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BEDIUZZAMAN SAID NURSI: THE GREAT SCHOLAR
OF ISLAM WHO
LEARNED AND TAUGHT IN THE SCHOOL OF YUSUF
Throughout history, Muslims were punished with imprisonment by the unbelievers
for their good works in the cause of Allah, and for teaching that He is
the only Lord. Somehow, breaking the law was not the reason for their
imprisonment. Those who fear that Muslims might spread good morality among
the people, and that, thereby, their evil might become exposed, and their
personal ambitions placed in jeopardy, have always slandered the believers,
and provoked the public and justice establishment against them.
Similar circumstances repeated themselves throughout Bediuzzaman's life.
He and his students have always been falsely accused, even though they
merely worked tirelessly to teach the morality of the Qur'an, without
political ambitions or for seeking status, but calling people to the kind
of peace and contentment contrary to the irreligious ideas that were being
propagated, and always fighting against those who sought to inhibit the
spread of the morality of Islam. As a result, they were investigated and
imprisoned. In each instance, their innocence was established. Nevertheless,
in the meantime, the prisons they were kept in became schools as they
had been for Yusuf (as), and their sincerity, love for one another, and
determination were enhanced and strengthened.
The treatment Bediuzzaman was exposed to, and the accusations he was
assailed with, were the fulfillment of the verses of the Qur'an. Even
if his life is only briefly examined, it becomes apparent that he experienced
circumstances similar to the sincere believers had, as revealed in the
Qur'an, and that he responded with a level of morality much like them.
For this reason, it will be of benefit to consider his life.
The Life Of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi
Said Nursi is one of the greatest Islamic scholars and thinkers of recent
times. He was born in 1873 in the Nurs village, of the Hizan district
in Bitlis, and he died in 1960, in Sanliurfa.
He acquired advanced knowledge of the sciences, as well as religious
insight, when he was still young, and he was noticed for his sharp mind,
strong memory, and superior abilities at an early age. He began to be
called Bediuzzaman for these qualities, meaning "the beauty of the age."
He never shied from any effort to exemplify the morality of the Qur'an,
which is why he was constantly slandered and oppressed by the Masons and
other enemies of Islam.
He came to Istanbul in the year 1907, in order to solve what he considered
to be the urgent problem of education in the east, by lobbying the authorities
for the foundation of a university, which he called Medresetü'z-Zehra,
where religious as well as modern sciences would be taught. His profound
knowledge gained him the scientific community's recognition here within
a short period of time. He published articles in various newspapers and
magazines, and participated in the Liberation constitutionalism arguments
of the time. He played a pacifying role in March 31 rebellion of 1909,
but was arrested by order of the state of emergency courts, as a consequence
of false allegations, and was freed in due course.
Following these events, he returned to the east and formed a militia
with his students during the First World War. Bediuzzaman was taken prisoner
of war in Siberia, and after 3 years in captivity, he escaped and returned
to Istanbul via Leningrad, Warsaw, Vienna and Sofia.
In Istanbul, he was received with great respect by the scientific community
and by government officials. He was appointed to the office of Dar al
Hikmat-al Islamiya, and from the income he earned, he published his books,
and distributed them free of charge. During the occupation of Istanbul,
he published a pamphlet called Hutuvat-ý Sitte warning of the occupying
forces' true intentions. He rejected the Fatwa by the Sheikh al-Islam,
obtained under duress, and to the effect that the uprising in Anatolia
was an unlawful rebellion, and instead defended and supported it. His
attitude won the approval of the national assembly formed in Anatolia,
after which he was invited to Ankara.
When he arrived in Ankara in 1922, he was received with an official state
ceremony. He was offered the posts of minister for religious affairs,
Member of Parliament, and preacher for the eastern regions, but he rejected
all such offers. When he realized the hostility of some members of parliament
towards Islam, he presented to and read out his 10 articles in parliament.
When the Sheikh Said uprising was taking place, during the time of his
retreat in a cave in Van, he was arrested and taken first to Burdur, and
then to Barla, a district of Isparta, even though he was in no way involved
in the plot. There, he began to write his books, which sold a total of
600,000 copies. Until the end of his life, he was persecuted by those
who disapproved of his ideas, and was taken to court in 1935 in Eskishehir,
in 1943 in Denizli, in 1947 in Afyon, and in 1952 in Istanbul. He was
also kept under house arrest in Kastamonu and Emirdag. He spent 30 years
of his life in prison or exile, and strove to complete his master work
Risale-i Nur, under these circumstances. He completed the work, the best
Tafsir (Commentary) of his era, in 1952. Following the case brought against
him in the Denizli courts, which lasted 8 years, the Risale-i Nur was
examined by the advisory commission of the ministry of religious affairs,
which concluded that it was a work of faith, and sanctioned its publication.
