she suffered cruelty from her mother-in-law. Hence, she chose to be a devotee of the Shaivite saint Siddha Srikantha, who was also called Sed Bayu. She learnt from him high moral truths and thus practiced Yoga philosophy. It is narrated that in her rebellious renouncement of domestic life, Lalla turned into a celibate mystic. However, she encountered Sufism when she met Shah-e-Hamadan—thefirst and foremost Sufi Muslim mystic of the highest stature in Kashmir who came from Central Asia after Bulbul Shah RA—Mir Syed Ali Hamadani, also called Ameer-e-Kabir and Syyedus Sadaat (head of the Prophet’s progeny in Kashmir) as envisaged by Allama Iqbal, himself a Kashmiri-origin Muslim philosopher whose ancestors came from among the Kashmiri Brahmins. After meeting Shah-e-Hamadan, Lalded who used to live a naked life, reportedly gave up celibacy and began to wear a proper dress. Asked why, she said she had seen ‘a man for the first time’!
Famously known as Nund-Rishi by Hindus and Sheikh-ul-Alam by Muslims, the prominent Kashmiri Rishi-Sufi mystic of the 14th century, Sultan ul Arifin Nooruddin Noorani gave the first direct reference to Lalla in his Vakhas (Kashmiri verses):
Admaanpora Chai Tem Lalia
Yem Gali Gali Amrit Chau
Soa Saain Autar Te Lalie
Theith War Mai Detam Dewao
Translation:
That Lalla from Padmaanpora (Pampore),
did drink nectar tumbler after tumbler.
She was a saint and she did bring up a saint,
O’ God, give me her vision and knowledge.
Here, it is noteworthy that Nund-Rishi Nooruddin Noorani or Nooruddin Wali himself was the biggest adherent and one of the closest disciples of Lalla Arifa. He greatly benefitted from her wisdom right from his childhood, as she happened to be not only his spiritual but also a foster mother. Thus, she suckled Nund- Rishi a lot of divine drink and spiritual nectar from her blessed breast. As a result, much like the Lalla, NundRishi also etched the essence of Rishi-Sufi wisdom into the hearts and minds of Kashmiris preserving their local and cultural ethos. In fact, he extracted the nectar of the Qur’aninto his poetry, and therefore his Kashmiri Kalaam—Kalaam-e-Sheikhul A’alam—is called the ‘Kashmiri Qur’an’ and ‘Qur’an-e-Sani’.
Significantly, it was the Sufi-Shaivite lady—Lalla Arifa—who rendered deep experiences of Shah-e-Hamadan who brought Sufism to the Valley of Kashmir and greatly influenced her spiritual journey and mystical thoughts, into local poetry in Kashmiri language called, Vakh. The Vakhs of Lalleshwari (Lall’e Vakh) and Sheikh Shruki (The sayings of Sheikh Ul Aalam) unravel limitless devotion, illumination and spiritual ecstasy (wajd) in the search for a deeper personal relationship with the Divine. This rich oral tradition of Divine Union (wisal-e-ilahi) birthed by Shah-e-Hamadan and imbibed by Lalla Arifa and later her disciples like Nund-Rishihas shaped the collective spiritual consciousness of Kashmir.She says in her Vakhas (Kashmiri poetry):
Yi Yi Karu’m Suy Artsun
Yi Rasini Vichoarum Thi Mantar
Yihay Lagamo Dhahas Partsun
Suy Parasivun Tanthar
(Whatever work I did, became worship of the Lord. Whatever word I uttered became a prayer; Whatever my body experienced became the Sadhana/devotion of Saiva Tantra, illumining my path to Parmasiva/Supreme Being).
At the same time, Lalla’s poetry came crashing down on the parasitic forms of ritualism and false religiosity. She strongly believed in the Divine but equally discarded the priestly class. One of her verses reads: It covers your shame, keeps you from shivering. Grass and water are all the food it asks. Who taught you, priest-man, to feed this breathing thing to your thing of stone? In fact, the Saivite-Sufi mystics like Lalla and Rishi-Sufi saints such as Shaikh-ul-Alam strengthened unity in diversity in Kashmir’s plural society for centuries.
While Shaikh was an ardent believer in Tawheed (Oneness of God and Oneness of Mankind), Lalla was a follower of the monotheistic Shaivism known as Turka Shastra. Albeit the difference in their spiritual disciplines, both believed in one Creator, loved all His creations, dismissed violent religious extremism, practised self-introspection and rejected all dogmatic and retrogressive ideologies. This was the result of an elevating experience of spiritual enlightenment. Prominent historian Azam Dedmari writes in his book, Waaqea’at-e-Kashmir (Events in Kashmir): Lalla was buried in a tomb in the premises of the Sufi shrine of Baba Naseebuddin Gazi — a disciple of Sultan-ul-Arifeen Sheikh Hamza Makhdumi. But the common Kashmiri people told this writer that her dead body was not found out as she was claimed by both Muslims and Hindus just as Sufi mystics like Sant Kabir. This can be further corroborated by the popular Kashmiri folk Sufi songs which have been written about her in abundance!
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A Regular Columnist with Newageislam.com, Ghulam Rasool Dehlvi is an Indo-Islamic scholar, Sufi poet and English-Arabic-Urdu-Hindi writer with a background in a leading Sufi Islamic seminary in India. He is currently serving as Head of International Affairs at Voice for Peace & Justice, Jammu & Kashmir.
URL: https://www.newageislam.com/spiritual-meditations/sufi-shaivite-mystic-lal-ded-lalla-arifa-ulalam/d/132481
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