Wahdat Al-wujūd
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Wahdat al-wujūd ( "unity of existence, oneness of being") is a doctrine in the field of
Islamic philosophy Islamic philosophy is philosophy that emerges from the Islamic tradition. Two terms traditionally used in the Islamic world are sometimes translated as philosophy—''falsafa'' (), which refers to philosophy as well as logic, mathematics, and p ...
and
mysticism Mysticism is popularly known as becoming one with God or the Absolute (philosophy), Absolute, but may refer to any kind of Religious ecstasy, ecstasy or altered state of consciousness which is given a religious or Spirituality, spiritual meani ...
, according to which the
monotheistic Monotheism is the belief that one God is the only, or at least the dominant deity.F. L. Cross, Cross, F.L.; Livingstone, E.A., eds. (1974). "Monotheism". The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (2 ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. A ...
God In monotheistic belief systems, God is usually viewed as the supreme being, creator, and principal object of faith. In polytheistic belief systems, a god is "a spirit or being believed to have created, or for controlling some part of the un ...
is identical with
existence Existence is the state of having being or reality in contrast to nonexistence and nonbeing. Existence is often contrasted with essence: the essence of an entity is its essential features or qualities, which can be understood even if one does ...
(''wujūd'') and this one existence is that through which all existing things (''mawjūdāt'') exist. This doctrine, which in recent research is characterized as
ontological Ontology is the philosophical study of being. It is traditionally understood as the subdiscipline of metaphysics focused on the most general features of reality. As one of the most fundamental concepts, being encompasses all of reality and every ...
monism Monism attributes oneness or singleness () to a concept, such as to existence. Various kinds of monism can be distinguished: * Priority monism states that all existing things go back to a source that is distinct from them; e.g., in Neoplatonis ...
, is attributed to the Andalusian Sufi
Ibn Arabi Ibn Arabi (July 1165–November 1240) was an Andalusian Sunni Sunni Islam is the largest branch of Islam and the largest religious denomination in the world. It holds that Muhammad did not appoint any successor and that his closest com ...
(d. 1240) but was essentially developed by the philosophically oriented interpreters of his works. In the
Early Modern Period The early modern period is a Periodization, historical period that is defined either as part of or as immediately preceding the modern period, with divisions based primarily on the history of Europe and the broader concept of modernity. There i ...
, it gained great popularity among
Sufis Sufism ( or ) is a mystic body of religious practice found within Islam which is characterized by a focus on Islamic purification, spirituality, ritualism, and asceticism. Practitioners of Sufism are referred to as "Sufis" (from , ), and ...
. Some Muslim scholars such as
Ibn Taymiyya Ibn Taymiyya (; 22 January 1263 – 26 September 1328)Ibn Taymiyya, Taqi al-Din Ahmad, The Oxford Dictionary of Islam. http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780195125580.001.0001/acref-9780195125580-e-959 was a Sunni Muslim schola ...
(d. 1329), ʿAbd al-Qādir Badā'ūnī (d. 1597/98) and
Ahmad Sirhindi Ahmad Sirhindi (1564 – 1624/1625) was an Indian Islamic scholar, Hanafi jurist, and member of the Naqshbandī Sufi order who lived during the era of Mughal Empire. Ahmad Sirhindi opposed heterodox movements within the Mughal court such as D ...
(d. 1624), however, regarded wahdat al-wujūd as a
pantheistic Pantheism can refer to a number of Philosophy, philosophical and Religion, religious beliefs, such as the belief that the universe is God, or panentheism, the belief in a non-corporeal divine intelligence or God out of which the universe arise ...
heresy in contradiction to
Islam Islam is an Abrahamic religions, Abrahamic monotheistic religion based on the Quran, and the teachings of Muhammad. Adherents of Islam are called Muslims, who are estimated to number Islam by country, 2 billion worldwide and are the world ...
and criticized it for leading its followers to antinomianist views. In reality, however, many advocates of wahdat al-wujūd emphasized that this teaching did not provide any justification for transgressing
Sharia Sharia, Sharī'ah, Shari'a, or Shariah () is a body of religious law that forms a part of the Islamic tradition based on Islamic holy books, scriptures of Islam, particularly the Quran, Qur'an and hadith. In Islamic terminology ''sharīʿah'' ...
. The Egyptian scholar
Murtada al-Zabidi Al-Murtaḍá al-Husaynī al-Zabīdī (), or Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad Murtaḍá al-Zabīdī (1732–1790 / 1145–1205 AH), also known as Murtada al-Zabidi, was an Indian Sunni polymath based in Cairo. He was a Hanafi scholar, hadith special ...
(d. 1790) described wahdat al-wujūd as a "famous problem" (''masʾala mashhūra'') that arose between the "people of mystical truth" (''ahl al-ḥaqīqa'') and the "scholars of the literal sense" (''ʿulamāʾ aẓ-ẓāhir'').Murtaḍā al-Zabīdī: ''Itḥāf as-sāda al-muttaqīn bi-sharḥ Iḥyāʾ ʿulūm al-dīn''. Dār al-kutub al-ʿilmīya, Beirut 1989. vol. XII, p. 333
Digitalisat
/ref> The Ni'matullahi master
Javad Nurbakhsh Javad Nurbakhsh (; 10 December 1926 – 10 October 2008) was the Master ('' pir'') of the Nimatullahi Sufi Order from 1953 until his death. He was also a psychiatrist and a successful writer in the fields of both psychiatry and Sufi mysticism. ...
(d. 2008) was of the opinion that
Sufism Sufism ( or ) is a mysticism, mystic body of religious practice found within Islam which is characterized by a focus on Islamic Tazkiyah, purification, spirituality, ritualism, and Asceticism#Islam, asceticism. Practitioners of Sufism are r ...
as a whole was essentially a school of the "unity of being". Another name for this doctrine is ''
Tawhid ''Tawhid'' () is the concept of monotheism in Islam, it is the religion's central and single most important concept upon which a Muslim's entire religious adherence rests. It unequivocally holds that God is indivisibly one (''ahad'') and s ...
wujūdī'' ("existential monism, doctrine of existential unity"). The adherents of Wahdat al-Wujūd were also known as Wujūdis (''Wujūdīya'') or "people of unity" (''ahl al-waḥda'').


Formation

Many Muslim scholars regarded Ibn ʿArabī as the founder of the ''wahdat al-wujūd'' concept. Thus,
al-Dhahabi Shams ad-Dīn adh-Dhahabī (), also known as Shams ad-Dīn Abū ʿAbdillāh Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad ibn ʿUthmān ibn Qāymāẓ ibn ʿAbdillāh at-Turkumānī al-Fāriqī ad-Dimashqī (5 October 1274 – 3 February 1348) was an Atharism, Athari ...
(d. 1348) and
Jāmi Nūr ad-Dīn 'Abd ar-Rahmān Jāmī (; 7 November 1414 – 9 November 1492), also known as Mawlanā Nūr al-Dīn 'Abd al-Rahmān or Abd-Al-Rahmān Nur-Al-Din Muhammad Dashti, or simply as Jami or Djāmī and in Turkey as Molla Cami, was a ...
(d. 1492) described Ibn ʿArabī as a “model of those who know about wahdat al-wujūd” (''qudwat al-ʿālimīn bi-waḥdat al-wujūd'') or as the “model of the advocates of wahdat al-wujūd” (''qudwat al-qāʾilīn bi-waḥdat al-wujūd''). And the Indian
Naqshbandiyya Naqshbandi (Persian: نقشبندیه) is a major Sufi order within Sunni Islam, named after its 14th-century founder, Baha' al-Din Naqshband. Practitioners, known as Naqshbandis, trace their spiritual lineage (silsila) directly to the Prophe ...
-
Sufi Sufism ( or ) is a mysticism, mystic body of religious practice found within Islam which is characterized by a focus on Islamic Tazkiyah, purification, spirituality, ritualism, and Asceticism#Islam, asceticism. Practitioners of Sufism are r ...
Ahmad Sirhindi Ahmad Sirhindi (1564 – 1624/1625) was an Indian Islamic scholar, Hanafi jurist, and member of the Naqshbandī Sufi order who lived during the era of Mughal Empire. Ahmad Sirhindi opposed heterodox movements within the Mughal court such as D ...
(1564-1624) explained in one of his ''Maktūbāt'': “The first to clearly state the doctrine of existential unity (''al-tawḥīd al-wujūdī'') was Shaykh Muhyī l-Dīn Ibn ʿArabī. “ Also
Shah Waliullah Dehlawi Qutb ud-Din Ahmad ibn ʿAbd-ur-Rahim al-ʿUmari ad-Dehlawi (‎; 1703–1762), commonly known as Shah Waliullah Dehlawi (also Shah Wali Allah), was an Islamic Sunni scholar and Sufi reformer, who contributed to Islamic revival in the Indian s ...
(d. 1762) regarded Ibn ʿArabī as the “leader of those who believe in the wahdat al-wujūd”. In contrast, the Egyptian Azhar scholar Muhammad Ghallāb (d. 2023) acquitted Ibn ʿArabī in a 1969 memorial volume dedicated to him of the "heretical" doctrine of ''Wahdat al-wujūd'' and claimed that he had nothing to do with it. According to him, it was merely an invention of the
Orientalists In art history, literature, and cultural studies, Orientalism is the imitation or depiction of aspects of the Eastern world (or "Orient") by writers, designers, and artists from the Western world. Orientalist painting, particularly of the Middle ...
that Ibn ʿArabī had raised this idea.


Explicit statements of Ibn ʿArabī on the unity of existence

In fact, in the extensive corpus of Ibn ʿArabī's writings, there is not a single place where he uses the expression ''Wahdat al-wujūd'' in this form, However, the Syrian scholar Bakri Aladdin has pointed out several passages where Ibn ʿArabī speaks of a unity of existence. These are the following passages: * In the 113th chapter of his work ''al-Futūḥāt al-Makkīya'' he writes: “Affirm diversity in immutability (''thubūt''), but keep it away from existence (''wujūd''). Affirm unity in existence (''al-waḥda fī al-wujūd''), but keep it away from immutability." * He expresses a similar view in his ''Kitāb al-Alif'': “Number and multiplicity appear only through His action on intelligible, non-existent levels. Thus, all that is in existence is one (''fa-kull mā fī l-wujūd wāḥid''), for if it were not one, one could not validly affirm unity with God - praise be to Him." * Ibn ʿArabī expresses this idea even more succinctly in his ''Kitāb al-Jalāla'': “Thus the whole of existence is in reality one, and there is nothing beside it” (''wa-hākadhā kull al-wujūd huwa wāḥid fī l-ḥaqīqa, lā shayʾ maʿa-hū''). * And in one of his Sufi prayers Ibn ʿArabī asks God: “I ask You, by the secret with which You bring together the complementary opposites, that You bring together for me everything that is disunited in my being in such a way that it lets me experience the unity of Your existence (''an yushhidanī waḥdat wujūdika'').“ Beneito and Hirtenstein point out that in some manuscripts the relevant passage does not read ''waḥdat wujūdika'', but ''waḥdat wujūdī'' (“the unity of my existence”). Mohsen Jahangiri, former professor of philosophy at the
University of Tehran The University of Tehran (UT) or Tehran University (, ) is a public collegiate university in Iran, and the oldest and most prominent Iranian university located in Tehran. Based on its historical, socio-cultural, and political pedigree, as well as ...
, has also pointed out some passages in Ibn ʿArabī's oeuvre where, like the later representatives of the ''wahdat-al-wujūd'' doctrine, he limits the principle of existence to God or equates God with existence. These are the following passages: * In the eighth chapter of his ''Fuṣūṣ al-ḥikam'' Ibn ʿArabī explains: “The contingent things actually belong to non-existence (''ʿadam''), for there is no existence except the existence of the True one (''wujūd al-ḥaqq'') with the forms of the states that the contingent things have in themselves and in the entities.” * In the 54th chapter of ''al-Futūḥāt al-Makkīya'' he writes: “It is established among the seekers of truth (''muḥaqqiqūn'') that nothing exists except God and, even if we exist, our existence is only through Him. The one whose existence is due to something else, is in reality non-existent.” * In the 69th chapter of the same work, which deals with the secrets of
prayer File:Prayers-collage.png, 300px, alt=Collage of various religionists praying – Clickable Image, Collage of various religionists praying ''(Clickable image – use cursor to identify.)'' rect 0 0 1000 1000 Shinto festivalgoer praying in front ...
, Ibn ʿArabī explains that the true believer speaks only with his
Lord Lord is an appellation for a person or deity who has authority, control, or power (social and political), power over others, acting as a master, chief, or ruler. The appellation can also denote certain persons who hold a title of the Peerage o ...
and does not take any of the servants of God into his confidence without seeing in it a ''dialogue'' (''munājāt'') with his Lord. He explains: "For God is existence and that which exists, and it is He who is worshipped in every worshiper and in everything, and He is the existence of everything." * In the 455th chapter of ''al-Futūḥāt al-Makkīya'' he explains that the Quranic statement in Sura 57:3 "He is the First and the Last, the Visible and the Hidden" indicates that God is the whole of existence (''al-wuǧūd kulluhū'').


The idea of the unity of existence before Ibn ʿArabī

However, statements of similar content can also be found in Muslim authors before Ibn ʿArabī. As an example we may refer to
al-Ghazālī Al-Ghazali ( – 19 December 1111), archaically Latinized as Algazelus, was a Shafi'i Sunni Muslim scholar and polymath. He is known as one of the most prominent and influential jurisconsults, legal theoreticians, muftis, philosophers, the ...
(d. 1111) who in the chapter on the love of God in his work ''Iḥyāʾ ʿulūm ad-dīn'' writes that nothing having persistence in itself is in existence except the living Persistent (= God), who persists in Himself (''laisa fī l-wujūd shayʾ la-hū bi-nafsihī qiwām illā l-qayyūm al-ḥayy alladhī huwa qāʾim bi-dhātihī''), everything else exists only through Him. The existence of the universe belongs to the existence of God just as the existence of light belongs to the sun or the existence of the shadow belongs to the shadow-casting tree. Murtadā az-Zabīdī (d. 1790), who wrote a commentary on the ''Iḥyāʾ ʿulūm ad-dīn'', said that if one looks at this statement, one can recognize a tendency towards the ''Wahdat al-wujūd'', which “the people of truth” (''ahl al-ḥaqīqa'') taught. Al-Ghazālī, he says, referred to them in numerous other places in his book, such as in the chapter on patience and gratitude, where he said: “Contemplation with the eye of the pure
Tawhid ''Tawhid'' () is the concept of monotheism in Islam, it is the religion's central and single most important concept upon which a Muslim's entire religious adherence rests. It unequivocally holds that God is indivisibly one (''ahad'') and s ...
makes you realize that apart from God, the Exalted, nothing is in existence (''al-naẓar bi-ʿain al-tauḥīd al-maḥḍ yuʿarrifuka annahū laisa fī l-wujūd ghayrahū taʿālā'')', and also in his book ''Mishkāt al-anwār''. The Arabic expression ''waḥdat al-wujūd'' can also be found literally in Shihāb al-Dīn Yahyā al-Suhrawardī (d. 1191). There, it is associated with the ontological position of the primacy of Whatness (''māhīya''). According to it, existence is not something that is added to the essence of a thing, but is identical with its essence. If existence were something that was added to whatness, then this addition (''iḍāfa'') would only exist through its existence, which would mean an
infinite regress Infinite regress is a philosophical concept to describe a series of entities. Each entity in the series depends on its predecessor, following a recursive principle. For example, the epistemic regress is a series of beliefs in which the justi ...
, which would be absurd. Thus, the unity of existence is also identical with existence, so that the latter is not completely lost (''fa-waḥdat al-wujūd huwa ḥattā lā yadhhab aṣlan''). However, it is not enough to say that the unity of existence is identical with existence or the existence of unity with unity, because the concept of existence is different from the concept of unity and two things cannot be one thing in themselves.


