Secret Practices of the Sufi Freemasons: The Islamic Teachings at the Heart of Alchemy
Autor Baron Rudolf von Sebottendorff Traducere de Stephen E. Flowers Ph.D.en Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 ian 2013
• Shows how this order, also known as Oriental Freemasonry, preserves the ancient spiritual doctrines forgotten by modern Freemasonry
• Explains how to transform the soul into the alchemical Magnum Opus by combining Masonic grips and the abbreviated letters of the Qur’an
• Includes a detailed biography of Baron von Sebottendorff
Originally published in Germany in 1924, this rare book by Baron Rudolf von Sebottendorff reveals the secret spiritual exercises of the Bektashi Order of Sufis as well as how this order, also known as Oriental Freemasonry, preserves the ancient spiritual doctrines forgotten by modern Freemasonry. Sebottendorff explains how the mysterious abbreviated letters found in the Qur’an represent formulas for perfecting the spirit of the individual. When combined with Masonic hand signs and grips and conducted accordingly to a precise schedule, these formulas incorporate spiritual power into the body and transform the soul from its base state into a noble, godlike state: the Magnum Opus of the medieval alchemists.
Laying out the complete program of spiritual exercises, Sebottendorff explains each abbreviated word-formula in the Qur’an, the hand gestures that go with them, and the exact order and duration for each exercise. Including a detailed biography of Sebottendorff and an examination of alchemy’s Islamic heritage, this book shows how the traditions of Oriental Freemasonry can ennoble the self and lead to higher knowledge.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781594774683
ISBN-10: 1594774684
Pagini: 144
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.24 kg
Ediția:Original.
Editura: Inner Traditions/Bear & Company
Colecția Inner Traditions
ISBN-10: 1594774684
Pagini: 144
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.24 kg
Ediția:Original.
Editura: Inner Traditions/Bear & Company
Colecția Inner Traditions
Notă biografică
Baron Rudolf von Sebottendorff (1875-1945) was a Freemason and practitioner of alchemy. In 1900 he moved to Turkey where he met the Jewish Termudi family, who introduced him to Rosicrucianism and led to his initiation into a local Masonic lodge. In 1910 he founded a lodge of the Bektashi Order in Constantinople. Returning to Germany, in 1917 he founded the Thule Society, an occult organization that led to the German Workers’ Party--joined in 1919 by Adolf Hitler, who transformed it into the Nazi Party. Sebottendorff left the Thule Society as it became increasingly political, fleeing to Turkey. Translator Stephen E. Flowers, Ph.D., received his doctorate in Germanic languages and medieval studies from the University of Texas at Austin and studied the history of occultism at the University of Göttingen, Germany. The author of more than two dozen books, including Lords of the Left-Hand Path, he lives near Austin, Texas.
Extras
Chapter 1
Practice
Islam means “submission,” that is, submission to the will of God. The believer can just commend himself to the will of God simply because it is the will of God. He feels secure and does not ask why this is so and that is different--he fulfills the divine law simply because it is the revealed law of God. He accepts his fate as being immutable and, at the most, attempts by means of prayer to implore for mercy from God when the burden becomes too great for him. But the sign of the true believer will consistently be that he does not ask for release from the burden, but rather for the strength to be able to bear it. “Lead us in the way of those who do not err,” the Prophet prescribes to those who pray.
This faithful condition is what is most worthy to strive after, according to all religious systems. Actually he is also the most happy, it is he who the Prophet values most highly, and he represents this as his only goal--and therefore his religion is called Islam.
Now beside the belief there is something else that makes it equally possible for a person to yield to his fate; it is no longer faith but knowledge--knowledge of the divine laws. The one who knows no longer fulfills this law blindly but rather knowingly. The truly wise one is very near to the believer, but he is superior to the believer.
The Prophet created a very wise institution to open the way to knowledge for everyone who truly seeks it. According to this system in the Qur’an he provided explicit signs, which point the way to knowledge, and which have to reveal the law of creation to someone who gains knowledge from within his own being. The highest form of knowledge will always lead the wise to yield to Divine Providence without complaint--that is, to Islam through knowledge.
In what follows we will concern ourselves with this path. How the Prophet himself came into possession of this knowledge is recounted in the form of the following legend.
