The world has been moving and changing at a speed we human beings can neither control nor
comprehend. In 1258, Baghdad fell to the Mongols. The one city that prided itself on its fortitude and
glamour and claimed to be the center of the world suffered defeat. That same year Saladin died. My
dervishes
and I had a huge celebration, passing through the streets with drums and flutes, dancing and
singing in joy, because that is how a saint should be buried.
In 1260 it was the Mongols’ turn to lose. The Mamelukes of Egypt defeated them. Yesterday’s victors
became today’s losers. Every winner is inclined to think he will be triumphant forever. Every loser tends
to fear that he is going to be beaten forever. But both are wrong for the same reason: Everything changes
except the face of God.
After the death of Saladin, Husam the Student, who has matured so fast and so well along the spiritual
path that he is now called Husam Chelebi by everyone, helped me to write down the poems. He is the
scribe to whom I dictated the entire
Mathnawi. Modest and generous, if anyone asks Husam who he is or
what he does, without missing a beat he says, “I am a humble follower of Shams of Tabriz. That’s who I
am.”
Little by little, one turns forty, fifty, and sixty and, with each major decade, feels more complete. You
need
to keep walking, though there’s no place to arrive at. The universe is turning, constantly and
relentlessly, and so are the earth and the moon, but it is nothing other than a secret embedded within us
human beings that makes it all move. With that knowledge we dervishes will dance our way through love
and heartbreak even if no one understands what we are doing. We will dance in the middle of a brawl or
a major war, all the same. We will dance in our hurt and grief, with joy and elation, alone and together, as
slow and fast as the flow of water. We will dance in our blood. There is a perfect harmony and subtle
balance in all that is and was in the universe. The dots change constantly and replace one another, but the
circle remains intact. Rule Number Thirty-nine:
While the parts change, the whole always remains the
same. For every thief who departs this world, a new one is born. And every decent person who passes
away is replaced by a new one. In this way not only does nothing remain the same but also nothing
ever really changes.
For every Sufi who dies, another is born somewhere.
Our religion is the religion of love. And we are all connected in a chain of hearts. If and when one of
the links is broken, another one is added elsewhere. For every Shams
of Tabriz who has passed away,
there will emerge a new one in a different age, under a different name.
Names change, they come and go, but the essence remains the same.