
 The Holy
Qur'an
Meraj
Of Prophet Muhammad
"There
are a number of legends about the early life of
Mohammed, founder of the religion of Islam.
It
is said that just before Mohammed’s birth his father,
Abdula, dreamt of his unborn son. He saw growing from
his child’s back a tree, which climbed upward, and
reaching its full height emitted a light that spread
around the world.
Most
Muslims interpret the dream and its imagery
symbolically. The tree would of course represent the
religion of Islam, supported by Mohammed. The light is
the wisdom of his teachings that have truly been
globally disseminated.
However
we also know that the tree in Mohammed’s back could be
the ‘tree of life’ and is a common symbol in Middle
Eastern and Islamic culture. Carl Jung, after years of
studying the language of the unconscious, interpreted
the tree of life as one of the universal unconscious’s
synonyms for the Kundalini.
The
Kundalini, said Jung, is a spiritual energy best
documented by (but by no means exclusive to) the yogis
of India. It should not at all be surprising, should we
take an open-minded and closer look at Islam, that as
with the other great religions, we find a deeper, more
mystical and universal message: that of self realisation
and the mechanism by which it occurs — Kundalini
awakening. Every culture and religion has had
individuals who have achieved a living, spontaneous,
direct experience of their religion. A dynamic,
suprahuman awareness that went beyond dogma and blind
faith. The Gnostics of Christianity, the Yogis of
Hinduism, the Fang-Shi of Tao and the Sufis of Islam all
achieved these states and each have spoken of
experiences that, despite differences of appearance, are
strikingly similar in content.
Let
us then look at Abdula’s dream from a yogic
perspective. We can suggest that he actually saw the
uniquely powerful Kundalini of his son. The ascent of
Mohammed’s Kundalini was not simply of individual
importance to Mohammed but had global, even cosmic
significance. For the light, the divine energy of
Mohammed’s Kundalini, was about to affect a spiritual
and cultural revolution in Arabia. Mohammed was the
vessel through which the universal unconscious, or
‘divine’, or ‘God’ was about to act.
As
a child and young man Mohammed showed few signs of his
prophetic destiny. He was well known for his moral
integrity and good character but it was not until his
forties that he became aware of his true purpose.
Through a series of transformative experiences Mohammed
was prepared for his divine role. These experiences
culminated in the amazing Meraj (or ‘Ascent’).
The
experience of the Meraj, like the rising kundalini that
Abdula had seen, would not only revolutionise
Mohammed’s awareness but send out shock waves which
resonated in the unconscious of all Arabians and later,
all the world.
Through
the Meraj Mohammed realized the need for the
establishment of a new culture. He was to establish a
creed that went beyond the petty tribal boundaries,
blood feuds and violent practices prevalent at the time.
To go beyond such ingrained behaviour patterns Mohammed
drew upon an awareness of superhuman proportions. He
transcended the limitations of the human mind and tapped
into the universal intelligence. His vision then became
universal: to unite the peoples of Arabia under a system
of morality, justice and compassion. A system that would
serve as the foundation for one of the greatest
civilisations in recorded history.
The
Meraj gave Mohammed the confidence, wisdom and
superhuman energy to attempt such a revolution.
In
this visionary experience the angel Gabriel escorted
Mohammed from his humble quarters to the Dome of the
Rock in Jerusalem. There the Buraq, a fantastic steed
with the body of a horse, the head of a woman and the
wings of a bird, greeted him. She shone with dazzling
white brightness and her tremendous strength bore
Mohammed up into the cosmos through the various divine
dimensions.
Gabriel
escorted Mohammed on the Buraq through the seven
heavens. Each heaven had its own guardian angel and
resident prophet who ruled the dimension in accordance
with God’s laws. Mohammed bowed to guardian angels who
determined his readiness to enter into their heaven, and
then Mohammed respectfully paid homage to the reigning
prophet. The prophet in turn blessed Mohammed and
ushered him on to the next heaven and so on.
At
the sixth heaven Gabriel brought Mohammed to the verge
of the seventh. The archangel said that he himself could
go no further. This, the seventh heaven, was the last
frontier between god and man and Mohammed was ushered
into the place described as the abode of God almighty.
Their
Mohammed saw a beautiful, radiant tree with wondrous
multicolored leaves. It was here that he communed with
God and learned of his true purpose.
This
beautiful and inspiring vision has motivated millions of
Muslims for more than a thousand years. Its significance
becomes even more universal when we examine it from the
perspective of kundalini awakening, using the symbolic
language of the universal unconscious.
