Nunda Reshi
"Subdue
the five senses to attain the supreme Siva"
SHEIKH
NUR-UD-DIN, endearingly and in
veneration called Nunda Rishi, has left an
indelible mark on the thinking and culture of all
Kashmiris. The great sage was one of the twin
stars of medieval Kashmir along with Lalleshwari (Lal
Ded) with whom he shared the intensity of mystic
experience whose profundity remains unrivalled to
this day.
Sheikh-Nur-ud-Din
lived from 1378 to 1438 AD. His 600th anniversary
celebrations understandably led to a welcome
revival of interest in all that he said and stood
for. Much useful light has already been shed on
some hitheno little known facts of his life and
work. But, in the absence of any contemporary
records about him, there remain cenain important
questions to which correct answers must be found
to enable a balanced appraisal of his marvellous
achievement which has left such a deep impress on
the people of Kashmir and their behaviour and
thinking. It is proposed to refer to some of these
here in the hope that scholars and researchers,
who have made this branch of investigation their
chosen field, may address themselves to the task
of finding answers to them.
Crucial
Period
Nunda
Riyosh lived in one of the most crucial periods of
Kashmir's long and chequered history. But beyond a
solitary line in a chronicle of his time, we have
no contemporary record about his life or wadc.
Cenain details in this behalf have come down to us
in various Rishinamas or Nurnamas. But these, as
Amin Kamil, an eminent poet and critic, points
out, greatly differ from one another. In the
profusion of miracles and magical deeds ascribed
to him, some important details about his life and
work have dropped out. And in the words of the
eminent poet and literary historian, the late
Abdul Ahad Azad, "greater reliance has been
placed in them on imagination than on historical
facts."His verses and Verse-sayings, known as
Shruks in Sanskrit and what they regarded as
Pandits' language, have been competely left out by
authors of Rishinamas and Nurnamas, because they
were beyond their comprehension.
Mixing
of Facts
The
first Rishinama or Nurnama that has come down to
us was written about 200 years after his passing
away. Inevitably, there has been a lot of mixing
of facts and fresh light needs to be shed on many
"unclear" events and episodes in the
story of his life and the cobwebs that have
gathered around many others need to be cleared.
Take,
for instance, his name itself. His is the rare
example of a person who is known by a number of
names - Nunda Riyosh or Nund Rishi, Sheikh
Nur-ud-Din and Sahazanand. The great Sheikh's
spiritual eminence and moral rectitude have also
justly won him the designation of Sheikh-ul-Alam
from his compatriots, and even his one-time
opponents ultimately felt constrained to
acknowledge him as "The Light of the
Faith" or Nur-ud-Din. But was he named as
such, i.e. as Nur- ud-Din, at his birth, or did he
come to be so known only after Mir Mohammad
Hamadani, son of the great Mir Syed Ali Mamadani,
recognised him as such?
In
this connection it might at once be pointed out
that the contemporary chronicler, Jonaraja, refers
to him as Mala Nurdin, "the chiefest guru of
Muslims". But the saint-poet always refers to
himself only as Nanda. And this is the name by
which he has most commonly been known till today.
Could it be that Nurdin was an appellation
conferred upon him later by vinue of his spiritual
eminence?
Nund
Rishi's parents were named Salar Sanz and Sadra
Maji. While there is some difference of opinion
about his father's name, Sadra is clearly derived
from Samhdra Ha two sons, prior, to her marriage
with Salar Sanz, bore the non-Muslim names of
Shush and aandur. Was Sahazanand also born before
her marriage. The Sheikh's wife 'Zai Ded' also
bore a clearly Hindu name. She too might have been
a Hindu originally.
Closest
Disciples
Of
the sage's four closest disciples two appear to
have borne Hindu names originally, Baba Bam- ud-Din
(Bhuma Saad or Sahi) and Baba Zain-ud- Din (Ziya
Singh or Jaya Singh). Similarly, of the rishis
mentioned by him before his time, two at least,
Zankar and Palasman, might well be the illustrious
Janaka and Palastaya.
There
has been a galaxy of Muslim saints and sages and
some great ones among them commanded the respect
and allegiance of vast numbers of Hindus also. But
they have notbeen known by Hindu names among their
non-Muslim followers. Sheikh Nur-ud-Din alone
enjoyed this rare distinction.
According
to the known facts of his life, the sage started
life normally; he married and had two issues. But
what he saw going on around him made him intensely
sad, and he lost interest in life as normally
lived. So he took to caves and solitary places for
severe penance and meditation. According to Dr.
Sufi, "he felt disgusted with the ways of the
world, and deciding upon renunciation, retired to
caves for meditation at the age of thirty",
and "lived for twelve years in
wilderness." In his last days, Dr. Sufi adds,
the saint sustained life on a cup of milk a day.
Finally, he goes on to add, the sage "reduced
himself to water alone."
Renunciation
Dr.
Sufi quotes Baba Daud Khaki for the statement:
"In addition to leading a retired life, he
was one of those who continually fasted".
Like the pious among the Hindus, "he had
given up eating flesh, onions, milk and honey for
many years," i.e., he had given up all animal
food besides onions, as has been the wont with the
Hindu saints and sages. Elsewhere, the eminent
histarion remarks in passing that "Islam does
not countenance the enervating type of Tasawwuf
which Iqbal too condemned in the first edition of
Asrar-i-Khudi..."
Of
Yasman Rishi, at whose hands Nund Rishi's parents
are stated to have been converted to Islam, Dr.