“Wahdat al-wujūd” as the name for Ibn ʿArabī's system of teaching

The fact that Ibn ʿArabī was nevertheless regarded as the founder of the doctrine of wahdat al-wujūd had to do with the fact that, beyond explicit references to the term, his fundamental writings were regarded as elaborations of this doctrine. Thus, the followers of Ibn ʿArabī recognized references to the unity of existence in several of his statements. For example, Ibn ʿArabī says in the first chapter of his ''Fuṣūṣ al-ḥikam'' that the connection of existing things – meaning God and the rest of things – can be easily recognized because they have something in common, namely individual existence (''al-wuǧūd al-ʿainī''). ʿAfīf al-Dīn at-Tilimsānī (d. 1290), who wrote the first commentary on the ''Fuṣūṣ al-ḥikam'', explains in it that Ibn ʿArabī wanted to point to the doctrine of existential unity (''at-tawḥīd al-wujūdī'') with this statement. He did not consider it good to mention it explicitly here, but did so elsewhere. Al-Tilimsānī comments on Ibn ʿArabī's further remarks at this point with the statement that he wanted to prepare the ground for identifying the attributes of the proxy (''al-ḫalīfa''; i. e. of man) with those of the one who appoints him as proxy (''al-mustaḫlif''; i.e. God), in order to finally trace everything back to one entity (''ʿain''), namely the existence of God. Overall, he says, Ibn ʿArabī's statements are based on the teaching that existence is one, but the entities (''al-aʿyān'') are different. These different entities are called ''Aʿyān thābita'' (immutable entities). A particularly widely debated statement, which has been considered to express Ibn ʿArabī's understanding of wahdat-al-wujūd, was his exclamation "Praise be to the One who has brought things into being and is Himself identical with them" in the 198th chapter of ''al-Futūḥāt al-Makkīya''. The Yemeni scholar Sālih ibn Mahdī al-Maqbalī (d. 1696) reports a conversation he had with the Kurdish scholar Muhammad ibn ʿAbd al-Rasūl al-Barzanjī (d. 1691). They both agreed that Ibn ʿArabī's statements in his ''Fuṣūṣ al-ḥikam'' all revolved around the unity of existence and that his work ''al-Futūḥāt al-Makkiyya'' clarified this.Ṣāliḥ ibn Mahdī al-Maqbalī: ''al-ʿAlam al-shāmikh fī īthār al-ḥaqq ʿalā l-ābāʾ wa-l-mashāyikh.'' Cairo 1328h. P. 77
Digitalisat
/ref> Sirhindī opined that Ibn ʿArabī was the one who “worked out the problem of the unity of existence in chapters and sections and established its syntax and grammar”.


Other early proponents of the doctrine and their statements

Beside Ibn ʿArabī, Ibn Taymiyya mentions the scholars
Sadr al-Din al-Qunawi Ṣadr al-Dīn Muḥammad ibn Isḥāq ibn Muḥammad ibn Yūnus Qūnawī lternatively, Qūnavī, Qūnyawī (; 1207–1274), was a PersianF. E. Peters, "The Monotheists", Published by Princeton University Press, 2005. pg 330: "Al-Qunawi was a ...
(d. 1274),
Ibn Sabʿīn Ibn Sab'īn ( ') was an Arab Sufi philosopher, the last philosopher of the Andalus in the west land of Islamic world. He was born in 1217 in Spain and lived in Ceuta. It has been suggested that he was a Neoplatonic philosopher, a Peripatetic phil ...
(d. 1270),
Ibn al-Farid Ibn al-Farid or Ibn Farid; (, ''`Umar ibn `Alī ibn al-Fārid'') (22 March 11811234) was an Arab poet as well as a Sufi waliullah. His name is Arabic for "son of the obligator" (the one who divides the inheritance between the inheritors), as hi ...
(d. 1235), ʿĀmir al-Basrī (bl. around 1300), ʿAfīf al-Dīn at-Tilimsānī (d. 1290), Saʿīd al-Dīn al-Farghānī (d. ca. 1300), Abu al-Hasan al-Shushtari (d. 1269), ʿAbdallāh al-Balyānī (d. 1288) and an otherwise unknown Ibn Abī Mansūr al-Misrī as proponents of the ''Wahdat al-Wujūd'' doctrine. To these people, whom he refers to collectively as ''ahl al-waḥda'' ("people of unity"), he attributes the teaching that existence is one and that the necessary existence of the Creator is identical with the contingent existence of the created.Ibn Taimīya: ''Ibṭāl waḥdat al-wujūd wa-radd ʿalā l-qāʾilīn bi-hā''. 1983, Vol. I, p. 80. The fact that he also assigns Ibn al-Fārid to the ''ahl al-waḥda'' may be related to the fact that Saʿīd ad-Dīn al-Farghānī often speaks of Wahdat-al-Wudschūd in his commentary on Ibn al-Fārid's ''Tāʾīya''. Ibn al-Fārid himself never used this term in his poem. Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulusi (d. 1731), writing a few centuries later, names Ibn ʿArabī, Ibn al-Fārid, ʿAfīf ad-Dīn at-Tilimsānī, Ibn Sabʿīn and Abd al-Karim al-Jili (d. 1424) as the main representatives of the ''Wahdat al-Wujūd'' doctrine.an-Nābulusī: ''Īḍāḥ al-maqṣūd min waḥdat al-wuǧūd''. 1969, p. 7.


Ibn Sawdakin

An author who is not named by either Ibn Taimiyya or al-Nabulusi, but who explicitly mentions Wahdat al-Wujūd, was the Aleppian scholar Ibn Sawdakīn al-Nūrī (d. 1248), whose
Nisba The Arabic language, Arabic word nisba (; also transcribed as ''nisbah'' or ''nisbat'') may refer to: * Arabic nouns and adjectives#Nisba, Nisba, a suffix used to form adjectives in Arabic grammar, or the adjective resulting from this formation **c ...
indicates that his father was a
Mamluk Mamluk or Mamaluk (; (singular), , ''mamālīk'' (plural); translated as "one who is owned", meaning "slave") were non-Arab, ethnically diverse (mostly Turkic, Caucasian, Eastern and Southeastern European) enslaved mercenaries, slave-so ...
of
Nur al-Din Zengi Nūr al-Dīn Maḥmūd Zengī (; February 1118 – 15 May 1174), commonly known as Nur ad-Din (lit. 'Light of the Faith' in Arabic), was a Turkoman member of the Zengid dynasty, who ruled the Syrian province () of the Seljuk Empire. He reigne ...
. He was one of the first students of Ibn ʿArabī. He uses the term Wahdat al-Wujūd in his commentary on Ibn ʿArabī's work ''at-Taǧallīyāt al-Ilāhīya'' ("Divine Revelations"), right at the beginning, where he discusses the importance of the
Basmala The (; also known by its opening words ; , "In the name of God in Islam, God") is the titular name of the Islamic phrase “In the name of God in Islam, God, Rahman (name), the Most Gracious, Rahim, the Most Merciful” (, ). It is one of ...
. There he devotes a separate section to the meaning of the point under the ''Bā of the Basmala, where he explains that this point "with its allusion to a divine monistic truth (''ḥaqīqa waḥdānīya ḥaqqa'') includes the manifold truths like a seed that grows on the earth rich in potentialities into the world tree (''šaǧarat al-kaun''), with branches, roots, leaves, flowers and fruits." This is the universal tree (''aš-šaǧara al-kullīya''), whose fruit is "I am God, the Lord of the people of the world" (Sura 28:30).Ibn Saudakīn: ''Kashf al-ghāyāt fī sharḥ mā iktanafat ʿalaihi at-Tajalliyyāt''. Ed. Muḥammad ʿAbd al-Karīm an-Nimrī. Dār al-kutub al-ʿilmīya, Beirut 2014. P. 13. Paragraphs no. 27 and no. 29
digital version
/ref> With this Koranic quotation, Ibn Saudakīn refers to the Qur'anic story about God's self-revelation in the
Burning Bush The burning bush (or the unburnt bush) refers to an event recorded in the Jewish Torah (as also in the biblical Old Testament and Islamic scripture). It is described in the third chapter of the Book of Exodus as having occurred on Mount Horeb ...
. At the end of his remarks on this point he writes: "Whoever is informed about the secrets of these point worlds (''ʿawālim nuqṭiyya'') is also informed about the secrets of the unity of existence (''waḥdat al-wujūd'') with its ranks, relationships and detailed rules, and indeed about its compression and breakdown into a single point."


Ibn Sabʿīn

A thinker for whom the term ''Wahdat al-wujūd'' more clearly denotes a specific dogmatic position was
Ibn Sabʿīn Ibn Sab'īn ( ') was an Arab Sufi philosopher, the last philosopher of the Andalus in the west land of Islamic world. He was born in 1217 in Spain and lived in Ceuta. It has been suggested that he was a Neoplatonic philosopher, a Peripatetic phil ...
(d. 1270), who, like Ibn ʿArabī, came from
Murcia Murcia ( , , ) is a city in south-eastern Spain, the Capital (political), capital and most populous city of the autonomous community of the Region of Murcia, and the Ranked lists of Spanish municipalities#By population, seventh largest city i ...
. In his "Light Letter" (''al-Risāla an-nūrīya'') he identifies the unity of existence with the absolute unity (''al-waḥda al-muṭlaqa'') and explains that the person of the spiritual elite (''insān ḫāṣṣat al-ḫāṣṣa'') refrains from everything that belongs to the relative things such as time and place and active and passive, and does not deny the existence of what is in their existence if the existence is the same as the Whatness (''māhīya''). Here he follows the ideas of Yahyā al-Suhrawardī. In another of his epistles, Ibn Sabʿīn makes it clear that ''Wahdat-al-wujūd'' characterizes the world view of this spiritual elite:


Sadr al-Din al-Qunawi

One author who wrote more extensively on the unity of existence was Ibn ʿArabī's son-in-law, the Persian Sufi philosopher Sadr al-Dīn al-Qūnawī (1207-1274).
Jāmi Nūr ad-Dīn 'Abd ar-Rahmān Jāmī (; 7 November 1414 – 9 November 1492), also known as Mawlanā Nūr al-Dīn 'Abd al-Rahmān or Abd-Al-Rahmān Nur-Al-Din Muhammad Dashti, or simply as Jami or Djāmī and in Turkey as Molla Cami, was a ...
was of the opinion that Ibn ʿArabī's intention in the problem of the unity of existence could only be understood by those who studied and understood the investigations (''taḥqīqāt'') of Ṣadr al-Dīn in a manner corresponding to reason (''ʿaql'') and divine law (''šarʿ''). Al-Qūnawī speaks about the unity of existence primarily in his philosophical treatise ''Miftāḥ ghayb al-jamʿ wa-l-wujūd''. There he explains: "Know that the Truthful One (''al-Ḥaqq''; sc. God) is pure existence (''al-wuǧūd al-maḥḍ''), in which there is no diversity, and He is one in the sense of a true unity (''waḥda ḥaqīqīya''), compared to which no multiplicity can be thought." Everything that is perceived in the entities, al-Qūnawī further explains, colors, lights, surfaces, etc., are effects of existence (''aḥkām al-wujūd''), or relational forms (''ṣuwar nisab'') of His knowledge. What is perceived, however, is not identical with true existence (''al-wujūd al-ḥaqq''), because there is only one existence. Man cannot perceive existence because he is a true unity like the unity of existence (''waḥdat al-wujūd''), but because he is a truth that is distinguished by existence, life, knowledge, will and a firm relationship to what he wants to perceive. Drawing on
Neoplatonic Neoplatonism is a version of Platonic philosophy that emerged in the 3rd century AD against the background of Hellenistic philosophy and religion. The term does not encapsulate a set of ideas as much as a series of thinkers. Among the common id ...
emanation doctrines, al-Qūnawī explains further: The one existence that enters into the created contingent things, al-Qūnawī further explains, differs from the true hidden existence that is stripped bare of the entities and phenomena (''maẓāhir'') only by relations (''nisab'') and considerations (''iʿtibārāt'') such as emergence (''ẓuhūr''), individuation (''taʿayyun''), plurality that comes about through connection, admission of the judgment of commonality (''ḥukm al-ištirāk''), and similar qualifiers that are attained by means of connection to the phenomena. Regarding the relationship between the diversity in the world and the unity of existence, al-Qūnawī expresses himself in a similar way to Ibn Sabʿīn: Regarding the relationship between the one existence and the immutable entities (''aʿyān thābita''), al-Qūnawī says in another work:


Statements by mystics in Persia and Transoxania


ʿAzīz al-Dīn Nasafī

One of the earliest Persophone authors to treat of ''wahdat al-wujūd'' was the Transoxian mystical thinker ʿAzīz ad-Dīn Nasafī (d. after 1281). He divided the Muslims broadly into three main categories, the "people of Sharia" (''ahl-i šariʿat''), who are in turn divided into Sunnis and Shiites, the "people of philosophy" (''ahl-i ḥikmat''), who are in turn divided into Avicennian philosophers and "transmigrationists" (''ahl-i tanāsuḫ''), and the "people of unity" (''ahl-i waḥdat''), which means the followers of the "unity of existence" (''waḥdat al-wujūd''). These "people of unity" are also divided into different groups, but they all share the belief that "existence is no more than one, that existence is God, and God is one existence, true, necessary, eternal and eternal, that in his existence there is no multiplicity or parts exist and apart from His existence nothing exists.” According to ʿAzīz al-Dīn Nasafī, there are two large groups within the “People of Unity”, the “People of Fire” (''aṣḥāb-i nār'') and the “People of Light” (''aṣḥāb-i nūr'').Hermann Landolt: “Nasafi, ʿAziz” in
Encyclopaedia Iranica An encyclopedia is a reference work or compendium providing summaries of knowledge, either general or special, in a particular field or discipline. Encyclopedias are divided into articles or entries that are arranged alphabetically by artic ...
br>online version
/ref> The former are called “People of Fire” because for everyone who reaches this level, conceit and pride disappear and the person himself also becomes annihilated (''nīst mīshawad''). The effect of fire is that it first destroys everything it reaches and then disappears itself. According to ʿAzīz ad-Dīn Nasafī, the "followers of fire" are divided into two groups: # One group teaches that the visible world, which is the composite and divided world of bodies and darkness and is subject to change and decay, is the creation of God, but that this is only delusion (''khayāl'') and imagination and only has an imaginary, reflective and shadow-like existence. # The other group teaches that the visible world, which is the world of bodies and darkness, and the hidden world, which is the world of spirits and light, are something other than the Lord of the worlds, because the world of bodies is in opposition to the world of spirits and the world of darkness is in opposition to light, and God is free of opposites, attributes and names. That which is above the world of bodies and the world of spirits and in which there are no opposites, forms and images is a real existence, which is pure unity. It is the necessarily Existence (''wājib al-wujūd'') and the Lord of the worlds (''khudāy-i ʿālam''). The world of bodies, the world of spirits, the world of darkness and the world of light, on the other hand, are all just imagination and notion. They appear through the nature of the necessarily existing, but only have an imaginary, reflective and shadowy existence, like things that appear in water, in dreams or in a mirror. This, explains ʿAzīzald-Dīn Nasafī, is the school of thought of the supreme sheikh (''shaykh al-mashāyikh'') Ibn Sabʿīn and the sheikhs of the Maghreb, and he himself saw many people in his time who followed this school of thought.