The
seven heavens through which Mohammed passed must of
course correspond to the seven chakras that exist within
the human body. Each chakra, say the yogis, is the abode
of a special deity whose character embodies the
chakra’s innate spiritual qualities. The human chakra
system is a microcosm for the entire Eastern pantheon of
gods, goddesses and heavenly beings. The prophets and
angels that Mohammed encountered in each heaven could
well have been these same inner deities that the yogis
personally discovered through intense meditation.
The
seventh heaven or chakra is the ‘Crown Chakra’ also
termed Sahasrara. Yogis have described it as the most
important of all the chakras for it represents the
ultimate level of mystic awareness.
Like
all the chakras it has a specific number of petals (in
this case more than a thousand)|. Each chakra not only
has a specific number of petals but also a specific
radiant colour. The sahasrara’s appearance however is
said to contain all the colours of the rainbow for it
contains within it all the aspects (and hence the
colours) of the six other chakras below it.
Such
ancient yogic descriptions of the sahasrara could
logically correspond to the resplendent and
multicoloured sidrat which Mohammed encountered in the
7th heaven.
The
kundalini is a feminine energy often described as an
‘inner goddess’ or ‘mother energy’. Her ascent
from the sacrum, through the chakras located in the
spinal cord, is the process of self-realisation. When
the kundalini arrives in the crown chakra (sahasrara)
the seeker experiences the complete transformation of
awareness. One is taken beyond the limits of the human
mind into the mystical states of meditation described by
sufis and yogis alike.
In
fact C.G. Jung described the kundalini as the ‘divine
feminine ‘or ‘God the mother’. Notably,
Mohammed’s vehicle for his own ascent through the
heavenly dimensions was the lady-faced, dazzling buraq.
The buraq could well be a feminine, Arabic synonym for
kundalini.
In
conclusion Mohammed’s ascent through the seven heavens
was, in fact, the ascent of the kundalini, taking his
consciousness with it, to divine union with the god
almighty.
It
is no coincidence that the entire Meraj is described to
have started and finished in an incredibly short period
of time: While sitting in his room Mohammad heard
someone grasp the door handle and the sound of the latch
clicking was the last thing he heard before Gabriel’s
appearance and the duo’s departure on their spiritual
journey. Mohammed’s return to mundane experience
restarts with the next few clicks of the same latch
movement. In other words the entire experience occurred
in a sort of ‘no-time’. This is not an unusual
proposition since meditation is a state of awareness
created by the ascent of the kundalini through the
chakras. As it pierces the sixth chakra (‘third eye’
or Agnya) and seventh, it takes the meditator into the
state of ‘thoughtless awareness’ (Nirvichara Samadhi)
and beyond. This is a simple state where one experiences
true mental silence, beyond the normal mental awareness
of past/future, cause/effect .
The
mind, as this editorial column has often discussed
before, can only deal with the dimension of past and
future, cause and effect, thought and memory. However,
the state of meditation begins in the ‘spaces between
the thoughts’. This is the numinous dimension where
there is no passage of time but only a singular, silent,
eternal, thought-free and joyful experience.
It
was from this dimension of awareness that Mohammed
perceived the divine vision of a universal culture and
spirituality. Through his meditative vision he learned
of humanity’s higher potential thus his mystic
perception of the universal spirit and its presence
within each of us became the template upon which he
sought to fashion a new society whose foundations lay
not in issues of common material interest but in the
unique awareness of Self-Realization. Mohammed was, in
fact, laying the first building blocks for the emergence
of a spiritual civilization that may only now come into
fruition.”
1
Prophet Muhammad was at all times besides His wife when He
experienced this mystical journey (Meraj) to heaven. Kash made about
1300 such journeys to heaven. Prophet Muhammad made the
journey within. Kash also made these journeys within.
Both reached the mystical heaven within, the
Sahasrara or Kingdom of God.
However, in no way is Kash compared or elevated to Prophet
Muhammad. Far from it. But there is a reason he met Prophet
Muhammad, a reason absolutely necessary to confirm what the
Qur'an reveals about His Ruh (Spirit) and the announcement
of Al-Qiyamah. These exacting pre-ordained conditions beyond
human manipulation form the phalanx of Sure Signs that
commences Al-Qiyamah.
1.