Sufi has this to say: "He travelled far and
wide. Later, he lived mastly in forests. His daily
food was a cup of wild goat's milk...."
Significantly, no one is mentioned in connection
with the initiation of Sheikh Nur-ud-Din.
Kashmir
witnessed the worst type of religious persecution
in the time of Sultan Sikandar (1389-1413 A.D.)
and his successor, Ali. Under the influence of
outsiders and at the instigation of his minister,
Suha Bhat, who had renounced the ancestral faith,
the king, accarding to Jonaraja, "took
delight, day and night, in breaking the sacred
images" and temples. The Sheikh lived during
this period when the very identity, the Kashmirian-ness
of Kashmir, if one may use that expression, was at
stake and in danger of being destroyed. Imbued as
he was with the glarious traditions of his
motherland, Sheikh Nur-ud-Din could not but be
very unhappy about it.
One
God
God
is one, all religions are in their ultimate
essence one. What is needed is a life of piety and
purity, no matter what faith one follows. The
prolonged course of penance and meditation, upon
which he embarked, had convinced him, apart from
his spiritual attainments, of the truth of this
fundamental basis of a good life and this also
provided a solution to the riddle of his time. He
seems to have realised that Kashmiris' precious
heritage, so dear to him, which was sought to be
destroyed by outsiders, could be saved only by a
happy "marriage" of the best in the old
and the new, in the union of the Hindus and the
Muslims into a common brotherhood, in their
co-existence and cooperation and not in
confrontation. That is why he again calls upon the
people, especially those who came from outside and
the zealots among the new converts, to live
together in unison, so that God Himself would
rejoice. He called upon them to subdue the five
senses, and get over the evils of Kama, Krodha,
Lobha, Moha and Ahankara to achieve the highest to
make union with Shiva (as he puts it) reminding
them that mere lowering of the fleshy body would
not save them. He calls upon the people not to go
to priests and Mullahs, not to shut themselves up
in places of worship or forests but "to enter
thine own body with breath controlled, in
communion with God".
Again
and again he stresses the need for unity among
Hindus and Muslims; God Himself would rejoice, he
adds, if this happy consummation came about. It
was for views such as these that Sheikh- ul-Alam
came to be designated Alamdar or standard-bearer
of Kashmir.
But
enlightened views such as the faregoing could not
endear him to the outsiders most of whom were
interested in getting hegemony over this beautiful
land and possession of the Kashmiri grandees'
estates and properties. We know it from the
contemporary historian, Janaraja, that Mala Nurdin,
as he calls him, was imprisoned and put under
restraint during Ali Shah's time. And Amin Kamil
tells us how the Rishinamas reveal that outsiders
were opposed to him and harassed him in many ways.
But little daunted, he pursued his enlightened
course, as though to justify his title to being
called Alamdar of Kashmir and all that it had
stood for at its best.
Eminence
The
Sheikh's spirtual eminence and his humanistic
philosophy made him the idol of the people of
Kashmir. They flocked to him and some of them
modelled their very lives on his pattern. These
latter who came to be known as Rishis, after him,
were of great help and assistance to him in the
stupendous task that he had undertaken.
Rishis
were by no means new to Kashmir. Rishis and Munis
had been known among the Hindus from hoaly
andquity. Kalhana mentions some well-known Rishis
like Vishwamitra, Vasishta and Agastya in his
Rajatarangini. He describes a Rishi as "a
treasure of asceticism". The term Rishi
should by no means have been uncommon in our
saint's time also. In fact, he describes the
person at whose hands his parents received the
Islamic faith as a Rishi.
Self-Abnegation
But
the Rishis of those days, though they commanded
the respect of their fellow-beings and outsiders
for their simplicity, spirit of service and
self-abnegation, were not rated high in the matter
of knowledge of the Islamic faith. Jehangir, for
example, says in his Memoirs: 'Though they have no
religious knowledge of learning or any sort, yet
they possess simplicity and are without
pretence....'
In
organising the new Order, Nund Rishi had before
him the example of the Buddhist Sangha, which for
centuries before the advent of Islam had been such
a prominent feature of the religious and
socio-cultural landscape of the Valley. And like
Buddhist monks, the Rishis also did not many; nor
did they eat flesh. Like them again, they would
not revile those not of their faith, and lived
simple, frugal lives and tried to be a source of
benefit to the community at large. For this
reason, the "Brotherhood of Rishis" may
well be considered to be a descendant of the
Buddhist Sangha or a Buddhist Order of Monks.
In
this connection, a most interesting fact that has
come to light is recorded in Baba Khalil's
Rishinama. In this work the author has ascribed a
2,500 verse Sanskrit work, Buddha Charita, to Nund
Rishi. According to Baba Khalil, the work was
composed by him on his re-emergence from a 12-year
sojourn in a cave at Kaimoh on the ninth of
Chaitra, a very sacred day in the Hindu calendar,
both in Kashmir and the rest of India.
Wrong
Assessment
Since
Baba Khalil was not conversant with Sanskrit, he
has not been able to correctly assess the nature
of the work or what it actually was. In truth it
must have been the well-known Buddhist work,
Buddha Charita, which the Kashmiri savant kept
with himself in his seclusion. And when, after he
had found answers to the riddles and questions
that had made him resort to severe penance and
meditation in a cave, he re-emerged into the work-
a-day world, the great work on the Buddha's life
and philosophy was with him. In this connection it
is interesting to note that another great work,
Yoga-Vasishta, was the solace of Sultan Zain-ul-
Abidin (Bud Shah), the noblest ruler that Kashmir
has ever known, in the closing embittered years of
his life.
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