Saʿīd al-Dīn al-Farghānī

Sadr ad-Dīn al-Qūnawī's student Saʿīd ad-Dīn al-Farghānī (d. ca. 1300) refers to the "unity of existence" several times in his commentaries on the poem ''at-Tāʾīya al-kubrā'' by
Ibn al-Farid Ibn al-Farid or Ibn Farid; (, ''`Umar ibn `Alī ibn al-Fārid'') (22 March 11811234) was an Arab poet as well as a Sufi waliullah. His name is Arabic for "son of the obligator" (the one who divides the inheritance between the inheritors), as hi ...
(d. 1235). In his Persian commentary ''Mašāriq ad-darārī'', which is based on his transcripts of al-Qūnawī's explanations of this poem, he uses the expression ''waḥdat al-wuǧūd'' or similar formulations 41 times and in his extended Arabic commentary on the same work entitled ''Muntahā al-madārik'', which reflects more of his own views, 22 times. In ten places in his Persian commentary, al-Farghānī contrasts the unity of existence (''waḥdat al-wujūd'') with the "multiplicity of (sc. divine) knowledge" (''kathrat al-ʿilm'') or the "multiplicity of known things" (''kathrat al-maʿlūmāt''). Thus, al-Farghānī explains in one place that the
soul The soul is the purported Mind–body dualism, immaterial aspect or essence of a Outline of life forms, living being. It is typically believed to be Immortality, immortal and to exist apart from the material world. The three main theories that ...
is the place of appearance of the multiplicity of knowledge, while the spirit (''rūḥ'') is the manifestation and form of the unity of existence. He derives the fact that the spirit belongs to the world of ''Wahdat-al-wujūd'' from the Qur'anic statement in Surah 15:29, according to which God breathed his spirit into
Adam Adam is the name given in Genesis 1–5 to the first human. Adam is the first human-being aware of God, and features as such in various belief systems (including Judaism, Christianity, Gnosticism and Islam). According to Christianity, Adam ...
. In another passage that builds on this idea, al-Farghānī relates the unity of existence to the Sufi idea of Fanā' ("annihilation") and explains that there are three stages of extinction and annihilation (''maḥw wa-fanā'') that the traveller of the mystical path goes through. What the two versions of the passage have in common is the statement that the unity of existence is seen after the annihilation of the soul on the first stage. In the Persian commentary, the three stages are described as follows: * The first stage is the extinction and annihilation of the soul and its attributes. In it, the unity of existence is seen (''dar ū mašhūd-i waḥdat-i wuǧūd ast''), insofar as it is reflected in the mirror of the multiplicity of the truths of knowledge and their attributes (''dar āyīna-yi kathrat-i ḥaqāʾiq-i ʿilm wa-ṣifāt-i ū munṭabaʿ ast''). Every time the mirror is full of reflections, the surface of the mirror is completely hidden and what is reflected stands out. * The second stage is the extinction and annihilation of the spirit (''rūḥ'') and its attributes. The multiplicity of truths (''kaṯrat-i ḥaqāʾiq'') is seen in it, insofar as it is reflected in the mirror of the unity of existence (''āyīna-yi waḥdat-i wuǧūd''), which is the hiddenness of the spirit (''bāṭin-i rūḥ''). The unity, which is the mirror, is not revealed, but the multiplicity, which is what is reflected. * The third stage is the extinction and annihilation of the confinement (''taqayyud'') to the two types of vision and the harmonization (''jamʿ'') between them. In his Arabic commentary, al-Farghānī gives further explanations on the three stages. Since in the soul the real multiplicity is evident, but the unity of the individual evident existence (''waḥdat al-wuǧūd al-ʿainī aẓ-ẓāhirī'') is hidden, the traveller on the mystical path inevitably overcomes the unity over the multiplicity when the soul ceases to exist on the first stage, so that the multiplicity disappears completely. Since in the spirit the unity of the individual existence with its quality of simplicity is evident, but the multiplicity of the known realities with their distinctions is hidden, the unity disappears, when it is annihilated on the second stage , while the multiplicity of the known realities emerges. On the third stage of disintegration, the traveller on the mystical path experiences a harmonization between these two states. In another passage in his Arabic commentary, al-Farghānī explains that the unity of existence is the opposite (''khulf'') to the veil of the multiplicity of existential truths (''kathrat al-ḥaqāʾiq al-kawnīya''), because as long as one of the effects and determinations of worldly existence (''kaun'') and its stages dominates someone or becomes apparent in him, neither the all-encompassingness (''jamʿīya'') of the unity of existence nor the non-existence of otherness in everything he perceives is revealed to him. Al-Farghānī repeats this thought a little later in slightly different words: As long as man is bound by the fetter of the determinations of being (''maḥṣūr fī qaid al-aḥkām al-kaunīya''), which include the consciousness of himself (''al-shuʿūr bi-nafsihī''), he is shielded from the witnessing of the unity of existence (''shuhūd waḥdat al-wujūd'').


ʿAbd al-Razzāq al-Kāshānī

The first lexicographical recording of the concept of wahdat al-wujūd has been produced by the Persian mystic Abd al-Razzaq Kāshānī (d. 1345). He explains it in his work ''Laṭāʾif al-iʿlām fī ishārāt ahl al-ilhām'', a lexicon of the mystic terminology of the Ibn-ʿArabī-school. with the following words:


Development of the concept in India

A student of ʿAbd ar-Razzāq al-Qāshānī, Ashraf Jahangir Simnānī (d. 1405) introduced the concept of wahdat al-wujūd to India. He had originally been a student of ʿAlā' ad-Dawla al-Simnanī, but then turned away from him and joined al-Qāshānī. Under the latter he studied Ibn ʿArabī's work ''al-Futūḥāt al-Makkīya'' and al-Qāshānī's own ''Dictionary of Mystical Terms''. He later travelled to India and settled in Jaunpur. A student of Ashraf al-Simnānī, Nizām ad-Dīn Yamanī, wrote a comprehensive work entitled ''Laṭāyif-i Ashrafī'', which explains Ashraf al-Simnānī's views on a variety of topics in 60 chapters called ''laṭāyif''. The 27th chapter is devoted to the proofs of the Wahdat al-wujūd doctrine. Here Yamanī quotes his teacher as saying that the innermost essence of the Sufi doctrines and the staple food of the people of knowledge is the theme of the unity of existence. Another transmitter of the wahdat al-wujūd doctrine to India was Makhdūm ʿAlī al-Mahā'imī (d. 1432), who belonged to the Arab seafaring community of
Konkan The Konkan is a stretch of land by the western coast of India, bound by the river Daman Ganga at Damaon in the north, to Anjediva Island next to Karwar town in the south; with the Arabian Sea to the west and the Deccan plateau to the eas ...
. He wrote an annotated Arabic translation of the Persian treatise ''Risāla-yi Jām-i jahān-namā'' by Muhammad Shīrīn Maghribī (d. 1408), entitled ''Irāʾat al-ḥaqāʾiq fī sharḥ Mirʾāt al-ḥaqāʾiq'', which deals with the relationship between the various aspects of divine unity (''aḥadiyya'', ''wāḥidiyya'', ''waḥdat'') and their relationship to the diversity of the manifested world. However, al-Mahā'imī warned in his commentary that "the doctrine of the unity of existence in everything" does not authorize one to teach "the divinity of every single thing" (''ālihīyat kull wāḥid min al-ashyāʾ''). For this doctrine only means that the totality of the existences of things is one matter, namely the appearance of the True One in its entirety (''ẓuhūr al-ḥaqq fī l-kull''), not that each individual one of the existing things is the totality in which the True One appears in its entirety. However, proponents of the wahdat al-wujūd doctrine also had to fight resistance in India. This is shown by the case of the
Chishtiyya The Chishti order () is a Sufi order of Sunni Islam named after the town of Chisht, Afghanistan where it was initiated by Abu Ishaq Shami. The order was brought to Herat and later spread across South Asia by Mu'in al-Din Chishti in the city o ...
Sufi Hasan Tāhir (d. 1503/4), who was related to Sultan
Sikandar Lodi Sikandar Khan Lodi (; 17 July 1458 – 21 November 1517), born Nizam Khan () also known as Sikandar II, was Sultan of the Delhi Sultanate between 1489 and 1517. He became ruler of the Lodi dynasty after the death of his father Bahlul Khan Lodi ...
and settled in Delhi. It is narrated that he was once asked by his father, who rejected Ibn ʿArabī's book ''Fuṣūṣ al-ḥikam'' and forbade its reading, for an explanation of the doctrine of the unity of existence (''tauḥīd-i wujūd''). He then explained the problem in a way that attracted the attention of the literalist scholars (''ʿulamā-yi ẓāhir''), which led to the unravelling of "the knot of difficulty of the jurist" (''ʿuqda-yi ishkāl-i maulawī'') and his revocation of the reading prohibition. Despite these resistances, the wahdat al-wujūd doctrine remained popular in India, and the Indian historian ʿAbd al-Qādir Badāʾūnī (d. 1597/98) reports that a Sufi sheikh named Tāj al-Dīn ibn Zakariyyā Ajūdhanī introduced this doctrine in evening sessions to the Mughal ruler
Akbar Akbar (Jalal-ud-din Muhammad Akbar, – ), popularly known as Akbar the Great, was the third Mughal emperor, who reigned from 1556 to 1605. Akbar succeeded his father, Humayun, under a regent, Bairam Khan, who helped the young emperor expa ...
(r. 1556–1605) and convinced him that he himself was the "perfect man" (''insān kāmil'') described by Ibn ʿArabī and his followers. Badā'ūnī was outraged because he considered Wahdat al-wujūd to be a teaching of "destructive Sufis" (''Ṣūfīya-i mubaṭṭila''), which ultimately leads to "immorality" (''ibāḥat'') and "
heresy Heresy is any belief or theory that is strongly at variance with established beliefs or customs, particularly the accepted beliefs or religious law of a religious organization. A heretic is a proponent of heresy. Heresy in Heresy in Christian ...
" (''ilḥād''). Badā'ūnī explained Taj al-Din's propagation of this doctrine with his not feeling bound by the religious rules (''sharʿiyyāt''). However, Ajūdhanī was not the only person at Akbar's court who was inclined towards the wahdat-al-wujūd doctrine. It is also reported that Akbar's court poet
Faizi Abu al-Faiz ibn Mubarak, popularly known by his pen-name, Faizi (20 September 1547 – 15 October 1595) was a poet and scholar of late medieval India whose ancestors were the ''Malik-ush-Shu'ara'' (poet laureate) of Akbar's Court. Blochmann, H. ...
(d. 1595) was one of the Sufis who professed the unity of existence. A particularly influential elaboration of the wahdat al-wujūd doctrine from India was the work ''al-Tuḥfa al-mursala ilā l-Nabī'' by Fadlallāh al-Burhānpūrī (d. 1619), an indirect student of
Muhammad Ghaus Muhammad Ghawth (Ghouse, Ghaus or Gwath) Gwaliyari (1500–1562) was a 16th-century Sufism, Sufi master of the Shattari order and Sufi saint, a musician, Segoogle book search and the author of ''Jawahir-i Khams'' (Arabic: ''al-Jawahir al-Khams' ...
(d. 1563). It begins with the statement that "the True One - praised be He and exalted" (''al-ḥaqq subḥānahū wa-taʿālā'') is existence. This existence is one, but its garments (''albās'') are different and varied. None of the changeable things (''kāʾināt''), not even an
atom Atoms are the basic particles of the chemical elements. An atom consists of a atomic nucleus, nucleus of protons and generally neutrons, surrounded by an electromagnetically bound swarm of electrons. The chemical elements are distinguished fr ...
, lacks existence. The work was later commented on by
Ibrahim al-Kurani Ibrāhīm al-Kūrānī (Arabic: إبراهيم الكوراني), full name Burhān al-Dīn Ibrāhīm ibn Ḥasan al-Kūrānī was a 17th-century Sunni Muslim scholar and Athari theologian of Kurdish descent who was an expert in Sufism. He is a c ...
(d. 1690), Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulusi (d. 1731) and Abū l-Khayr al-Suwaydī (d. 1786). On the Indian subcontinent, the concept of wahdat al-wujūd became so popular that authors from this region discovered it also among mystics who were only loosely connected with Islam. At the beginning of the 17th century, the author of the '' Dabistān-i madhāhib'' wrote about the North Indian poet
Kabir Kabir ( 15th century) was a well-known Indian devotional mystic poet and sant. His writings influenced Hinduism's Bhakti movement, and his verses are found in Sikhism's scripture Guru Granth Sahib, the Satguru Granth Sahib of Saint Gar ...
that after his encounter with Ramananda, sublime words from him about wahdat al-wujūd became famous, such as only the mystical "seekers of truth" (''muḥaqqiqān'') could utter.


