Rumi - The Most Famous Sufi Poet in the World

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @jediTempleGuard
    @jediTempleGuard Год назад +471

    The love is when God says to you "I have created everything for you" and you say, "I have left everything for you"
    - Rumi

    • @plantwithplants1635
      @plantwithplants1635 11 месяцев назад +4

    • @secretsofUniverse1001
      @secretsofUniverse1001 11 месяцев назад +2

      Hi dear friend ! Have you ever delved into the profound concept of 'Mental Ego,' as highlighted by Rumi in many of his poems? Rumi often refers to this phenomenon extensively and emphasizes its significance as the source of many insights. If you're keen on Rumi's teachings, Professor Danesh is one of those individuals who truly grasps the depth of his work, providing insightful interpretations and practical applications in life. Come join our channel and benefit from his comprehensive coverage of Rumi's material

    • @margaretgoodheart4167
      @margaretgoodheart4167 10 месяцев назад

      Dear Jedi Temple Guard thank you for this wonderful quote that requires us to reflect on the most respectful, humble and correct way for us to interact with nature, including our own mortality. Aloha

    • @pauldurand4780
      @pauldurand4780 10 месяцев назад

      Thats kinda like God giving you a gift and you saying to God "thanks but you have it". And that conversation ends when the never ending back n forth ends ..forever..
      Actually, the correct response is simply thank you.
      Then tend and care for it as a gift; like you are going to pass it on to your children the same way God gave it to you (Which is how God designed and intended)..
      but that's more practical and not as "esoteric" or "mystical" ...or flakey.. and requires waaaay less responsibility...kinda like "new n improved" age "thinkers"; trying to save the world with the" latest greatest" built in obsolete upgradable 10 billion megapixel i-whathaveyou . Its oooh sooo more McJellickle jazz cat..meOOOWW..lol..

    • @TheGr8Godfather
      @TheGr8Godfather 8 месяцев назад

      💯

  • @colingallagher1648
    @colingallagher1648 Год назад +567

    “The wound is the place where the Light enters you.”
    ― Rumi

    • @c.a.t.732
      @c.a.t.732 Год назад +9

      Tell that to the countless people who have been wounded by life, physically or emotionally, and have been ruined by the experience.

    • @sawtoothiandi
      @sawtoothiandi Год назад +2

      so..via my right thumb...🤔

    • @benioren6120
      @benioren6120 Год назад +14

      He actually got that from Leonard cohen

    • @QHawk7
      @QHawk7 Год назад

      *Calling Turkic Shamanism, or Persian Magus Sorcery , a Religion, or associate it with Islam, Is not that accurate, Shams himself was a student of a Hashashin esoteric order master, Rumi or Sabattai Zevi , Or Hallaj or Ibn Arabi, were are devil worshipers, and call it God, and claim they were connected to him ,and thus, they claim, they become God, That's where the idea of elitism we have in our world elites societies came from , that they think all other people are their servants and slaves*

    • @Amrraelwani
      @Amrraelwani Год назад +3

      @@benioren6120 😂🤣

  • @AjitTheUndefeatable
    @AjitTheUndefeatable Год назад +293

    Sees "Rumi" : intrigued
    Sees it's a "Let's Talk Religion" video:
    sits up and leans forward
    Sees it's over an hour long: Head explodes
    Cheers Filip. Love the content always.

  • @safamirror
    @safamirror Год назад +173

    It's truly a privilege to contribute my voice to such an exceptional video💛

  • @Delhi_Sultan
    @Delhi_Sultan Год назад +791

    Thank you Filip for mentioning that Rumi was himself a pious Muslim and his poetry come out of a specifically Islamic context and perspective. Most westerners either don't know this or intentionally ignore it.

    • @pellesvansl
      @pellesvansl Год назад +50

      Yeah, Rumi without Islam is a sad song.

    • @SadiqVids
      @SadiqVids Год назад +62

      They would call Rumi an Islamist if they read his poems in the language of Farsi/Persian 🤣

    • @Ser3456
      @Ser3456 Год назад +11

      @@pellesvanslNot even a sad song, I would say. It is a cacophony, noise perhaps…

    • @pellesvansl
      @pellesvansl Год назад +3

      @@Ser3456 blasphemy?

    • @Ser3456
      @Ser3456 Год назад +13

      @@pellesvansl The poems lose its origins and purpose/aim, and become misleading and confusing.

  • @TheTanha47
    @TheTanha47 7 месяцев назад +6

    At this young age, such a deep knowledge of Rumi and his time is astounding. I learned from you at the age of 75.

