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  • Doorkeeper of the Heart : Versions of Rabi'a 
  • Hadrat Sayyidah Rabia Basri : A Light of Islam
  • Rabia Basri, The Mystic : The Life & Work of Rabia & other Women Mystics in Islam

  

  

Page Last Updated: 16th June 2011

  

Doorkeeper of the Heart : Versions of Rabi'a

Paperback - 85 pages                                                                  Translated by Charles Upton

"One day a rich merchant visited Rabi'a
And saw that she was living in a ruin:
So he gave her a thousand pieces of gold
And told her to buy a new house —

But the day she moved in, she became so fascinated
With the beautiful paintings that covered the walls
That she gave the rich man back his money
And went back to live in her ruin — why?

'Because I was mortally afraid
I might fall in love with that house,' said Rabi'a."

This is one of the many stories told about Rabi'a al-Adawiyya (May Allah be pleased with her) (717 - 801CE), a major saint of Islam & one of the central figures in Sufism. She was born in Basra in ancient Mesopotamia, what is now Iraq. After her parents died in a famine, she and her sisters were separated. Rabi'a was captured and sold as a slave. Later on in her life, she was freed by her master and may have made her living as a flute player at one time. Rabi'a was known for her devotion to God and her rigorous ascetic practices. Translator James Upton, in his introduction to this Sufi saint and poet makes the following comparison: "If Rumi is the Ocean, Rabi'a is the Well." The stories about her and the poems have come down to us through the generations and the grace of Attar, her major biographer and al-Ghazzali, the towering figure who unifies Sufi lore and orthodox Islam tradition.

There are several edifying and witty pieces in this paperback on prayer. In one, Rabi'a writes:

"O God, take away the words of the devil
That mix with my prayer —
If not, then take my prayer as it is, devil and all."

There are quite a number of stories about the only miracles that count, namely the gracious and often surprising ways that God acts in our lives. Here is one:

"One day, when Rabi'a was about to boil some meat Hasan of Basra dropped by. "Speech about divine things is better food than anything cooked in a pan," she said, and laid the meat aside. They talked until evening.

"Then they decided to break their fast. Rabi'a laid out dry bread and water, and then reached for the pan. She burnt her hand. The pan was bubbling over, the meat cooked. She took it out and served it: it was the best meat either of them had ever tasted.

" 'Good food for convalescents,' Rabi'a said."

Rabi'a's two most famous images are included here. In the first, she states:

"I love God: I have no time left
In which to hate evil."

That's a good one to keep in mind when there is so much talk about fighting evil ones and overcoming the dark forces which surround us. The other zeroes in on the same theme:

"I carry a torch in one hand
And a bucket of water in the other:
With these things I am going to set fire to Heaven
And put out the flames of Hell
So that voyagers to God can rip the veils
And see the real goal."

 REVIEW BY: Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat [Spirituality & Practice]

OUR PRICE £10.99                 INCLUSIVE OF UK DELIVERY     

Hadrat Sayyidah Rabia Basri :    A LIGHT OF ISLAM 
Booklet - 16 pages

This booklet is based on the amazing and miraculous life of one of the greatest Sufis of her time, namely Hadrat Sayyidah Rabia al-Basri May Allah be pleased with her.

 

It is hoped that all Muslims would gain some insight into the life of this most remarkable shining star in the history of Islam. Her entire life was based on one key principle, which was total subservience to Almighty Allah.

  

  

by Mawlana Mahomed Farhaad Ibrahim Ashrafi [Darul Uloom Ashrafiya Aleemia Razvia]

 
SOLD OUT                            INCLUSIVE OF UK DELIVERY

 Rabi'a Basri, The Mystic : The Life & Work of Rabi'a & other Women Mystics in Islam

Paperback - 249 pages                                                              by Dr. Maragaret Smith

From the back page: 

'' The Women saints... certainly represent the greatest height to which Muslim womanhood has attained, and in reverence accorded them by Muslim men and the example which they offer to women lies a real hope for the attainment of higher standard, religious and social, for Muslim women of today.''

  

So writes Margaret Smith in this fascinating and scholarly work on Rabi'a of Basra, may Allah be pleased with her, the early Muslim saint and true mystic who died in the year 801 C.E.

  

A complete biography of this woman of unique personality did not appear until Dr. Smith, a distinguished scholar of Sufism, published this authoritative account of her life and teachings.

  

 
Our Price £9.99                     INCLUSIVE OF UK DELIVERY

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