🐘 Kata Kata Rabiah Al Adawiyah

BagiRabiah, ibadah dilakoninya semata kasih sayang Tuhan kepada dirinya. Kasih sayang itu, kata Rabiah, mutiara paling berharga bagi manusia, jika saja manusia itu mengetahui rahasia di baliknya. Dilahirkan di Basrah, Irak, pada tahun 713 M, Rabiah Basri, atau lebih dikenal dengan nama Rabiah Al Adawiyah, berasal dari keluarga yang hina dina. Ya Allah, ya Tuhanku. Aku berlindung diri kepada Engkau daripada segala yang ada yang boleh memesongkan diri daripada-Mu, daripada segala pendinding yang boleh mendinding antara aku dengan Engkau! Tuhanku! bintang-bintang telah menjelma indah, mata telah tidur nyenyak, semua pemilik telah menutup pintunya dan inilah dudukku di hadapan-Mu. Ok dalam kisah berkenaan, Rabiah Al Adawiyah telah bertanya soalan tentang nafsu lelaki dan nafsu perempuan, dan lantas dijawab dgn yakin oleh Hasan Basri dan jawapan itu diterima sebagai TEPAT oleh Rabiah Al Adawiyah, bermakna kedua-dua mereka dan juga orang lain yang bersama pada ketika itu, malah mungkin semua orang Islam pada zaman itu Sufimasyhur Rabi'ah al-Adawiyah pernah mengutarakan, aku tidaklah menyembah-Nya karena takut neraka dan tidak pula karena berharap surga-Nya sehingga aku seperti orang yang buruk. Akan tetapi aku menyembah-Nya karena kecintaan dan kerinduanku pada-Nya (kitab Ihya Ulumuddin: 4/310). Apa yang disebutkan Rabi'ah tersebut tidak lain adalah Mujam al-Falsafi, Jamil Shaliba juga mengatakan, Mahabbah (cinta) adalah lawan dari kata al-Baghd (benci). 4. Al Mahabbah. dapat pula berarti al Wadud, yakni yang sangat pengasih atau penyayang. 5. Mahabbah . adalah kecenderungan hati kepada sesuatu yang menyenangkan. Jika kecenderungan itu semakin menguat, maka namanya bukan lagi . mahabbah PerjalananRabiah Al-Adawiyah di Tokopedia ∙ Promo Pengguna Baru ∙ Cicilan 0% ∙ Kurir Instan. BagiRabi'ah al-Adawiyah, Yang terpenting adalah keridhoan Allah. Dia merasa senang, apa bila semua yang dilakukan bisa membuat Allah ridho. Sorga dan neraka bagi Rabi'ah al-Adawiyah Adalah Tidak Penting. bahkan, sorga dan neraka yang dianggap banyak kalangan penting itu, malah justru dikhawatirkannya, bisa menjadi hijab, atau penghalang hubungan antara dia dengan Tuhannya, yaitu Allah. Termasuksoal ajaran cinta (mahabbah). Selain Jalaluddin Rumi, Rabi'ah al-Adawiyah adalah seorang sufi yang mengusung mazhab cinta. Cintanya kepada Allah begitu dalam dan kuat. Sehingga ia tidak mampu mencintai yang lainnya karena cintanya hanya untuk Allah. Rabi'ah menyembah Allah dengan dasar cinta (hubb), bukan karena takut atau harap KisahRabiah Al Adawiyah dalam versi ini, memberikan penjelasan sistem adat dalam budaya Bugis yang dikenal dengan istilah 'Pangaderreng'. Panggaderreng dapat diartikan sebagai keseluruhan norma yang meliputi bagaimana seseorang harus bertingkah laku terhadap sesama manusia dan terhadap pranata sosialnya secara timbal balik, dan yang aK7o. RābiĘžah al-AdawiyahBORN c. 713 â€ĸ Basra, IraqDIED c. 801 â€ĸ Basra, IraqIraqi religious leader; poet; mysticRābiĘžah al-Adawiyah was an eighth-century Muslim mystic, or a person concerned with religious mysteries. She is considered a saint of Islam, a virtuous and holy woman who was also able to perform miracles. RābiĘžah, a founding member of the branch of Islam called Sufism, established the principle of mystical love, or the pure love of Allah, as a path to knowing Allah. She rejected the notion that punishment or heavenly reward motivated religious devotion. RābiĘžah was also one of the most prominent early Sufi poets, leaving behind many verses and prayers that became part of the literature and oral tradition of Life of povertyRābiĘžah was born about in 713 ce to the Al-Atik tribe of Qays clan and died, by most accounts, in 801. Her name means "fourth daughter" in Arabic. Other variations of her name include RābiĘžah al-Qaysiyya and RābiĘžah al Basri RābiĘžah of Basra, after her hometown."If I adore You out of fear of Hell, burn me in Hell! / If I adore You out of desire for Paradise, / Lock me out of Paradise. / But if I adore You for Yourself alone, / Do not deny to me Your eternal beauty."Little was written about RābiĘžah during her lifetime. Much of the legend in existence comes from the thirteenth century and the writings of Sufi mystic and poet Farid al-Din Attar. In his Tadhkirat al-Awliya or Biographies