  • @siavashatashgahi4006
    @siavashatashgahi4006 Год назад +17

    Dear Filip, I am blown away by the depth of your knowledge and how nicely you put this video together. Your work reminded me of this famous verce of our mater:
    تو نگو همه به جنگند و ز صلح من چه آید
    تو یکی نه ای هزاری تو چراغ خود برافروز
    And you did that perfectly

  • @ismaelmarksteiner
    @ismaelmarksteiner Год назад +88

    “You have no idea how hard I've looked for a gift to bring You. Nothing seemed right. What's the point of bringing gold to the gold mine, or water to the ocean. Everything I came up with was like taking spices to the Orient. It's no good giving my heart and my soul because you already have these. So I've brought you a mirror. Look at yourself and remember me.”
    ~ Rumi 🪞

  • @PearlsofRumi
    @PearlsofRumi Год назад +61

    Rumi's poetry is a timeless treasure! ✨ His words have the power to touch the depths of the soul. Thank you for sharing the beauty of Rumi's work with us. Let's continue to be inspired by his profound wisdom and the universal love he celebrated. 📜❤

  • @MillhouseSpeaks
    @MillhouseSpeaks Год назад +311

    The ocean of spiritual and sacred knowledge that is Mawlānā Jalāl ud dīn Rūmī benefiting more than just Muslims

    • @refikergin9729
      @refikergin9729 Год назад +1

      Mevlana Celaleddin Rumi Türk'tur. O dönemde şiir dili olarak Farsça kullanılması onu Fars yapmıyor. Ki kendisi Türkçe konuşurdu ve Türkçe şiirleri vardı. Kendisi de Türk kökenlidir.

    • @gokhant1112
      @gokhant1112 Год назад

      nekadar merakliyiz hep, herkezi türk yapmaya.@@refikergin9729

    • @liluths4601
      @liluths4601 Год назад +12

      @@refikergin9729 he was literary from Balkh. He just died in todays Turkey.

    • @ranumaitra412
      @ranumaitra412 Год назад +3

      Hi , just don't have enough words to thank u for such a wonderful piece of work....
      I have always been curious about the spiritual and mystical teachings our four fathers had left for us, irrespective of the religion they belonged.
      An amalgamation of their doctrines and quotes when heard with great intent, might bring to light new aspects for SEEKERS like myself...
      People like yourself has made such effective contributions in bringing the essence of LIFE . Do carry on Ur good work....I love ,love ,love Ur work on Sufism....can see the passion in it...and yes it does reach my heart...
      Tha NK you..

    • @Friedrichsen
      @Friedrichsen Год назад +3

      ​@@refikergin9729Tajikistan'da doğdu. Ana dili Farsça'ydı. Irk olarak Pers kökenliydi.

  • @WilliamCarterII
    @WilliamCarterII Год назад +73

    Rumi really is the GOAT and has a unique ability to appeal to people who aren't Muslim. I'm Christian myself and love Rumi (and Hafiz) and to me the there's no Christian equivalent to Rumi. I love that Islam produced the poetry that I so enjoy

    • @majidbineshgar7156
      @majidbineshgar7156 Год назад +19

      It was not Islam that produced " the poetry that you so much enjoy " for there are many heterodox poetry you might enjoy such as Omar Khayyam's or many others , it was actually Persian poetry influenced by Greek Neo-Platonism that produced so many magnificent works of literature.

    • @Amrraelwani
      @Amrraelwani Год назад +7

      @@majidbineshgar7156 Where were these Persian poets before ISLAM? 😂🤣

    • @majidbineshgar7156
      @majidbineshgar7156 Год назад +11

      "Also Sprach Zarathustra" in the western world the Intellectuals have been aware of Persian writers and by the way did you know that many books such as " Thousands and one night " have pre-Islamic Persian Origins ?

    • @WilliamCarterII
      @WilliamCarterII Год назад +3

      pls touch grass lmao

    • @mahaduzumaki6643
      @mahaduzumaki6643 Год назад

      rumi without islam is worthless squabble@@majidbineshgar7156

  • @afzalghumra6595
    @afzalghumra6595 Год назад +27

    Hello @Let's Talk Religion, thank you so much. You are very honest in your commentary. I have read Rumi but I never had this insight and understanding. It's beautiful

  • @an.hs.n
    @an.hs.n Год назад +138

    Here in Indonesia, we teach psychology of tasawwuf in psychology program. Rumi is the most important figure and we explore his work. However, lacking of knowledge in tasawwuf as part Islamic science is our weakness. This video (and your other videos) help a alot! Thank you so much.
    I hope you can cover more topics in tasawwuf which are relatable for modern people, their needs and issues. For example, we use Rumi's poetry "Guest House" to help ease depression/ emotional pain, give constructive meaning to suffering, and repair broken relationship with God. Many other poetries of Rumi have similar potential.

    • @_notsaf
      @_notsaf Год назад +4

      interresting! could you share any resources based on Rumi/ Tasawwuf used for the therapy pls?

    • @AkhtarM28
      @AkhtarM28 Год назад +7

      Very interesting! I wish more countries would take up this scholarly approach. We in the Muslim world need to develop a method that merges the scientific advances and theories with divine concepts; I’m sure it will help the ailing people. I will definitely pass down this information to those who can probably do something about this.

    • @anjumjanrashid5759
      @anjumjanrashid5759 Год назад +2

      Is orthodox Islam possible without sufism by abdul hakam murad

    • @Dailymailnewz
      @Dailymailnewz Год назад +2

      Well I hope he is not angry or Jealouse with Afghanistan because Rum was from Balkh Afghanistan not from Samerqand and even if he did moved in there he was born and raised in Afghanistan Balkh province so there are people are trying to steal history and he is also taking part in it too?? Also he was a Turk but born in Afghanistan.