Critics and opponents of the concept


Ibn Taymiyya

One of the earliest critics of the wahdat al-wujūd doctrine was the Hanbalite scholar
Ibn Taymiyya Ibn Taymiyya (; 22 January 1263 – 26 September 1328)Ibn Taymiyya, Taqi al-Din Ahmad, The Oxford Dictionary of Islam. http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780195125580.001.0001/acref-9780195125580-e-959 was a Sunni Muslim schola ...
(d. 1329). According to him, the proponents of this doctrine claimed that the existence of the created was identical with the existence of the Creator. Ibn Taimīya saw in this an emptying and denial of the Creator, which included all forms of
Shirk Shirk may refer to: * Shirk (surname) * Shirk (Islam), in Islam, the sin of idolatry or worshiping beings or things other than God ('attributing an associate (to God)') * Shirk, Iran, a village in South Khorasan Province, Iran * Shirk-e Sorjeh ...
. He attributes to Ibn ʿArabī the teaching that the existence of every thing is identical with the existence of the Truthful (''wujūd kull shayʾ ʿayn wujūd al-Ḥaqq''). In another text in which Ibn Taymiyya discusses this "doctrine of unity" (''madhhab al-waḥda''), he explains that according to it existence is one, the Creator God has no existence separate from the existence of the created, and God unites in himself the evil in the world (''al-sharr fī l-ʿālam''). He thought that the starting point of their error (''mabdaʾ ḍalālihim'') lay in the fact that the followers of this doctrine do not recognize God as having an existence separate from the existence of the created. He also accuses them of drawing on the teachings of philosophers, the false teachings of the Sufis and Mutakallimūn and the teachings of the
Qarmatians The Qarmatians (; ) were a militant Isma'ili Shia movement centred in Al-Ahsa in Eastern Arabia, where they established a religious state in 899 CE. Its members were part of a movement that adhered to a syncretic branch of Sevener Ismaili ...
and Bātinites, of wandering around "before the doors of the various schools of thought" and of pursuing the lowest goals.Ibn Taymiyya: ''Jāmiʿ al-rasāʾil''. Ed. Muḥammad Rashād Sālim. 2nd ed. Dār al-Madanī, Jeddah 1984. Vol. I, p. 167
digital copy
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Sufi critics


ʿAlā' al-Dawla al-Simnānī

At about the same time as Ibn Taimiyya, the Persian Sufi ʿAlā' ad-Dawla al-Simnānī (d. 1336) criticized the wahdat-al-wujūd doctrine. As his former student Ashraf Jahangir Simnānī reports, he had a correspondence about this with his contemporary ʿAbd al-Razzāq al-Qāshānī. It is also reproduced in the ''Nafaḥāt al-Uns'' by
Jami Nūr ad-Dīn 'Abd ar-Rahmān Jāmī (; 7 November 1414 – 9 November 1492), also known as Mawlanā Nūr al-Dīn 'Abd al-Rahmān or Abd-Al-Rahmān Nur-Al-Din Muhammad Dashti, or simply as Jami or Djāmī and in Turkey as Molla Cami, was a ...
(d. 1492), and from this work Herrmann Landolt translated it into German. The cause for the correspondence was that Iqbāl-i Sistānī, another student of ʿAlā' ad-Daula, had met al-Qāshānī at
Soltaniyeh Soltaniyeh () is a city in the Central District (Soltaniyeh County), Central District of Soltaniyeh County, Zanjan province, Zanjan province, Iran, serving as capital of both the county and the district. History Soltaniyeh, located some ...
and had asked him about the doctrine of wahdat-al-wujūd. When al-Qāshānī asked him what his sheikh thought of Ibn ʿArabī and his words, Iqbāl-i Sistānī replied that although his sheikh considered Ibn ʿArabī to be a great man, he believed that he was wrong in his teaching of God as the absolute existence. Al-Qāschānī then replied that this very statement was the basic principle of all his mystical insights and that there was no better statement than this. It is strange, he continued, that his sheikh disapproved of it, although all prophets, men of God and authorities had followed this school of thought. When Iqbāl-i Sistānī told this to his sheikh ʿAlā' ad-Daula as-Simnānī, he wrote in response: When al-Qāshānī learned of this, he wrote a letter to ʿAlā' ad-Dawla as-Simnānī defending the doctrine of wahdat al-wujūd. In response to this letter, ʿAlā' ad-Dawla as-Simnānī wrote a reply with new attacks against this doctrine. In it he referred to Ibn ʿArabī's introductory words in his work ''al-Futūḥāt al-Makkīya'': "Glory be to Him who creates everything (in the world) and is (at the same time) one with it", and commented:


ʿAbd al-Karīm al-Jīlī

The Yemeni Sufi Abd al-Karim al-Jili (d. 1428), who is classed with the Ibn-ʿArabī school, criticized the prevailing understanding of wahdat al-wujūd with a theological argument. In his commentary on the ''Risālat al-Khalwa'' by Ibn ʿArabī, he writes:


Ibn Abī l-Hasan al-Bakrī

Another Sufi who opposed the doctrine of wahdat al-wujūd was the Egyptian sheikh Ibn Abī l-Hasan al-Bakrī (d. 1586). Like al-Simnānī, he expressed his respect for Ibn ʿArabī, but at the same time rejected the idea of wahdat al-wujūd. At the beginning of his Dīwān he warns the reader that the text contains some Qasīdas and poetic passages "in the style of those who teach the unity of existence (''ʿalā asālīb al-qāʾilīn bi-waḥdat al-wuǧūd'')", and then distances himself from it: "God forbid that this becomes the
doctrine Doctrine (from , meaning 'teaching, instruction') is a codification (law), codification of beliefs or a body of teacher, teachings or instructions, taught principles or positions, as the essence of teachings in a given branch of knowledge or in a ...
of ours! Rather, our doctrine is what the
Sunnis Sunni Islam is the largest Islamic schools and branches, branch of Islam and the largest religious denomination in the world. It holds that Muhammad did not appoint any Succession to Muhammad, successor and that his closest companion Abu Bakr ...
(''ahl as-sunna wa-l-ǧamāʿa'') believe in.” He justifies the fact that he nevertheless included these pieces in his Dīwān with the subtlety of their meaning. In one of the poems of the Dīwān, however, al-Bakrī takes up the condemnation of the proponents of this doctrine again. There he exclaims: كم أناس توعلوا في دعاوي زعموا أنهم من الأبرار أطلقوا وحدة الوجود وقالوا كل شىء هو الإله الباري يا لقومي ما لطه نصير خاب من لم يكن من الأنصار ''Kam unās tawaʿʿalū fī daʿāwī'' ''Zaʿamū annahum min al-abrār'' ''Aṭlaqū waḥdata l-wujūd wa-qālū'' ''Kullu shayʾin huwa l-ilāhu l-bārī'' ''Yā la-qawmī mā li-Ṭāhā naṣīr'' ''Ḫāba man lam yakun min al-anṣār'' How many people have made lofty claims And claimed that they were among the righteous! They have invoked the oneness of existence and said: “All is God the Creator!” O my people, is there nobody coming to the aid of Tāhā (= the Prophet)? He who was not among the helpers will be disappointed.
As an alternative concept, Ibn Abī l-Hasan al-Bakrī contrasted the “unity of existence” with the “unity of experience” (''waḥdat al-shuhūd''). In his work ''Tabʿīd al-minna fī taʾyīd as-sunna'', which he completed in Mecca in 1552, he wrote: “The unity is experiential, not ontological (''al-waḥda shuhūdiyya lā wujūdiyya'')”.


ʿAlī al-Qārī

Ibn Abī l-Hasan al-Bakrī's student
Ali al-Qari Nur ad-Din Abu al-Hasan Ali ibn Sultan Muhammad al-Hirawi al-Qari (; d. 1605/1606), known as Mulla Ali al-Qari () was an Afghan Islamic scholar. He was born in Herat, where he received his basic Islamic education. Thereafter, he travelled to M ...
(d. 1606) took a similar position. In his writings he distinguished between the Wujūdis, i.e. those who teach the "unity of existence", and Shuhūdis, i.e. representatives of the doctrine of the "unity of experience". He considered the former to be misguided, while the latter were the "representatives of the true doctrine" (''ahl al-ḥaqq''). Al-Qārī also wrote a separate treatise against the followers of the wahdat-al-wujūd doctrine entitled ''al-Martaba al-shuhūdiyya fī l-manzila al-wujūdiyya''. The reason for this was that he had been told that "an ignorant Sufi" (''baʿḍ jahalat al-mutaṣawwifa'') had his novices say the following formula during initiation: "I believe that all things are united with God from their inner side, but from their outer side they are different from Him and are something other than Him." When al-Qārī described this in conversation as a heresy leaning towards the wahdat-al-wujūd doctrine, he was asked to explain this in more detail, whereupon he wrote his treatise. However, in the early phase of his literary activity, al-Qārī seems to have at least partially accepted the wahdat al-wujūd doctrine. This is evident in his treatment of the theory of the concentric nesting of universal sacred knowledge, already advocated by Ibn Sawdakīn (see
above Above may refer to: *Above (artist) Tavar Zawacki (b. 1981, California) is a Polish, Portuguese - American abstract artist and internationally recognized visual artist based in Berlin, Germany. From 1996 to 2016, he created work under the ...
). According to this theory, the Qur'an contains the essence of all other holy books, the
Fatiha Al-Fatiha () is the first chapter () of the Quran. It consists of seven verses (') which consist of a prayer for guidance and mercy. Al-Fatiha is recited in Muslim obligatory and voluntary prayers, known as ''salah''. The primary literal mea ...
the essence of the Qur'an, the
Basmala The (; also known by its opening words ; , "In the name of God in Islam, God") is the titular name of the Islamic phrase “In the name of God in Islam, God, Rahman (name), the Most Gracious, Rahim, the Most Merciful” (, ). It is one of ...
the essence of the Fātiha, the Bā' the essence of the Basmala and the point of the Bā' the essence of the Bā'. Al-Qārī explains this in his commentary on the prayer collection ''Ḥizb al-fatḥ'' by Abū l-Hasan al-Bakrī: "Perhaps the point is a reference to the level of Wahdat al-wujūd of the worshipped one, from which everything emanates, to which everything returns and around which everything revolves."


Ahmad Sirhindī


His initial sympathy for Wahdat al-wujūd

Among the Sufi critics of the Wahdat al-wujūd doctrine was the Indian
Naqshbandi Naqshbandi (Persian: نقشبندیه) is a major Sufi order within Sunni Islam, named after its 14th-century founder, Baha' al-Din Naqshband. Practitioners, known as Naqshbandis, trace their spiritual lineage (silsila) directly to the Prophet ...
Ahmad Sirhindi Ahmad Sirhindi (1564 – 1624/1625) was an Indian Islamic scholar, Hanafi jurist, and member of the Naqshbandī Sufi order who lived during the era of Mughal Empire. Ahmad Sirhindi opposed heterodox movements within the Mughal court such as D ...
(d. 1624). However, instead of ''Wahdat al-wujūd'' he mostly used the term ''
Tawhid ''Tawhid'' () is the concept of monotheism in Islam, it is the religion's central and single most important concept upon which a Muslim's entire religious adherence rests. It unequivocally holds that God is indivisibly one (''ahad'') and s ...
wujūdī'', with which he perhaps wants to express that it is not an objective reality, but a special way of perceiving reality. Sirhindī admits that he was initially very inclined towards this doctrine. The development of Sirhindī's attitude towards this doctrine can be traced through his letters (''Maktūbāt''). In letter 31 of the first volume he states that he believed in this doctrine from an early age and enjoyed it very much, and that his father had also always adhered to it. Later, when Sheikh Bāqī bi-Llāh introduced him to the method of the Naqshbandī order, the existential unity (''tauḥīd wuǧūdī'') was revealed to him after only a short time. He was completely absorbed in this experience, and the ideas associated with it flowed into him. Sirhindī describes the next stage of his development in Letter 160. There he explains that after studying the sciences he adopted a more distanced attitude towards existential unity, without completely rejecting this doctrine. For a long time he remained in this state of indecision until he finally began to turn away from it. He was shown that existential unity was a low level from which he had to ascend to the level of shadowhood (''ẓillīya''). At this level he realized that he and the world were only a shadow (''ẓill'') of God. He would have gladly remained at this level because of its proximity to Wahdat al-wujūd, which he still considered the epitome of perfection. Then he was raised by God to the level of subserviency (''ʿabdiyya''). Only then did he realize that Wahdat al-wujūd was not the highest stage on the mystical path. However, Sirhindī remained committed to the wahdat al-wujūd doctrine for a long time. In the 44th letter of the second volume, he attempted to reinterpret it in a way that no longer appeared heretical. The reason for this was that he was asked by a scholar named Muhammad Sādiq what to think of the fact that the Sufis taught the unity of existence and the scholars considered this doctrine to be unbelief and
freethinking Freethought (sometimes spelled free thought) is an unorthodox attitude or belief. A freethinker holds that beliefs should not be formed on the basis of authority, tradition, revelation, or dogma, and should instead be reached by other meth ...
, although both parties were
Sunnis Sunni Islam is the largest Islamic schools and branches, branch of Islam and the largest religious denomination in the world. It holds that Muhammad did not appoint any Succession to Muhammad, successor and that his closest companion Abu Bakr ...
. He replied that the dispute between the two parties was only due to a difference in expression (''lafẓ''). For the Sufis, things are not identical with God, but only manifestations of the Truthful One (''ẓuhūrāt-i Ḥaqq''). Things are therefore from God, not God Himself. When they say: "Everything is He" (''hama ūst''), they mean that everything comes from Him. This is also the preferred view of the scholars. Thus the dispute between the two sides is not based on reality. Rather, the two doctrines amount to the same thing. The only difference is that the Sufis taught that things are reflections of the manifestations of God, but the scholars also avoided this expression because they wanted to avoid the false impression of incarnation (''ḥulūl'') and becoming one with God (''ittiḥād''). Both the Sufis who taught the unity of existence and the scholars who opted for multiplicity are speaking the truth. For the Sufis, unity is appropriate and for the scholars, multiplicity. And in the 291st letter of the first volume, Sirhindī defended the wahdat-al-wujūd doctrine against criticism from ʿAlā' al-Dawla al-Simnānī and others, arguing that existential monism in one group of them stems from the frequency of contemplation of
Tawhid ''Tawhid'' () is the concept of monotheism in Islam, it is the religion's central and single most important concept upon which a Muslim's entire religious adherence rests. It unequivocally holds that God is indivisibly one (''ahad'') and s ...
and reflection on the creed ''Lā ilāh illā Llāh'', and in the other group from
ecstasy Ecstasy most often refers to: * Ecstasy (emotion), a trance or trance-like state in which a person transcends normal consciousness * Religious ecstasy, a state of consciousness, visions or absolute euphoria * Ecstasy (philosophy), to be or stand o ...
(''injidhāb'') and love of God in the heart (''maḥabbat-i qalbī''). He himself should be careful not to criticize these people because this idea occurs to them involuntarily (''bī irāda'') and they are therefore excused.


