One of the great
Sufi Masters, Junnaid, was dying. His chief disciple came close to him and
asked softly, ″Master, you are leaving us. One question has always been in
our minds. Who was your Master? This has been a great curiosity among all your
disciples because we have never heard you talk about your Master. But we could
never gather the courage to ask you."
Junnaid opened his
eyes and said, ″It will be very difficult for me to answer because I have
learned from almost everybody. The whole existence has been my Master. I have
learned from every event that has happened in my life. And I am grateful to all
that has happened, because out of all that learning I have arrived.″
Junnaid said, ″Just
to satisfy your curiosity I will give you three instances...
One:
I was very thirsty
and I was going towards the river carrying my begging bowl, the only possession
I had. When I reached the river a dog rushed, jumped into the river, started
drinking.
I watched the dog
for a moment and threw away my begging bowl. Because I saw it is useless. A dog
could do without it. I also jumped into the river, drank as much water as I
wanted. My whole body was cool because I had jumped into the river. I sat in
the river for a few moments, thanked the dog, touched his feet with deep
reverence because he had taught me a lesson.
I had dropped
everything, all possessions, but there was a certain clinging to my begging
bowl. It was a beautiful bowl, very beautifully carved, and I was always aware that
somebody might steal it. Even in the night I used to put it under my head as a
pillow so nobody could snatch it away. That was my last clinging. The dog
helped. It was so clear: if a dog can manage without a begging bowl... I am a
man, why can′t I manage? That dog was one of my Masters.
Two:
I lost my way in a
forest and by the time I reached the nearest village that I could find, it was
midnight. Everybody was fast asleep. I wandered all over the town to see if I
could find somebody awake to give me shelter for the night, until finally I
found one man. I asked him, ′It seems only two persons are awake in the town,
you and I. Can you give me shelter for the night?′
The man said, ′I can
see from your gown that you are a Sufi monk....′″
_(The word Sufi comes
from suf; suf means wool, a woolen garment. The Sufis have used the woollen
garment for centuries; hence they are called Sufis because of their garment.)_
The man said, ″I can
see you are a Sufi and I feel a little embarrassed to take you to my home. I am
perfectly willing, but I must tell you who I am. I am a thief. Would you like
to be a guest of a thief?″
For a moment Junnaid
hesitated. The thief said, ″Look, it is better I told you. You seem hesitant.
The thief is willing but the mystic seems to be hesitant to enter into the
house of a thief, as if the mystic is weaker than the thief. In fact, I should
be afraid of you--you may change me, you may transform my whole life! Inviting
you means danger, but I am not afraid. You are welcome. Come to my home. Eat,
drink, go to sleep, and stay as long as you want, because I live alone and my
earning is enough. I can manage for two persons. And it will be really
beautiful to chit-chat with you of great things. But you seem to be hesitant.″
Junnaid became aware
that it was true. He asked to be forgiven. He touched the feet of the thief and
he said, ″Yes, my rootedness in my own being is yet very weak. You are really a
strong man and I would like to come to your home. And I would like to stay a
little longer, not only for this night. I want to be stronger myself!″
The thief said, ″Come
on!″ He fed the Sufi, gave him something to drink, helped him to prepare for
sleep and he said, ″Now I will go. I have to do my own thing. I will come back
early in the morning.″ Early in the morning the thief came back. Junnaid asked,
″Have you been successful?″
The thief said, ″No,
not today, but I will see tomorrow.″
And this happened
continuously, for thirty days: every night the thief went out, and every
morning he came back empty-handed. But he was never sad, never frustrated--no
sign of failure on his face, always happy --and he would say, ″It doesn′t
matter. I tried my best. I could not find anything today again, but tomorrow I
will try. And, God willing, it can happen tomorrow if it has not happened
today.″
After one month
Junnaid left, and for years he tried to realize the ultimate, and it was always
a failure. But each time he decided to drop the whole project he remembered the
thief, his smiling face and his saying ″God willing, what has not happened
today may happen tomorrow.″
Junnaid said, ″I
remembered the thief as one of my greatest Masters. Without him I would not be
what I am.
Three:
I entered a small
village. A little boy was carrying a lit candle, obviously going to the small
temple of the town to put the candle there for the night.″
And Junnaid asked, ″Can
you tell me from where the light comes? You have lighted the candle yourself so
you must have seen. What is the source of light?″
The boy laughed and
he said, ″Wait!″ And he blew out the candle in front of Junnaid. And he said, ″You
have seen the light go. Can you tell me where it has gone? If you can tell me
where it has gone I will tell you from where it has come, because it has gone
to the same place. It has returned to the source.″
Junnaid said, ″I had
met great philosophers but nobody had made such a beautiful statement: ′It has
gone to its very source.′
Everything returns to its source finally. Moreover, the child made me aware of my own ignorance. I was trying to joke with the child, but the joke was on me. He showed me that asking foolish questions: 'From where has the light come?′--is not intelligent. It comes from nowhere, from nothingness--and it goes back to nowhere, to nothingness.″
Everything returns to its source finally. Moreover, the child made me aware of my own ignorance. I was trying to joke with the child, but the joke was on me. He showed me that asking foolish questions: 'From where has the light come?′--is not intelligent. It comes from nowhere, from nothingness--and it goes back to nowhere, to nothingness.″
Junnaid said, ″I
touched the feet of the child. The child was puzzled. He said, ′Why you are
touching my feet?′ And I told him, ′You are my Master--you have shown me
something. You have given me a great lesson, a great insight.′
″Since that time,″
Junnaid said, ″I have been meditating on nothingness and slowly, slowly I have
entered into nothingness. And now the final moment has come when the candle
will go out, the light will go out. And I know where I am going--to the same
source.
I remember that
child with gratefulness. I can still see him standing before me now, blowing
out the candle.
No situation is
without a lesson, no situation at all. All situations are pregnant with meaning
and intelligence. But we have to discover them. They may not always be on the
surface.
When we see life
itself as our master, these lessons become more accessible.
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