of the Saints, he related the words of RābiĘžah, who left no written documents herself. Attar says that RābiĘžah was "on fire with love and longing" and that she was considered "an unquestioned authority to her contemporaries."Most sources note that RābiĘžpah was born into a poor household. Indeed, the family was so poor that on the night of RābiĘžah's birth, her father was sent out to beg for oil for the lamps. He had made a promise, however, to ask for assistance from no one but Allah and came back without any oil. That night, the Prophet Muhammad c. 570–632; see entry came to RābiĘžah's father in his sleep and told him not to worry, for his newborn daughter was destined to be a great Muslim saint. The prophet also told him that the local emir high official had failed to pray as a good Muslim should and that RābiĘžah's father should demand money from the emir as punishment. The money was supposedly paid, but it seems that this was the last bit of good luck the family had. Soon after, RābiĘžah's parents both died, famine struck Basra, her three older sisters moved away, and RābiĘžah was left on her time later RābiĘžah was sold into slavery as a house servant, although accounts vary as to how this occurred. Some sources claim she was traveling in a caravan when it was attacked by robbers and taken prisoner. Most others report that she was walking down the streets of Basra one day and was kidnapped. After RābiĘžah finished her daily chores, she would turn to prayers and meditation on Allah. Her religious calling was confirmed one day when she fell in the street and dislocated her wrist. She was trying to avoid allowing a stranger to see her without her veil, which was forbidden for pure Muslim women. Praying to Allah at that moment, she was answered with a voice that said on the day of reckoning she would be among the select to sit near Allah in this experience RābiĘžah became increasingly religious. She practiced asceticism, or self-denial, living in a very simple manner as a means of gaining higher spiritual powers. Some ascetics wore clothing that scratched their bodies in order to remind them of their duty to God. Some also fasted or ate very little. RābiĘžah, according to legend, fasted during the day while working and then prayed much of the night. On one such night, her master happened upon her in the midst of prayer. He saw her bathed in a golden light called the sakina, something like a halo that marks a Christian saint. The next day he gave RābiĘžah her freedom, and she left to meditate in the of meditationRābiĘžah soon established herself in the desert not far from Basra, where she lived a quiet life of prayer. She did not feel it necessary to have a teacher or other holy person direct her in her quest for Allah. Rather, she went directly to Allah for such teachings and inspiration. RābiĘžah found no comfort in organized religion with its officials and rituals. She once said of the Muslim House of God, the famed KaĘžaba, in Mecca, that she had no use for a house. It was the master of the house who interested belief in a direct knowledge of Allah placed her in the early ranks of mystical Sufis. From the time of the founding of the Islamic religion, there were believers who wanted a deeper experience than that provided by the simple adherence to the five pillars of Islam professing faith, saying prayers five times daily, giving support to the poor, fasting during Ramadan, and making pilgrimage to Mecca. These people, like RābiĘžah, wanted direct communication with Allah. They attempted to establish it through continual prayer, reading of the QurĘžan, and focusing on Allah. They fasted, did not engage in sex, and repented for their makes a SufiThe term Sufi most likely comes from the Arabic word for the coarse wool many of these ascetics used for their robes. It was first seen in the literature of Islam during the eighth century, during RābiĘžah's lifetime. As Sufism evolved, two main concepts came to dominate that branch of Islam tawakkul, or a total reliance on God, and dhikr, a continual remembrance of, or focusing on, Allah. Sufism combined elements of Christianity and Hinduism with its own distinctive Islamic Sufism had a harsh, gloomy tone. RābiĘžah, however, brought joy to the obedience to and love of Allah. RābiĘžah looked to Allah not only as a master