Fazlallah Astarabadi and the Hurufis
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Shahzad Bashir
Shahzad Bashir is Assistant Professor of Religion at Carleton College in Minnesota. His published works include Messianic Hope and Mystical Visions: The Nurbakhshiya between Medieval and Modern Islam.
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Fazlallah Astarabadi and the Hurufis - Shahzad Bashir
PREFACE
Fazlallah Astarabadi (d. 1394) was an Islamic religious leader who believed that the world was about to come to an end and that he had been appointed the final divine messenger for humanity. He claimed that he had received direct revelations from God, which made him equal to prophets like Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad. These revelations came to him in the form of momentous dreams that also gave him the unsurpassed ability to interpret others’ dreams and to understand all human and animal languages. His followers thought that he was the ultimate master of all techniques of interpretation and, based on this distinction, they saw him as a manifestation of God in a human body.
Divine incarnation is a radical idea in the Islamic context and readers of this book already familiar with Islam might be inclined to think that Fazlallah and his followers do not qualify as Muslims. Such a judgment should be resisted. All evidence from Fazlallah’s works indicates that he considered himself a Muslim, but he also felt that he had been given the great charge of fulfilling Muhammad’s mission by providing the final and unambiguous interpretation of the Qur’an and previous scriptures. It is understandable that Muslims who did not accept Fazlallah’s claims saw him as a transgressor but, from a historical viewpoint, we must regard Fazlallah’s story as an indicator of Islam’s internal diversity. The radical ideas held by Fazlallah had, by the time of his activity, a long history as a part of the fabric of Islam. He provided a new complicated rationale for the proposition that God can manifest himself in the material world and was able to persuade a sizeable group that his views represented true Islam. His perspective should be seen as a version of Islam that was a viable alternative for Muslims living in the late medieval period.
The first three chapters of this book treat Fazlallah’s life and the next two go into aspects of his thought. Chapter 4, on cosmology and humanity, explains Fazlallah’s ideas about the creation of the world, its mythological history, and the place of the human being within it. The human body in particular was a central topic for him since he believed that the human form was an actual image of God imprinted on a mixture of earthly elements. He was also especially concerned with the human capacity for language, spoken as well as written. This emphasis is reflected in the fact that his followers came to be known as Hurufis,
a term that translates as letterists
and implies people obsessed with the alphabet. As discussed in Chapter 5, Fazlallah’s perspective compelled him and his followers to work for the salvation of the world in the face of the impending apocalypse. This effort generated a substantial literary corpus as well as communities of followers in various parts of the Iranian world. Chapter 6 takes the narrative beyond Fazlallah’s death by treating the activities of his immediate followers who constructed a shrine for him after his execution and attempted to rationalize his death. The last chapter of the book describes the fate of Fazlallah’s ideas after the period of his direct disciples.
Although written for a non-specialist audience, this book is the most comprehensive academic treatment of Fazlallah Astarabadi and his movement to date. A National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship from the American Research Institute in Turkey was instrumental in providing the resources for manuscript research for this project. I am grateful to Patricia Crone, for her keen editorial eye, and to Hamid Algar, Abbas Amanat, Kathryn Babayan, Gerhard Böwering, Kay Ebel Cornell Fleischer, Adnan Husain, Ahmet Karamustafa, and Emin Lelic for their aid and encouragement over the years I have been pursuing this topic. Special thanks to members of the Sufis and Society Project – Devin DeWeese, Jamal Elias, Farooq Hamid, Kishwar Rizvi, and Sara Wolper – for providing a congenial venue for discussing many different interests. And my greatest gratitude is due to Nancy and Zakriya for all their patience and love.
EARLY LIFE
Very little is known for certain about Fazlallah Astarabadi’s life. He is mentioned in only two historical works, which state that his birth name was ‘Abd al-Rahman, but he was better known as Abu l-Fazl Astarabadi, or as Sayyid Fazlallah. At some point in his life, he acquired a considerable reputation for a religious lifestyle emphasizing poverty and detachment from the world and for the depth and literary quality of his writings. Muslim scholars in Samarqand (Central Asia) and Gilan (northern Iran) eventually condemned his views as religious innovation, a hallmark of heresy in medieval Islamic thought. The historians state that he was executed on the order of the Turko-Mongol conqueror Timur in the Islamic year 804 (1401–2 CE). The involvement of Timur in the matter is certain, though it can be asserted, on the basis of better evidence, that the execution actually took place in 1394.
The lack of hard historical information does not mean that nothing else can be said about Fazlallah’s life. His followers’ works provide many details, some even with dates, although these sources have to be treated with caution since they presume that Fazlallah was a great saint and a martyr. Whatever is said in these works comes to us after being refracted through the lens of the myth Fazlallah’s followers built around his personality during his life and after his death. This issue is further complicated by the fact that Fazlallah and his followers placed great importance on dreams. Much of what we know about his life consists of either his own dreams and their supposed meanings, or the interpretation he provided for dreams seen by others. Such information is often difficult to interpret conclusively, leading to a story full of conjectures.