    • @Al-Azdi
      @Al-Azdi Год назад +3

      The proof of Islam Alghazali is more important in Sufism base

  • @ZenSolipsist
    @ZenSolipsist Год назад +114

    Rumi was truly one of the greatest saints of all time 🧡 his words and poetry will continue to live on for generations 🕉️ thank you for covering this Master 🙏

    • @AruntamizhSentamizh
      @AruntamizhSentamizh Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/_XUS2fC7bKM/видео.htmlsi=MTe4cFrzpNbdBDBn

    • @LiftingStress
      @LiftingStress 10 месяцев назад +3

      Why should he be a saint? What did he do exactly other than right obscure sentences

    • @NoLefTurnUnStoned.
      @NoLefTurnUnStoned. 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@LiftingStress
      He wrote quite a lot of sentences and then put them all together until they became huge volumes of allegorical, mystical poetry and stories that have touched many millions for over a thousand years.
      Apart from that, not much really.

  • @lady-m30
    @lady-m30 Год назад +23

    I rarely comment videos on RUclips, bur recently discovered your channel and I am in awe of your generosity, balance and ability to transmit the essence of the knowledge. I’ve been interested in exploring the Sufi path for a while now and I could rarely go beyond 20min listening to other lectures and scholars. This was the fastest 1 hour 20 I’ve experienced in my learning journey! Thank you SO much 🙏🙏

  • @aprameyarao
    @aprameyarao Год назад +12

    Very informative. I am glad that someone finally mentioned that he was a great practicing Muslim and sufi. Modern day quotes of Rumi have turned him into some kind of romantic poet.

  • @ailaranta2606
    @ailaranta2606 2 месяца назад +3

    Born in Lapland, much above the Polar Circle, and yet, for some unexplinable reason, my soul fell in love with Rumi's soul at once, after reading the first poem of his. Love, lasting some 30 years. Rumi and Tagore will be my most loved poets, to the end of my life. Thank you for this wonderfull video. You are the best, so competent and so enjoyable in every video of yours that I have watched till now.

  • @pulkitninenine
    @pulkitninenine Год назад +16

    Filip, the quality of your scholarly interpretations coupled with the beautiful artworks you choose really conjures magic for us viewers. Thank you for such kickass work!

  • @ontrail_w_katie
    @ontrail_w_katie Год назад +12

    Your channel has been a staple in my personal, religious, and philosophical enlightenment. Thank you greatly for the detailed, entertaining, and insightful content!

  • @wrenlittle8826
    @wrenlittle8826 Год назад +6

    Young man. You have again given us a pearl. You manage to convey with knowledge and reveal with passion the hidden gems on the paths we at times blindly walk upon. Thank you.

  • @erfan74ir
    @erfan74ir Год назад +64

    As you mentioned a couple of times. Translation of His works is hard. The Persian language is like an onion, it has many layers especially when it comes to poetry. Each word can mean differently based on the context. His work is also very hard to be digested by the native people. However, you did a great job. But, as Molavai says: If you can not drink the whole ocean; you may taste it at your capacity. This might be the best explanation for those people who are seeking to find the true Molavi.

  • @ahmad_9877
    @ahmad_9877 Год назад +21

    I'm a fan of this channel and I've never seen Filip stammering like this. It shows how hard it is to talk about such a great person and be devoted to express the truth.
    I cannot thank you enough, Filip. Good luck with all these great works.

  • @YogiMcCaw
    @YogiMcCaw Год назад +11

    This, sir, was a masterpiece among your many great videos. Thank you for doing this.

  • @parvinaglidewell1860
    @parvinaglidewell1860 Год назад +2

    I cannot get enough of this Chanel. What a beautiful historical program. Love love Rumi and i love that you know so much fact about him. Thank you for this❤❤❤❤

  • @AkhtarM28
    @AkhtarM28 Год назад +17

    Thank you for putting the pieces of the whole puzzle together. Of course as a Muslim growing up with parents who know Farsi I was familiar with Rumi and had more pieces at hand. But didn’t know the chronology, the clear cut framework of what happened after what. This has been a very enlightening experience.
    Thank you 🙏 for sharing your hard earned knowledge with us. 🤲 prayers for you and all those that helped you in the making of this. Thank you.

  • @M_A_R_I_A_M399_5
    @M_A_R_I_A_M399_5 Год назад +7

    You are brilliant. Thank you Filip. I am a muslim with a deep love for Rumi and Sufism. This video was tackled most gracefully.

  • @nouniquenamesatall
    @nouniquenamesatall Год назад +7

    Love that you post sources - gives me a way to delve deeper into this amazing wisdom

  • @abdullahal-masud4956
    @abdullahal-masud4956 Год назад +23

    Ibnul Arabi and Rumi are both most influential Sufis of all time... Alhamdulillah 🙏🙏🙏❤️❤️❤️🌹🌹🌹 Thanks 🌙🌙🌙

    • @d1.700
      @d1.700 2 месяца назад

      А Шамс Тебризи?

  • @behzad2395
    @behzad2395 Год назад +6

    I am truly thankful to you for these series of videos. This presentation and unity of being is one of the best presentations I have ever seen and I haven't seen anything better maid and explained than your work even in persian sources. These videos has really helped me in my life and I want to thank you for your love and effort you put into making them.

  • @desertBruja
    @desertBruja Год назад +37

    I dream of secluding myself with someone and talking about the nature of reality, God and things esoteric and intriguing. My heart would love nothing more. I adore the friendship between Shams and Rumi. As humans we can do that for one another, expand on our internal dialogs, tease out, vet out, get lost in the thought, bringing us ever closer to God. What a practice of devotion, to see God in each other in such a way.

