Niyâzî-i Mñsrî (9 March 1618, Malatya â 16 March 1694, Limni) was a Sufi mystic and poet and patron saint of the Niyâziye or Mñsriyye branch of the Khalwati order of dervishes, known variously as Niyâzî Mñsrî, Mñsrî Nñyâzî, Skheyh Mñsrî, and as Mehmed üâÂÂl- Mñsrî.
He is the author of several mystical poems and is also known for his commentaries on earlier Turkish mystical verses, such as those of Yunus Emre whose works are still preserved in Turkey today.
Biography
Niyâzî-i Mñsrî's real name is Mehmed and he was born on March 9, 1618, in the town of Aspozi, now called SoÃÂanlñ, in Malatya. His father is Sogancizâde Ali Chelebi al-Nakshibandiyya, an as his name suggests, his father was a member of the Nakshibandi sect and therefore Niyazi Misri was born and raised in a Sufi environment. Niyâzî and Mñsrî are their pseudonyms. His pseudonym Mñsrî is because he received his education in Egypt. He was educated in various madrasahs and developed his knowledge of Sufism in different places. In 1655, he received the caliphate from the sheikh of Halveti, Sinan-ñ ÃÂmmî, and was graduated in guidance.
He died at dawn on a Wednesday in 1694 on the island of Lemnos, where he was exiled by the Ottoman sultan, and was buried in his tomb on the same island. He has more than ten volumes of works in Turkish and Arabic, both in verse and prose.
Teaching
Niyazi Misri adopted the views of the famous Sufi Ibn Arabi who is the founder of the Sufi Wahdat ul-Wujud school (Unity of Being) but did not write a systematic work on this subject. However, he processed this view deeply in his prose and poems. According to him, everything in the universe is a reflection of God's attributes. Niyazi Misri attracted the reaction of both the ulema and some figures from the Sufi circles with some of his views. One of the views that received criticism is the view that prophethood continued after Muhammad. Misri considers Muhammad's two grandsons Hasan and Husayn as prophets.
Poems
Niyazi Misri was also an important poet whose poems were composed and sung as hymns in Sufi circles. Like Yunus Emre, Niyazî Misrî was able to express subtle mystical insights using very simple language.
Works
Turkish
- Divân
- Tuhfetü'l-uÃ
ÂÃ
Ââk
- Süleymaniye Küt. ReÃ
Âid Ef. 1218 numaradaki mecmua.
- Mecmua-i Kelimât-ñ Kudsiyye
- Risâle fiâÂÂt-tasavvuf
- Risâle-i Devriyye
- TaâÂÂbîrâtüâÂÂl-vâkñât
- RisâleâÂÂi Devriyye
- RisâleâÂÂi EsâÂÂile ve EcvibeâÂÂi Mutasavvufâne
- RisâleâÂÂi EÃ
Ârâtü'sâÂÂSâat
- Tabirnâme
- RisâleâÂÂi Haseneyn
- RisâleâÂÂi Hñzriyye
- RisâleâÂÂi ArÃ
Âiyye
- Vahdetnâme
- RisâleâÂÂi ðade
- RisâleâÂÂi Nokta
- AkîdetüâÂÂlâÂÂMñsrî
- Risale fî DevrânâÂÂñ Sofiye
- EtvârâÂÂñ SebâÂÂa
- Ã
ÂerhâÂÂi EsmââÂÂi Hüsnâ
- Ã
ÂerhâÂÂi NutkâÂÂñ Yûnus Emre
Arabic
- MevâidüâÂÂlâÂÂirfân
- DevreâÂÂi ArÃ
Âiyye
- TesbîâÂÂi KasîdeâÂÂi BürâÂÂe (Bürde)
- TefsîrâÂÂi FâtihatüâÂÂlâÂÂKitâb
- Mecâlis
See also
References
Further reading
- Heath W. Lowry, Historical Vestiges of Niyâzî Misrî's presence on the Island of Limnos/Niyazi Misri'nin Limni Adasñnda Bulunan Tarihi ðzleri (bilingual edition), trns. Kñvanç Tanrñyar, Istanbul:Bogazici University Press, 2011.
- Paul Ballanfat, âÂÂNiyâzî Misrî: lâÂÂÃÂgypte, station mystique pour un soufi turc du XVIIe siècleâÂÂ, in Le soufisme àlâÂÂépoque ottomane, Cahiers des Annales islamologiques 29 (Cairo, 2010), pp.âÂÂ
252âÂÂ3.
- Mustafa AÃ
Âkan, Niyazi Mñsri ve Tasavvuf AnlayñÃ
Âñ,[Niyazi Misri and His Sufi Perspective] Ankara:Kültür BakanlñÃÂñ, 1998.
- Niyazi Mñsri, Niyazi Misri: Life & Poems, trans. Paul Smith, Introduction to Sufi Poets Series Paperback, 2020
- Niyazi Misri, BeÃ
 Risale (Five Epistles), Oguzhan Donmez (trans.Ed.), BuyuyenAy Yayinlari, 2022
- Kenan ErdoÃÂan: Niyazî-i Mñsrî: Hayatñ, Edebî KiÃ
ÂiliÃÂi, Eserleri ve Divani [Niyazî-i Mñsrî: His Life, Literary Persona, Works and Divan] Ankara (AkçaàBasñm Yayñm Pazarlama, A.Ã
Â.), 1998.
- Derin TerzioÃÂlu: Sui and the Dissident in the Ottoman Empire: Niyazi-i Mñsri (1618âÂÂ1694). Harvard University (Unpublished PhD Dissertation), 1999.
- Mustafa Kara: âÂÂÃ
Âemseddin MñsrîâÂÂnin Limni Yolculuklarñ,â in Bursa AraÃ
Âtñrmalarñ, No.29. Bursa, 2010. pp. 12âÂÂ17.
- Mustafa Tatcñ: LimniâÂÂde Sürgün Bir Velî: Niyâzî MñsrîâÂÂnin Hâtiralarñ, [An Exiled Saint in Lemnos:Memoirs of Niyazi Misri], ðstanbul (H Yayñnlarñ), March, 2010.
- Mustafa Kara & Yusuf Kabakçñ (Compilers & Editors): Niyazi-i MñsriâÂÂnin ðzinde Bir ÃÂmür Seyahat, [A Lifetime Travel in the Footsteps of Niyazi-i Mñsri], ðstanbul (Dergah), November, 2010
- Stephen Hirtenstein - From Ibn Arabi to Niyazi Misri
External links