My sketch of Fazlallah’s life is based largely on the movement’s internal tradition. Its neat progression, where everything works out like a plan, makes it difficult to accept the whole narrative as history on face value. Since we have virtually no evidence from outside the movement, we cannot make the story more complex by juxtaposing alternative information and interpretations, as would be done with an historical topic based on a wider base of sources. We have to take the story as it is, keeping in mind that it is both a history and the unfolding of a myth or an archetype. Fazlallah’s devoted followers must have witnessed their guide’s life as a complex reality as well. The fact that what they recorded from it seems formulaic and over-simplified reflects their notions of the light in which Fazlallah’s life should be understood. In what follows, I reconstruct Fazlallah’s life using the fragmentary evidence found in his own works and the eulogistic accounts written by his followers.
BIRTH AND CHILDHOOD
Works by Fazlallah’s followers tell us that he was born in Astarabad in 1340. The city, the capital of an Iranian province on the southeastern shore of the Caspian Sea (see map), was at the time under the control of a petty ruler from the Ilkhan dynasty. Fazlallah’s father was the head judge of the city, which placed his family among the local elite. The fact that the term sayyid
is sometimes attached to Fazlallah’s name means that he considered himself a descendant of Muhammad, a mark of distinction among Muslims. The city of Astarabad was, at least in later centuries, famous for having a large number of sayyids as its residents, which made some people regard it as a religious center. We do not know to which sect of Islam Fazlallah’s family belonged. His works reflect familiarity with the positions of various sects but also show a particular devotion to early leaders of Twelver Shi‘ism known as the imams. However, a report from one of his sons that originated after Fazlallah’s death states that the family was Sunni of the Shafi‘i legal persuasion. The confusion regarding this matter in part reflects the fact that formal sectarian affiliation was not a crucial marker of religious identity in the context.
Fazlallah’s father died while he was still a child and we are told that he inherited the judge’s office. Judgeships were not usually transferable between generations and if Fazlallah did actually succeed his father in this way, this would have been based on a limited local tradition. In his youth, while he was incapable of actually doing the judge’s job, he was put on a horse every day and taken to the courthouse to act as the figurehead while his father’s former assistants took care of the work. The judge’s seat he occupied may have made him unusually serious even as a child, but we are also told that he was naturally inclined toward religious diligence. He performed the necessary Islamic rituals without fail from an early age and often went beyond these to do extra prayers by staying awake at night. He must have received a solid traditional religious education in his youth as well since his works, written much later in his life, show extensive familiarity with major Islamic sources, such as the Qur’an and the sayings of Muhammad and other early Muslims. The interpretive method he eventually developed also contains ways of arguing that he could have learned only through training in a traditional institution.
Fazlallah’s first extraordinary religious experience occurred around the year 1358 at the age of eighteen. One day he heard a wandering dervish recite the following verse by the great Sufi Persian poet Jalal al-Din Rumi (d. 1273):
Why are you afraid of death when you have the essence of eternity?
How can a grave contain you when you have the light of God?
This verse moved Fazlallah greatly, so much so that he became rooted to the spot and went into a kind of trance. He then asked his religious teacher about the verse’s meaning and was told that it was beyond description. He said that understanding the message underlying the verse required devoting oneself completely to religious pursuits, following which one would experience the meaning rather than knowing it intellectually. Hoping to unite with God and transcend death as mentioned in the verse, Fazlallah decided to attempt the experiential path suggested by his teacher.
RELIGIOUS WANDERING
For one whole year after hearing the verse, Fazlallah tried to live a normal life while at the same time detaching himself from worldly concerns. During the day he would go to the religious school to study and also work as a judge as required by the office he had inherited. At night he would often remove himself to a graveyard outside the city and pray alone until dawn. He soon discovered that his day and night-time activities were fundamentally antithetical to each other and that he must make a choice. When he was about nineteen, he decided to abandon his family, possessions, and secure life to become a homeless religious seeker. He gave away all his belongings and left Astarabad in the dark of the night. On the way out of the city, he met a shepherd and gave him the clothes he was wearing in exchange for a felt shirt. From now on he began wearing this shirt at all times as a symbol of having abandoned worldly connections and comforts.
Fazlallah’s religious search first took him to the city of Isfahan in central Iran. He was unused to hard conditions and the long journey on foot from Astarabad caused him to develop a seizure in one of his limbs upon arrival. After recovering, he became a part of the culture of wandering religious seekers who were becoming common in the Islamic world at this time. The period 1300–1500 is known for the rise of groups such as the Haydaris, Qalandars, and Abdals of