Classification of Wahdat al-wujūd as a heretical doctrine

At a certain point, however, Ahmad Sirhindī began to regard the Wahdat al-wujūd doctrine as a heretical doctrine. The background was that he saw the danger of inherent
antinomianism Antinomianism ( [] 'against' and [] 'law') is any view which rejects laws or Legalism (theology), legalism and argues against moral, religious or social norms (), or is at least considered to do so. The term has both religious and secular meaning ...
in this doctrine. As he himself writes in his 43rd letter of the first volume, the reason for his writing was that most of his contemporaries "clung to the hem of this existential unity" (''dast ba-dāman-i īn tauḥīd-i wuǧūdī zada-and'') and had come to the conclusion that the whole thing was from God or was God himself, and with this trick had pulled their necks out of the noose of
Sharia Sharia, Sharī'ah, Shari'a, or Shariah () is a body of religious law that forms a part of the Islamic tradition based on Islamic holy books, scriptures of Islam, particularly the Quran, Qur'an and hadith. In Islamic terminology ''sharīʿah'' ...
duties. Some did this because of Taqlīd, others purely because of knowledge, still others because of knowledge mixed with "taste" (''
dhawq Dhawq (Arabic: ذوق, ''"taste"'') is a concept in Sufi mysticism that refers to the direct, inner experience of spiritual reality. While the term appears in the Qur’an and Hadith with various meanings, including punishment and faith, it evol ...
''), and finally some because of Ilhād and freethinking (''
zandaqa Zindīq (pl. zanādiqa) is an Islamic pejorative applied to individuals who are considered to hold views or follow practices that are contrary to central Islamic dogmas.. Zandaqa is the noun describing these views. Zandaqa is usually translated a ...
''). These people, Sirhindī further explains, invent all kinds of lies about the Sharia rules and enjoy their lives. Even if they accept the Sharia commandments, they consider them "parasitic" (''ṭufaylī'') and imagine that the real goal lies behind the Sharia. At the end, Sirhindī expresses his personal disgust for this bad bad belief (''iʿtiqād sūʾ'') with an Arabic phrase. In the 160th letter, Sirhindī divides the Sufi sheikhs into three groups: # The first group teaches that the world exists "externally" (''dar khārij'') through the creation of the True One and that everything that is shown in it in terms of perfection and imperfection comes from His creative activity. They consider themselves nothing more than phantoms (''shabaḥ'') and compare themselves with someone who is naked and then puts on someone else's clothes, fully aware that they are borrowed clothes. # The second group teaches that the world is the shadow (''ẓill'') of the True One, but exists in the external world, albeit only as a shadow (''ba-ṭarīq-i ẓillīyat''), not as an independent entity (''ba-ṭarīq-i aṣālat''). The existence of the world thus exists through the existence of God, just as the shadow exists through the body that casts the shadow. # Finally, the third group teaches the unity of existence (''waḥdat-i wujūd''). This means that there is only one thing that exists in the external world, namely the essence of the True One (''dhāt al-Ḥaqq''). In their view, the world does not have any realization in the external world, but only a knowledge-based determination (''thubūt-i ʿilmī''). Therefore, they said: "The entities have not smelled the odor of existence." Although this group says that the world is a shadow of the Truth, they teach that their shadowy existence exists only on the level of perception, but is nonexistent in reality and in the external world. The third group, explains Sirhindī, has achieved perfection like the other two, but their speech leads the people into error and heresy. The first group, on the other hand, is more perfect, and its teachings are more in accordance with the Koran and Sunnah. In the 272nd letter, Sirhindī once again deals in great detail with the doctrine of wahdat al-wujūd. Here he quotes some proponentes of this doctrine as claiming that the prophets had hidden the secrets of existential unity from the masses because of their weak minds. These people would call those who believed in the plurality of existence and avoided worshipping anything other than God
associators Associators were members of 17th- and 18th-century volunteer military associations in the British American thirteen colonies and British Colony of Canada. These were more commonly known as Maryland Protestant, Pennsylvania, and Ameri ...
. Conversely, they would consider those who believed in the unity of existence, even if they worshipped a thousand idols, as monotheists (''muwaḥḥid''), because they considered them to be manifestations of God. Sirhindī firmly rejects this idea:


The “unity of experience” as an alternative

Sirhindī adopted the concept of the "unity of experience" from Ibn Abī l-Hasan al-Bakrī, which he does not call ''waḥdat al-shuhūd'', but ''tawḥīd shuhūdī'' ("experiential unity"), parallel to the term ''tawḥīd wujūdī'' used by him. According to him, the difference between existential and experiential unity is that in the former, the walker of the mystical path sees only the One and nothing else, while in the latter he believes that the existent is one, considers everything else to be non-existent and, despite its non-existence, considers it to be manifestations (''majālī'') and phenomena (''maẓāhir'') of this One. While "experiential unity" is one of the necessities of the mystical path, because without it the Fanā' state and the "seeing of certainty" (''ʿayn al-yaqīn'') cannot be achieved, this does not apply to existential unity; it is therefore not necessary. Sirhindī compares the followers of existential unity to people who look at the sun during the day and deny the existence of the stars because they cannot see them at that time. However, the followers of experiential unity know in this situation that the stars continue to exist, even if they cannot see them. The doctrine of existential unity, which in this way denies everything other than the one being, is in Sirhindī's opinion in contradiction with reason and religious law. Sirhindī also rejects the view that the unity of existence is a doctrine that had already been advocated by other Sufis before Ibn ʿArabī, such as
al-Hallaj Mansour al-Hallaj () or Mansour Hallaj () ( 26 March 922) (Islamic calendar, Hijri 309 AH) was a Persian people, Persian Hanbali school, HanbaliChristopher Melchert, "The Ḥanābila and the Early Sufis," ''Arabica'', T. 48, Fasc. 3 (2001), ...
(d. 922) with his statement "I am the truthful one" (''anā al-Ḥaqq'') or
Bayazid Bastami Bayazīd Ṭayfūr bin ʿĪsā bin Surūshān al-Bisṭāmī (al-Basṭāmī) (d. 261/874–5 or 234/848–9), commonly known in the Iranian world as Bāyazīd Basṭāmī (), was a Sufi from north-central Iran.Walbridge, John. "Suhrawardi a ...
(d. 875) with his exclamation "Praise be to me. How great is my rank!" (''subḥānī, mā aʿẓama shaʾnī''). According to him, these can rather be traced back to the experiential unity. He considered the unity of existence, however, to be a heretical doctrine that differs fundamentally from the teachings of classical Sufism. He writes in his 272nd letter: Sirhindī also counters the impression that wahdat al-wujūd is a fundamental teaching of the Naqshbandiyya. When it is said, he argues, that wahdat al-wujūd is explicitly mentioned in the expressions of the sheikhs of this order, his answer is that they made these expressions in the midst of ecstatic states (''aḥwāl''), but then turned away from this station (''maqām''), as was the case with him. As a result, Sirhindī explains, one can state that existential unity is not needed to achieve the mystical states of Fanā' and ''Baqāʾ'' and to attain the minor or major friendship with God, but experiential unity is indispensable for the realization of the Fanā' and the forgetting of everything non-divine. According to some later scholars, Ahmad Sirhindī rendered Islam a great service by combating the doctrine of wahdat al-wujūd. The Indian scholar
Siddiq Hasan Khan Sayyid Muḥammad Ṣiddīq Ḥasan Khān al-Qannawjī (14 October 1832 – 26 May 1890) was an Islamic scholar and leader of India's Muslim community in the 19th century, often considered to be the most important Muslim scholar of the Bhopal ...
(d. 1889) wrote about him:


Shiite opponents of the concept


Muqaddas Ardabīlī

On the
Imamite Twelver Shi'ism (), also known as Imamism () or Ithna Ashari, is the largest branch of Shi'a Islam, comprising about 90% of all Shi'a Muslims. The term ''Twelver'' refers to its adherents' belief in twelve divinely ordained leaders, known as th ...
- Shii side, the wahdat-al-wujūd doctrine was criticized by the Iraqi scholar Muqaddas Ardabīlī (d. 1585). He dealt with the followers of this doctrine in his book ''Ḥadīqat al-Shīʿa'' ("Garden of the Shi'a") in a separate chapter dedicated to the beliefs of the various Sufi groups. The first group mentioned here is the Wahdatīya. These are those who teach the unity of existence and consider every person and every thing to be God. Ardabīlī thinks that this group is worse than
Nimrod Nimrod is a Hebrew Bible, biblical figure mentioned in the Book of Genesis and Books of Chronicles, the Books of Chronicles. The son of Cush (Bible), Cush and therefore the great-grandson of Noah, Nimrod was described as a king in the land of Sh ...
, Shaddād ibn ʿĀd and
Pharaoh Pharaoh (, ; Egyptian language, Egyptian: ''wikt:pr ꜥꜣ, pr ꜥꜣ''; Meroitic language, Meroitic: 𐦲𐦤𐦧, ; Biblical Hebrew: ''Parʿō'') was the title of the monarch of ancient Egypt from the First Dynasty of Egypt, First Dynasty ( ...
because they consider all things to be God, even things that are considered impure according to the
Sharia Sharia, Sharī'ah, Shari'a, or Shariah () is a body of religious law that forms a part of the Islamic tradition based on Islamic holy books, scriptures of Islam, particularly the Quran, Qur'an and hadith. In Islamic terminology ''sharīʿah'' ...
. Actually, it would be more appropriate to call this group Kathratīya ("followers of multiplicity") because they took the multiplicity of God so far that they considered everything non-divine to be God. Nevertheless, in their belief all this is one.


Muhammad Tāhir al-Qummī

Another Imamite opponent of the wahdat-al-wujūd doctrine was the Iranian scholar Muhammad Tāhir al-Qummī (d. 1689), who held the office of
Shaykh al-Islām Shaykh al-Islām (; ; , ''Sheykh-ol-Eslām''; , Sheikh''-ul-Islām''; , ) was used in the classical era as an honorific title for outstanding scholars of the Islamic sciences.Gerhard Böwering, Patricia Crone, Mahan Mirza, The Princeton Encyclope ...
in
Qom Qom (; ) is a city in the Central District of Qom County, Qom province, Iran, serving as capital of the province, the county, and the district. It is the seventh largest metropolis and also the seventh largest city in Iran. The city is ...
. He devoted the last part of his anti-philosophical polemic ''Ḥikmat al-ʿārifīn'' to the rejection of this doctrine. In it he declared the unity of existence to be meaningless, on the grounds that existence is one of the secondary conceptual things (''maʿqūlāt'') that the mind creates from all contingents that are realized in the external world. In his treatise, Al-Qummī first deals with statements by
Dawūd al-Qayṣarī Dawūd al-Qayṣarī () was an early Ottoman Sufi scholar, philosopher and mystic. He was born in Kayseri, in central Anatolia and was the student of the Iranian scholar, Abd al-Razzaq Kāshānī (d. 1329). He was the author of over a dozen philo ...
(d. 1350),
Jāmi Nūr ad-Dīn 'Abd ar-Rahmān Jāmī (; 7 November 1414 – 9 November 1492), also known as Mawlanā Nūr al-Dīn 'Abd al-Rahmān or Abd-Al-Rahmān Nur-Al-Din Muhammad Dashti, or simply as Jami or Djāmī and in Turkey as Molla Cami, was a ...
(d. 1492) and
Mulla Sadra Ṣadr ad-Dīn Muḥammad Shīrāzī, more commonly known as Mullā Ṣadrā (; ; c. 1571/2 – c. 1635/40 CE / 980 – 1050 AH), was a Persians, Persian Twelver Shi'a, Shi'i Islamic philosophy, Islamic mystic, philosopher, Kalam, theologian, a ...
(d. 1635), all three of whom he presents as advocates of the wahdat-al-wujūd doctrine, Regarding Mulla Sadra, he states that he has not provided proof that the realities of contingent things are rays of light (''ashiʿʿa wa-aḍwāʾ'') of existence belonging to the necessary (''al-wujūd al-wājibī''), but only that contingent things are their effects (''āṯār wa-majʿūlāt''), which, however, does not necessarily entail the unity of existence that he claims. Finally, al-Qummī moves on to Muhyī d-Dīn Ibn ʿArabī, whom he presents, like as-Sirhindī, as the actual founder of the wahdat-al-wujūd doctrine. In his polemic against him, he mocks that he is in reality not a ''muḥyī d-dīn'' (“reviver of religion”), but a ''mumīt al-dīn'' (“killer of religion”), and tries to discredit him as a liar: The fact that al-Qummī considers Ibn ʿArabī to be a
Hanbalite The Hanbali school or Hanbalism is one of the four major schools of Islamic jurisprudence, belonging to the Ahl al-Hadith tradition within Sunni Islam. It is named after and based on the teachings of the 9th-century scholar, jurist and traditio ...
is due to his belief that the Hanbalites are split into two groups: 1. the Corporeists (''mujassima''), who believe that God is a body, 2. the Sufis, who teach that God can be perceived with the senses, although he is not a body. The latter is the school of thought of Muhyī d-Dīn Ibn al-ʿArabī. Overall, al-Qummī believes that the doctrine of the unity of existence with all its meanings is nonsense (''bāṭil'') and its falsehood is necessarily evident from religion, so that setting forth rational or tradition-based evidence to refute it is not necessary.


Al-Maqbalī

A
Zaydi Zaydism () is a branch of Shia Islam that emerged in the eighth century following Zayd ibn Ali's unsuccessful rebellion against the Umayyad Caliphate. Zaydism is one of the three main branches of Shi'ism, with the other two being Twelverism ...
scholar who strongly criticized the wahdat al-wujūd doctrine was Sālih ibn Mahdī al-Maqbalī (d. 1696). In his work ''al-ʿAlam al-shāmikh fī īthār al-ḥaqq ʿalā l-ābāʾ wa-l-mashāyikh'' he reports on a debate he had about this doctrine in Medina with the Kurdish scholar Muhammad ibn ʿAbd ar-Rasūl al-Barzanjī (d. 1691). In this conversation, Al-Barzanjī expressed his conviction that the Book, i.e. the
Qur'an The Quran, also romanized Qur'an or Koran, is the central religious text of Islam, believed by Muslims to be a revelation directly from God ('' Allāh''). It is organized in 114 chapters (, ) which consist of individual verses ('). Besides ...
, and the
Sunnah is the body of traditions and practices of the Islamic prophet Muhammad that constitute a model for Muslims to follow. The sunnah is what all the Muslims of Muhammad's time supposedly saw, followed, and passed on to the next generations. Diff ...
were full of proofs for the unity of existence. Al-Maqbalī, on the other hand, ruled that this teaching was "the greatest error" (''akbar ḍalāla'') that existed among people. To him, it was surprising that no doubts had been expressed about it. Al-Barzanjī's statement that the Qur'an and Sunnah are full of evidence for the unity of existence was rejected by al-Maqbalī as a lie and slander against these holy texts.