but also as a friend and companion. She was the first Sufi to preach that love and only love was the key to the mystic path. She also scorned the reward and punishment system of heaven and hell. One of her poems, translated by Charles Upton and published in Doorkeeper of the Heart Versions of RābiĘžah, states, "I love God I have no time left / In which to hate the devil."RābiĘžah was also famous for a legend in which she was reportedly seen carrying a flaming torch in one hand and a bucket of water in the other. She explained in a poem published in Doorkeeper of the Heart "With these things I am going to set fire to heaven / And put out the flames of hell / So that voyagers to God can rip the veils / And see the real goal." RābiĘžah meant that a person should not worship Allah out of fear of hell or in hopes of heaven. One should worship because one loved Allah. The emotions of fear and hope were like veils that kept the true vision of Allah al-BasriRābiĘžah was a resident of the city of Basra, located in the far southeast of modern-day Iraq, near the Persian Gulf. Founded in 636, the city was an important military and trading site. Also called Bassorah, the city was mentioned in Thousand and One Nights as the place where Sinbad the Sailor began his voyages. The city was called the "Venice of the Middle East," because of the series of canals that once flowed through the city at high tide. Basra was also a center for the cultivation of dates and date palm RābiĘžah's lifetime, Basra was only about a century old, but was already famous in Islam as a home to many well-known Sufis. One of the most famous of these was Hasan al-Basri 642–728. Hasan was born one year after the death of the Prophet Muhammad and moved to Basra when it was still a primitive military encampment. As a young man this famous mystic scholar served as a soldier of Islam from 670 to 673 and participated in the conquest of eastern his return to Basra, Hasan quickly became a well-respected religious figure, preaching the importance of a permanent state of anxiety in the true believer. He claimed that such anxiousness was caused not by the certain knowledge of death, but by an uncertainty about what awaited a person after death. He also preached religious self-examination, which he said led to an avoidance of doing evil and an emphasis on doing good. Most importantly, Hasan believed that humans were responsible for their own actions and could not, therefore, blame such actions on the will of appeared in many of the legends dealing with RābiĘžah. Her belief in the importance of love was the opposite of Hasan's emphasis on fear and hope as twin motivators for the faithful Muslim. According to one legend, Hasan asks RābiĘžah to marry him. When he is unable to answer a series of questions she puts to him, she declines the offer. Another legend tells of how Hasan, seeing RābiĘžah near a lake, decides to display his miraculous powers. He throws a prayer rug onto the water and invites her to pray with him on it. Unimpressed, she responds, as quoted by Farid al-Din Attar, "Hasan, when you are showing off your spiritual goods in the worldly market, it should be things which your fellow men cannot display." Then she throws her prayer rug into the air and flies up to sit upon it, inviting him to join her. The old man simply looks at her sadly. She feels badly for him then, and says, "Hasan, what you did fishes can do, and what I did flies can do. But the real business is outside these tricks. One must apply oneself to the real business." There is little chance these tales are true, however, as RaābiĘžah was only eleven at the time of the death of the older Sufi master and had not yet become an teachingSuch wisdom won RābiĘžah followers, though she never developed a system of teaching. Later thinkers, however, found a logical organization in RābiĘžah's way of seeking Allah. This path began with tawba, or repentance, asking forgiveness of one's sins and turning from wrong actions to right ones. However, such repentance deals only with individual actions each sin is repented after being committed. Instead, RābiĘžah focused on a more general, divine tawba, seeing repentance as a gift from God, whom she called the Healer of Souls. "If I seek repentance myself," RābiĘžah taught, "I shall have need of repentance again."In