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Aug 12, 2008

Sufism, sodomy and Satan
By Spengler 

Sigmund Freud thought that everything was about sex, and he was half right. 
Rarely is love so spiritual that it does not also stir the loins, for human 
beings are creatures not only of soul but of body. Although it is thought rude 
to say so nowadays, different kinds of love belong to different kinds of sex. 
Not even Hell can resist divine love, J W Goethe showed in the funniest 
vignette in all literature: his devil, Mephistopheles, is disabled by an 
obsessive lust for the cherubs sent to claim the soul of Faust in the drama's 
penultimate scene. Heavenly beauty, that is, reduces the crafty demon to a 
pathetic old pervert, in a tableau not fit for a family newspaper.[1] 

Goethe's creepily convincing portrait of a pederastic devil in Faust (1832) 
drew on the poet's earlier study of Persian love poetry of the High Middle 
Ages,[2] where "as a rule, the beloved is not a woman, but a young man", 
according to the leading Persian historian Ehsan Yar-Shater. Islamic mysticism 
(Sufism) of the High Middle Ages is the only case in which a mainstream current 
of a major world religion preached pederasty as a path to spiritual 
enlightenment. A vast literature documents this, and a great deal of it is 
available online. 

Sufi adoration of pre-pubescent boys "persisted in many Islamic countries until 
very recent times," according to the Orientalist Helmut Ritter.[3] The Afghan 
penchant for dancing boys in female costume, shown in the 2007 film The Kite 
Runner, is the last vestige of a Sufi practice that has been long suppressed by 
both the Sunni and Shi'ite branches of Islam. Sufism has a reputation in 
Western pop culture as a kinder and gentler branch of Islam. It is not a 
different kind of Islam, but rather Islam's mystical practice, to which the 
adage applies, "by their fruits shall ye know them." 

Controversy persists over what is "authentic Sufism". The Turkish organization 
of Fethallah Gulen claims millions of members and doubtless is the largest 
self-styled Sufi organization in the world. The American Sufi convert Stephen 
Schwartz has dismissed it as a "cult",[4] while Michael Rubin of the American 
Enterprise Institute warns that Gulen may become the Turkish Khomeini. Given 
Turkey's turn towards political Islam (Turkey in the throes of Islamic 
revolution?, Jul 22, 2008), the world is likely to find out a great deal more 
about Sufism in the near future, and well may be dismayed by what it learns. 

In contrast to the Judeo-Christian West, where marriage has been a metaphor for 
God's love since the Biblical Song of Songs, homosexual pederasty was normative 
for the Sufi philosopher-poets of Islam's golden age in Central Asia. For 
Christians, the earthly adumbration of God's love was nuptial, but pederastic 
in Muslim Persia. The classic Persian poets, including Hafez[5] and Rumi,[6] 
pined for beardless boys while their European contemporaries wrote sonnets to 
women. Some apologists claim that the Sufi practice of "contemplation of the 
beardless" was a chaste spiritual exercise, but an Egyptian proverb warns: "In 
his father's home a boy's chastity is safe, but let him become a dervish [Sufi 
adept] and the buggers will queue up behind him."[7] 

Sufi pedophilia cannot be dismissed as a remnant of the old tribal practices 
that Islam often incorporated, for example, female genital mutilation. Genital 
mutilation is a pre-Islamic practice unknown in the ancient and modern West. 
Even though some Muslim authorities defend it on the basis of Hadith, no one 
has ever claimed that it offered a path to enlightenment. Sadly, pedophiles are 
found almost everywhere. In its ascendancy, Sufism made a definitive spiritual 
experience out of a practice considered criminally aberrant in the West. But 
pederasty as a spiritual exercise is not essentially different in character 
from the furtive practices of Western perverts. As the psychiatrists explain, 
pederasty is an expression of narcissism, the love of an idealized youthful 
self-image. 

