Risale I Nur
Risale I Nur
Risale I Nur
Imam Bediuzzaman Said Nursi describes how the treatises were authored in the
period of New Said and how the name Risale-i Nur was given to them:
I have buried the Old Said which is a time period of my life in my terminology. I
have retired from worldly pursuits, being a New Said focusing totally on the Afterlife.
I drew back to the Y (Yusha) Hill in Istanbul in complete seclusion from society.
Later, I went to Bitlis, which is my birthplace, and Van, and secluded myself in the
caves. I have stayed alone with my spiritual and heart pleasures. I have been
absorbed in my spiritual realm according to the principle of Auzu billahi minashshaytan was-siyasah, that is, I seek refuge in Allah from Satan and politics and I
have begun to live as New Said by busying myself with study and research of the
Quran. However, the manifestations of destiny have made me travel to several
places as an exile. During these times, I have made people around me write the
inspirations from the Quran born into my heart and in that way the Risale-i Nur
Collection was formed. I have given the name Risale-i Nur to all of these treatises
as a whole. Truly, since it was dependent on the light (nur) of the Quran, that name
was born out of my conscience and I am sure with all my conviction that this is a
Divine inspiration. And I have said Barakallah! to those who have reproduced
these treatises, because it is impossible to begrudge the light of faith to anybody.
These treatises of mine were shared among some of the people of faith and they
were reproduced by hand. My conviction is that it is a Divine prompt to strengthen
the weakened faith of the Muslims. A man of faith cannot be thought to prevent this
divine prompt, and I personally felt to be obliged to encourage it. These treatises,
whose number has exceeded one hundred and thirty, pertain to themes such as the
afterlife and faith, and they purposely avoid politics and worldly matters.(The Rays,
Altnbasak Pub, V. 2, p. 531)
The reason why these Thirty-three Words and Thirty-three Letters were given the
name Risale-i Nur is as follows; throughout my life I have run into the word Nur
(light) in many ways.
Briefly:
My village is Nurs.
The name of my late mother is Nuriya.
My Naqshi sheikh is Sayyid Nur Muhammad.
My Qadiri sheikh is Nuraddin.
One of my Quran teachers is Nuri.
Those of my students who are the most interested in me are those who have the
names including Nur.
The metaphor which best explains and enlightens my books is Nur (light, sun,
etc.).
The verse which first occurs to me and occupies my mind with is the verse, Allah
is the Light (Nur) of the heavens and the earth.(Nur, 24:35)
The name has been most useful in solving the difficulties that I have experienced
in dealing with the Divine truths is the name Nur among the other Most Beautiful
Names of Allah (SWT).
My particular guide for my profound gravitation towards the Quran and my
confining my service to it is (Imam Uthman) Zinnurayn (R). (Barla Addendum)
As the materialistic perception of the West progressed throughout the Islamic world
in the twentieth century, a profound political, economic and cultural devastation
was observed in the Muslim communities. Doubts and conflicts emerged among the
Muslims as their loyalty to Islam was loosened. People moved away from the Quran
and the Sunnah; the Islamic morals degenerated and irreligion spread.
Imam Bediuzzaman authored the Risale-i Nur Collection in order to neutralize the
negative effects of Western civilization in the Islamic world; to silence the atheists
who were aggressively criticizing the religion; to refresh the loyalty of Muslims
towards the Quran and the Sunnah, and to revive the religious life of the people.
The Risale-i Nur treatises are composed of four main books which are the Words, the
Letters, the Flashes (the Gleams) and the Rays. These four books together contain
130 chapters on different themes which are called risala (for treatise or letter in
Arabic). While some of these treatises are only 2 or 3 pages long, others contain 8090 pages.
Imam Bediuzzaman defines the Nur treatises mostly as the mujaddid (restorer) of
this age; a semantic interpretation and commentary of the Quran, sometimes as
a kalam discipline, and sometimes a path which takes the man from the external
world to the internal realm like Sufism.
Risale-i Nur is a tafsir (interpretation) of the Quran, but it does not interpret the
Quran from beginning to end as usual tafsir books do. Risale-i Nur is a work of
kalam at the same time, but it differs from the ancient kalam discipline
methodologically. It also resembles Sufism in terms of the themes that it covers, but
it is not exclusively Sufic either.