    • @raheelbelal5848
      @raheelbelal5848 Год назад +1

      Why just dream? You can make it a reality. Are you interested in spiritual growth? Learning the masnawi?

    • @MrNereata
      @MrNereata 8 месяцев назад +1

      its not friendship, its love

    • @hxyzazolchak
      @hxyzazolchak 8 месяцев назад +1

      Become Muslim

    • @desertBruja
      @desertBruja 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@hxyzazolchak what a timely comment as I'm listening to the Quaran. Such a profound holy book.

    • @hxyzazolchak
      @hxyzazolchak 8 месяцев назад

      @@desertBruja "On the Day when some faces brighten and others darken, it will be said to those with darkened faces, ‘How could you reject your faith after believing? Taste the torment for doing so,’
      but those with brightened faces will be in God’s grace, there to remain.These are God’s revelations: We recite them to you with the Truth. God does not will injustice for His creatures. Everything in the heavens and earth belongs to God; it is to Him that all things return" surah aal Imran 3:106-109

  • @nowshadk07
    @nowshadk07 Год назад +3

    Wonderful video Coverring all the life of Maulana Rumi. I learnt many new things about him today.Thanks for making this video.

  • @Eftekhar-vp8jg
    @Eftekhar-vp8jg 6 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent clip - the best piece of your clips. I am Muslim, Iranian and a Rumi fan who have read a lot about Rumi - this work of yours is a gem.

  • @musamusashi
    @musamusashi Год назад +6

    Thank you for bringing some clarity to one of the most misunderstood figures in our times. Peace and blessings as always, Filip.

  • @sallybalkin8507
    @sallybalkin8507 2 дня назад

    Probably the best abbreviated run-down on Rumi I've heard. Good video. I could have listened to this for a lot longer.

  • @LoneWolf_RoaminginSolitude
    @LoneWolf_RoaminginSolitude Год назад +30

    Surprisingly, few among us tend to overlook the fact that even though Rumi was born and raised within the Islamic tradition, his teachings did not confine him to promoting unity solely among Muslims. Instead, his writings consistently emphasize unity, discouraging divisions of any sort, and acting as a bridge between the Creator and His creation which includes every human being. Just as a medical book written by a Christian isn't meant exclusively for Christian medical students, it's incorrect to label Rumi's writings as purely Islamic. His teachings cater to all who seek spiritual guidance, regardless of their religious or philosophical background. Though I was born to Sunni Muslim parents, my journey in Tasawuf has broadened my horizons, allowing me to study scriptures from various religions. This has enabled me to overlook "Form" and rather focus on "Meaning" thus connecting me with spiritual seekers regardless of their religious affiliations or ethnic backgrounds.

  • @parvinpeerwani7873
    @parvinpeerwani7873 Год назад +3

    Thank you Fillip for such a wonderful researched discourse on Rumi.

  • @kornelia8627
    @kornelia8627 Год назад +15

    Love is the passion for life. The Sufí know and knew this. And it means: You can only see and understand with your heart. And your heart is the mouth God speaks with and it is your ears and your mouth at the same time. And once you listened you fall in love forever.

  • @adapa360
    @adapa360 Год назад +10

    Thank you very much for your dedication and passion, it is inspiring.

  • @bortol5113
    @bortol5113 Год назад +37

    The story of Rumi & Shams has many mythical elements, & bears a striking resemblance to the story of Gilgamesh, his encounter & deep friendship with Enkidu, the death of Enkidu and Gilgamesh’s lonely and arduous quest for solving the puzzle of immortality in its aftermath. Simply too much to be a mere coincidence.

    • @pellesvansl
      @pellesvansl Год назад +3

      Coincidence? What is coincidence? Is there a creator?

  • @Elly3121
    @Elly3121 9 месяцев назад +2

    I am so grateful for being able to read his poetry in Persian/Parsi. The beauty of his poetry in Persian is at another level ❤

  • @FredEshaghian
    @FredEshaghian Год назад +4

    Very very nice video. Really the best I have ever seen. You got the meaning really well. I salute you. Bravo.

  • @ryusdojo8348
    @ryusdojo8348 Год назад +23

    Shariat+Tariqat=Haqiqat...shariat is the skeleton of islam and tariqat the flesh and blood...without each other you'll either end as a cold stone or a madman...together you'll taste the true love...there is so much to learn from Hz Maulana and Hz Shams...🌹

  • @faeezmiller5847
    @faeezmiller5847 Год назад +28

    Inshallah Rumi's knowlege will be beninfical too all

  • @Ghredle
    @Ghredle 6 месяцев назад +1

    I am amazed on how deep your knowledge of so many different religious aspects is. As a Christian i am a big fan of Rumi’s writings for decades

  • @mushwani85
    @mushwani85 Год назад +8

    Great man, your composition always impressed, may GOD protect you always

  • @ceh5526
    @ceh5526 Год назад +1

    Excellent again, and an affective and appealing presentation. Im going to order a book and read. This is the mark of a great teacher - your engagement and joy is passed on to us your students

  • @sophieamirian6726
    @sophieamirian6726 Год назад +4

    THANK YOU FOR YOUR AWESOME WAY OF EXPLAINING THE GREATNESS OF RUMI THE WONDER OF LIFE LONG AMAZEMENT OF HIS BEING ❤❤

  • @latifa-muzaffari
    @latifa-muzaffari 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for explaining everything about him and Islam so beautifully. ❤

  • @goonermo94
    @goonermo94 Год назад +10

    Went Konya in April to pay my respects. The peace and serenity was something else.

