A revelation from Rumi

This morning I read some poems from Hafez (c 1315-1390) that celebrated love and wine and striving of a mysticism. Notwithstanding the art, the sentiments left me cold, and so I recovered from an earlier post this different sentiment of Rumi that speaks more to my sense of the spirit of the times: “Sometimes the cold and dark of a cave/ Give the opening we most want”.

A revelation from Rumi 

(originally posted 29 December 2018)

Sitting in a shopping centre cafe, I am reading A Year with Rumi. I am waiting for a back massage, sipping a coffee and listening to Sam Harris and Johann Hari speaking about addiction, depression and the loss of connection and control in our society. I woke this morning with the thought that I wanted to deepen the response of the Victorian Royal Commission into mental health from a service design frolic for health bureaucrats to engagement with the place of mental health/illness in culture.

I read from my book this poem from Rumi, written nearly 800 years ago

Backpain

Muhammad went to visit a sick friend.

Such kindness brings more kindness,

And there is no knowing the proliferation from there.

The man was about to die.

Muhammad put his face close and kissed him.

His friend began to revive.

Muhammad’s visit re-created him.

He began to feel grateful for an illness

That brought such light.

And also for the backpain

That wakes him in the night.

No need to snore away like a buffalo

When this wonder is walking the world.

There are values in pain that are difficult

To see without the presence of a guest.

Don’t complain about autumn.

Walk with grief like a good friend.

Listen to what he says.

Sometimes the cold and dark of a cave

Give the opening we most want.

Jalāl ad-Dīn Muhammad Rūmī

1207-1273

Published by Jeff Rich

Jeff Rich is a writer, historian, podcaster and now retired government official. He lives in Melbourne, Australia, and writes about many real worlds clearly with good world history.

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