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Abidas (devotees) beside the Abids. They worked wonders (karamat, closely akin
to the χαρισματα of 1 Cor. xii, 9) by the divine grace, and still, as we have seen, at their
own graves such are granted through them to the faithful, and their intercession (shafa'a)
is invoked. Their religious exercises were the same; they held dhikrs and women darwishes
yet dance to singing and music in order to bring on fits of ecstasy. To state the case
generally, whatever is said hereafter of mysticism and its working among men must be taken
as applying to women also.
To return: one of the earliest male devotees of whom we have distinct note is Ibrahim
ibn Adham. He was a wanderer of royal blood, drifted from Balkh in Afghanistan to al-Basra
and to Mecca. He died in 161. Contempt for the learning of lawyers and for external forms
appears in him; obedience to God, contemplation of death, death to the world formed his
teaching. Another, Da'ud ibn Nusayr, who died in 165, was wont to say, "Flee men as
thou fleest a lion. Fast from the world and let the breaking of thy fast be when thou
diest." Another, al-Fudayl ibn Iyad of Khurasan, who died in 187, was a robber
converted by a heavenly voice; he cast aide the world, and his utterances show that he
lapsed into the passivity of quietism.
Reference has already been made in the chapter on jurisprudence to the development of
asceticism which came with the accession of the Abbasids. The disappointed hopes of the
old believers found an outlet in the contemplative life. They withdrew from
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PASSAGE OF ASCETICISM TO ECSTASY
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the world and would have nothing to do with its rulers; their wealth and everything
connected with them they regarded as unclean. Ahmad ibn Hanbal in his later life had to
use all his obstinacy and ingenuity to keep free of the court and its contamination.
Another was this al-Fudayl. Storieschronologically impossibleare told how he rebuked
Harun ar-Rashid for his luxury and tyranny and denounced to his face his manner of life.
With such an attitude to those round him he could have had little joy in his devotion. So
it was said, "When al-Fudayl died, sadness was removed from the world."
But soon the recoil came. Under the spur of such exercises and thoughts, the ecstatic
oriental temperament began to revel in expressions borrowed from human love and earthly
wine. Such we find by Ma'ruf of al-Karkh, a district of Baghdad, who died in 200, and
whose tomb, saved by popular reverence, is one of the few ancient sites in modern Baghdad;
and by his greater disciple, Sari as-Saqati, who died in 257. To this last is ascribed,
but dubiously, the first use of the word tawhid to signify the union of the soul
with God. The figure that the heart is a mirror to image back God and that it is darkened
by the things of the body appears in Abu Sulayman of Damascus, who died in 215. A more
celebrated ascetic, who died in 227, Bishr al-Hafi (bare-foot), speaks of God directly as
the Beloved (habib). Al-Harith al-Muhasibi was a contemporary of Ahmad ibn Hanbal
and died in 243. The only thing in him to which Ahmad could take exception was that he
made use of kalam in refuting the Mu'tazilites;
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