2021 يناير
العدد الخامس والعشرون- المجلد السادس- مجلة العمارة والفنون والعلوم االنسانية
The Mysticism of Arabic Calligraphy: A Love Affair between the
Reed Pen and Sufism
Dr. Raid Al-Daghistani
Postdoctoral Fellow and Lecturer- University of Münster -Centre for Islamic Theology
Raid-Aldaghistani55@gmail.com
Abstract:
The relationship between calligraphy and mysticism has a unique inner dynamic in Islam.
Arabic calligraphy has been cultivated for centuries in the context of pious everyday practice
of the Sufis and Dervishes. From the symbolic interpretation of the letters to the breathing
technique – calligraphy and Sufi mysticism share many similarities. Many Muslim calligraphers
were drawn to the spiritual teachings of the Sufis and were often followers of the Sufi Order
themselves. The Sufis, on the other hand, found in calligraphy the appropriate artistic expression
to visualize their contemplation of the Koranic word and thus to exercise their spirituality.
Due to globalization and open skies we find ourselves standing in front of a major challenge
against voices that are claiming that Islamic arts and civilization fell through and they are
underdeveloped. Without trying to know the true concept of that art and without studying it's
influence on the western art and intellect. So we have to confirm the philosophy of the Islamic
art through artistic pieces and their influence on pioneers and how they utilize them in such a
clear way at the renaissance age through works of orientalists, modern art schools and some
artists who were affected by it such as (Matisse, Picasso, Kandinsky, Bulkeley, Mondrian,
Vasarely) who are considered the most iconic western artists in the modern age. Then the
identity of artists might be assured in the age of globalization and the 21t century which might
have an impact on the western conception of Islam and Islamic arts.
We find out that the research problem is at many elements:
The lack of confirmation of the Islamic identity for western artists at the modern age, such as
(Matisse, Picasso, Kandinsky, Bulkeley, Mondrian, Vasarely).
Assuring the special elements and characteristics of Islamic arts and their influence on
renaissance and orientalism.
The research aim:
Realizing the concept of Islamic arts and their impact on the west during the age of globalization
and the 21st century.
In order to achieve that we have to know:
What is Islamic art?
the special characteristics of Islamic arts.
The influence of Islamic arts on renaissance, modern schools and orientalism.
The elements of Islamic, Arabic art in (Matisse, Picasso, Kandinsky, Bulkeley, Mondrian,
Vasarely) artistic pieces.
Keywords:
Mysticism, Calligraphy, Sufism, Revelation, Spirituality, Hermeneutics, Aesthetics.
DOI: 10.21608/mjaf.2020.24502.1523
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مجلة العمارة والفنون والعلوم االنسانية -المجلد السادس -العدد الخامس والعشرون
يناير 2021
ملخص:
العالقة بین الخط والتصوف لها دینامیکیة داخلیة فریدة من نوعها فی اإلسالم .لقد تم ادخال عنصر الخط العربی لقرون فی
سیاق الممارسة الیومیة الورعة للصوفیین والدرویش .من التفسیر الرمزی لألحرف إلى تقنیة الكتابة -یشترک الخط
والتصوف الجمیل فی العدید من أوجه التشابه .کثیر من الخطاطین المسلمین انجذب إلى التعالیم الروحیة للصوفیة وکانوا
فی الغالب أتباع رواد الشیوخ الصوفیین بأنفسهم .وجد الصوفیون ،من ناحیة أخرى ،فی الخط العربی التعبیر الفنی المناسب
لتصور تأملهم فی الکلمة القرآنیة وبالتالی لممارسة روحانیاتهم .
نظرً ا للعولم ة والسموات المفتوحة ،نجد أنفسنا نقف أمام تح ٍد کبیر ضد األصوات التی تدعی أن الفنون والحضارة اإلسالمیة
قد تراجعت وأنهما متخلفان .من دون محاولة معرفة المفهوم الحقیقی لهذا الفن ودون دراسة تأثیره على الفن الغربی والعقل .
لذلک علینا أن نؤکد فلسفة الفن اإلسالمی من خالل االعمال الفنیة وتأثیرها على الرواد وکیف یستفیدون منها بطریقة
واضحة فی عصر النهضة من خالل أعمال المستشرقین ومدارس الفنون الحدیثة وبعض الفنانین الذین تأثروا بها مثل
)ماتیس ،بیکاسو ،کاندینسکی ،بول کیلی ،موندریان ،فاساریلی (الذین یعتبرون أکثر الفنانین الغربیین شهرة فی العصر
الحدیث .عندئذ یمکن ضمان هویة الفنانین فی عصر العولمة والقرن الحادی والعشرین الذی قد یکون له تأثیر على المفهوم
الغربی لإلسالم والفنون اإلسالمیة.