Though Risale-i Nur resembles the books of tafsir, kalam and Sufism, it differs from
them in terms of method and style.
Imam Bediuzzaman covers the themes in Risale-i Nur in such a unique way, it is as
if nobody has ever mentioned them before, analysing them with strong proofs and
by this means resolving them. Mostly he does not even quote from previous books.
He does not imitate anybody in terms of style. He has his own original style.
The word bedi is defined as an object which is formed without sample and model
in the dictionary. According to this definition, we could say that the Risale-i Nur
should be the recipient of the title bedi because of its unique and original style
which does not resemble any previous Islamic books. A statement of Imam
confirming this meaning is as follows: Risale-i Nur which is like spiritual electricity
is neither a light borrowed from the disciplines of knowledge of the East nor a
product transferred from the philosophy and science of the West. Maybe, we could
say, it has been taken from the lofty highest heaven of the celestial Quran which is
superior to both East and West. (Sikka-i Tasdik-i Ghaybi, First Ray, Altnbaak Pub,
p. 63)
Of course the person who has authored such a work should also be the recipient of
the title bedi. Another meaning of the word bedi is given as a person who forms
and establishes an object without sample and model. For that reason, it is quite
meaningful that the Imam has for many years been called Bediuzzaman. However,
the Imam did not consider himself being deserving of such a title, and says as
follows: The title Bediuzzaman which has been given to me since my earlier
years,
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though it was not deserved, did not belong to me. Maybe it was a spiritual name of
the Risale-i Nur; and it was given to its interpreter as a loan temporarily. Now this
borrowed name has been returned to its real owner. (Sikka-i Tasdik-i Ghaybi, Eighth
Ray, Altnbaak Pub, p. 114)
***
As a conclusion to what we have said so far, we could define Risale-i Nur as follows:
Risale-i Nur is a sui generis (of its own kind) work of tafsir and kalam which performs
the duty of mujaddid (restorer) in our age, and at the same time it is a path, like
Sufism, which takes man from the external world to the internal realm.
We will cover the tajdid, kalam and tafsir aspects of the Risale-i Nur in the following
paragraphs.
Risale-i Nur marks a new era in the knowledge of the kalam of Ahl al-Sunnah. Let
me give you a brief account of kalam discipline before discussing Risale-i Nur as a
work of kalam:
The discipline of kalam has been defined in two ways in terms of their content and
purpose:
It is a discipline of knowledge which covers the Self and the attributes of Allah
(SWT), the themes regarding nubuwwah and risalat and the situation of created
beings in terms of the origin (mabda) and the ultimate state (maad) based on the
Islamic canon.
The ultimate goal of all Islamic disciplines of knowledge is to make it possible for
human beings to gain the happiness of this world and the afterlife. In addition to
that, the scholars have mentioned the secondary goals and benefits of the kalam
discipline.
1. It causes the imitative faith of a man to turn into a verified unshakable faith.
2. It guides those who seek the path of righteousness, and it silences the irreligious
and people of bidah.
3. It protects the doctrines of the faith from being shaken due to the doubts cast by
the irreligious.
Imam Al-Ghazali says the following about the discipline of kalam: The discipline of
knowledge which undertakes the duty of proving all the principles and essentials
upon which all religious disciplines depend is kalam. All the other disciplines are
insignificant in comparison to kalam. As a conclusion, kalam is in the highest rank of
the Islamic disciplines because it is the channel which opens up to the other
disciplines. (Abu Hamid Muhammad ibn Muhammad Al-Ghazali, The proofs and
methodology of interpretation, Mustasfa (trans.), Kayseri: Rey Pub., 1994, p.5)
Some scholars, the prominent scholar Al-Taftazani being in the first place, have said
the discipline of kalam is the most honourable and superior of the Islamic
disciplines. They have declared their rationale for that as follows:
1. The coverage of the discipline of kalam is comprehensive and its themes such
as the self, and the attributes of Allah (SWT) are honourable.