Knowledge of Reality,
Yogic
Insights into Islam
(Issue 15)
Continue:
Belief
In His Angels
Continue:
His
Spirit And His Angels (Al Qadr)
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CONTENTS OF AL QADR:
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Eid Al-Idha Of 1994
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Eid Al-Idha Of 1995
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Meraj
Of Prophet Muhammad
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Belief
In His Angels
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His
Spirit And His Angels (Al Qadr)
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PROMULGATION AND
EXPLANATION OF SURAH AL-QIYAMAH:
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Al-Qiyamah (The Resurrection): Ayat 1-2
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Al-Qiyamah
(The Resurrection): Ayat 3-4
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Al-Qiyamah
(The Resurrection): Ayat 5-6
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Al-Qiyamah (The Resurrection): Ayat 7-10
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Al-Qiyamah (The Resurrection): Ayat 11-13
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Al-Qiyamah (The Resurrection): Ayat 14-15
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Al-Qiyamah (The Resurrection): Ayat 16-19
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Al-Qiyamah (The Resurrection): Ayat 20-21
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Al-Qiyamah (The Resurrection): Ayat 22-25
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Al-Qiyamah (The Resurrection): Ayat 26-30
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Al-Qiyamah (The Resurrection): Ayat 31-35
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Al-Qiyamah (The Resurrection): Ayat 36-40
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COLLECTION, PROMULGATION AND
EXPLANATION OF SURAHS UPHOLDING ALLAH'S (SWT) SIGNS
OF AL-QIYAMAH:
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Winds Of Qiyamah Are Blowing (Fatir)
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Your Hands Will Speak (Fussilat)
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Angels Sent Have Arrived (Al Mursalat)
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Regions Within Revealed (Fussilat)
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Sun And Moon Joined Together (Al-Qiyamah)
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Allah's Iron Has Been Delivered (Al Hadid)
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Revelation Of Light Completed (Al Saf)
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Mighty Blast On Earth Announced (Qaf)
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Mighty Blast In Sky Has Occurred (Qaf)
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Children Of Israel Gathered (Al Isra')
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Hidden Imam Mahdi Has Emerged (Qaf)
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Kitab Al Munir Identified (Al Hajj)
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Ruh Of Allah Explained In Detail (Al Isra)
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Baptism Of Allah (Al Baqarah)
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Allah Will Not Address Them (Al Baqarah)
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The Dealers In Fraud (Al Mutaffun)
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The Day You Were Not Aware (Al Rum)
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What Will Explain To Thee? (Al Infitar)
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My Messengers Must Prevail (Al Mujadidah)
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Night Of Power And Fate (Al Qadr)
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Day Of Noise and Clamour (Al Qariah)
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The Night Visitant (Al Tariq)
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Second Coming (Al Zukhruf)
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Caller From Within (Qaf)
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Blasts Of Truth (Qaf)
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Fear My Warning (Qaf)
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Deliver Warning (Al Muddaththir)
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Conclusion
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TRANSLATIONS OF THE
HOLY QUR'AN:
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The Holy Qur'an (Abdullah Yusuf Ali)
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Ruh OF ALLAH (THE IMAM
MAHDI):
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Proof Of Divinity 1
(click to enlarge)
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Proof Of Divinity 2
(click to enlarge)
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Shri Adi Shakti: The Kingdom Of God
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EDITOR'S CHOICE: QUOTES AND REFERENCES
Satanic lies about Night of Power (Al Qadr) 1
Satanic lies about Night of Power (Al Qadr) 2
Satanic lies about Night of Power (Al Qadr) 3
Satanic lies about Night of Power (Al Qadr) 4 |
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“Experience of the universal
The nature of the goal, however, introduces a paradox.
Like every other aim and activity, mysticism operates
in a historical context. Yet, sooner or later, it also
tends to reveal a timeless stance. The mystic is both
in and out of time. The eternal now is a kind of
release from the temporal order. Such a release may
lead to a shift from the local to the universal, to a
growing sense of unity of all experience. Though not a
declared or conscious aim, this result could be looked
upon as a not unworthy goal as well as a pragmatic
standard.
To cure man of a provincialism of the spirit, from
which more people suffer than either know or admit it,
is one of the goals of a mysticism that has come of
age. The true mystic is a cosmopolitan. In man's
many-sided growth toward the real, a sane and mature
mysticism leads to an ecumenical insight and
obligation. Local colour, particulars, and uniqueness
will not cease, but, in the perspective of the future
and of wholeness, the universal alone will have
survival value.”
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Britannica
Online
(1994-1998 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.)