نکتشف أن مشکلة البحث تکمن فی العدید من العناصر:
عدم تأکید الهویة اإلسالمیة للفنانین الغربیین فی العصر الحدیث ،مثل )ماتیس ،بیکاسو ،کاندینسکی ،بولکیلی ،موندریان ،فاساریلی(
التأکید على عناصر وخصائص الفنون اإلسالمیة وتأثیرها على النهضة واالستشراق.الهدف من البحث:
إدراک مفهوم الفنون اإلسالمیة وتأثیرها على الغرب فی عصر العولمة والقرن الحادی والعشرین.
من أجل تحقيق ذلک علينا أن نعرف:
ما هو الفن اإلسالمی؟
الخصائص الخاصة للفنون اإلسالمیة.
تأثیر الفنون اإلسالمیة على النهضة والمدارس الحدیثة والشرقیة.
عناصر الفن اإلسالمی العربی فی القطع الفنیة )ماتیس ،بیکاسو ،کاندینسکی ،بولکیلی ،موندریان ،فاساری(
الكلمات المفتاحية:
التصوف ،الخط العربی ،الصوفیة ،الوحی ،الروحانیات
• Revelation, Script, and Aesthetics
Islam is, like no other religion, shaped by the written word. Therefore, it is rightly called a
“Religion of Scripture and the Book”. For many devout Muslims, the Arabic script is to this
day sacred: It is the script of revelation and as such sacred and inimitable. The Qur’an as the
Divine speech is for Muslims the most sublime of all things.
With the textualization of the Qur’an the need arose to do justice to the sublime language and
to reflect its sacred and aesthetic character in the script. From this desire and the need to mirror
the perfection and the aesthetics of the Divine language in equally perfect and aesthetic writing,
magnificent Qur’an editions were written over the centuries. According to a prophetic saying,
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the one who writes the basmala in a particularly beautiful way will be blessed by God
abundantly.
• The Origin and Significance of Arabic Calligraphy
Writing the Qur’an beautifully became a religious duty in Islam. And so, the Arabic calligraphy
emerged: the art of beautiful writing which reached “a unique expressiveness in the Islamic
world”. The emergence of Arabic calligraphy is therefore inseparable from the Islamic religion.
It is the origin of Islamic art and an aesthetic response of the human soul to the Divine message.
Seyyed Hossein Nasr states: “In the same way that the psalmody of the Noble Quran as the
sonoral sacred art of Islam par excellence is the origin of the traditional sonoral arts, so is the
art of calligraphy, which reflects on the earthly plane the writing of His Word upon the Guarded
Tablet, the origin of the plastic arts. Quranic calligraphy issues at once from the Islamic
revelation and represents the response of the soul of the Islamic peoples to the Divine Message
[…] In as much as there resides a Divine Presence in the text of the Quran, calligraphy as the
visible embodiment of the Divine Word aids the Muslim in penetrating and being penetrated by
that Presence in accordance with the spiritual capabilities of each person”.
Arabic penmanship was used to preserve and transmit the Qur’an in writing. And even though
Islamic art is diverse, calligraphy remains its pride as manifestation of the Divine word. Arabic
calligraphy is the most representative element of Islamic art. “The art of Arabic writing is, by
definition, the most Arab of all the plastic arts of Islam. It belongs nevertheless to the entire
Islamic world, and is even considered to be the most noble of the arts, because it gives visible
form to the revealed word of the Koran”. To this day, due to the synthesis between aesthetic
complexity and spiritual sovereignty, Arabic calligraphy has retained its significance within
Islamic culture. The essential characteristic of Arabic calligraphy is found in the connection
between beauty and holiness, between aesthetics and spirituality.
• Mystical Hermeneutics and the Symbolism of Letters
The relationship between calligraphy and mysticism has a unique inner dynamic. Muslim
mystics, the Sufis were the first to reveal the deeper meaning of calligraphy by approaching its
essence and nature through contemplation and meditation. According to mystics, the revealed
scripture holds a secret knowledge of letters and their numeric value which can lead among
other things to “mystical interpretation of names, terms and a cosmological reference system”.
The idea that every letter in a given language venerates God, encouraged the early mystics to
interpret the Arabic letters in almost infinite variations and in doing so reveal new meanings.
For many mystics “the contraction and expansion of the letter testify to the vibrancy of the
creative text.” Muslim mystics held the view that there is no letter that does not praise God, and
therefore they constantly tried to gain deeper understanding in interpreting the word of God
correctly and soundfully. The Sufis further assert that the Arabic letters represent the mystery
of the Divine that has been entrusted to man.
But the hermeneutic method of taʾwīl is used by Sufis not only for the interpretation of
individual verses of the Qur’an but also for the symbolic interpretation of each letter of the
Arabic alphabet. In this context, the letter alif holds a key position in both calligraphy and
mystical hermeneutics. For the mystic, the straightness of the alif symbolizes either the Divine
unity (aḥad) or the mystical union with him (ʿayn al-jamʿ): “Alif is the letter of the aḥadiyya,
the unity and uniqueness, and also the letter of transcendence.” Sufi poet and martyr Abū
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Manṣūr al-Ḥallāj regards the alif as the “initiatic” letter par excellence. And the mystic Sahl alTustarī sees it as a connection to God. Alif is also often compared to Adam; as Adam is an
archetype of humanity, alif is the origin of all letters. According to al-Tustarī, the letter alif
contains all creation as it refers to God (Allah) who connects all things (allafa) – and yet
transcends them. As defined in mystical interpretation of the Arabic alphabet, the letter bāʾ
refers to bahāʾ-Allāh (“Divine glory”), sīn to sanāʾ-Allāh (“Divine majesty”) and mīm to
mamlakatu-llāh (Divine reign).