The defense of the concept with Qur'an and Hadith


The list in Yamanī's ''Laṭāyif-i Ashrafī''

In order to defend the Wahdat-al-wujūd doctrine against critics, proponents of this doctrine compiled lists of Qur'anic verses and hadiths that were supposed to prove its truth. A first list with six Qur'anic verses and two hadiths can be found in the ''Laṭāyif-i Ashrafī'' by Nizām ad-Dīn Yamanī, in which he recorded the sayings of his teacher Ashraf Jahangir Simnānī (d. 1405). The six Qur'anic verses that are listed here and commented on in detail with regard to their evidential value are: 1. "Say: He is God, the One" (Sura 112, 1); 2. "He is God, the One, the Subduer" (Sura 39:4), 3. "Worship God and do not associate anything with Him" (Sura 4:36), 4. "There is no equal to Him. He is the Hearer, the Seeer" (Sura 42:11), 5. "Everything passes away - except His face" (Sura 28:88) and 6. "Wherever you turn, there is the face of God" (Sura 2:115). Among the hadiths cited by Ashraf Jahangir Simnanī to prove that existence is one is the alleged saying of the Prophet, "Whoever has seen me has seen the Truthful One (''man raʾānī fa-qad raʾā l-ḥaqq'')". This is presented as a clear proof of the unity of existence. In its correct form, however, the saying is: “Whoever has seen me ‘in a dream’ has seen the Truthful One (‘man raʾānī ‘fī l-manām’ fa-qad raʾā l-ḥaqq’)”


Fadlallāh al-Burhānpūrī's list

Fadlallāh al-Burhānpūrī (d. 1619) listed in his work ''al-Tuḥfa al-mursala ilā n-Nabī'' an even larger number of Quranic passages and Prophetic sayings which, in his opinion, prove the truth of the wahdat-al-wujūd doctrine. The passages of the Qur'an include: * Sura 2:115 “To God belongs the East and the West: wherever you turn, there is the face of God.” * Sura 50:16 “We (sc. God) are nearer to him (sc. to man) than to the jugular vein” and Sura 56:85 “and we are nearer to him than you, but you cannot see (it).” * Sura 48:10 “Those who pledge allegiance to you pledge it to God. God’s hand is above their hand.” * Sura 57:3 “He (sc. God) is the First and the Last, the Visible and the Unseen. And He is Knowing of all things.” * Sura 51:21 “And in yourselves (sc. are signs of God). Can you not see?" * Sura 2:186 "When my servants ask about me, I am near." * Sura 8:17 "It was not you who threw when you threw, but God." * Sura 4:126 "And God encompasses all things." Among the sayings of the Prophet that al-Burhānpūrī quotes to prove the truth of the wahdat-al-wujūd doctrine, are: * the hadith reported in
Sahih Muslim () is the second hadith collection of the Six Books of Sunni Islam. Compiled by Islamic scholar Muslim ibn al-Ḥajjāj () in the format, the work is valued by Sunnis, alongside , as the most important source for Islamic religion after the Q ...
: "The truest word that the Arabs have ever uttered is the dictum of
Labīd Abū Aqīl Labīd ibn Rabīʿa ibn Mālik al-ʿĀmirī (; c. 505 – c. 661) was an Arab poet from higher Nejd and a companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. He belonged to the Bani Amir, a division of the tribe of the Hawazin. In his younge ...
: 'Is not everything vain except God?'". * the hadith narrated in
Sahih al-Bukhari () is the first hadith collection of the Six Books of Sunni Islam. Compiled by Islamic scholar al-Bukhari () in the format, the work is valued by Sunni Muslims, alongside , as the most authentic after the Qur'an. Al-Bukhari organized the bo ...
: “When anyone of you rises for ritual prayer, then he should only converse with his
Lord Lord is an appellation for a person or deity who has authority, control, or power (social and political), power over others, acting as a master, chief, or ruler. The appellation can also denote certain persons who hold a title of the Peerage o ...
, for his Lord is between him and the
Qibla The qibla () is the direction towards the Kaaba in the Great Mosque of Mecca, Sacred Mosque in Mecca, which is used by Muslims in various religious contexts, particularly the direction of prayer for the salah. In Islam, the Kaaba is believed to ...
.” * the
Hadith qudsi Hadīth qudsī (, meaning ''sacred tradition'' or ''sacred report'') is a special category of Hadith, the compendium of sayings attributed to the Islamic prophet Muhammad. It is stated these Hadiths are unique because their content is attrib ...
narrated in Sahīh al-Bukhari: “Through
supererogatory Supererogation (Late Latin: ''supererogatio'' "payment beyond what is needed or asked", from ''super'' "beyond" and ''erogare'' "to pay out, expend", itself from ''ex'' "out" and ''rogare'' "to ask") is the performance of more than is asked for; ...
actions (''nawāfil'') my servant draws ever closer to me until I love him. And when I love him, I am his hearing with which he hears, his sight with which he sees, his hand with which he strikes, and his foot with which he walks.” * the Hadith qudsī narrated in Sahīh Muslim: “God says: O man, I was sick and you did not visit me. I was hungry and you did not give me food . * and the word of the prophet in the hadith about the distance between the seven heavens and seven earths, reported by
al-Tirmidhi Muhammad ibn Isa al-Tirmidhi (; 824 – 9 October 892 CE / 209–279 AH), often referred to as Imām at-Termezī/Tirmidhī, was an Islamic scholar, and collector of hadith from Termez (early Khorasan and in present-day Uzbekistan). He w ...
among others: “By the one in whose hand Muhammad’s soul is: If you were to lower a rope to the lowest earth, it would fall on God.” With the exception of the second hadith, which is attributed to
Anas ibn Malik Anas ibn Mālik ibn Naḍr al-Khazrajī al-Anṣārī (; 612 712) was a companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. Finding the Truth in Judging the Companions, 1. 84-5; EI2, 1. 482 A. J. Wensinck J. Robson He was nicknamed Khadim al-Nabi for ...
, all other hadiths mentioned are attributed to
Abu Hurayra Abū Hurayra ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn Ṣakhr al-Dawsī al-Zahrānī (; –679), commonly known as Abū Hurayra (; ), was a companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and considered the most prolific hadith narrator. Born in al-Jabur, Arabia to ...
. ʿAbd al-Ghanī al-Nābulusī, who commented on al-Burhānpūrī's work, also thought that the following prophetic saying, which was narrated by al-Tirmidhī among others, clearly enunciates Wahdat al-wujūd : “God – blessed and exalted be He – created His creation in darkness and caused His light to fall upon it. Whoever His light reaches will be guided, and whoever it misses will go astray.”


Discussion in the 17th and 18th century


Ahmad al-Qushashī

After the opponents of the wahdat al-wujūd doctrine had dominated the intellectual climate in the Hijaz in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, this doctrine celebrated a comeback with the Medinan scholar Ahmad al-Qushashī (d. 1661). Al-Muhibbī, in his biographical lexicon of personalities of the 11th Islamic century, referred to him as the
Imam Imam (; , '; : , ') is an Islamic leadership position. For Sunni Islam, Sunni Muslims, Imam is most commonly used as the title of a prayer leader of a mosque. In this context, imams may lead Salah, Islamic prayers, serve as community leaders, ...
of those who teach the unity of existence (''imām al-qāʾilīn bi-waḥdat al-wujūd''). ِAl-Qushashī wrote a treatise entitled ''Kalimat al-jūd bi-l-baiyina wa-l-shuhūd ʿalā l-qawl bi-waḥdat al-wujūd'' ("The Treatise on the Doctrine of the Unity of Existence Generously Equipped with Evidence"), which is currently only available in manuscript form. In it, he explained that ''wahdat al-wujūd ''meant that there was no partner for God in His existence; the contingent things consisted exclusively of His objects of knowledge, His actions and His creatures. In addition, in the treatise he quoted the Ottoman Sheikh Islam Kemal-Paşa-zâde (d. 1534) as saying that it is the ruler's responsibility to convert people to the doctrine of the unity of existence (''yajib ʿalā walī al-amr an yaḥmil an-nās ʿalā l-qawl bi-waḥdat al-wujūd''). Al-Qushashī claims to have seen this in an
autograph An autograph is a person's own handwriting or signature. The word ''autograph'' comes from Ancient Greek (, ''autós'', "self" and , ''gráphō'', "write"), and can mean more specifically: Gove, Philip B. (ed.), 1981. ''Webster's Third New Intern ...
by Kemal-Paşa-zâde. Although there is a fatwa by Kemal-Pasha-zade to protect the teachings of Ibn ʿArabī, wahdat al-wujūd is not mentioned in it. Ahmad al-Qushashī also formulated his own theological doctrine with the doctrine of the "unity of attributes" (''waḥdat al-ṣifāt''). His student Ibrāhīm al-Kūrānī (see below) referred to this doctrine as "the sister" of the doctrine of wahdat al-wujūd and was of the opinion that al-Qushashī's efforts in laying the foundations of it were similar to those of Ibn ʿArabī regarding wahdat al-wujūd.


Ibrāhīm al-Kūrānī

Another important proponent of the doctrine of wahdat al-wujūd in the Hijaz was al-Qushashī's student Ibrāhīm al-Kūrānī (d. 1690), who dedicated several works to it. The most important of these was his commentary ''Itḥāf al-dhakī'' on the work ''al-Tuḥfa al-mursala ilā l-Nabī'' by Fadlallāh al-Burhānpūrī (see above). Al-Kūrānī wrote this commentary at the request of students from Southeast Asia (''Bilād Ǧāwā'') who were staying in Medina. Al-Burhānpūrī had begun his work with the statement that God is existence.Al-Kūrānī: ''Itḥāf al-dhakī fī sharḥ al-Tuḥfa al-mursala ilā n-Nabī''. 2012, p. 183. Al-Kūrānī took this statement as the starting point for admonitions, which he divided into seven sections. In the fifth section he admonishes the reader: "The first duty that befalls the one who strives after this noble science (sc. ''ʿilm al-ḥaqāʾiq'' =
metaphysics Metaphysics is the branch of philosophy that examines the basic structure of reality. It is traditionally seen as the study of mind-independent features of the world, but some theorists view it as an inquiry into the conceptual framework of ...
) is that he should be fully aware that there is no contradiction between the belief in the unity of existence (''tawḥīd al-wujūd'') on the one hand and the
Sharia Sharia, Sharī'ah, Shari'a, or Shariah () is a body of religious law that forms a part of the Islamic tradition based on Islamic holy books, scriptures of Islam, particularly the Quran, Qur'an and hadith. In Islamic terminology ''sharīʿah'' ...
and the imposition of command and prohibition on the other." The unity of existence, which entails that those addressed when duties are imposed are individuations (''taʿayyunāt'') of the absolute existence and manifestations of the names of the true God, does not mean that they are no longer burdened with duties because it is God who has created them and they are like prisoners in his hand. According to al-Kūrānī, the assumption that unity and existence and the divine imposition of duties contradict each other stems from the fact that the people concerned did not correctly understand the concept of acquisition (''kasb''), which is based on the unity of existence. In the seventh section, al-Kūrānī admonishes the reader to be aware that the profession of the unity of existence does not contradict the statement of the master of the Sufis
al-Junayd Junayd of Baghdad (; ) was a mystic and one of the most famous of the early Islamic saints. He is a central figure in the spiritual lineage of many Sufi orders. Junayd taught in Baghdad throughout his lifetime and was an important figure in th ...
: "
Tawhid ''Tawhid'' () is the concept of monotheism in Islam, it is the religion's central and single most important concept upon which a Muslim's entire religious adherence rests. It unequivocally holds that God is indivisibly one (''ahad'') and s ...
is the separation of the pre-existent from the produced" (''al-tawḥīd ifrād al-qadīm min al-muḥdath''), nor the teaching of the
Sunnis Sunni Islam is the largest Islamic schools and branches, branch of Islam and the largest religious denomination in the world. It holds that Muhammad did not appoint any Succession to Muhammad, successor and that his closest companion Abu Bakr ...
that tawhīd is the rejection of the likening (''tashbīh'') of God with creation on the one hand and the complete emptying (''taʿṭīl'') of God on the other. Regarding the statement of al-Junayd, al-Kūrānī considers that the doctrine of the unity of existence does not contradict it because its proponents have clearly stated that the universal truths (''al-ḥaqāʾiq al-kullīya'') are limited to three types: # a part of them is related to the True One (''al-Ḥaqq'') and belongs to Him. These include divinity (''ulūhīya''), the all-encompassing essential mercy (''al-raḥma al-dhātīya''), which in terms of abundance (''al-fayyāḍīya'') is existence, necessity (''wujūb''), permanence (''al-qaiyūmīya''), which is subsistence in itself, the establishment of others, self-sufficiency (''al-ghinā al-dhātī''), and the like. # the second part is related to the world (''kawn'') and belongs to it. These include need (''al-faqr''), essential nothingness (''al-ʿadmīya al-dhātīya''), lowliness (''dhilla''), contingency (''imkān'') and multiplicity. # the third part is that which is directly related to the True One and indirectly related to the world through the addition of existence. This includes, for example, knowledge, will, power and the like, which can relate to God, in which case they are pre-existent (''qadīm''), or to the world, in which case they are secondarily occurring (''ḥādith''). As long as this is the case, the essentially eternal existence is separated from the things produced, as al-Junayd also taught, even though they clearly state that the things produced are individuations and relations of the absolute essentially eternal existence, as well as manifestations of the names and attributes. As for the second point, namely the compatibility of the confession of the unity of existence with the Sunni rejection of the likening and emptying of God, it is known that "the truth-finders from the people of clear revelation and right tasting" (''al-muḥaqqiqūn min ahl al-kashf al-ṣarīḥ wa-l-dhawq al-ṣaḥīḥ''), who taught the unity of existence, adhered to the belief that appropriately combines the acquittal (''tanzīh'') of God from all the properties of the created beings with the confirmation of the likening attributes, this on the basis of
kashf ''Kashf'' () "unveiling" is a Sufi concept dealing with knowledge of the heart rather than of the intellect. Kashf describes the state of experiencing a personal divine revelation after ascending through spiritual struggles, and uncovering the he ...
and experience, confirmed by the Qur'an and the Sunna. Because, as al-Kūrānī explains, they clearly state that God is not bound to any states of being (''akwān''), even if He reveals Himself in the manifestations of the names. Ibrāhīm al-Kūrānī speaks about Wahdat al-wujūd in another passage, namely when commenting on the explanation of the author that the existence identical with God is one, but the types of its clothing (''albās'') are different and varied. Al-Kūrānī explains this diversity with the diversity of qualities (''shuʾūn''), names, realities and fixed entities, while reiterating that this diversity and variety does not affect the unity of existence (''waḥdat al-wujūd'') because it is one of the requirements of its essential absoluteness.Al-Kūrānī: ''Itḥāf al-dhakī fī sharḥ al-Tuḥfa al-mursala ilā n-Nabī''. 2012, p. 227. In two other writings, al-Kūrānī responded to questions from Southeast Asian Muslims who apparently interpreted Wahdat al-wujūd in a pantheistic sense. These were: * the two-folio ''Mirqāt al-ṣuʿūd ilā ṣiḥḥat al-qawl bi-waḥdat al-wujūd''. In this treatise, al-Kūrānī rejected an extreme notion held by some Southeast Asian Sufis who claimed that Muhammad possessed divine aspects and that this was the true meaning of ''wahdat al-wujūd''. He contrasts this with what he believes to be the correct meaning of this doctrine. According to it, God is absolute existence in the true sense of absoluteness - that which is not limited by anything in the cosmos - and manifests itself in created forms without being limited by these forms. Al-Kūrānī responds to this idea that the doctrine of wahdat al-wujūd is correct from the point of view of religious law (''šarʿan'') because it is consistent with the Qur'an and the Sunnah. * The second writing was al-Kūrānī's treatise ''al-Maslak al-jalī fī ḥukm shaṭḥ al-walī''. In this treatise, al-Kūrānī mentions that in the year 1084 of the
Hijra Hijra, Hijrah, Hegira, Hejira, Hijrat or Hijri may refer to: Islam * Hijrah (also ''Hejira'' or ''Hegira''), the migration of Muhammad from Mecca to Medina in 622 CE * Migration to Abyssinia or First Hegira, of Muhammad's followers in 615 CE * L ...
(= 1673/74 CE) he received a letter from Southeast Asia in which it was reported that some people there said: "God is ourselves and our existence, and we are He Himself and His existence" (''inna Llāha taʿālā nafsunā wa-wujūdunā, wa-naḥnu nafsuhū wa-wujūduhū''). The letter asked whether this statement could be interpreted in a figurative sense or whether it represented open disbelief. In his reply, al-Kūrānī explains that God, the absolute existence, is different from human existence and from contingent existence in general.


ʿAbd al-Ghanī al-Nābulusī

Although Ahmad Sirhindī had spoken out against Wahdat al-Wujūd at the beginning of the 17th century, some of the most prominent Naqshbandi Sufis in the Ottoman Empire also returned to this teaching in the 18th century, for example Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulusi (d. 1731) in Damascus. He wrote two treatises on this subject: ''Īḍāḥ al-maqṣūd min waḥdat al-wujūd'' ("Explanation of what is meant by the Unity of Existence") and ''al-Wujūd al-ḥaqq'' ("The Existence, the True One").


