A BRIEF LOOK AT
BEDIUZZAMAN SAID NURSI'S LIFE AND THE RISALE-I
NUR
Bediuzzaman's
Life
Bediuzzaman
Said Nursi was born in 1877 in eastern Turkey and died in
1960 in Urfa in Turkey. Readers may refer to his
biography for details of his long and exemplary life,
which spanned the last decades of the Ottoman Empire, its
collapse after the First World War and the setting up of
the Republic, then the twenty-five years of Republican
Peoples' Party rule, well-known for the measures taken
against Islam, followed by the ten years of Democrat
rule, when conditions eased a little for Bediuzzaman.
Bediuzzaman
displayed an extraordinary intelligence and ability to
learn from an early age, completing the normal course of
medrese (religious school) education at the early age of
fourteen, when he obtained his diploma. He became famous
for both his prodigious memory and his unbeaten record in
debating with other religious scholars. Another
characteristic Bediuzzaman displayed from an early age
was an instinctive dissatisfaction with the existing
education system, which when older he formulated into
comprehensive proposals for its reform. The heart of
these proposals was the bringing together and joint
teaching of the traditional religious sciences and the
modern sciences, together with the founding of a
university in the Eastern Provinces of the Empire, the
Medresetü'z-Zehra, where this and his other proposals
would be put into practice. In 1907 his endeavours in
this field took him to Istanbul and an audience with
Sultan Abdulhamid. Although subsequently he twice
received funds for the construction of his university,
and its foundations were laid in 1913, it was never
completed due to war and the vicissitudes of the times.
Contrary
to the practice of religious scholars at that time,
Bediuzzaman himself studied and mastered almost all the
physical and mathematical sciences, and later studied
philosophy, for he believed that it was only in this way
that Islamic theology (kalâm) could be renewed and
successfully answer the attacks to which the Qur'an and
Islam were then subject.
In the
course of time, the physical sciences had been dropped
from medrese education, which had contributed directly to
the Ottoman decline relative to the advance of the West.
Now, in the 19th and early 20th centuries, Europe had
gained dominance over the Islamic world, and in efforts
to extend its dominance, was attacking the Qur'an and
Islam in the name of science and progress in particular,
falsely claiming them to be incompatible.
Within
the Empire too was a small minority which favoured
adopting Western philosophy and civilization. Thus, all
Bediuzzaman's endeavour was to prove and demonstrate the
falseness of these accusations, and that far from being
incompatible with science and progress, the Qur'an was
the source of true progress and civilization, and in
addition, since this was the case, Islam would dominate
the future, despite its relative decline and regression
at that time.
The years
up to the end of the First World War were the final
decades of the Ottoman Empire and were, in the words of
Bediuzzaman, the period of the 'Old Said'. In additions
to his endeavours in the field of learning, he served the
cause of the Empire and Islam through active involvement
in social life and the public domain. In the War, he
commanded the militia forces on the Caucasian Front
against the invading Russians, for which he as later
awarded a War Medal. To maintain the morale of his men he
himself disdained to enter the trenches inspite of the
constant shelling, and it was while withstanding the
overwhelming assaults of the enemy that he wrote his
celebrated Qur'anic commentary, Signs of Miraculousness,
dictating to a scribe while on horseback. Stating that
the Qur'an encompasses the sciences which make known the
physical world, the commentary is an original and
important work which in Bediuzzaman's words, forms a sort
model for commentaries he hoped would be written in the
future, which would bring together the religious and
modern sciences in the way he proposed. Bediuzzaman was
taken prisoner in March 1916 and held in Russia for two
years before escaping in early 1918, and returning to
Istanbul via Warsaw, Berlin, and Vienna.
The
defeat of the Ottomans saw the end of the Empire and its
dismemberment, and the occupation of Istanbul and parts
of Turkey by foreign forces. These bitter years saw also
the transformation of the Old Said into the New Said, the
second main period of Bediuzzaman's life. Despite the
acclaim he received and services he performed as a member
of the Darü'l-Hikmeti'l-Islamiye, a learned body
attached to the Shaykhu'l-Islam's Office, and combatting
the British, Bediuzzaman underwent a profound mental and
spiritual change in the process of which he turned his
back on the world. Realizing the inadequacy of the
'human' science and philosophy he had studied as a means
of reaching the truth, he took the revealed Qur'an as his
'sole guide.' In recognition of his services to the
Independence Struggle, Bediuzzaman was invited to Ankara
by Mustafa Kemal, but on arrival there, found that at the
very time of the victory of the Turks and Islam,
atheistic ideas were being propagated among the Deputies
and officials, and many were lax in performing their
religious duties. He published various works which
successfully countered this.