A typical hermeneutic approach of Muslim mystics is also to seek deeper meanings in the letters
of those words that describe mystical states (aḥwāl) and stations (maqāmāt). One of the first
Muslim mystics who sought deeper meanings and symbolic interpretation of individual letters
of certain names or terms was the aforementioned Manṣūr al-Ḥallāj The famous master from
Baghdad, ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Jilānī also interprets the individual letters of the term taṣawwuf
(“Sufism”) in this light. Each of these words stands for a specific spiritual “state” or “station”:
tāʾ for tawba (“repentance” or “conversion”), ṣād for ṣafāʾ (“integrity” or “purity”), wāw for
wilāya (“holiness” or “friendship with God”) and fāʾ for fanāʾ fī-llāh (“passing away”,
“annihilation” or “union with God”).
• Arabic Calligraphy and Islamic Mysticism
The hermeneutic approach of the Muslim mystics to constantly gain new understandings of the
meanings of the individual letters found its most creative expression in Arabic calligraphy.
Annemarie Schimmel rightly notes that seeing the Divine in the form of a letter is characteristic
for a religion that “forbids figural representation – and above all any representation of the
Divine”. Thus, the letter itself becomes a subtle “manifestation of the Divine” in the Islamic
mystical tradition.
Arabic calligraphy has been cultivated for centuries in the settings of pious daily practice of
Sufis and Dervishes. In the later years of classical Islam (12th century), Muslim calligraphers
drew figures and patterns which depicted Qur’anic verses and mystical statements in a beautiful
and subtle form. And due to its contemplative-aesthetic character, calligraphy also represents
an “initiatic” way of getting closer to the Divine. It is not only an artistic skill and an aesthetic
experience, but also a spiritual exercise and metaphysical experience. It is a method of
contemplating the Qur’an and thus the inner ascension of man to God. ‟It serves as an important
spiritual exercise of concentration on the mystical path whereby the musical rhythm of the
elegant swings of the letters reflect the inner transformation process of the Sufi. Just like an alif
the praying mystic stands before God and the path of the soul to the Almighty is straightened
in the same way”.
One thing can be said without doubt: in no other area of Islamic art are aesthetics and mysticism
as closely linked as in Arabic calligraphy. There is a fundamental interrelation between
calligraphic writing and Sufi spirituality. As a symbiosis of the aesthetic and mystical, Arabic
calligraphy as a genuine Islamic art becomes a technique of deepening and refining the spiritual
life based on the Qur’an. From the symbolism of the letters to the breathing technique,
calligraphy and mysticism share many commonalities. Many Muslim calligraphers were drawn
to the spiritual teachings of the Sufis and were often themselves followers of Sufi orders. The
Sufis in turn took calligraphy as one of the most appropriate form of artistic expression to
visually illustrate their venerating contemplation of the Qur’an and thereby engage in their
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spiritual exercise. Calligraphy does not only decorate numerous Dervish meetinghouses
(khānqa or. tekke) and Sufi shrines. As an ornament on amulets, it also serves the practice of
ritual commemoration of God: “Imagery, symbolism and the content of words evoke vital forces
and create an atmosphere that leads to individual or collective forms” of devotion.
• Conclusion
Arabic calligraphy as the most distinguished expression of Islamic art is capable of reflecting
the mystical states of the Sufis. Sufis in turn, draw inspiration from the art of calligraphy for
their mystical interpretation of the Divine word. Islamic calligraphy as the intersection of the
aesthetic and the mystical, the artistic and the religious, presents for us today – perhaps more
than ever – a different view of Islam and the Qur’an. The renowned professor of Qur’anic
studies, Angelika Neuwirth says “Islam can only be understood by those who understand it
aesthetically”. To see the mystical Qur’anic aesthetic inspired and regenerated by calligraphy
as a doorway to understand Islam appears in today’s discourse not only as a very welcoming
gesture but also as an almost necessary approach to do justice to the inherent message of this
last revealed religion.
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About the author:
Dr. Raid Al-Daghistani, born in 1983 in Ljubljana; studied philosophy in Ljubljana and
Freiburg and Arabic and Islamic Studies in Sarajevo and Münster; PhD (2017) in Arabic and
Islamic Studies at the University of Münster (Epistemology of the Heart: Aspects of Knowledge
in Islamic Mysticism, Cologne 2017); Since 2014 Lecturer and Researcher in the field of
“Kalām, Islamic philosophy and mysticism”; since 2017 postdoctoral fellow at the CIT
Münster; Author of four monographs and several articles in various languages.
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