''Īḍāḥ al-maqṣūd min waḥdat al-wujūd''

Al-Nābulusī wrote the treatise ''Īḍāḥ al-maqṣūd min waḥdat al-wujūd'' in 1680. As he later stated in ''al-Wujūd al-ḥaqq'', he drew for it on the knowledge of Abū Bakr, whose knowledge, according to him, was based on “the secrets of Unity of Existence" (''asrār waḥdat al-wujūd''). The actual intention of the treatise becomes clear right at the beginning, where the author, following the Hamdala, describes God as the one who is characterized by the unity of existence, as it is known to the people of observation (''muʿāyana'') and experience ( ''shuhūd''), not according to the wrong meaning among the people of Ilḥād and
Zandaqa Zindīq (pl. zanādiqa) is an Islamic pejorative applied to individuals who are considered to hold views or follow practices that are contrary to central Islamic dogmas.. Zandaqa is the noun describing these views. Zandaqa is usually translated a ...
. The treatise was directed against what it considered to be false interpretations of Wahdat al-Wujūd and aimed to determine the true meaning of this term. The wrong interpretations were, in his opinion, also the reason why this doctrine had been rejected by mentally limited and narrow-minded people. In reality, however, al-Nābulusī asserts, this teaching is in agreement with the teaching of the
Sunnis Sunni Islam is the largest Islamic schools and branches, branch of Islam and the largest religious denomination in the world. It holds that Muhammad did not appoint any Succession to Muhammad, successor and that his closest companion Abu Bakr ...
. In his treatise, al-Nābulusī contrasts the representatives of ''wahdat al-wujūd'' with other Muslims in several respects: While their sciences are based on unveiling (''kashf'') and observation (''ʿiyān''), the others derive their sciences from intellectual considerations or rational knowledge; while the beginning of their path is
Taqwa ''Taqwa'' ( '' / '') is an Islamic term for being conscious and cognizant of God, of truth, "piety, fear of God." It is often found in the Quran. Those who practice ''taqwa'' — in the words of Ibn Abbas, "believers who avoid shirk with All ...
and pious work, the beginning of the path of the others is the study of books; while at the end of their sciences they came to experience the ever-living (''al-ḥayy al-qayyūm'' = God), the others at the end of their sciences attained offices and positions. Since only ''wahdat al-wujūd'' in its correct meaning is the true doctrine of faith, it is incumbent upon every obliged person (''mukallaf'') to search for it and to take it completely seriously. The correct ''wahdat al-wujūd'' does not contradict the teachings of the Imams of Islam. According to al-Nābulusī, the controversy over the ''wahdat al-wujūd'' doctrine is ultimately due to the different interpretations of the word "existence" (''wujūd''). Whoever interprets this word precisely as the essence of existence (''ʿain ḏāt al-wujūd'') rejects ''wahdat al-wujūd'' because he claims a newly emerged existence (''wujūd ḥādith'') that coincides with the essence of the existent. His rejection of the ''wahdat al-wujūd'' doctrine is, however, a mistake, since this newly emerged existence, which he claims is a second existence alongside the existence of God, in his opinion nevertheless consists in the existence of God (''qāʾim bi-wujūd Allāh''), so that for him too, ultimately all existence goes back to the existence of God. On the other hand, whoever interprets existence as that through which every created being exists, accepts the ''wahdat al-wujūd'' doctrine and considers it to be true, which is the correct standpoint to which all doctrines ultimately lead. Al-Nābulusī explains the different understandings of existence with a comparison: If one dissolves
vitriol Vitriol is the general chemical name encompassing a class of chemical compounds comprising sulfates of certain metalsoriginally, iron or copper. Those mineral substances were distinguished by their color, such as green vitriol for hydrated iron(I ...
or
cinnabar Cinnabar (; ), or cinnabarite (), also known as ''mercurblende'' is the bright scarlet to brick-red form of Mercury sulfide, mercury(II) sulfide (HgS). It is the most common source ore for refining mercury (element), elemental mercury and is t ...
in water so that it changes color, then the water has a real existence and the vitriol or cinnabar only an assumed virtual existence (''wujūd mafrūḍ muqaddar''). One can therefore assume that these are different existences. The proponents of ''wahdat al-wujūd'', however, meant by "existence" only that through which the existent becomes existent, not the assumed virtual existence. But ultimately even the scholars of externals (''rusūm'') and Kalām, who consider the assumed virtual existence as an existence in its own right, would have to admit the truth of ''wahdat al-wujūd'', since the assumed virtual existence only exists through the existence of God. It requires a first existence. All of them thus voluntarily or inevitably taught the unity of existence. As for the ignorant proponents of ''wahdat al-wujūd'' who claimed that their supposed virtual existence was the existence of God and also their attributes were the attributes of God in order to overthrow the Shari'ah rules, dissolve the Muhammadan community and get rid of the obligation (''taklīf''), it is justified to denigrate them for their false teaching, and the scholars of the outside world (''ʿulamāʾ aẓ-ẓāhir'') would also be rewarded by God for this denigration. However, when these scholars proceed from denigrating this vulgar mob, which deviates from religion like an arrow from its trajectory, to denigrating the ruling Imams of the Knowers of Truth, believing that the latter taught ''wahdat al-wujūd'' in a similar sense, this was reprehensible in religion and unacceptable to those who believe in God and the Last Day.


''al-Wujūd al-ḥaqq''

In ''al-Wujūd al-ḥaqq'', al-Nābulusī emphasized the difference between the unity of existence and the multiplicity of existents (''kathrat al-mawjūd''). He wrote in it: Regarding the difference between existence and existing things, al-Nābulusī explains that the former is the origin (''aṣl''), while the latter follow it, emerge from it and exist in it. The meaning of "existing" (''mawjūd'') is a thing that has existence, not existence itself. What is being talked about is the unity of existence, not the unity of the existent. The existing is not one, but there is multiplicity in it, as the Koran says in surah 7:86 : "And remember (the times) when you were few and He made you many!"


Shah Waliullah Dehlawi

The Indian scholar
Shah Waliullah Dehlawi Qutb ud-Din Ahmad ibn ʿAbd-ur-Rahim al-ʿUmari ad-Dehlawi (‎; 1703–1762), commonly known as Shah Waliullah Dehlawi (also Shah Wali Allah), was an Islamic Sunni scholar and Sufi reformer, who contributed to Islamic revival in the Indian s ...
(d. 1762) studied the doctrine of wahdat al-wujūd intensively as well. He believed that wahdat al-wujūd "according to the taste of the philosopher" (''ʿalā ḏauq al-ḥakīm'') differs from wahdat al-wujūd according to the
opinion An opinion is a judgement, viewpoint, or statement that is not conclusive, as opposed to facts, which are true statements. Definition A given opinion may deal with subjective matters in which there is no conclusive finding, or it may deal ...
of others. Sadr ad-Dīn al-Qūnawī's statement on this says, according to him, "that existence is comprehensive and common to all beings, is an
imagination Imagination is the production of sensations, feelings and thoughts informing oneself. These experiences can be re-creations of past experiences, such as vivid memories with imagined changes, or completely invented and possibly fantastic scenes ...
(''tamaṯṯul'') of the necessary
reality Reality is the sum or aggregate of everything in existence; everything that is not imagination, imaginary. Different Culture, cultures and Academic discipline, academic disciplines conceptualize it in various ways. Philosophical questions abo ...
(''al-ḥaqīqa al-wuǧūbīya'') and emanates from it". In his work ''at-Tafhīmāt al-ilāhīya'', Shah Waliullah Dehlawi explained that the realization of the belief in existential unity (''taḥqīq tauḥīd al-wujūdī'') consists in "that in the external and in the
thing in itself In Kantian philosophy, the thing-in-itself () is the status of objects as they are, independent of representation and observation. The concept of the thing-in-itself was introduced by the German philosopher Immanuel Kant, and over the followin ...
there is only one reality, namely existence, and that in the sense of self-realization (''taḥaqquq'') and confirmation (''taqarrur''), not in the original sense (''lā bi-l-maʿnā al-maṣdarī'')." The rest of existing things, explains Shāh Walīyallāh, rose and appeared in it, just as the forms of the waves rise in the sea or the accidents appear in their substrates. The core of their nature as existing things is that they have a connection to the reality of existence. For the Sufis who profess unity (''al-ṣūfīya al-muwaḥḥida''), all realities are accidents of existence. However, these realities that appear in existence are not independent things, but rather qualities and aspects of reality (''shuʾūn al-wujūd wa-iʿtibārātuh'') in the sense that existence, when it reveals itself, shows numerous receptivities, so that it embodies itself in one form and another in another, and is then called either human or horse. In a letter to the Medina-based Ottoman scholar Afandī Ismāʿīl ibn ʿAbdallāh, Shah Waliullah commented on the difference between wahdat al-wujūd and wahdat al-shuhūd. The Ottoman scholar had asked him to make a comparison (''taṭbīq'') between the two concepts. Shah Waliullah explained in his reply that the two expressions were used in two different contexts: # Firstly, they were used in connection with the mystical journey to God (''al-sayr ilā Llāh''). Thus, it is said that a certain ''sālik'', that is, a walker on the mystical path, is at the station (''maqām'') of wahdat al-wujūd, while another has reached the station of wahdat al-shuhūd. Wahdat al-wujūd here means immersing oneself in the knowledge of the unifying truth (''maʿrifat al-ḥaqīqa al-jāmiʿa''), in which the world becomes individualized, in such a way that all judgments of differentiation and separation (''aḥkām al-tafriqa wa-l-tamāyuz''), on which the knowledge of good and evil is based and on which clear statements are made about the religious law (''sharʿ'') and the intellect (''ʿaql''), are lost. Some travellers remain at this station until God releases them from it. The meaning of wahdat al-shuhūd, on the other hand, is the connection of the judgments of connection and separation (''al-jamʿ wa-l-tafriqa''). The walker of the mystical path then knows that things are one (''wāḥida'') from one aspect and many (''kathīra'') from another. This latter stage of the journey is more perfect and higher than the first. # On the other hand, the expressions are also used to describe different points of view in the knowledge of the realities of things (''maʿrifat ḥaqāʾiq al-ashyāʾ'') and the nature of the connection between what has come into being in time (''al-ḥādith'') and the pre-existent (''al-qadīm''). According to one group, the world consists of
accidents An accident is an unintended, normally unwanted event that was not deliberately caused by humans. The term ''accident'' implies that the event may have been caused by unrecognized or unaddressed risks. Many researchers, insurers and attorneys w ...
that are combined in a single truth (''aʿrāḍ mujtamiʿa fī ḥaqīqa wāḥida''), just as wax can take on the form of a human being, a horse and a donkey, while the nature of the wax remains the same in all of these. Although wax is named after the forms it has assumed, these forms are in reality still representations (''tamāṯīl'') that only have existence through the wax. Another school, on the other hand, sees the world as reflections of the divine names and attributes (''ʿukūs al-asmāʾ wa-l-ṣifāt''), which are reflected in the mirrors of the non-existences (''al-aʿdām al-mutaqābila'') that face them. For example, when the light of divine power (''qudra'') is reflected in the mirror of its non-existence, namely powerlessness (''ʿajz''), it becomes contingent power (''qudra mumkina''). The same applies analogously to other attributes and also to existence itself. The school of thought of the first group is called wahdat al-wujūd and that of the second wahdat asch-shuhūd. In contrast to Ahmad al-Sirhindī, who had distinguished between wahdat al-wujūd as a metaphysical teaching and wahdat ash-shuhūd as a mystical experience, Shah Waliullah believed that both concepts have a mystical and a metaphysical quality. The starting point for Shah Waliullah's preoccupation with the topic was a dream he had in 1731 during his stay in the
Hijaz Hejaz is a historical region of the Arabian Peninsula that includes the majority of the western region of Saudi Arabia, covering the cities of Mecca, Medina, Jeddah, Tabuk, Yanbu, Taif and Al-Bahah. It is thus known as the "Western Province ...
and describes in his work ''Fuyūḍ al-Ḥaramayn''. In it, he saw a crowd of people. Half of them were engaged in
Dhikr (; ; ) is a form of Islamic worship in which phrases or prayers are repeatedly recited for the purpose of remembering God. It plays a central role in Sufism, and each Sufi order typically adopts a specific ''dhikr'', accompanied by specific ...
and Yād-Dāsht ("concentration on God"). Lights appeared on their hearts and freshness and beauty on their faces, and they did not believe in wahdat al-wujūd. The other half believed in wahdat al-wujūd and were busy contemplating the divine permeation of existence (''sarayān al-wujūd''). Their hearts showed shame and despondency in the view of God, who is busy controlling the world in general and souls in particular. Their faces looked desiccated. The two groups argued, each claiming that their way (''ṭarīqa'') was better than the other. When they could not resolve their dispute, they turned to Shah Waliullah to seek his judgment. In a long speech, he stated that wahdat al-wujūd was a true teaching, but those who believed in it were so absorbed in thinking about the immanence of God in the world that they lost the worship of God, the love of God and the transcendence of God.


Ismāʿīl al-Gelenbevī

On the grounds that the doctrine of Wahdat al-Wujūd had become known among prominent scholars and was one of the dangerous places where feet slipped (''mazāliq al-aqdām''), the Ottoman theologian and mathematician Ismāʿīl ibn Mustafā al-Gelenbevī (d. 1791), who was active in
Istanbul Istanbul is the List of largest cities and towns in Turkey, largest city in Turkey, constituting the country's economic, cultural, and historical heart. With Demographics of Istanbul, a population over , it is home to 18% of the Demographics ...
, wrote a treatise on this topic too. In it he based his work on the distinction already made by Ibn Sabʿīn and al-Qāshānī between the necessarily existent, i.e. God, and the contingently existent, which means everything that is not divine. In his treatise, al-Gelenbevī first makes it clear that he considers the view of ''wahdat al-wujūd'' popular among a group of Sufis, according to which the necessary is "the sum of the parts of the world" (''majmūʿ ajzāʾ al-ʿālam''), to be blatant disbelief (''kufr ṣarīḥ''). In order to explain what he considered to be the correct philosophical doctrine of wahdat al-wujūd, he draws the following analogy: {{Quote, If we stretch many threads from the top of a pole from all its sides so that they completely cover it and then place the pole on the ground, the threads all look as erected as the pole. In reality, however, what is erected is only the pole, while the erections of the threads are only imaginary and imagined. For they are erected only by the erection of the pole, not by their own erections. The true erection is only one, but what is erected is many, because it (sc. the erection) extends to them (sc. the threads) and appears in them. As long as each thread is hanging on the pole, the erection appears in it. And as soon as this suspension is interrupted, the imaginary erection disappears and no longer exists. If you replace the erection of the pole with the true existence, the erected threads with the imaginary and imagined existences of contingent things, and the forms (''hayākil'') and fixed entities (''aʿyān thābita'') that are the manifestations in place of those threads, then you have formed an image of the doctrine of ''wahdat al-wujūd'' as held by the true scholars, without needing to add anything., With this simile, al-Gelenbevī wanted to make it clear that contingent things have no existence of their own apart from the necessary existence, but exist solely through the existence of the necessary, i.e. God. The obvious existence of every contingent existent is the existence of the necessary, not another independent existence. Rather, the other independent existence is as imaginary and a product of the imagination as the uprightness of the threads or as mirror images. According to al-Gelenbevī, the counterparts of those who teach the unity of existence are those who teach the multiplicity of existence (''kathrat al-wujūd''). They attribute to each contingent existent an existence of its own, which is not connected to the existence of the necessarily existent. According to al-Gelenbewī, what the proponents of ''wahdat al-wujūd'' teach inevitably means that all effects and actions that appear to emanate from the non-necessary actually emanate from God. What has confused the rational people, however, is the fact that the totality of these effects and actions also includes that which is disgraceful (''qabīḥ'') according to the
Sharia Sharia, Sharī'ah, Shari'a, or Shariah () is a body of religious law that forms a part of the Islamic tradition based on Islamic holy books, scriptures of Islam, particularly the Quran, Qur'an and hadith. In Islamic terminology ''sharīʿah'' ...
and reason. Many scholars have therefore accused Muhyī l-Dīn Ibn ʿArabī, Sadr al-Dīn al-Qūnawī and other great "representatives of unity" (''ahl al-waḥda'') of unbelief. But there is no reason to declare them unbelievers because it is also Sunni teaching that there is compulsion in people's actions and what appears to be shameful does not come about through the voluntary choice (''ikhtiyār'') of people, but is predetermined from all eternity (''azalī'').