  • @Consciousbeing693
    @Consciousbeing693 10 месяцев назад +1

    What an amazing storyteller you are. Thank you Filip✨

  • @teafortahir
    @teafortahir Год назад +34

    Reading Mevlana Rumi in Persian is the actual enjoyment! Try! ❤️

    • @is-ness
      @is-ness Год назад +4

      That would be amazing.

    • @maoist2010
      @maoist2010 Год назад +11

      من امزوش يا ياد فارسى زبان براى اين سبب ، وهم شعر حضرت حافظ و سعدى ، فقط به زبان فارسى ما میتوانیم فهم اين برزگ زيباى معنى هاى و راز ها عرفان و عشق ، متاسفم اگر زبان من ضعیف، من هنوز یادگیری هستم 😅

    • @_notsaf
      @_notsaf Год назад

      omg yes nothing beats actual reading esp for 1,4 hours allahhh

    • @agostocobain2729
      @agostocobain2729 8 месяцев назад +2

      Persian language is poetry without Rumi. Are normal way of saying "I love you" is "my heart constricts when I'm not with you" so imagine a Persian poet writing in this language.

  • @ksmkvoyager
    @ksmkvoyager 21 день назад

    You are amazing man - really enjoying these talks and the way you deliver it. Honestly - well done

  • @usamabinshahid8815
    @usamabinshahid8815 Год назад +4

    Thank you so much for this beautiful and honest biography of Rumi. جَزَاكَ ٱللَّٰهُ

  • @umamahan2133
    @umamahan2133 2 месяца назад

    Dear Filip your voice is the ultimate sound. Very powerful description.

  • @laylaali5977
    @laylaali5977 Год назад +15

    Rumi was a great poet and human being

  • @kaustubhthapa5743
    @kaustubhthapa5743 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you for such informative lecture of Rumi's life and work. Much love to you brother.

  • @4gimmi
    @4gimmi Год назад +17

    Thank you for explaining so clearly that even a as a Muslim I truly understood Sufism behind his poetry and kalam!

  • @Jaggerbush
    @Jaggerbush 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks for putting in all these chapters - its so easy to go back and rewatch the parts i wanted to watch again without the guesswork of finding it. It's feedback that you probably dont hear often but it definitely adds to the quality of your videos 👏👏👏

  • @kobekabir325
    @kobekabir325 Год назад +12

    I tried to find Him on the Christian Cross, but He was not there; I went to the Temple of the Hindus and to the pagodas, but I could not find a trace of Him anywhere. I searched on the mountains and in the valley and across the deserts, but neither in the heights nor in the depths was I able to find Him. I went to the Kaaba in Mecca, but He was not there either. I questioned the scholars and the philosophers but He was beyond their understanding. I then looked into my heart and it was there where He dwelled that I saw Him; He is no where else to be found, for words are useless and life defies definition. ~ Jalal Uddin Rumi.

    • @NclaguaNclagua
      @NclaguaNclagua 4 месяца назад

      Brother, Allah bless you for sharing the thoughts of Rumi... He is beyond...

    • @3rdirt
      @3rdirt 3 месяца назад

      Beyond any religious belief are these words

  • @PeaceChanel
    @PeaceChanel 11 дней назад +1

    Thank You for All that you are doing for our Planet Earth....
    Peace.. Shalom.. Salam.. Namaste
    🙏🏻 😊 ✌ ☮ ❤

  • @farshidmarwi9534
    @farshidmarwi9534 Год назад +9

    In his verse “I was raw, I got cooked, I burned” “Xãm bodam, poxte shodam, suxtam” it has got way more in itself than just word for word translation.
    In Persian, to be raw is when you have just come of age, you are strong, grown and powerful but you don’t have the mental strength to avoid the consequences of your actions or power, you hurt you or those around you unintentionally.
    To be cooked is when you are wise enough to consider the consequences of your actions, when you don’t do anything without considering the result.
    To be burning in other words means restlessness, to be burning to achieve something precious, or to dedicate all you got for a noble cause.
    So if you know the context of those words and the deeper meaning of what Rumi says just one verse of his poem get you thinking for a long time and it is what makes Rumi “Rumi”.

  • @ahmadfawad2808
    @ahmadfawad2808 Год назад +1

    Buddy, you are a blessing from heavens. May God rain his blessings upon you as you do research and share authentic content

  • @FarhatKCh
    @FarhatKCh Год назад +60

    I was expecting another typically secular and Western trope of “Rumi is all about love and for everyone” but I was pleasantly surprised.
    Felip proved his commitment to the truth by doing due research and even Muslims can benefit from this video.
    You cannot separate nor understand Mawlana, may Allah have mercy on him, without having at least a basic understanding of Islam and Islamic culture.

    • @is-ness
      @is-ness Год назад +8

      I understand him very well without that background.
      So does anyone that has removed their identity / ego / attachments from any tradition. More so than a scholar with attachments.
      Read him closely and you will hear him say this too.
      The insights, the end point, are identical.