3. The proofs that it uses are both clear (in that reason comprehends them) and
authentic (that they can be traced back to the main written sources of Islam).
Therefore, kalam is a discipline which combines all honour in it.
4. The discipline of kalam has the merit of being authentic knowledge, because the
true disciplines of knowledge have the feature that they do not change with change
of the religion and the missionaries. Kalam is such a discipline of knowledge
because all the prophets have brought and propagated the same truths. (Bekir
Topalolu, The Discipline of Kalam, Damla Publication, 1985, p.47-55)
However, we need to state that Risale-i Nur is a work of kalam, yet it differs from
the ancient discipline of kalam in terms of its methodology. For example, while the
ancient discipline of kalam used the argument of huduth and imkan (cosmological
argument) on the theme of tawhid (the existence of God), Risale-i Nur has adopted
the argument of nizam (order) and ghaya (purpose), which is one of the methods
used by the Quran itself.
On the subject of Risale-i Nurs being a work of kalam, Imam Bediuzzaman said the
following:
I, as your weak and poor brother, who is really nothing, cannot claim that I am the
person who will come and carry out that duty, since it is a thousand times beyond
my capacity and I in no way deserve it. However, I suppose that I am a servant of
that exceptional person and a rearguard who makes a place for him and a foot
soldier in the vanguard of that great commander. For that reason, you have sensed
that exceptional scent from what you have been writing.(Barla Addendum)
In earlier times, the people of the madrasa were submissive and obedient to the
people of the sufi lodge and they applied to them for their harvest of walayat
(sainthood). They sought the pleasures of faith and the divine lights of truth in their
spiritual stores. Furthermore, a great scholar of the madrasa used to kiss the hand
of a little wali from the sufi lodge and obey him. They sought the fountain of the
water of life in the lodge. However, the Risale-i Nur has shown by the spiritual
miracle of the Quran whose declarations are miraculous that a shortcut opens up to
the lights of truth in the madrasa and that there is a purer and cleaner fountain of
the water of life in the disciplines of the knowledge of faith. There is a path of
walayat which is higher and sweeter than deeds, worship and Sufism, in knowledge,
the truths of faith and the discipline of the kalam of Ahl al-Sunnah, and this is all
clear from the pages of Risale-i Nur.
Now while the scholars who are members of the madrasa tradition need to favour
Risale-i Nur, first of all feeling proud of it and advocating it, unfortunately, most of
the scholars of the madrasas did not know and seek and protect this fountain of the
water of life and this precious treasure. Praise be to Allah, now they have started to
do so. The Words has attracted both the scholars and the teachers to the treatises.
(Kastamonu Addendum)
Risale-i Nur is a work of tafsir, yet since it is different from the usual tafsir books,
some claim that it is not a tafsir.
The word tafsir derives from the root fasr or through the way of taqlib it
derives from safr . Al-fasr is said in the dictionary to be used for little
water which the doctor looks at to diagnose an illness. The doctors find the causes
of the illnesses by examining this water (like urinalysis of today). Other than this
meaning, that word is used to mean to declare, to discover, to manifest and to
uncover.
Although the root As-safr - has several different meanings, one of these
meanings is to uncover what is covered, and to illuminate. For example; it is said the woman uncovered her face (smail Cerraholu, Tefsir Usul
(Tafsir Methodology), Ankara: Diyanet Vakf pub., 1997, p. 213)
It is possible that the word tafsir may have derived from one of these two roots.
Some scholars say both of them mean discovery. (As-sifr) means a material
discovery and (al-fasr) means a spiritual discovery and the word (tafsir) which
comes from them in the form of (tafil) meaning discovery and manifestation of the
meaning.
Among scholars, tafsir has been used to mean the discovery of the meaning of the
Quran and a declaration of what is meant by certain expressions where the
meaning is not immediately obvious.
In conclusion, from all these explanations we could say that tafsir is discovery,
declaration and manifestation of secret meanings of the Quran.
Imam Al-Ghazali compares the Quran to an ocean which has no shore. There are
pearls, rubies and jewels in the depths of this ocean. The discipline of tafsir is the
knowledge of how to extract the hidden pearls, rubies and jewels from the depths of
this ocean.