Sufism seeks one-ness with the universe through spiritual exercises that lead 
individual consciousness to dissolve into the cosmos. But nothing is more 
narcissistic than the contemplation of the cosmos, for if we become one with 
the cosmos, what we love in the cosmos is simply an idealized image of 
ourselves. An idealized self-image is also what attracts the aging lecher to 
the adolescent boy. That is the secret of Sufi as well as other pederasty, for 
pederasty is an extreme expression of self-love. That is the conventional 
psychiatric view; Freud for example wrote of the "basic narcissism of the vast 
majority of pederasts . proceeding as from narcissism, they seek their own 
image in young people." 

Sufism enjoys a faddish ripple of interest in America, where self-admiration is 
the national pastime. As opposed to the Biblical God, the cosmos is an 
unthreatening thing to worship. The universe, after all, is no one in 
particular, and those who seek to merge their consciousness with no one in 
particular at the end are left alone with themselves. Worship the cosmos, and 
you worship yours truly; worship yourself, and it is not unusual to adore your 
own idealized image. 

I do not mean to suggest that Sufis today are more likely to be pederasts than 
members of any other religious denomination. Sadly, there is brisk competition 
in that field. Karen Armstrong, the popular writer on religion, claims to be a 
Sufi, and I have it on good authority that she is not a pederast. Non-Muslims 
who embrace Sufism view it as a generic form of "spirituality", like Madonna's 
dabbling in what she thinks is Kabbalah. That recalls the joke about the 
Chinese waiter in a kosher restaurant who speaks perfect Yiddish, of whom the 
owner says, "He thinks he's learning English." No one should blame Hafez or 
Rumi for the casual interest of American spiritual tourists. 

Nonetheless, it is not entirely by accident that Sufism holds a fascination for 
self-absorbed young Americans who dislike the demands placed upon them by 
revealed faith. Mysticism of this genre provides a pretext to worship one's 
self in the masquerade of the universe. As Rumi (1207-1273), the most revered 
of the Sufi philosopher-poets, said of his own spiritual master, 
  Why should I seek? I am the same as
  He. His essence speaks through me.
  I have been looking for myself!
I do not speak Persian and cannot comment on the aesthetic quality of Rumi's 
verse, which connoisseurs hold to be elegant. Its content, though, reduces to 
the same God-is-everywhere-and-all-I-have-to-do-is-look-inside-myself sort of 
platitudes of pop spirituality, for example, 
  I searched for God among the Christians and on the Cross and therein I found 
Him not.
  I went into the ancient temples of idolatry; no trace of Him was there.
  .
  Then I directed my search to the Kaaba, the resort of old and young; God was 
not there even.
  Turning to philosophy I inquired about him from ibn Sina but found Him not 
within his range.
  I fared then to the scene of the Prophet's experience of a great divine 
manifestation only a 'two bow-lengths' distance from him' but God was not there 
even in that exalted court.
  Finally, I looked into my own heart and there I saw Him; He was nowhere else.
If the point of love is to dissolve one's self into the All, then there is no 
difference between the self and the All; the self and the All are the same, and 
one loves one's self. There is no Other in Sufism, only your own ego grinning 
back from the universe. To embrace the cosmos implies the destruction of 
individuality. In Goethe's drama, Faust conjures up the personification of the 
cosmos, the Earth Spirit, and cannot bear to look upon it; the Earth Spirit 
dismisses him with the epigram, "You are like the spirit whom you comprehend - 
not me!" Woe betide the adept who succeeds in merging his mind with the 
universe: he would become a monster, like Mephistopheles, the consummate 
nihilist. 
Love of the cosmos reduces to idolatrous love of self. It is a radically 
different sort of love than the love of YHWH or Jesus, who are distinct beings 
with a personality, even if incomprehensible in their totality. The 
Judeo-Christian God is known to humankind by revelation, and specifically 
self-revelation through love. The revealed God seeks the love of humankind as 
an Other. Revelation does not reassure us that the Divine was in our hearts all 
along. It is not always a pleasant experience. It burns our lips like the kiss 
of a seraph, and casts our heart into the refiner's fire. It shatters, burns, 
overwhelms and transforms us - but it does not dissolve us into a cosmic soup. 
On the contrary: it enhances our individual personality. Precisely because it 
reinforces our individuality, love in the Judeo-Christian world can be a very 
painful experience. 