order to achieve real "tawba," two qualities were needed sabr, or patience, and shukr, or gratitude. Patience, in turn, required an end to complaint and desire. RābiĘžah's prayers were free of desires and expressed a simple, grateful acceptance of whatever happened in put little emphasis on rajaĘž, or hope, and khawf, fear, as motivating factors on the path to spiritual enlightenment. Instead she focused on mahabba, or love, the ascetic principle offaqr, or poverty, and zuhd, the giving up of anything that distracted one from the path to Allah. She believed that all of this led to tawhid, or the joining of the personal self with RābiĘžah maintained a solitary existence throughout her life, she did have conversations with some of the other Muslim thinkers of the day and advised people who came to visit her. As an old woman, she possessed only a cracked jug, a mat made from stiff plants, and a brick that served as her pillow. She slept little at night, instead praying and meditating, and became angry with herself if she fell asleep for a short time and thus lost precious minutes or hours of devotion to Allah. In one tale, RābiĘžah refused to go out and admire nature on a fine spring day, saying that she would rather contemplate the beauty of Allah in the darkness of her dwelling. She never married, though it was reported she had many miraculousDespite her disregard for the rituals of Islam, RābiĘžah went on at least one pilgrimage to Mecca now in Saudi Arabia in order to visit the House of God, the KaĘžaba, the most sacred place in Islam. It also lies in the direction toward which Muslims face to pray each day. According to legend, while RābiĘžah was on her way to Mecca and traveling in the company of other pilgrims, her donkey died and she was left without transportation. She told the others to continue on their way, refusing their offers of help. She said she would rely solely on Allah for assistance. One version of this tale claimed the donkey came back to life after RābiĘžah prayed for a week. Another stated that the KaĘžaba actually came to her. She was unimpressed, however, saying that she wanted the master of the house and not simply the house. Though reportedly capable of performing miracles, RābiĘžah distrusted them and believed them to be the devil's the end of her long life, RābiĘžah became recognized as a saint. Islam, like many religions, has a high opinion of such holy people. They are called awliya, which literally means "Friends of Allah." Unlike the Catholic Church, Islam has no official process for conferring sainthood, but there are certain beliefs as to which conditions lead to sainthood. To be considered, a person must have a strong faith, follow the traditions laid out by the Prophet Muhammad, possess an excellent moral character, display an ability to perform certain miracles or marvels, and, finally, be accepted by other Muslims as a she died in 801, RābiĘžah passed into legend. Many stories have been told of her great deeds and the thousand times each day she knelt to pray. Movies have been made of her life. Her name is still used by followers of Islam to praise an exceptionally religious More InformationBOOKSal-Adawiyah, RābiĘžah. Doorkeeper of the Heart Versions of RābiĘžah. Translated by Charles Upton. Putney, VT Threshold Books, Farid al-Din. Muslim Saints and Mystics Episodes from the "Tadhkirat al-Awliya" "Memorial of the Saints". Translated by A. J. Arberry Ames, IA Omphaloskepsis, 2000. Also available online at Sakkakini, Widad, and Nabil Safwat. First Among Sufis The Life and Thought of RābiĘžah al-Adawiyah, the Woman Saint of Basra. London, England Octagon Press, Annemarie. "RābiĘžah al-Adawiyah." Encyclopedia of Religion. 