    • @SaladDongs
      @SaladDongs Год назад +4

      I think Filip has been pursuing a doctorate in theology and he has focused more on sufism than other religious practices so I would be surprised if he didn't know!
      I think his presence on youtube is very welcome, as he's more than just another video essayist, but a real expert in most of the topics he covers. It's both pleasing to listen to and informative, and his passion is infectious even to me.

    • @SwiggityPeanut
      @SwiggityPeanut Год назад

      ​​​​@@is-nessWhile I dont disagree that there are multiple paths to the top of the mountain to Rumi specifically the top of the mountain was Jannah, heaven in Islam. Specifically Jannat-al-Firdaus, the closest level of heaven to the Creator. The intent is indistinguishable from tasawwuf and Qur'anic spirituality. To understand his work beyond superficial similiarities one would need to have at least a working knowledge of his tradition.
      To Rumi, a Muslim practicing tasawwuf, detachment is not the same as the concept of detachment/nonattachment is to a Hindu, Daoist, Jainist or Buddhist- on a fundamental level. Of the more well known practices, the Dao would be the most similiar to tasawwuf (the Daoists' focus on being in harmony with the Tao is somewhat similiar) but they still have deep differences at the core. The end goals of these are not the end goals of tasawwuf.
      It is true, to someone practicing detachment it appears similiar in scope. However, saying "read him closely and you will hear him say this too" is subjectively based on your experience. Nothing wrong with that of course, just pointing out that unless you have read Rumis' work (or other Sufi scholar poets, especially around his time period) in full, his scholarly work that fuses the academic portion of tasawwuf with the spiritual portion, then you aren't getting the full picture.
      Read him closely with an intimate understanding of his background and you will hear that what he is saying is deeply intertwined with his Islamic tasawwuf tradition, because to Rumi detachment and dissolution of ego is inseperable from the tradition and its beliefs. He himself would disagree with your statement while still commending your spiritual practice. If he had the opportunity to study other spiritual practices that place an emphasis on nonattachment, he would likely say that they were all means to attain the top but that they fall short.

    • @taha7538
      @taha7538 Год назад +1

      @@is-nessidk abt that one

    • @jj-gz9xd
      @jj-gz9xd Год назад +2

      @@is-ness you don't sound like someone who has discarded his ego. or who understands Rumi for that matter.

  • @ufukugur2385
    @ufukugur2385 Год назад +1

    Ank you so much for sharing your knowledge with us. I recently got a chance to visit Konya and the grave of Mevlana or Rumi and whas moved when I stand in front of his grave. Tears run over my cheeks just somehow touched probably his soul touched mines over his grave.

  • @khoirulanam9141
    @khoirulanam9141 Год назад +26

    “Knowing that it was You who took life, death is sweet. As long as I am with You, death is even sweeter than life itself.” - Rumi

    • @tahiraaslam5583
      @tahiraaslam5583 10 месяцев назад +2

      Beautiful ❤

    • @margaretgoodheart4167
      @margaretgoodheart4167 10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you, Khoirulanam. When one is above 80 years, this is a mantra of the heart.

    • @khoirulanam9141
      @khoirulanam9141 8 месяцев назад

      @@margaretgoodheart4167 your creator neither eats nor drinks.

  • @milonsarker
    @milonsarker Год назад +2

    Great work! Resourceful video to learn about the great mystic Rumi!

  • @BlondeManNoName
    @BlondeManNoName Год назад +9

    Love him so much, my all time favorite poet.

  • @mohammedali1500
    @mohammedali1500 Месяц назад +1

    Excellent monologue. Sheikh Mansur Hallaz expressed the truth which can be only appreciated by the pure heart.

  • @therealzilch
    @therealzilch Год назад +30

    Okay. I'm an atheistic Westerner. But I too appreciate the timeless and transcendental worth of Rumi's poetry. We are all in this together, no matter what we believe.
    Thanks for another great video. Lunch is on me if you're ever in Vienna. Cheer from sunny Austria, Scott

    • @ahmadfrhan5265
      @ahmadfrhan5265 Год назад +1

      Hi Scott you as an atheist how do you appreciate anything or you know you appreciate it? your brain is nothing but an organ with chemical reactions that delude itself into having meaning when there's non but mere chemical reactions. please take the leap of faith soon from 8th floor.
      Also, how did you come to the conclusion that there's no God when you are moral subjectivsit and have no logic?

    • @ranjittyagi9354
      @ranjittyagi9354 Год назад

      ​@mosaabtwice3999I believe you need the belt treatment. You'd get all your answers automatically.

    • @Nozarks1
      @Nozarks1 Год назад +4

      Amazing that Rumi can be appreciated by such a wide spectrum. Much respect to you. I too go through phases of non belief and belief. Yet Rumi affects me too.

    • @ranjittyagi9354
      @ranjittyagi9354 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@Nozarks1 why not. Rumi is here.

    • @Nozarks1
      @Nozarks1 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@ranjittyagi9354 yes. Very much so.

  • @timothyhoran9521
    @timothyhoran9521 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you Filip. This is the first time that I have discovered your channel and I am deeply impressed. You have presented this complicated and detailed information in a clear and comprehensive manner.

