There is no cave into which I can withdraw - my cave is where I am at the moment. That inner voice brings the message. I cannot hide. There is only here.
“I come to plant Mevlana’s message of universal love in this soil. The way of Mevlana, of Rumi, will grow in the West in its own way.” Suleyman Hayati Dede Suleyman Hayati Dede was the Mevlevi Shaikh of Konya until his passing in 1985. "Hayati", meaning "Divinely Alive", was his sufi name. He was born Suleyman Lorasulam around 1904 in Konya, Turkey, the old Roman city of Iconium which rose to prominence as the seat of the Seljuk Sultans of Rum a thousand years ago. The young Suleyman Lorasulam was fascinated by the Whirling Dervishes - the Mevlevi Sufi Order, created by followers of the great poet and mystic Jelaluddin Rumi to continue their teacher's spiritual influence after his death in 1273. Rumi was known by his students as Mevlana, meaning "Our Master", and so the sufi lineage stemming from him was called Mevlevi. Rumi was buried in Konya and his sufi descendants had their central training centre, or "tekke", beside his tomb. Suleym...
Daud Dede asked me to write something about the early days I visited him in his beautiful oriental carpet shop in Edinburgh. Here is a first attempt... Memories of the Mihrab Gallery It was January 1999. I had just returned to Glasgow University in September, after an earlier false start and a three-year incursion into Buddhism, including highland retreats, life in communal houses and theatrical exploits. Looking for books in the university library on Sufism, which I had begun to explore the previous year, I found Shems Friedlander’s The Whirling Dervishes with its darkly evocative pictures of dervishes in white against black backgrounds, and I found a website – searching the internet was still quite a novel experience back then! - for the Threshold Society in the USA, a sufi organisation connected to the Persian mystic and poet Jelaluddin Rumi. They offered a distance learning introduction to sufi thought and practice called the 99 Day Program, which I wrote off to join, and in...
Daud Dede came down to Manchester from Edinburgh this weekend to lead an evening conversation on Rumi's spiritual tradition and to share zikr. He spoke of many things forming the way: gentleness, humanity, silence, intuition, faith, commitment to a simple practice, community, "higher worlds", and especially Unity. Central to his discourse was a Turkish saying, which translates roughly as "Two mountains cannot come to meet each other, but two human beings can." We hope to invite Dede down to Manchester again in December for Rumi's Sheb-i Arus.
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