Ibrahim ibn Adham

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Ibrahim ibn Adham
(إبراهيم بن أدهم
)
Mystic
BornIbrahim ibn Mansour ibn Zayd ibn Jabir
Al-Fuḍayl ibn ʻIyāḍ
InfluencedKhwaja Sadid ad-Din Huzaifa al-Marashi, Shaqiq al-Balkhi
Abou Ben Adhem Shrine Mosque, United States

Ibrahim ibn Adham also called Ibrahim Balkhi and Ebrahim-e-Adham (

Sufi saints
.

The story of his conversion is one of the most celebrated in Sufi legend.

Abu Nu'aym, Ibrahim emphasised the importance of stillness and meditation for asceticism. Rumi extensively described the legend of Ibrahim in his Masnavi. The most famous of Ibrahim's students is Shaqiq al-Balkhi
(d. 810).

Life

Ibrahim's family was either from Persian nobles of the region or from arab origins of Kufa in modern-day Iraq. He was born in Balkh (modern day Afghanistan). Most prominent sources and writers traced his lineage back to 'Abdullah, the brother of Ja'far al-Sadiq, son of Muhammad al-Baqir, and the great-great-grandson of Husayn ibn Ali.[citation needed] According to a few historians he was descended from the Islamic Caliph Omar.[who?][citation needed][dubious ]

Accounts of Ibrahim's life are recorded by medieval authors such as Ibn Asakir and Bukhari.

Ibrahim was born into the Arab community of Balkh as the king of the area in around 730 CE, but he abandoned the throne to become an ascetic.He received a warning from God, through Khidr who appeared to him twice, and, abdicated his throne to take up the ascetic life in Syria. Having migrated in around 750 CE, he chose to live the rest of his life in a semi-nomadic lifestyle, often travelling as far south as Gaza. Ibrahim abhorred begging and worked tirelessly for his livelihood, often grinding corn or tending orchards. In addition, he is also said to have engaged in military operations on the border with Byzantium, and his untimely death is supposed to have occurred on one of his naval expeditions.[3]

His earliest spiritual master was a

Fudhail Bin Iyadh.[6]

As is often with the graves of saints, numerous locations have been placed as the burial place of Ibrahim ibn Adham.

Byzantine island,[7] while other sources state his tomb is in Tyre, in Baghdad, in the "city of the prophet Lot",[8] in the "cave of Jeremiah" in Jerusalem and, in the city of Jablah (on the Syrian coast) where a mosque bearing his name is located (35.3626975, 35.9244253). But also in the city of Sur in the sultanate of Oman where a small shrine is a place of pilgrimage (22.5528326, 59.5295567).[9]

Historicity and literary reception

The medieval narratives of the life of Ibrahim are semi-historical. Ibrahim may have been a historical Sufi of the 8th century, whose legend was embellished in later accounts. The Persian

Memorial of the Saints by Attar,[10] for example, remains one of the richest sources on Ebrahim's conversion and early life as the king of Balkh
. It was through the Persian memorials that literature on Ibrahim passed into the legendary literature of India and Indonesia, where further unhistorical embellishments were added.

One of the main features of non-Arabic literature on Ibrahim is the feature of full-length biographies on the figure, as opposed to anecdotes centring on the main incidents in his life. Moreover, many of the non-Arabic accounts on Ebrahim's life preceded with a short account of the life of his father Adham. One of the most famous of these biographies was written in Persian by Rumi, which was adapted[according to whom?] into Arabic form.[9] Other such biographies were written in

Awadhi,[11] and Malay, which laid the basis for short biographies in Javanese and Sundanese
.

English poet Leigh Hunt's poem "Abou Ben Adhem" is a story of Ibrahim ibn Adham.[12] In turn, the musical Flahooley features a genie named Abou Ben Atom, played in the original 1951 Broadway production by Irwin Corey.[13]

See also

References

  1. ISBN 9780521200936.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link
    )
  2. ^ Muslim Saints and Mystics, Attar, trans. A.J. Arberry intro. on "Ebrahim ibn Adham"; Encyclopedia of Islam, "Ibrahim ibn Adham".
  3. ^ Abu Nu'aym, vii, 388.
  4. ^ Islam and the Perennial Philosophy, F. Schoun, ind. Ibrahim ibn Adham, Suhail Academy co.
  5. ^ Concise Encyclopedia of Islam, C. Glasse, Ibrahim ibn Adham, pg. 178.
  6. ^ Siyar ul Auliya i Chisht, 1884 reprint Delhi.
  7. ^ Ibn Asakir, Tarikh kabir, Damascus, ii, 1330, 167–96.
  8. ^ Encyclopedia of Islam, Vol. III, pg. 985.
  9. ^ a b "Ibrahim Ibn Adham: The prince of Sufis - Inspiring Minds - Folk". Ahram Online. Retrieved 2020-06-04.
  10. ^ Muslim Saints and Mystics, Attar, trans. Arberry, Ebrahim ibn Adham.
  11. ^ Sultan Bodh, Kabir Sagar, Khemraj Shree Krishan Das Press
  12. ^ The Sufis, Idries Shah, Doubleday, 1964, p. 47 (paperback edition).
  13. ^ T. Rees Shapiro, "Irwin Corey, 102: Comedian Billed Himself as 'World's Foremost Authority'", Washington Post, February 8, 2017, p. B5.