Risale-i Nur does not start with surah al-Fatiha and end with surah an-Nas, which is
the usual way of tafsir methodology. However, since it discovers, declares and
manifests the secret meanings of the Quran based on the definitions of tafsir
above, it would not be wrong to consider it as a sui generis (of its own kind) tafsir.
Imam Bediuzzaman has interpreted the Quran by first of all taking the needs of the
modern age into consideration.
The first kind: These are conventional tafsirs which explain, prove and declare the
meanings of expressions, words and sentences of the Quran.
The second kind of tafsir: These tafsirs prove, explain and declare the truths of the
Quran regarding faith with strong evidences. This kind of tafsir has great
importance. The conventional commentaries of the Quran sometimes summarize
such themes. Yet, Risale-i Nur is a semantic tafsir which has forthrightly adopted the
second way, and which silences the obstinate philosophers in an unprecedented
way. (The Rays, Altnbaak Pub, V2, p.545)
Allah (SWT) sends a mujaddid who will restore His religion on the beginning of
every one hundred years. (Sunan Abu Dawud, Kitabul Malahim, Bab 1, Hn. 4291)
The word tajdid, which lexically means restoration is used to mean when
departures from the Quran and Sunnah arise due to the emergence of sinning,
bidah and irreligion within the Islamic communities after the age of bliss, to fight
against corruption and the degenerated ideas and behaviours, restoring the Islamic
community in the light of the authentic sources (the Quran and Sunnah). The word
mujaddid which means renewer (restorer) is used to describe the knowledgeable
person who is a sincere follower of the Quran and Sunnah, and has a high degree of
information on Islamic disciplines of knowledge, reviving the community by
struggling against bidah and irreligion.
Since the earlier times of Islam the mujaddids who struggled against sinning, bidah
and irreligion have not been lacking. They have always battled to take the society
back to the age of bliss by neutralizing the bidahs, reviving the Quran and Sunnah
and restoring the spiritual life.
The materialistic Western philosophy, which began to influence the Islamic world in
the 19th century, became widespread in the 20th century. Because of the spread of
Western philosophy and anti-Islamic propaganda, peoples positive feelings for Islam
lessened and doubts were raised in their minds. Morals degenerated, anti-Islamic
ideas proliferated and people gave up living by Islam. Furthermore, being religious
was regarded as something reactionary and out-of-date. Generations were raised
who were partially, if not totally, sceptical, or even hostile, towards Islam.
Imam Bediuzzaman is a person who proved to be a mujaddid of this age with his
success in the battle against bidah and irreligion, which were spread by the
materialistic Western philosophy affecting the Muslim community in the 20th
century.
For us, there are six items which may be considered evidences of the Imams being
a mujaddid. They are as follows:
1. The Faith Mission: The scholars of kalam have indicated the importance of making
the faith verified by saying, It is fardh (obligatory duty) for every man to make his
faith verified. Even if imitated faith is authentic, the person who does not make his
faith verified is a sinner. Especially in such a time when atheism has been caused
by science and spread to the world, it is even more important to shed light into
matters of faith. Risale-i Nur has proved the truths of faith with evidences which are
so powerful that they cannot be refuted, and it has strengthened the faith of
believers while at the same time silencing the deniers. This is the greatest evidence
of the fact that Imam Nursi is the mujaddid of this age.
2. Guidance (Irshad): We live in an age when worldly benefits and pleasures are
cherished, the afterlife is ignored and, furthermore, the believers have become
addicted to sinful actions and behaviours. In such an atmosphere, Risale-i Nur has
guided many people to the right path and saved them from sins by proving that
there are painful spiritual torments in the sinful deeds even in the world and there
are heavenly pleasures in the truths of faith and Islamic morals. Although there are
many persons and groups who are conducting irshad (guidance) activity, it is seen
that Risale-i Nur is more effective and widespread.