2nd ed. Edited by Lindsay Jones. Detroit, MI Macmillan Reference USA, Margaret. Muslim Women Mystics The Life and Work of RābiĘžah and Other Women Mystics in Islam. Oxford, England Oneworld Publishing, SITESLochtefeld, James G. "Stunningly Brief Introduction to Sufism." Sufism. accessed on May 22, 2006."RābiĘžah al Basri." Poet Seers. accessed on May 22, 2006. Rabi’ah al-Adawiyah adalah sedikit dari ulama sufi perempuan yang sangat disegani dalam sejarah peradaban Islam. Pemikiran dan laku spiritualnya terus dikaji hingga hari ini. Berbagai macam kisah hidupnya pun sudah banyak dikupas dan ditulis dalam banyak buku. Termasuk soal ajaran cinta mahabbah. Selain Jalaluddin Rumi, Rabi’ah al-Adawiyah adalah seorang sufi yang mengusung mazhab cinta. Cintanya kepada Allah begitu dalam dan kuat. Sehingga ia tidak mampu mencintai yang lainnya karena cintanya hanya untuk Allah. Rabi’ah menyembah Allah dengan dasar cinta hubb, bukan karena takut atau harap roja’ dan khauf sebagaimana kebanyakan orang. Karena saking cintanya kepada Allah, Rabi’ah pernah berujar bahwa ia tidak mendambakan surga dan tidak takut kalau dimasukkan dikenal sebagai sebagai hamba yang sangat patuh dan taat kepada Allah. Bahkan, setiap hembusan nafasnya selalu diiringi dengan dzikir kepada Allah. Dalam urusan beribadah kepada Allah, ia adalah orang sangat istiqomah. Ketaatan yang begitu tinggi kepada Allah membuatnya dikenal sebagai waliyullah wali Allah. Memang, ada ungkapan bahwa hanya wali Allah yang mengetahui wali Allah lainnya la ya’riful wali illa wali. Tapi sebagaimana yang dikemukana oleh Syekh Zarruq, setidaknya ada tiga sifat yang dimiliki seorang wali; mengutamakan Allah, hatinya berpaling dari makhluk-Nya, dan berpegang tegug pada syariat Nabi Muhammad SAW dengan benar. Jika merujuk pada indikator ini, maka Rabi’ah adalah memang seorang ketiga tanda tersebut, seorang waliyullah biasanya’ memiliki karomah sesuatu yang berbeda dari sewajarnya. Dalam hal ini, Rabi’ah juga memiliki cerita dan kisah yang menggambarkan karomahnya. Berikut adalah sejumlah karomah yang dimiliki oleh Rabi’ah al-Adawiyah sebagaimana yang tercantum dalam buku Rabi’ah; Pergulatan Spiritual Perempuan karya Margaret Smith. Pertama, ketika Rabi’ah sedang jalan-jalan di sebuah pegununang, ada banyak binatang buas yang mendekatinya. Anehnya, binatang-binatang tersebut tidak menyerang Rabi’ah dan sangat jinak kepadanya. Mereka bermain bersama. Tiba-tiba, Hasan al-Basri muncul dan mendekati Rabi’ah. Seketika binatang-binatang buas tersebut menampakkan wajah buasnya dan pergi meninggalkan Hasan suatu hari Rabi’ah melakukan perjalanan haji ke baitullah Mekkah dengan menaiki unta. Di tengah jalan, unta yang dinaiki tersebut mati. Langsung saja, Rabi’ah berdoa kepada Allah. Tidak lama setelah itu, untanya hidup kembali. Rabi’ah pun melanjutkan perjalanan hingga sampai ke baitullah dan pulang dengan menaiki unta yang sama, unta yang pernah mati itu. Ketiga, suatu malam ada dua orang teman Rabi’ah yang datang kerumahnya. Mereka hendak melakukan diskusi bersama dengan Rabi’ah. Na’asnya, rumah Rabi’ah tidak memiliki lampu penerang. Lalu Rabi’ah meniup ujung jari-jarinya hingga kemudian mengeluarkan cahaya yang terang dan menerangi seluruh rumahnya sepanjang malam. Dengan demikian, mereka bisa berdiskusi hingga pagi hari. Keempat, pada suatu malam rumah Rabi’ah didatangi oleh tamu yang tidak diundang. Tamu tersebut hendak mencuri pakaian Rabi’ah. Ketika sudah mengangkut semua baju Rabi’ah dan hendak kabur, pencuri tersebut bingung karena tidak menemukan pintu keluar. Namun, ketika sang pencuri meletakkan barang curiannya tersebut, ia menemukan ada pintu keluar. Sang pencuri mengulang perbuatannya itu –mengambil dan meletakkan barang Rab’iah- sebanyak tujuh kali. Hingga akhirnya sang pencuri mendengar ada hatif suara tanpa rupa yang mengatakan; Wahai manusia, jangan engkau persulit dirimu sendiri. Perempuan ini telah mempercayakan dirinya kepada Kami selama bertahun-tahun. Setan pun tidak berani mendekatinya. Mendengan suara itu, pencuri tersebut lari terbirit-birit tanpa membawa secuil barangpun dari rumah Rabi’ suatu hari Hasan al-Basri mengajak Rabi’ah al-Adawiyah untuk salat di atas air. Rabi’ah merespons ajakan Hasan itu dengan sebuah jawaban yang ketus. Bagi Rabi’ah, adalah tidak perlu menunjukkan kemampuan spiritual untuk mencari kepopuleran duniawi. Tidak hanya itu, Rabi’ah kemudian melemparkan sajadahnya dan terbang di atasnya. Ia mengajak Hasan untuk naik di atas bersamanya sehingga lebih banyak orang yang mengetahuinya, daripada hanya sekedar salat di atas air. Hasan tahu jawaban yang diutarakan Rabi’ah itu adalah sindirian. Mendengar hal itu, Hasan hanya kelima cerita di atas, tentu masih banyak lagi kisah-kisah yang menceritakan tentang karomah Rabi’ah al-Adawiyah. Namun satu yang perlu diketahui bahwa karomah yang diberikan kepada Rabi’ah adalah tanda bahwa Allah memberkahinya. A Muchlishon Rochmat

kata kata rabiah al adawiyah