Sunday, 3 March 2013

The Miracle of Shah Nematullah

Safi Ali Shahi khanaka in Tehran
The tomb of Safi Ali Shah is in the centre of Tehran. It is a mausoleum covered with a silvery dome but there are no crowds of pilgrims here like in Mashhad or Rey. Even Sunday afternoons are quiet here and that is when I went there. I entered the courtyard and was immediately greeted by bearded men. My limited knowledge of Farsi was laid bare after a few sentences so an English-speaking interlocutor was found for me. He could tell me something about this place.

Is it a Nematullahi Khanaqa? Could I be present at a zekr even though I am not a dervish?”

Yes, it is a khanaqa of the Nematullahi order of dervishes. Safi Ali Shah was one of the greatest shaikhs of this order. Could I be present at the zekr? Darvish Muhammad has to decide, he is pir-e-khanaqa, he will lead the zekr. Soon after a man with a dense but rather short beard appeared. He kept telling jokes which I didn't understand but at which everybody else laughed. This was Darvish Muhammad; one glance of his mischievous eyes was enough for me to know I'd be accepted..

Can I take a picture of the mausoleum?”

Outside yes but inside it is not officially allowed,” my English-speaking interlocutor says. “The dervishes wouldn't have any problems but the authorities do. There is no real reason, I guess they just want to feel important. They gave us an official supervisor, that's the man who stands there in the corner. He was very much against us to start with but we tamed him and he became a dervish. Well, he thinks he is a dervish, but it is better this way. He sometimes even chairs the meetings. So for now we have a kind of peace here but really the government of the Islamic Republic persecutes the dervishes. Most meet in secrecy. One Nematullahi shaikh lives in London because in Iran he has a death sentence.”

Darvish Muhammad (left) and others
Who are these dervishes, then? Why should the government of the Islamic Republic have anything against them?

One myth has to be dispersed to start with – dervishes do not have to whirl. They don't have to don funny outfits either. The zekr of the Nematullahi dervishes in Tehran started with recitation of poetry and ended with recitation of Divine Names in total darkness. All those gathered there sat on the floo rall the time .

Sufi or dervishes (usually the words are used as synonyms although sometimes the word 'sufi' is used for enlightened masters, whereas 'dervishes' are still learning) are Muslim mystics organised into orders since the Middle ages. For them the outward behaviour and exotic clothing are not important. What is important is the inner change of a person, the change that makes possible to experience God's presence. In the sufi parlance – no egoist can hear the voice of God but the superficial ego (called 'nasf' by the sufis) does not need to dominate, it can be taken under control. Only those who tamed their own egos can hear the whisper of God within their hearts. The outward behaviour is important only as far as it influences the mind, it may lead to a state of mind in which hearing the whisper of God is possible. The outward behaviour of dervish orders is not prescribed forever, it changes depending on the society in which the order exists. The Nematullahi used to be a begging order but these days they are all employed, sometimes as highly skilled professionals. They used to wear a special habit called 'kherqa', nowadays they dress as everybody else and only don the habit on special occasions. The Nematullahi dervishes in London meet in a room where men and women sit together completely mixed, women also wear western clothes and don't cover their heads. In Iran this is not possible, at the tomb of Safi Ali Ahah there is a separate entrance for women and during the zekr they sit in a separate room.

The tomb of Shah Nematullah
Having heard that I plan to travel to Central Iran, Darvish Muhammad suggested that I visit Mahan, a little town where the tomb of Shah Nematullah Wali is located. Shah Nematullah was the founder of the Nematullahi order of dervishes. Of course his tomb is not just any old gravestone at a village cemetery, we are in Iran after all, the tomb of Shah Nematullah is a magnificent mausoleum, beautiful architecture. I had considered the possibility of going there anyway but after Darvish Muhammad's suggestion I decided to go there for sure.
A railway station, then. A railway station in Iran is an experience in itself. It demonstrates the contrast between ordinary Iranians who are usually friendly and helpful and the extremely inefficient institutions of the Islamic Republic. There is only one train a day between Kerman (a town the size of Leeds) and Tehran (the capital, bigger than London). Of course the number of people who want to travel far exceeds the number of seats available so the ticket offices are in a state of incessant siege. Police officers block the entry with a park bench to reduce the crowds inside. A tourist (like myself) is rudely turned away but the ordinary people in the crowd point out that the 'khareji' (foreigners) don't have to queue if they show passports, at which point the policemen move the bench ever so slightly so the khareji can squeeze in, the crowd inside lets him go through and he gets his ticket just like that (this is not the miracle alluded to in the title). The khareji has to show his passport to get his ticket, he has to show it at the entry to the platform as well even though he isn't going abroad. This is normal in Iran, the police checks documents of people travelling between cities. The country is in the state of constant martial law. What is the government of the Islamic |Republic afraid of? Maybe the dervishes? Or maybe the ordinary friendly and helpful people?

Shah Nematullah Wali
This is not all. Once all the passengers were on their seats the train was checked by morality guards. In Iran opposite sexes are not permitted to sit in the same compartments unless they are members of the same family. So although I paid for my seat (it was obligatory) I was not permitted to sit on it because there were some ladies in my compartment. I was ordered to vacate my seat and was led to a compartment occupied only by men.

In the end I arrived in Kerman, from there I took a taxi to Mahan and got off in front of the shrine of Shah Nematullah. Tourist guides warn that the entry to the Shia shrines is only allowed for Muslims so I entered with some apprehension but it soon turned out that I didn't need to worry at all. I walked in, passed all the courtyards, entered the inner sanctuary and even touched the sarcophagus of the bearded saint without anybody raising the eyebrow. I knew he was bearded because his picture was hanging there. It was only later that I noticed something that hadn't at first seemed unusual to me – sex segregation so ubiquitous in Iran did not apply there. Mixed groups of men and women came to touch the sarcophagus and prayed together bowing towards Mecca. In mixed groups! In Iran!

The atmosphere was also somewhat different than in the shrines of the Shia saints such as in Rey near Tehran. Fewer people, less noise, wall decoration not so gaudy, 15th century architecture well preserved. Groups of people talk quietly here and there but the aura is that of silent prayer. Carpets on all the floors, one can sit and soak up the atmosphere.

I was sitting and soaking up the atmosphere when a girl approached and asked whether I would like to join them – a group of young people sitting in a mixed group and talking quietly. I did join them and thus I learned why some people come to visit the tomb of Shah Nematullah. Not all of them are dervishes.

Asma – the girl that approached me – and her husband Nima, also present, told me their story. They said they were in love for years but their parents wouldn't let them get married. Asma's father was the most difficult to persuade, he was a traditionalist and always had objections. Asma and Nima weren't freethinkers themselves, not at all, they were very religious and every week they came to Mahan to ask Shah Nematullah for intercession. And it worked! After six years the parents relented and the wedding was just two months ago. Now they come to Mahan every week to say thank you.
In the garden of Shah Nematullah mausoleum







You will find this story, and many others, in my book "ASK A GLOBETROTTER".