3. Attacks on Islam and their Answers: There are some issues which have been
brought up by anti-Islamists to criticize it since the end of the 19th century. Bodycovering (tasattur); polygamy; sexist inheritance law (that sisters receive half of
what brothers receive); the multiple marriages of the Prophet, the Miraj (ascension
to heaven) and the creation of devils and evil (the problem of theodicy) are a few of
them. Imam Bediuzzaman has silenced the enemies of Islam and defended the
Islam by bringing satisfactory explanations for these themes.
4. Addressing to all levels: Imam has taken all levels of people from seven to
seventy into consideration while authoring his books.
a. For children, Imam Nursi says that they are natural students of Risale-i Nur.
5. The Groups in Society: Imam Bediuzzaman has put forward Islamic rulings on
many issues and groups in society with a satisfactory and persuasive style. These
groups and issues are: Sufism, politics, Shiism, Wahhabism, liberalism from Islamic
school of laws (anti-madhabism), nationalism, materialism, positivism, capitalism,
socialism, mischiefs peculiar to the End Times and people manufacturing and
performing bidah. Besides, in addition to rational and narrational evidences,
through using evidences from the New and Old Testaments, he has authored the
treatises which have proved the prophethood of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) for
the people of the divine books. He has proved the superiority of Islamic civilization
over the Western civilization by comparing the differences between them.
6. The Personality of the Imam: One of the evidences of Imams being a mujaddid is
his scholarly personality and Islamic lifestyle which were acknowledged by
everybody. He was an authority in all of the Islamic disciplines of knowledge. He led
an active, brave life, enduring hardships and striving to make Islam a way of life for
himself and for everybody, based on zuhd (ascetism) and taqwa (meticulousness for
the pleasure of Allah).
***
Imam Bediuzzaman states clearly that Risale-i Nur is a mujaddid of the modern age
in the treatises that he authored. Some of them are as follows:
Before the Great War (First World War), I saw in an true dream that I was at the
bottom of the famous Mount Ar which is also called Mount Ararat. All of a sudden,
that mountain blew up and the mountain-like particles were spread all around the
world. I was in shock and I saw my mother beside me. I said: Do not be afraid,
mother! This is by the order of Allah (SWT); He is Compassionate and Wise. When I
was in that situation, I realized that an important person was ordering me in a
commanding tone: Declare the miraculousness of the Quran! I woke up and
understood that there would be a huge explosion. After that explosion and change it
brought about, the walls around the Quran would be destroyed and the Quran
would protect itself on its own. There would be onslaughts against the Quran; yet,
its miraculousness would be its steel armour. And I concluded that I, though it is far
beyond my limits, would be a nominee for the manifestation of that sort of
miraculousness in this age. (The Letters, Altnbaak Pub. p. 218)
We have read your letter regarding the issue of the mujaddid and informed the
Imam about it. The Imam says: Yes, now there is an urgent need for an important
mujaddid in this time for restoration of the faith and the religion, the life of the
community and Islamic law, and public rights and Islamic politics. However, the
restoration regarding the protection of the truths of faith is the greatest and most
sacred one. The law and the regulation of society and politics have secondary or
tertiary degree importance. The importance attached to restoration of the religion
(tajdid) in the narration of the hadith is regarding the restoration of the truths of
faith. However, since in public opinion and for those who cherish the mass
movements, the social aspects of Islamic order and religious politics have a more
immediate and widespread appeal, they evaluate the hadith from that perspective
and motivation.
It is only a remote possibility and may even be impossible that these three duties
could be owned by a person or a group in this age; that they could be in such a
perfect harmony that they would not exclude or contradict each other. They can
only come together in the Mahdi who represents the spiritually enlightened
community of Ahl al Bayt (the Prophets family) and the collective personality of his
community. Limitless thanks to Allah (SWT) that He has made the collective
personality of true Risale-i Nur students perform the duty of tajdid (restoration)
regarding the protection of the truths of faith. Forty thousand men can bear witness
to the fact that it has been retaliating efficiently and successfully against the
extremely fearsome and horrendous onslaught of unbelief and misguidance with its
publication, and saving the faiths of hundreds of thousands of men for the last
twenty years. However, I say that you should not put me forward to take on such a
duty, which is a thousand times beyond my limits as a weak and poor man, and I
salute you. We also salute your highness and those who are engaged with Risale-i
Nur there.