Not far from Mecca there lived at the time of Mohammed an aged hermit, Ben Chasi, who was teaching the Prophet. When the lesson was over the hermit gave him a metallic plate upon which were engraved formulas, the meaning of which the then thirty-year-old Prophet had just learned. Soon thereafter the hermit died, but Mohammed kept on teaching the secret of these formulas in the most intimate circles. Abu Bekr, the first calif, inherited the plate and the knowledge, which only spread within a small circle after the death of the Prophet: this is the secret knowledge of the oriental Freemasons.
In order to ensure against the loss of the formulas the Prophet distributed them throughout the Qur’an according to a precise key. The key is known, and the formulas are preserved in the Qur’an, such that the possibility remains for reconstructing the system at any time.
The formulas are preserved in the so-called abbreviated letters,1 the meaning of which is debated among orientalists as well as different commentators. Some are of the opinion that these letters are signatures. Individual Suras certainly originated under highly variable conditions: the Prophet dictated some, others he recited while friends wrote them down, still others were recorded later from memory. When the Suras were collected, the letters, which indicated the originator of the Sura, would have remained, but now without their meaning.
Some European scholars are of the view that these letters represent notes by the scribe. Thus ALM is supposed to mean: amara li muhamed--“Mohammed commanded me to write.”
Arabic commentators view these letters as holy abbreviations. Thus ALM means: allah latif madshid--“God is good.” Or, as another thinks: ana lahu alamu--“I am the God who knows.”
For others the letters are to be interpreted in a kabalistic sense. Certainly all the Suras in which these letters occur contain definite indications that they have something special to say.
The Arabic language, like all the Semitic languages, does not write the vowels. If one does not read these letters as such, but rather as words, they yield no meaning. For this reason people have been scratching their heads over the meaning of these letters. But in actuality these are the secret formulas concealed in the letters that someone who knows the truth can now easily read and pronounce. All of these formulas are compounds of the vowel A with one or several consonants.
Number of the Sura / Name of the Sura / Formula
2 / The Cow / alam
3 / Amran’s Family / alam
7 / El Araf / alamas
10 / Jonah / alar
11/ Houd / alar
12 / Joseph / alar
13 / Thunder / alamar
14 / Abraham / alar
15 / A-hijr / alar
19 / Mary / kaha ya as
20 / Ta ha / ta ha
26 / The Poet / tasam
27 / The Ant / tas
28 / The Narration / tasam
29 / The Spider / alam
30 / The Greeks / alam
31 / The Wise / alam
32 / Adoration / alam
36 / Ya sin / yas
38 / Sad / sa
40 / The Believer / cham
41 / Revelations Well Expounded / cham
42 / Consultation / cham asak
43 / Gold Adornments / cham
44 / Smoke / cham
45 / Kneeling / cham
46 / Al ahqaf / cham
50 / Qaf / ka
68 / The Feather / na
822 days--14 different formulas
The formulas are present in twenty-nine Suras. The number of days results in twenty-five lunar months in which three days are missing. On these three days the one who was dedicating himself to these exercises was occupied doing something else, to which we will return later.
Practice
Islam means “submission,” that is, submission to the will of God. The believer can just commend himself to the will of God simply because it is the will of God. He feels secure and does not ask why this is so and that is different--he fulfills the divine law simply because it is the revealed law of God. He accepts his fate as being immutable and, at the most, attempts by means of prayer to implore for mercy from God when the burden becomes too great for him. But the sign of the true believer will consistently be that he does not ask for release from the burden, but rather for the strength to be able to bear it. “Lead us in the way of those who do not err,” the Prophet prescribes to those who pray.
This faithful condition is what is most worthy to strive after, according to all religious systems. Actually he is also the most happy, it is he who the Prophet values most highly, and he represents this as his only goal--and therefore his religion is called Islam.
Now beside the belief there is something else that makes it equally possible for a person to yield to his fate; it is no longer faith but knowledge--knowledge of the divine laws. The one who knows no longer fulfills this law blindly but rather knowingly. The truly wise one is very near to the believer, but he is superior to the believer.
The Prophet created a very wise institution to open the way to knowledge for everyone who truly seeks it. According to this system in the Qur’an he provided explicit signs, which point the way to knowledge, and which have to reveal the law of creation to someone who gains knowledge from within his own being. The highest form of knowledge will always lead the wise to yield to Divine Providence without complaint--that is, to Islam through knowledge.
In what follows we will concern ourselves with this path. How the Prophet himself came into possession of this knowledge is recounted in the form of the following legend.