Remaining
some eight months in Ankara, Bediuzzaman understood the
way Mustafa Kemal and the new leaders were going to take,
and on the one hand that he could not work alongside
them, and on the other that they were not to be combatted
in the realm of politics. When offered various posts and
benefits by Mustafa Kemal, he declined them and left
Ankara for Van, where he withdrew into a life of worship
and contemplation; he was seeking the best way to
proceed.
Within a
short time, Bediuzzaman's fears about the new regime
began to be realized: the first steps were taken towards
secularization and reducing the power of Islam within the
state, and even its eradication from Turkish life. In
early 1925 there was a rebellion in the east in which
Bediuzzaman played no part, but as a consequence of which
was sent into exile in western Anatolia along with many
hundreds of others. Thus unjustly began twenty-five years
of exile, imprisonment, and unlawful oppression for
Bediuzzaman. He was sent to Barla, a tiny village in the
mountains of Isparta Province. However, the attempt to
entirely isolate and silence him had the reverse effect,
for Bediuzzaman was both prepared and uniquely qualified
to face the new challenge: these years saw the writing of
the Risale-i Nur, which silently spread and took root,
combatting in the most constructive way the attempt to
uproot Islam, and the unbelief and materialist philosophy
it was hoped to instil in the Muslim people of Turkey.
The
Risale-i Nur
As the
New Said, Bediuzzaman had immersed himself in the Qur'an,
searching for a way to relate its truths to modern man.
In Barla in his isolation he began to write treatises
explaining and proving these truths, for now the Qur'an
itself and its truths were under direct attack. The first
of these was on the Resurrection of the Dead, which in a
unique style, proves bodily Resurrection rationally,
where even the greatest scholars previously had confessed
their impotence. He described the method employed in this
as consisting of three stages: first God's existence is
proved, and His Names and attributes, then the
Resurrection of the Dead is 'constructed' on these and
proved.
With
these writings, Bediuzzaman opened up a new, direct way
to reality (haqiqat) and knowledge of God which he
described as the highway of the Qur'an and way of the
Companions of the Prophet (PBUH) through the 'legacy of
Prophethood,' which gains for those who follow it 'true
and certain belief.' He did not ascribe the writings to
himself, but said they proceeded from the Qur'an itself,
were 'rays shining out of from [its] truths.'
Thus,
rather than being a Qur'anic commentary which expounds
all its verses giving the immediate reasons for their
revelation and the apparent meanings of the words and
sentences, the Risale-i Nur is what is known as a
mânevî tefsir, or commentary which expounds the meaning
of the Qur'anic truths. For there are various sorts of
commentaries. The verses mostly expounded in the Risale-i
Nur are those concerned with the truths of belief, such
as the Divine Names and attributes and the Divine
activity in the universe, the Divine existence and Unity,
resurrection, prophethood, Divine Determining or destiny,
and man's duties of worship. Bediuzzaman explains how the
Qur'an addresses all men in every age in accordance with
the degree of their understanding and development; it has
a face that looks to each age. The Risale-i Nur, then,
explains that face of the Qur'an which looks to this age.
We shall now look at further aspects of the Risale-i Nur
related to this point.
In
numerous of its verses, the Holy Qur'an invites man to
observe the universe and reflect on the Divine activity
within it; following just this method, Bediuzzaman
provides proofs and explanations for the truths of
belief. He likens the universe to a book, and looking at
it in the way shown by the Qur'an, that is, 'reading' it
for its meaning, learns of the Divine Names and
attributes and other truths of belief. The book's purpose
is to describe its Author and Maker; beings become
evidences and signs to their Creator. Thus, an important
element in the way of the Risale-i Nur is reflection or
contemplation (tefekkür), 'reading' the Book of the
Universe in order to increase in knowledge of God and to
obtain 'true and certain belief' in all the truths of
belief.