  • @writteninthesky
    @writteninthesky Год назад +4

    ❤ Rumi's poems are glistening diamonds and pearls of compassion...❤

  • @sureyyademir2273
    @sureyyademir2273 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for sharing this video! Amazing work 🙏🙏 Respect for Rumi and his teachings MashaAllah!!!

  • @rifatsele2908
    @rifatsele2908 Год назад +3

    Thanks Filip. Very well put together work. Now I know my favorite muslim poet much better. Thank you.

  • @muzaffarmehdim.d.2471
    @muzaffarmehdim.d.2471 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks Philip for such a great all inclusive introduction of Jalaluddin Romi great author of Masnawi.thanks

  • @bearllande
    @bearllande Год назад +12

    his poetry is so profound because rumi was a highly awakened being.
    a lot of his poetry is about enlightenment and awakening. after awakening, you shed your old practices, rituals, religion and old identity - he is not just a sufi or just a muslim anymore, he is beyond all of those worldly concepts. that's why the mass appeal.

    • @LiftingStress
      @LiftingStress 10 месяцев назад

      Profound in what way exactly??

    • @justsendmelocation313
      @justsendmelocation313 9 месяцев назад

      Don't you dare try to rob Rumi of his Religion...

    • @bearllande
      @bearllande 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@justsendmelocation313 lol religion is just another concept. when you die, you will realize this - everyone will.

    • @justsendmelocation313
      @justsendmelocation313 9 месяцев назад

      @@bearllande I am not talking about your Subjective personal beliefs..
      Rumi was a muslim ..period!

    • @bearllande
      @bearllande 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@justsendmelocation313 at the beginning, but not at the end, period!

  • @ali.khosro
    @ali.khosro 4 месяца назад

    This is the best video explaining Rumi that I have seen from Persian-speaking or English-speaking researchers, covering the most important (and reliable) parts of his philosophy, message, and biography.
    I would like to leave one of my favorite quotes (among many) from Rumi:
    "Do not seek water any more, earn the thirst
    To see water fountains from ups and downs (here and there, everywhere)"
    One pillar of his philosophy is that "seeking reunion" (which is what Rumi calls love as it is everywhere) is two-ways attraction: as much the fields (of flower) crave water, water searches for the fields; as much pain needs remedy, remedy looks for pain; as much a question looks for a solution, the solution wants to solve that problem;
    This duality, and the universal force for unity, is the "force/gravity/attraction/essence of life", which is called love. At the beginning, everything was one (the essence, God, spirit, etc) and then became two (opposites) and then manifested in many forms and created this world with an ever-lasting desire to become one, embedded in every piece of the existence.
    So, do not seek water any more, just become more thirsty: water will find you (will open your senses to see it).

  • @nowhereman6019
    @nowhereman6019 Год назад +7

    Oh yes, finally! I've been wondering why you hadn't covered Rumi, I'm very excited for this!

    • @LetsTalkReligion
      @LetsTalkReligion  Год назад +7

      I've been wondering that for a long time too

    • @elprofesor8571
      @elprofesor8571 Год назад

      @@LetsTalkReligion and I'm wondering why you haven't covered abdul qadir jilani yet? Diligently waiting for your next video.

  • @r.p.8906
    @r.p.8906 11 месяцев назад +1

    December 17: the sun is exactly on the galactic center in astronomy. The son returns... Beautiful video. Thank you!!

  • @timkaine5098
    @timkaine5098 Год назад +40

    My sister is a semi famous scholar of Persian and she told me a story once about her visiting a certain very famous Rumi translator. He saw her leaf through a person dictionary and said "you understand that?"
    She was taken aback and said "you don't?" And in conversation he revealed to her his method of translation was to hover his hands over rumis Persian text to sort of read the general vibe before he basically channeled what he thought Rumi was saying

    • @emfox6280
      @emfox6280 Год назад +6

      🤦‍♀

    • @alwilliams5177
      @alwilliams5177 Год назад +6

      Wonder who that could have been lol.

    • @instamdgram
      @instamdgram Год назад +1

      You mean Persian dictionary, I guess! It says person dictionary!😮

    • @larapalma3744
      @larapalma3744 Год назад

      😂😮😢

    • @Nozarks1
      @Nozarks1 Год назад

      Wow! Amazing. I’ve heard of people having this ability.

  • @meherflamenca
    @meherflamenca Год назад

    Thank you, Filip. Hafiz and Rumi I have been interested in due to Meher Baba's quoting of them. Information about their lives is lovely to discover, so unexpectedly this morning. Thank you for these postings.

  • @pressedgranite
    @pressedgranite Год назад +3

    I’m impressed by your pronunciation of the “kh”. i would appreciate it if you made a video on Ibn Battuta. incredible video all in all

    • @Ghredle
      @Ghredle 6 месяцев назад

      ❤ me too😊

  • @tessathulien61
    @tessathulien61 11 месяцев назад

    Omid Safi offers some beautiful teachings on Rumi as well. ❤ Thank you for this gift to my ears and heart, especially hearing the music of the original Persian sound. It left me swimming in the ocean of my heart. Blessings❤😊

  • @paulopheim4224
    @paulopheim4224 8 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent and inspiring. Thank you.

  • @themushmonk
    @themushmonk Год назад +4

    Visited his tomb not too long ago, he's word amaze me!

  • @mgamga
    @mgamga Год назад +1

    Beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder.
    Not only informative from a theological pov, but put In an historical perspective.