To Christians and Jews, God reveals himself as a personality, and through acts 
of love - the Exodus and the Resurrection. There is no such event in Islam. 
Allah does not reveals himself, that is, descend to earth; instead, he sends 
down from heaven his instruction manual, namely the Koran. Allah remains 
unknown, and ultimately indistinguishable from the nature in which he is 
embedded. Confronted by this absolutely transcendental entity the individual 
human personality shrivels into insignificance. 

Mystical communion with an unrevealed and unknowable God demands the sort of 
star- and navel-gazing that brings the communicant right back to good old 
number one. Just as Rumi said, it's all inside you, like the self-help books 
say. And that brings us back to the matter of pederasty. 

Men and women are so different that the experience of heterosexual love is 
analogous to the spiritual encounter with the divine Other. Love is as strong 
as death, says the Song of Songs: 
  Set me as a seal upon thine heart, as a seal upon thine arm: for love is 
strong as death; jealousy is cruel as the grave: the coals thereof are coals of 
fire, which hath a most vehement flame. Many waters cannot quench love, neither 
can the floods drown it.
It is not only the passion of love that challenges death, but the fruit of 
love, the birth of children, that keeps death at bay. Nature appears to have 
arranged matters so that these two presentiments of immortality occur together. 
The Judeo-Christian God becomes the partner of human lovers: "Lovers could not 
love if they did not have an ally against death, if the only certainty were the 
grave and silence," writes Michael Wyschogrod. Anyone who has been in love with 
someone of the opposite sex knows precisely what I am talking about. Those who 
have not may consult the Song of Songs, for example: 
  The love of bride and bridegroom is not quite the same thing as the love of 
God and his congregation, but the passion as strong as death that unites men 
and women is analogous to the encounter with the Other in the person of God.
On the extreme opposite of the spiritual spectrum, we encounter pederasty as 
the foundational experience of Sufism. According to Wikipedia, 
  As a Sufi practice of spiritual realization and union with the godhead, the 
meditation known in Arabic as Nazar ila'l-murd, "contemplation of the 
beardless," or Shahed-bazi, "witness play" in Persian has been practiced from 
the earliest years of Islam. It is seen as an act of worship intended to help 
one ascend to the absolute beauty that is God through the relative beauty that 
is a boy.
The medieval Persians were not the first to practice the higher sodomy. The 
Greeks of the 6th century BC preferred young boys, procreating out of patriotic 
habit while their women closed their eyes and thought of Athens. Adoration of 
youth is a very different way to capture from love a sense of immortality. In 
Greek legend the gods turned Narcissus into a flower to punish his pride in 
refusing male suitors. Pederasty thus was present at the origin of the concept 
of narcissism. 

The medieval Persians surpassed the Greeks in enthusiasm. Hafez, widely 
considered the greatest Persian poet, wrote such verses as 
  My sweetheart is a beauty and a child, and I fear that in play one day
  He will kill me miserably and he will not be accountable according to the 
holy law.
  I have a fourteen year old idol, sweet and nimble
  For whom the full moon is a willing slave.
  His sweet lips have (still) the scent of milk
  Even though the demeanor of his dark eyes drips blood. (Divan, no 284) 
And about the Magian baccha: 
  If the wine-serving magian boy would shine in this way
  I will make a broom of my eyelashes to sweep the entrance of the tavern. 
(Divan, no 9)
Hafez is typical of the Muslim philosopher-poets of the epoch. Ehsan Yar-Shater 
wrote: 
  As a rule, the beloved [in medieval Persian poetry] is not a woman, but a 
young man. In the early centuries of Islam, the raids into Central Asia 
produced many young slaves. Slaves were also bought or received as gifts. They 
were made to serve as pages at court or in the households of the affluent, or 
as soldiers and body-guards. Young men, slaves or not, also, served wine at 
banquets and receptions, and the more gifted among them could play music and 
maintain a cultivated conversation. It was love toward young pages, soldiers, 
or novices in trades and professions which was the subject of lyrical 
introductions to panegyrics from the beginning of Persian poetry, and of the 
ghazal.[8]
As noted, it is tempting to dismiss the pederasty of the Sufi philosopher-poets 
as a cultural artifact of traditional society, along with the mystical practice 
of "contemplation of the beardless". This would obscure rather than shed light, 
however, for three reasons. 