Bediuzzaman
demonstrates that the irrefutable truths, such as Divine
Unity, arrived at in this way are the only rational and
logical explanation of the universe, and making
comparisons with Naturalist and Materialist philosophy
which have used science's findings about the universe to
deny those truths, show the concepts on which they are
based, such as causality and Nature, to be irrational and
logically absurd.
Indeed,
far from contradicting them, in uncovering the order and
working of the universe, science broadens and deepens
knowledge of the truths of belief. In the Risale-i Nur
many descriptions of the Divine activity in the universe
are looked at through the eyes of science, and reflect
Bediuzzaman's knowledge of it. The Risale-i Nur shows
that there is no contradiction or conflict between
religion and science.
In
addition, all these matters discussed in the Risale-i Nur
are set out as reasoned arguments and proved according to
logic. All the most important of the truths of belief are
proved so clearly that even unbelievers can see their
necessity. And so too, inspired by the Qur'an, even the
most profound and inaccessible truths are made accessible
by means of comparisons, which bring them close to the
understanding like telescopes, so that they are readily
understandable by ordinary people and those with no
previous knowledge of these questions.
Another
aspect of the Risale-i Nur related to the face of the
Qur'an which looks to this age, is that it explains
everything from the point of view of wisdom; that is, as
is mentioned again below, it explains the purpose of
everything. It considers things from the point of view of
the Divine Name of All-Wise.
Also,
following this method, in the Risale-i Nur Bediuzzaman
solved many mysteries of religion, such as bodily
resurrection and Divine Determining and man's will, and
the riddle of the constant activity in the universe and
the motion of particles, before which man relying on his
own intellect and philosophy had been impotent.
While in
Barla, Bediuzzaman put the treatise on Resurrection and
the pieces that followed it together in the form of a
collection and gave it the name of Sozler (The Words).
The Words was followed by Mektûbat (Letters), a
collection of thirty-three letters of varying lengths
from Bediuzzaman to his students. And this was followed
by Lem'alar (The Flashes Collection), and Sualar (The
Rays), which was completed in 1949. Together with these
are the three collections of Additional Letters, for each
of Bediuzzaman's main places of exile, Barla Lahikasi,
Kastamonu Lahikasi, and Emirdag Lahikasi.
The way
the Risale-i Nur was written and disseminated was unique,
like the work itself. Bediuzzaman would dictate at speed
to a scribe, who would write down the piece in question
with equal speed; the actual writing was very quick.
Bediuzzaman had no books for reference and the writing of
religious works was of course forbidden. They were all
written therefore in the mountains and out in the
countryside. Handwritten copies were then made, these
were secretly copied out in the houses of the Risale-i
Nur 'students,' as they were called, and passed from
village to village, and then from town to town, till they
spread throughout Turkey. Only in 1946 were Risale-i Nur
students able to obtain duplicating machines, while it
was not till 1956 that various parts were printed on
modern presses in the new, Latin, script. The figure
given for hand-written copies is 600,000.
It may be
seen from the above figure how the Risale-i Nur movement
spread within Turkey, despite all efforts to stop it.
After 1950, the period of what Bediuzzaman called 'the
Third Said,' there was a great increase in the number of
students, particularly among the young and those who had
been through the secular education system of the
Republic. At the same time the number of students outside
Turkey increased.
Besides
these powerful writings themselves, a major factor in the
success of the movement may be attributed to the very
method Bediuzzaman had chosen, which may be summarized
with two phrases: 'mânevî jihad,' that is, 'jihad of
the word' or 'non-physical jihad', and 'positive action.'
For Bediuzzaman considered the true enemies in this age
of science, reason, and civilization to be materialism
and atheism, and their source, materialist philosophy.
Thus just as he combatted and 'utterly defeated' these
with the reasoned proofs of the Risale-i Nur, so through
strengthening the belief of Muslims and raising it to the
level of 'true, verified belief,' the Risale-i Nur was
the most effective barrier against the corruption of
society caused by these enemies. In order to be able to
pursue this 'jihad of the word,' Bediuzzaman insisted
that his students avoided any use of force and disruptive
action. Through 'positive action,' and the maintenance of
public order and security, the damage caused by the
forces of unbelief could be 'repaired' by the healing
truths of the Qur'an. And this is the way they have
adhered to.