Not far from Mecca there lived at the time of Mohammed an aged hermit, Ben Chasi, who was teaching the Prophet. When the lesson was over the hermit gave him a metallic plate upon which were engraved formulas, the meaning of which the then thirty-year-old Prophet had just learned. Soon thereafter the hermit died, but Mohammed kept on teaching the secret of these formulas in the most intimate circles. Abu Bekr, the first calif, inherited the plate and the knowledge, which only spread within a small circle after the death of the Prophet: this is the secret knowledge of the oriental Freemasons.
In order to ensure against the loss of the formulas the Prophet distributed them throughout the Qur’an according to a precise key. The key is known, and the formulas are preserved in the Qur’an, such that the possibility remains for reconstructing the system at any time.
The formulas are preserved in the so-called abbreviated letters,1 the meaning of which is debated among orientalists as well as different commentators. Some are of the opinion that these letters are signatures. Individual Suras certainly originated under highly variable conditions: the Prophet dictated some, others he recited while friends wrote them down, still others were recorded later from memory. When the Suras were collected, the letters, which indicated the originator of the Sura, would have remained, but now without their meaning.
Some European scholars are of the view that these letters represent notes by the scribe. Thus ALM is supposed to mean: amara li muhamed--“Mohammed commanded me to write.”
Arabic commentators view these letters as holy abbreviations. Thus ALM means: allah latif madshid--“God is good.” Or, as another thinks: ana lahu alamu--“I am the God who knows.”
For others the letters are to be interpreted in a kabalistic sense. Certainly all the Suras in which these letters occur contain definite indications that they have something special to say.
The Arabic language, like all the Semitic languages, does not write the vowels. If one does not read these letters as such, but rather as words, they yield no meaning. For this reason people have been scratching their heads over the meaning of these letters. But in actuality these are the secret formulas concealed in the letters that someone who knows the truth can now easily read and pronounce. All of these formulas are compounds of the vowel A with one or several consonants.
Number of the Sura / Name of the Sura / Formula
2 / The Cow / alam
3 / Amran’s Family / alam
7 / El Araf / alamas
10 / Jonah / alar
11/ Houd / alar
12 / Joseph / alar
13 / Thunder / alamar
14 / Abraham / alar
15 / A-hijr / alar
19 / Mary / kaha ya as
20 / Ta ha / ta ha
26 / The Poet / tasam
27 / The Ant / tas
28 / The Narration / tasam
29 / The Spider / alam
30 / The Greeks / alam
31 / The Wise / alam
32 / Adoration / alam
36 / Ya sin / yas
38 / Sad / sa
40 / The Believer / cham
41 / Revelations Well Expounded / cham
42 / Consultation / cham asak
43 / Gold Adornments / cham
44 / Smoke / cham
45 / Kneeling / cham
46 / Al ahqaf / cham
50 / Qaf / ka
68 / The Feather / na
822 days--14 different formulas
The formulas are present in twenty-nine Suras. The number of days results in twenty-five lunar months in which three days are missing. On these three days the one who was dedicating himself to these exercises was occupied doing something else, to which we will return later.
Cuprins
Introduction by Stephen E. Flowers
1 The Life of Rudolf von Sebottendorff
2 The Bektashi Sect of Sufism
3 The Mysteries of the Arabic Letters
4 Alchemy and Sufism
The Practice of Ancient Turkish Freemasonry
The Key to the Understanding of Alchemy
A Presentation of the Ritual, Doctrine, and Signs of Recognition among the Oriental Freemasons
By Baron Rudolf von Sebottendorff
Introduction
i Practice
ii Theory
iii Theory and Practice
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
1 The Life of Rudolf von Sebottendorff
2 The Bektashi Sect of Sufism
3 The Mysteries of the Arabic Letters
4 Alchemy and Sufism
The Practice of Ancient Turkish Freemasonry
The Key to the Understanding of Alchemy
A Presentation of the Ritual, Doctrine, and Signs of Recognition among the Oriental Freemasons
By Baron Rudolf von Sebottendorff
Introduction
i Practice
ii Theory
iii Theory and Practice
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Recenzii
“The book is very insightful and I leaned so much. The author does an excellent job conveying the concepts.”
“Touching on the spiritual ideas that lie beneath it, its relation to alchemy, and many other topics, Secret Practices of the Sufi Freemasons is a fascinating read for anyone curious about the old ways of the occult in history.”
“Touching on the spiritual ideas that lie beneath it, its relation to alchemy, and many other topics, Secret Practices of the Sufi Freemasons is a fascinating read for anyone curious about the old ways of the occult in history.”
Descriere
Reveals the secret spiritual exercises of the Bektashi Order of Sufis.