This class takes place in beautiful Santa Barbara, California. Sorry Bahrain.
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22 Sep 2012 Leave a comment
by Eva the Dragon in Food for the Soul - Poetry, The Most Interesting Roosters - People Tags: Fariba Enteshari, La Casa De Maria, Mathnawi, religion, Rumi, Santa Barbara, Sufi
12 Mar 2012 1 Comment
by Eva the Dragon in Food for the Soul - Poetry, The Most Interesting Roosters - People Tags: Divine messages, Fariba Enteshari, Forty Rules of Love, Indries Shah, La Casa De Maria, poetry, Rumi, Santa Barbara California, Sufism
We are not forced to do anything. We are only chosen. To be chosen does not mean anything by itself, but the meaning of what you are chosen to do does. Once we make that choice, the Divine comes to meet us and gives us assistance that is beyond our capabilities.
Fariba Enteshari,
Jalal al Din Rumi student/scholar
I have never been a big reader of poetry but lately I seem to keep coming across small bits of Rumi’s work. And although no one is forcing me to read it – I am not “in school” – I find that for some reason I am drawn to his work and find a relevant truth in nearly every passage. Perhaps this is an example of the Divine meeting me and helping me glimpse Rumi’s magnificence.
My friend Fariba Enteshari has been a Rumi student since I met her nearly twenty years ago at the Immaculate Heart College Center in Los Angeles. While I waded through Theresa of Avila, Fariba was immersed in Rumi’s six volume book of poetry, the Mathnawi.
The Mathnawi is 25,000 lines of lyrical verse. It is referred to as the Persian Koran. The verse is spoken in the voice of Rumi’s beloved muse, friend, teacher, Shams al Din. Our bookclub recently read a novel about their relationship called The Forty Rules of Love.
Rumi, a Koranic scholar, was a popular Imam in Koya, Turkey. Shams was “delivered” to his doorstep and began a conversation with Rumi that, according to the stories, lasted forty-days and nights. During that intense period of interaction, Rumi’s heart was opened. And after Sham’s death, for the first time in his life, he began writing the poetry which has guided people for 700 years.
Indries Shah the great thinker and writer on Sufism said a great part of Sufism “must be personally communicated by means of interaction between the teacher and the learner. Too much attention to the written page can be harmful.”
This Sufism truth was probably revealed by Rumi’s and Sham’s relationship.
If you are interested in entering a conversation with a Rumi scholar, this Wednesday, March 14th, Fariba Enteshari is putting aside her writing for the day to have a Banquet of Love. She invites anyone interested in Rumi’s poetry to come to this spiritual feast.
If you are uncertain whether you are interested in poetry or are capable of understanding Rumi’s deeper meaning, you can take heart from Indries Shah who said
“Rumi, like other Sufi authors, plants his teachings within a framework which as effectively screens its inner meaning as displays it. This technique fulfills the functions of preventing those who are incapable of using the material on a higher level from experimenting effectively with it; allowing those who want poetry to select poetry; giving entertainment to people who want stories; stimulating the intellect in those who prized such experiences.”
Indries Shah, The Way of the Sufi, 1970.
If you are near beautiful Santa Barbara, California this Wednesday, go spend the day at La Casa Maria with Fariba and other Rumi devotees and see what message Rumi’s poetry has for you.
Banquet of Love is Wednesday March 14th 9:30-3:30 at the La Casa de Maria, in Santa Barbara, California. Donations will be taken at the door. To make a reservation for the $14 lunch go to www.lcdm.org or call (805) 969 – 5031.
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