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“He was one of those happy few who
have attained the supreme joy of making one great
truth their very life spring. He was the messenger of
One God, and never to his life's end did he forget who
he was or the message which was the marrow of his
being. He brought his tidings to his people with a
grand dignity sprung from the consciousness of his
high office, together with a most sweet humility.”
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Stanley
Lane-Poole, Studies in a Mosque
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“Experience of oneness with people
The apotheosized (divinized) field of consciousness is
mysticism's ultimate goal and gift to the life of an
evolving humanity. It alone is fitted to mediate
between the anguish of existence and the serenity of
essence, between samsara ("cycle of birth and
rebirth") and Nirvana (the State of Bliss).
According to an American Roman Catholic mystic, Thomas
Merton, "The spiritual anguish of man has no cure
but mysticism."
Though the mystic goal may seem to be tied to a
transcendent reality, this does not mean a sundering
of all relations and responsibilities. On the
contrary, it is the guarantee of a set of altered
relationships and a rehabilitation of what may be
called the higher reason. Intuitions that sink into
private fancy and morbidity have a short life to live.
As for the mystic's "yonder," it is not
spatially or posthumously remote but rather refers to
a different order of reality and consciousness. The
healthier forms of mysticism do not abjure action or
the claims of love. It is an ancient maxim that one
becomes what one loves. This is how the psychic birth
repeats itself in the mystic soul, as stated, for
example, by Meister Eckehart, a medieval German
mystic: "It is more worthy of God that he should
be born spiritually of every virgin, or of every good
soul, than that he should have been born physically of
Mary."
The mystic is not always amorous of the beyond,
leaving an unredeemed world to its own ways. Not
escape but, rather, victory is mysticism's inner urge
and promise. The more sober among the mystics do not
merely withdraw; they also return to the base and
attempt the ancient alchemy, the transformation of
men. A solitary salvation does not satisfy either head
or heart.”
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Britannica
Online
(1994-1998 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.)
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“My problem to write this
monograph is easier, because we are not generally fed
now on that (distorted) kind of history and much time
need not be spent on pointing out our
misrepresentations of Islam. The theory of Islam and
sword, for instance, is not heard now in any quarter
worth the name. The principle of Islam that
"there is no compulsion in religion" is well
known.”
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K.
S. Ramakrishna Rao,
Mohammed: The Prophet of Islam
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“Mystical relationship between man
and the sacred
Nature of the relationship
Within man is the soul of the holy, said Ralph Waldo
Emerson in the 19th century. This is true of society,
too. As the French sociologist Émile Durkheim saw it,
the sacred is but a personified society. Mysticism,
one might say, is the art and science of the holy.
Theologically, it is but "the experience of the
Holy Ghost, . . . the realization of the Spirit of
Holiness." As the opposite of the profane and as
a distinct and irreducible quality of the religious
and mystical life, the sacred has always existed. It
is indeed a mark of the real, and, when the German
theologian Rudolf Otto isolated the sacred as a
"quite distinctive category" of mystical
apprehension, he had no lack of evidence. The
emphasis, however, was not unanimously accepted. Some,
like Inge, thought the sacred might as well be
elicited from such ultimate values as "truth,
goodness, and beauty."
According to the respective world view, the
interpretation or emphasis varies, but the universal
core remains unaffected. The sacred is in its own way
a coherent system, though not rational. The dualists
no less than the theists insist on the unqualified and
irreducible "otherness," the unbridgeable
gulf, even when one speaks of union or communion. It
is the distance that preserves the sacred.
Christian mystics, who often speak of "union with
God," generally do not imply identity with the
divine, since this might lead to heresy. The
16th-century Spanish mystic St. Teresa of Avila could
write with impunity: "It is plain enough what
unity is — two distinct things becoming one."
But most others could not be so plain and had to use
special strategy to cover up traces of possible
deviation from what was permissible. Even if there had
been a semblance of interpenetration between man and
the divine, there could be no substantial identity.
"Each of these," wrote the medieval Dutch
mystic Jan van Ruysbroeck, "keeps its own nature.
There is here a great distinction, for the creature
never becomes God, nor does God ever become the
creature." The same doctrine is preached in the
Middle Ages by the mystic Heinrich Suso:
In this merging of itself in God the spirit passes
away and yet not wholly; for it receives indeed some
attribute of God, but it does not become God by
nature. It is still something that has been created
out of nothing, and continues to be this
everlastingly.”
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Britannica
Online
(1994-1998 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.)
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