Seven hundred years ago
the Saints came marching in
to this valley, from Delhi,
seven hundred Sufi Saints,
and then another seven hundred,
at the request of the great
Master Nizamuddin.
Only God
knows why.
They lived here,
and the valley
still breathes
their Light.
Their heirs
have erected
sublime shrines
to honor
some of them.
It is all
a Song of Love;
and in the hills
and valley at this
green time of year,
Nature sings along.
Great clouds of incense smoke
waft from the bier room,
in which someone
is chanting loudly.
Bright lights
shockingly illumine
vast swaths of
green and white marble.
Brown faces, caps, dhotis,
beards. Kind eyes.
“Time for a Sufi song,”
my guide says.
A man with full beard,
long robe and cap
approaches
and stands before
the open crypt room.
I remember
having greeted him
earlier in the courtyard,
his hand’s touch
like that of a bird
scarcely lighting
on the ground.
Now, as he begins singing,
standing here like
a great eagle, somehow,
even angels fall silent.
We stand behind him,
a line of men,
repeating his chants
in a strong male chorus
that becomes another
mighty voice.
Later I ask my guide,
“What is the title
of that magnificent
leader of the Sufi singing?”
and he replies, “Beggar.
He just came and asked
if he could do odd jobs.”
New world of sharp angles.
Everything impossibly brilliant!
Arches outlined green and gold.
The domes, perfect;
ice cream scoops for God.
My senses
are sharpened
beyond measure.
In the little room
where we paid respects.
I felt a rush of the heart,
a lightening.
Now my host goes
and prays with
the Moslem men
I sit where I am
offering my own
silent prayers,
surveying the room
of brown faces—
Islamic mystics
chanting Allahu Akbar.
Briefly I wonder,:
“Is an American safe here?”
Everyone so far
has been friendly, though,
and I relax.
I speak to one or two
who inquire of me:
“I came to India for Meher Baba.”
“Ah, Meher Baba,” one says.
“My uncle has a shop in Ahmednagar!”
“Ah,” says another.
“My father saw Meher Baba here!”
Coming down the steps
afterward, my guide and I
pass the little flower bazaar.
Across the lane
some of his friends
sit drinking
at a chai shop,
and we join them.
I've long heard of
Sai Baba’s cave,
where he received
Realization from Zarzari,
who'd lived seven hundred
years before.
It is said that Sai
had served him
so perfectly back then
that he earned Godhood.
Only God knows why
it was not given then.
My guide and I trudge
up the steep hill
on the winding path.
I slip. He helps
to steady me.
We stop a moment
to rest.
Finally, we reach
a green iron gate,
Imtiyaj pulls it open,
and we carefully
climb up into the cave.
We sit upon
the earthen floor,
facing a prayer rug
and a wall hanging.
I close my eyes
in this spot
where God reached down
and turned Sai Baba into Light
so that he could become
Qutub-e-Irshad of his age,
the age when the Five
undertook their Great Work
of bringing down the Avatar.
Meditating, I see
Zarzari as a great Eye
reaching down—
Sai holding out
an open palm
with an ॐ inscribed upon it,
emanating blinding Light,
and Merwan in that Light
approaching Sai,
whose recognition is
his cry: “Parvardigar!”
In this very cave once,
a human being
became God.
Will I ever understand?
God is One
yet we go round
from shrine to shrine
bowing before
Sufi Saints and Mogul Emperors,
each with a magnificent domed shrine.
At each, we buy offerings
of flowers and perfume.
At each, a welcomer reminds us
of the donations box,
and I put in rupees.
I’ve run out of small notes,
have only 50s and 100s left.
I give to beggars
outside, as well:
a man with stumps for feet,
a woman whose desperately
beseeching face
I simply can't ignore.
And in each shrine there is
another man, often a blind man,
who tells about yet another Saint—
the main Saint’s brother,
mother-in-law or son,
buried in a separate little place.
The speaker ends with,
“I am a poor man.”
I give him 100 rupees, too.
I’m beginning to feel
I don’t know what I’m doing.
I came to pay respects
to someone who was
Master to a Master
of my Master,
but he came to this valley
with so many others—
A lineage of the great
Chistis, among others.
At each place I’m told names
that seem to run
to sentence length.
How can I comprehend
that seven hundred years ago
these men were truly
God’s Light on Earth?
I don’t recognize
most of the names.
I bow and bow,
each time bowing
to Meher Baba,
saying His Name.
I don’t want
to insult my guide,
who has been kind.
He’s only 23, but
his care for me is that
of a mature man.
I’m overwhelmed
with impressions
here in Khuldabad—
“City of Paradise”—
where the last
of the shrines are.
Upthrust minarets
surround a miniature
Haggia Sofia.
Shrines are everywhere.
Each one is striking.
women in burkas
walk down the street
amid the usual Indian hubbub—
shops, pedestrians, motorbikes.
An old, turbaned man
comes toward me,
hand out. How
can I refuse?
But fatigue
is setting in.
We pay respects
at one last shrine,
and finally finish up
our rounds.
Now we'll drive over
to the bazaar at Ellora,
near the caves, look for gifts
and feed the monkeys.
I have so much
to contemplate!
Poem and photos ©
2017 by Max Reif
Notes:
Prologue
A Wikipedia article describes a bit of the history of the Valley, and gives links to some of the main figures involved.
Part One
More info on Zarzari Zarbaksh, who lived 700 years ago, but still inspires his
small local group of devotees to great mystical fervor! He is best known in Meher Baba circles for having been Master of Sai Baba of Shirdi. This will be footnoted in Part 3.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zar_Zari_Zar_Baksh
Part Two
Sai Baba of Shirdi, with
his luminous eyes, remains the best-known modern spiritual figure in India. His photo or a painting of him can be seen on taxicabs, trucks, small temples, and elsewhere all over India. Going from
Mumbai to Meherabad, my driver and I passed a large contingent of devotees walking around 150 miles on pilgrimage to Shirdi. Here is the account from LORD MEHER of the Enlightenment
(God-Realization) of Sai Baba at the behest of his Master, Zarzari, who had lived so long ago--a VERY unusual phenomenon, because usually only another Perfect Master in the body can bestow this
Gift.
http://www.lordmeher.org/rev/index.jsp?pageBase=page.jsp&nextPage=49
Part Three
This article lists a number of the Saints (or Perfect Ones) whose shrines we visited:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sufi_saints_of_Aurangabad