Wahdat al-wujūd as the true meaning of the formula Lā ilāh illā Llāh


Lā ilāh illā Llāh as a means of contemplating the unity of existence

Fadlallāh al-Burhānpūrī also expressed the view in his treatise ''at-Tuḥfa al-mursala'' that Wahdat al-wujūd is the "real meaning" (''ʿain maʿnā'') of the "Good Word" (''al-kalima aṭ-ṭaiyiba''), i.e. the formula ''Lā ilāha illā Llāh'', which forms the first part of the
Islamic creed ''Aqidah'' (, , pl. , ) is an Islamic term of Arabic origin that means "creed". It is also called Islamic creed or Islamic theology. ''Aqidah'' goes beyond concise statements of faith and may not be part of an ordinary Muslim's religious ins ...
. His commentator
Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulsi Shaykh 'Abd al-Ghani ibn Isma′il al-Nabulsi (an-Nabalusi) (19 March 1641 – 5 March 1731), was an eminent Sunni Ulama, Muslim scholar, poet, and author on works about Sufism, ethnography and agriculture. Family origins Abd al-Ghani's family ...
(d. 1731) agreed with him and justified the correctness of this position with the argument that the formula ''Lā ilāha illā Llāh'' means: "There is nothing that can dispense with everything else and that everything else cannot dispense with, except God." Since this statement also applies to the one true existence that does not need the forms and individuations of the world, while all worlds need them, one can say that the meaning of Wahdat al-wudschūd is identical with the meaning of the "Good Word". be. Al-Burhānpūrī also considered the formula ''Lā ilāha illā Llāh'' as a means of contemplation (''murāqaba'') on the unity of existence and thus as a means of reaching God. He recommended that seekers of God repeat this formula constantly and not pay attention to breathing or pronunciation, but concentrate entirely on the meaning of the formula. One can perform this exercise without
Wudu ''Wuduʾ'' ( ) is the Islamic procedure for cleansing parts of the body, a type of ritual purification, or ablution. The steps of wudu are washing the hands, rinsing the mouth and nose, washing the face, then the forearms, then wiping the head, ...
. However, if it is present, it is better.Al-Burhānpūrī: ''Al-Tuḥfa al-mursala ilā n-nabī''. 1965, p. 136. His commentator ِAbū l-Chair as-Suwaidī (d. 1786) adds at this point that seekers of God should continue this
Dhikr (; ; ) is a form of Islamic worship in which phrases or prayers are repeatedly recited for the purpose of remembering God. It plays a central role in Sufism, and each Sufi order typically adopts a specific ''dhikr'', accompanied by specific ...
until it passes from the tongue to the heart. In this way, the revelations of the attributes and names of God would come to him, for God said: "I am the companion of the one who mentions me" (''anā ǧalīs man ḏakaranī''). The companion must, however, be something experienced. The dhikr performed in this way, al-Suwaidī concludes, is better than
raiding Raiding may refer to: * The present participle of the verb Raid (disambiguation), which itself has several meanings * Raid (military) * Raid (video games), a group of video game players who join forces * Raiding, Austria, a town in Austria * Party ...
and
martyrdom A martyr (, ''mártys'', 'witness' stem , ''martyr-'') is someone who suffers persecution and death for advocating, renouncing, or refusing to renounce or advocate, a religious belief or other cause as demanded by an external party. In colloqui ...
for the cause of God, because the former are rewarded with the Garden of Paradise, while the dhikr is rewarded with the experience and vision of Gods, which is better than the attainment of Paradise.


The theses of ʿAbd ar-Rahmān al-Lakhnawī

Wahdat al-wujud being the true meaning of the formula ''Lā ilāha illā Llāh'' was also the central idea of the treatise ''Kalimat al-ḥaqq'' by the Indian Sufi author ʿAbd ar-Rahmān al-Lakhnawī (d. 1830)Tanoli: “A Forgotten Debate on Wahdat al-wujud in Contemporary Perspective” 2013, p. 202. Based on this view, he also believed that the affirmation of Wahdat al-wujud was obligatory for all Muslims. According to him, the formula ''Lā ilāh illā Llāh'' actually means ''Lā mawjūda illā Llāh'' (“There is nothing that exists except God”). Anyone who does not believe in this meaning of the formula ''Lā ilāha illā Llāh'' is not a true believer. The great scholars of the East and West of the earlier and later generations, the hadith scholars as well as the Qur'an exegetes,
Kalām ''Ilm al-kalam'' or ''ilm al-lahut'', often shortened to ''kalam'', is the scholastic, speculative, or rational study of Islamic theology ('' aqida''). It can also be defined as the science that studies the fundamental doctrines of Islamic fai ...
scholars and
Fiqh ''Fiqh'' (; ) is the term for Islamic jurisprudence.Fiqh
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''Fiqh'' is of ...
scholars, the
Mujtahid ''Ijtihad'' ( ; ' , ) is an Islamic legal term referring to independent reasoning by an expert in Islamic law, or the thorough exertion of a jurist's mental faculty in finding a solution to a legal question. It is contrasted with '' taqlid'' (i ...
ūn as well as the Muqallidūn have unfortunately distorted the true meaning of the formula ''Lā ilāha illā Llāh''. This error and this falsification then spread among the Muslims until in their belief system
Tawhid ''Tawhid'' () is the concept of monotheism in Islam, it is the religion's central and single most important concept upon which a Muslim's entire religious adherence rests. It unequivocally holds that God is indivisibly one (''ahad'') and s ...
became
Shirk Shirk may refer to: * Shirk (surname) * Shirk (Islam), in Islam, the sin of idolatry or worshiping beings or things other than God ('attributing an associate (to God)') * Shirk, Iran, a village in South Khorasan Province, Iran * Shirk-e Sorjeh ...
and Shirk became Tawhid. After God enlightened him through inspiration about the true meaning of the creed, he set to work and wrote the text ''Kalimat al-ḥaqq''.al-Lakhnawī: ''Kalimat al-ḥaqq''. 1908, p. 14. ʿAbd ar-Rahmān al-Lakhnawī based his view on linguistic and historical arguments. For example, he believed that the word ''illā'' in the creed was not an exceptional particle, but had the meaning of "other than", so that it made sense: "No god is other than God". Another argument of his was based on the morphology of the Arabic creed ''Lā ilāha illā Llāh'': Since three of the four words, namely ''lā'', ''ilāha'' and ''illā'', are contained in the fourth word ''(A)llāh'', this shows that nothing else exists besides God. Furthermore, al-Lakhnawī believed that Wahdat al-wujūd must be the real meaning of the Islamic creed because otherwise there would have been no difference between the Muslims and the Mushrikun, whom Muhammad called to this creed under threat of violence. Even the pre-Islamic Arabs had already believed in the existence and unity of God and that he had created the world, as can be seen from Sura 23:86f and 43:9. They only viewed the idols as intercessors with God and only worshipped them so that they would bring them into a close relationship with God, as can be seen from Sura 10:18 and 39:3. What Muhammad objected to among the Mushrikun was the assertion of the difference between God on the one hand and the gods and other things on the other. To refute this, the formula ''Lā ilāha illā Llāh'' was revealed. It means: "Everything that you imagine to be other than God is nothing other than Him, but He Himself."ʿAbd al-Ḥaiy al-Ḥusainī al-Laknawī: ''al-Iʿlām bi-man fī taʾrīḫ al-Hind min al-aʿlām''. Dār Ibn Ḥazm, Beirut 1999. P. 1008
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/ref> Therefore, the truth of the creed formula ''Lā ilāh illā Llāh'' depends on the affirmation of the unity of existence and the rejection of plurality. ʿAbd ar-Rahmān al-Lakhnawī went further in his interpretation of Wahdat al-wujūd than any other scholar. For example, he believed, unlike al-Mahā'imi (see
above Above may refer to: *Above (artist) Tavar Zawacki (b. 1981, California) is a Polish, Portuguese - American abstract artist and internationally recognized visual artist based in Berlin, Germany. From 1996 to 2016, he created work under the ...
), that God does not reveal himself in the totality of existences, but that every existing thing is God and that there is no difference between one existing thing and another. He explained the difference that people perceive between things as something that does not exist externally, but only in the imagination (''wahm'') and in the mind (''iʿtibār''). In his opinion, this subjectively perceived difference between one another (''at-taġāyur al-iʿtibārī'') does not contradict the unity of existence. Various scholars declared al-Lakhnawī an unbeliever because of his teachings or wrote refutations of his writings. The Sufi Mehr ʿAlī Shāh (d. 1937), who worked in
Punjab Punjab (; ; also romanised as Panjāb or Panj-Āb) is a geopolitical, cultural, and historical region in South Asia. It is located in the northwestern part of the Indian subcontinent, comprising areas of modern-day eastern Pakistan and no ...
, criticized al-Lakhnawī's theses in his Persian book ''Taḥqīq al-ḥaqq fī Kalimat al-ḥaqq'', which was first published in 1897, and tried to refute them with his own arguments. He was of the opinion that al-Lakhnawī had not fundamentally deviated from the mystical tradition with his teaching of Wahdat al-wujūd, but with the fact that he applied it to the meaning of the Islamic creed formula ''lā ilāha illā Llāh'' and wanted to make belief in this meaning obligatory for the entire
Umma Umma () in modern Dhi Qar Province in Iraq, was an ancient city in Sumer. There is some scholarly debate about the Sumerian and Akkadian names for this site. Traditionally, Umma was identified with Tell Jokha. More recently it has been sugges ...
.Tanoli: “A Forgotten Debate on Wahdat al-wujud in Contemporary Perspective” 2013, p. 210.


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Ibn Sabʿīn Ibn Sab'īn ( ') was an Arab Sufi philosopher, the last philosopher of the Andalus in the west land of Islamic world. He was born in 1217 in Spain and lived in Ceuta. It has been suggested that he was a Neoplatonic philosopher, a Peripatetic phil ...
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Sadr al-Din al-Qunawi Ṣadr al-Dīn Muḥammad ibn Isḥāq ibn Muḥammad ibn Yūnus Qūnawī lternatively, Qūnavī, Qūnyawī (; 1207–1274), was a PersianF. E. Peters, "The Monotheists", Published by Princeton University Press, 2005. pg 330: "Al-Qunawi was a ...
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Ibn Taimiyya Ibn Taymiyya (; 22 January 1263 – 26 September 1328)Ibn Taymiyya, Taqi al-Din Ahmad, The Oxford Dictionary of Islam. http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780195125580.001.0001/acref-9780195125580-e-959 was a Sunni Muslim scholar ...
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al-Taftazani Sa'ad al-Din Masud ibn Umar ibn Abd Allah al-Taftazani () also known as Al-Taftazani and Taftazani (1322–1390) was a Muslim Persian polymath."Al-Taftazanni Sa'd al-Din Masud b. Umar b. Abdullah", in Encyclopedia Islam by W. Madelung, Brill ...
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Ali al-Qari Nur ad-Din Abu al-Hasan Ali ibn Sultan Muhammad al-Hirawi al-Qari (; d. 1605/1606), known as Mulla Ali al-Qari () was an Afghan Islamic scholar. He was born in Herat, where he received his basic Islamic education. Thereafter, he travelled to M ...
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Ahmad Sirhindi Ahmad Sirhindi (1564 – 1624/1625) was an Indian Islamic scholar, Hanafi jurist, and member of the Naqshbandī Sufi order who lived during the era of Mughal Empire. Ahmad Sirhindi opposed heterodox movements within the Mughal court such as D ...
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* ʿAbd al-Ġanī an-Nābulusī: ''al-Wuǧūd al-ḥaqq.'' Ed. Bakri Aladdin. Institut Français de Damas, Damaskus 1995. * ʿAbd al-Ġanī an-Nābulusī: ''al-Qaul al-matīn fi bayān tauḥīd al-ʿārifīn wa-huwa al-musammā Nuḫbat al-masʾala: wa-huwa šarḥ risalat al-Tuḥfa al-mursala''. Ed. ʿAlī Abū n-Nūr al-Ǧarbī. Maṭbaʿat aš-Šarq, Kairo 1926
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William C. Chittick William Clark Chittick (born June 29, 1943) is an American philosopher, writer, translator, and interpreter of classical Islamic philosophical and mystical texts. He is best known for his work on Rumi and Ibn 'Arabi, and has written extensively o ...
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Türkiye Diyanet Vakfı İslâm Ansiklopedisi Turkey, officially the Republic of Türkiye, is a country mainly located in Anatolia in West Asia, with a relatively small part called East Thrace in Southeast Europe. It borders the Black Sea to the north; Georgia (country), Georgia, Armen ...
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Toshihiko Izutsu was a Japanese scholar who specialized in Islamic studies and comparative religion. He took an interest in linguistics at a young age, and came to know more than thirty languages, including Arabic, Hebrew, Turkish, Persian, Sanskrit, Pali, Hin ...
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* Tahir Hameed Tanoli: “A Forgotten Debate on Wahdat al-wujud in Contemporary Perspective” in Heike Stamer (Hrsg.): ''Mysticism in East and West, the concept of the unity of being. Proceedings of the First Loyola Hall Symposium, held on 20-21 february 2013 in Lahore, Pakistan''. Multimedia Affairs, Lahore 2013. S. 202–217. * Adam Tyson: ''The Debate Over Mystical Monism in the 17th Century: The 'Unity of Existence' and Non-Muslims in the Ottoman and Mughal Empires''. PhD Dissertation University of California, Riverside 2024
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* Alberto Ventura: “Un trattato di ʿAbd al-Ġanī an-Nābulusī sull' «Unicità dell'Esistenza».” in ''Rivista Degli Studi Orientali'' 53/1–2 (1979) 119–39. * Alberto Ventura: “A letter of Šayḫ Aḥmad Sirhindī in defense of ‘waḥdat al-wuǧūd.’” in ''Oriente Moderno'' 92/2 (2012) 509–17.


References

Monism Islamic philosophy Arabic words and phrases Islamic terminology