  • @annettealim3820
    @annettealim3820 Год назад +12

    My soul is from elsewhere 🌹

  • @shahnoz87
    @shahnoz87 Год назад +1

    Thank you very much for making this video! ❤

  • @majidbineshgar7156
    @majidbineshgar7156 Год назад +7

    Rumi is believed to have been influenced by Sana'i Ghaznavi as well as Attar .

  • @username.something
    @username.something 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much for videos on this channel. You are wonderful!

  • @robertmoshe6674
    @robertmoshe6674 Год назад +18

    My poetry is about Allah not your ex girlfriend
    -Rumi

    • @magma9000
      @magma9000 Год назад +3

      😂😂😂😂😂

  • @sunmoon42
    @sunmoon42 Год назад +2

    Great video. Usually eesterners have a very strange and un8nformed view of Molana and his poetry but this video really did him justice. I loved the recitation of ney nameh in the original persian. I remember we had to memorise that poem as part of our school work in Iran.

  • @roseannefreese4685
    @roseannefreese4685 Год назад +3

    Teşekkür ederim and Shukran for your wonderful introduction to the great mystic Rumi. I have watched dozens of your videos and your presentation here is outstanding.
    I have been reading, absorbing, and reflecting on Rumi's Mathnavi for months and, of course, reading various commentaries on his life. I have also had the good fortune to make a pilgrimage to Konya this June where I circled, so to speak, the places associated with his life many times. Naturally I met so many wonderful people as well. Your presentation has helped me to integrate what I have seen and felt.
    You may find it interesting that among the Ojibwe Nation of Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Southern Canada that their prayers often contain the phrase, Manitou, make me a hollow bone. Here the emphasis is like Rumi's annihilation of the self and yet a little different, let me be of use to others -- not just the human world but also the plant and animal world.
    Thank you again for your lovely teaching which is both so rich in wisdom and so deep in inspiration. A'o!

  • @sambarkat2761
    @sambarkat2761 9 месяцев назад

    What a great and through job you have done by this presentation of Rumi. Thank you .

  • @willieluncheonette5843
    @willieluncheonette5843 Год назад +4

    " The words of Mevlana Rumi are immensely significant. There have been very few people who have moved and transformed as many hearts as Jalaluddin Rumi.
    In the world of the Sufis, Mevlana Rumi is the emperor. His words have to be understood not as mere words, but sources of deep silences, echoes of inner and the innermost songs. He is the greatest dancer the world has known. Twelve hundred years have passed since he was alive.
    His dance is a special kind of dance. It is a kind of whirling, just the way small children whirl; standing on one spot they go on round and round. And perhaps everywhere in the world small children do that and their elders stop them saying, “You will become dizzy, you will fall, you will hurt yourself,” and, “What is the point of doing it?”
    Jalaluddin Rumi made a meditation of whirling. The meditator goes on whirling for hours - as long as the body allows him; he does not stop on his own. When whirling a moment comes that he sees himself utterly still and silent, a center of the cyclone. Around the center the body is moving, but there is a space which remains unmoved; that is his being.
    Rumi himself whirled for thirty-six hours continuously and fell, because the body could not whirl anymore. But when he opened his eyes he was another man. Hundreds of people had gathered to see. Many thought he was mad: “What is the point of whirling?”
    … Nobody can say this is a prayer; nobody can say this is great dance; nobody can say in any way that this has something to do with religion, spirituality….
    But after thirty-six hours when they saw Rumi so luminous, so radiant, so new, so fresh - reborn, in a new consciousness, they could not believe their eyes. Hundreds wept in repentance, because they had thought that he was mad. In fact he was sane and they were mad.
    And down these twelve centuries the stream has continued to be alive. There are very few movements of spiritual growth which have lived so long continuously. There are still hundreds of dervishes. `Dervish’ is the Sufi word for sannyas. You cannot believe it unless you experience, that just by whirling you can know yourself. No austerity is needed, no self-torture is needed, but just an experience of your innermost being and you are transported into another plane of existence from the mortal to the immortal. The darkness disappears and there is just eternal light."

  • @parvanehbarron6194
    @parvanehbarron6194 8 месяцев назад

    This was beautiful 😍
    Thank you 🙏 for this video

  • @zulfizakarya5703
    @zulfizakarya5703 Год назад +6

    Many people think rumi (ra) was just a poet not a practicing muslim but you will be shocked that he followed sharia fully .
    He says in his masnavi that when i pray /nimaz i get so lost in it that i dont remember who is leading the prayer or in which physical position i am .
    His color used to change /pale whenmuazzin used to call for prayer .
    He says "im the dust on the path of Muhammad (saw)"

  • @JanealamkhakiTV
    @JanealamkhakiTV 6 месяцев назад

    Excellent presentation. Though I had read quite a bit about Rumi, but this presentation added to my knowledge to a great extent. Thank you as your other talks, this was a very enlightened and enlightening talk.

  • @logo2462
    @logo2462 Год назад +4

    That quote at 18:49 is so cute. W/e Rumi and Shams had going on was 🔥

  • @monasoufian2421
    @monasoufian2421 2 месяца назад

    Thank you! Great introduction to Molana’s teaching !❤

  • @Turkistonkanal
    @Turkistonkanal Год назад +7

    His father was also giant scholar and preacher!