The first is that traditional society is precisely what revelation seeks to 
temper. The Hebrew Bible abjures pagan practices, just as Mohammed inveighs 
against the pagans. Yet we do not find a single instance of a Hebrew poet 
celebrating homosexuality until, of course, late 20th-century Tel Aviv. Classic 
Persian and Arab literature ooze with it. Islam could not extirpate a 
pederastic culture including virtually all the leading poets of the high Middle 
Ages except by suppressing the Sufi cults. There were a number of reasons that 
both the Sunni and Shia mainstream persecuted Sufism, but a prominent one was 
the cited practice called "contemplation of the beardless" in which the dervish 
sought communion with the eternal by immersing himself in the beauty of 
adolescent boys. 

Second, the same sort of people who reject the demands of "organized religion" 
in favor of "free spirituality" have made the defense of homosexuality the 
Shibboleth of their generation. Speak out against gay marriage in the United 
States, and you have made yourself a pariah in any of the strongholds of 
liberalism, especially university campuses. I do not believe in criminalizing 
adult homosexuality, any more than I believe that a heterosexual chosen at 
random is necessarily a better person than a homosexual chosen at random. But 
the experience of divine love reflected in the love of men and women and their 
children is the foundation of society, and gay marriage would have dreadful 
consequences. 

Third, pederasty has become a plague in parts of the West, and widespread abuse 
of children has occasioned a crisis in the Catholic Church. It is hard to avoid 
the impression that sexual misbehavior is associated with a retreat from faith 
in a personal God, namely the Jesus who lived on earth and was crucified and 
was resurrected, in favor of a mushy and unspecific spirituality - something 
like Sufism, in fact. Perhaps the same link between spiritual and sexual 
narcissism is at work in the West. 

Notes
1. Mephistopheles addresses the boy angels (in Tony Kline's translation 
online): 

What wretched luck, and dire!
Is this Love's own element?
My whole body's bathed in fire,
I scarcely feel, my head's so burnt. -
You float to and fro, sink down a while,
Move your sweet limbs with earthly guile:
True, a grave expression suits you well,
But I'd still like to see you smile a little!
That would be an eternal delight to me.
Like the lovers' mutual glance, you see:
A simper round the mouth, is how it's done,
You, the tall lad, you could make me love you,
The priest's pose doesn't really suit you,
So show a little lust, and look hereon!
You could be more modestly naked too,
That robe's long hem, so demure in its rising -
They turn away - and seen from the rear view -
Those rascals now are really appetising!

See http://www.tonykline.co.uk/klineasfaust.htm 

2. The West-Ostlicher Divan of 1814 

3. See The Ocean of the Soul: Man, the World, and God in the Stories of Farid 
Al-Din Attar, by Hellmut Ritter, John O'Kane, Bernd Radtke (Brill: New York 
2003), p 516 et seq. Ritter quotes a 1936 travelogue from Albania: "Still 
another oddity: among the Albanians there is 'love of beauty'. Fifty to sixty 
people are united through love for a beautiful youth. Quite frequently they ask 
the father's permission in the morning, take the boy with them and have him sit 
on a table. Everyone sits in front of him and gazes at him admiringly for 
hours. These youths are called dilber. They're dressed up like a girl, ie, with 
finger rings, a pleated silk shirt ... silk sash and a small hat tilted to one 
side ." Comments Ritter, "Since Albania from far back in time has been a home 
for Sufi orders, it is not far-fetched to assume that the described practice is 
also of Sufi origin." 

4. http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=10273 

5. Khwaja Samsu d-Din Muhammad Hafez-e Sirazi, flourished 14th century 

6. Mawlana Jalal-ad-Din Muhammad Balkhi, 1207-1273 

7. Wikipedia entry, "Pederasty in the Islamic World." 

8. Yar-Shater, Ehsan. 1986. Persian Poetry in the Timurid and Safavid Periods, 
in Cambridge History of Iran. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1986, pp 
973-974. 

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