He was therefore found not guilty of the charges. After his release, the
Risale-i Nur was published in the new alphabet by the Democratic Party's
Member of Parliament for Isparta, Tahsin Tola, by the order of Adnan Menderes.
His life of 87 years, spent in the cause of Islam, ended in the 1960.
The fact that Bediuzzaman spent a major part of his life either in prison,
exile or house arrest, proves the determination and patience of his students.
They had dedicated themselves to the service of Islam, and yet were always
accused by certain segments of power of trying to undermine the state.
These segments tried to discredit them in the public eye through slanderous
accusations, though they had only been working of the good of Islam. For
instance, these segments, in control of some media and other means of
access to power, accused Said Nursi and his students of forming secret
religious organizations, of fighting against the regime, and of trying
to destroy the republic's core values. Consequently, Said Nursi and 120
of his followers were apprehended and, according to some journalists of
the era, "bundled handcuffed into trucks as if they had started a revolution,"
taken to the Eskishehir High Criminal Court.
It must be stated at this point that throughout these proceedings, the
Turkish police and the army acted sympathetically towards Bediuzzaman
and his Nur students. Through the provocation by some irreligious groups,
however, they were forced to do their duty, but without failing to state
that they are on the side of truth. For instance, the commander of the
military unit that was ordered to transport Bediuzzaman and 120 of his
followers to Eskishehir, on the way allowed them to do their daily prayers,
removing their handcuffs for this purpose.
Another Islamic thinker, Necip Fazil Kisakurek wrote the following about
the apprehension of Bediuzzaman and the Nur students:
Despite that in the raid everything of relevance
belonging to Bediuzzaman and his followers was secured, there is nothing
that would indict them. Even so, they did not free them but sent him with
15 of his followers to prison as if a consolation to a charge that warranted
the death penalty… 105 students are found not guilty.28
The Eskishehir court convicted Bediuzzaman and sentenced him to 11 months
in prison. During his term in the Eskishehir prison, Bediuzzaman endured
a very difficult time. He was punished with one month solitary confinement,
and was exposed to many other cruel practices, some of which are related
by various sources as follows:
Said Nursi was in the Eskishehir prison with
120 of his followers where he was taken into solitary confinement and
he and his students were subjected to various forms of cruelty and torture.
One of his students, Zubeyir Gunduzalp states that they were not given
food for 12 days.29
They were looking at us as if we had already
been sentenced to the death penalty. No visitors were allowed, saying
that anyone who spoke to us would be sentenced to death as well and at
night it was not possible to find sleep because of the filth, cockroaches
and bedbugs.30
When Bediuzzaman was released from the Eskishehir prison, he was held
under house arrest, in a house opposite the police station in Kastamonu.
Eight years later, the Denizli court sentenced him to 20 months in prison,
and he was then exiled to Emirdag.
Throughout this period, he was subjected to countless instances of torture
and cruelty, and poisoned more than once. Bediuzzaman, who was by then
suffering from old age and ill-health, was deliberately kept in cold,
damp and poorly ventilated cells. Said Nursi relates his prison days as
follows:
Then they arrested me during the most intensely
cold days of winter on some trite pretext, and put me into solitary confinement
in prison in a large and extremely cold ward, leaving me two days without
a stove. Having been accustomed to light my stove several times a day
in my small room, always having live coals in the brazier, with my illness
and weakness I was only able to endure it with difficulty.31
Bediuzzaman continues by saying that, as we related in the previous chapter,
he found consolation in the thought of seeing other inmates entering the
Islamic faith.
Allegations Against Bediuzzaman
Certain segments of power that disliked the idea of spiritual values
gaining in popularity, used the same age-old tactics against Said Nursi,
and incited the public, as well as the authorities, against him and his
followers, through a comprehensive smear campaign. Various newspapers
of the era waged a propaganda war against him and his students by printing
untrue stories. Some individuals were bought with money to offer false
evidence against them. However, each time the courts found Bediuzzaman
and his students not guilty of the charges brought against them, those
who concocted these ill-conceived slanderous charges were humiliated in
public.
When these slanderous accusations are examined, it becomes clear that
they are much like those assailed against the believers of the past, such
as "he is abusing religion for personal gain," "he is misleading people,"
"he is corrupt," "he is mad," "those who believe him are naïve." These
are just some of the accusations brought wrongly against the believers
as pointed out in the Qur'an.
In the past, every believer encountered the opposition of his community's
leading personalities, as every believer will encounter such opposition
in the future. As the following verse of the Qur'an reveals, "We never
sent a warner into any city without the affluent people in it saying,
'We reject what you have been sent with.'" (Surah Saba', 34). This is
Allah's unchanging law and encountering such opposition is proof for believers
of being on the right path. The fact that Bediuzzaman and his students
were confronted by the same accusation and slanders that the Qur'an speaks
of shows that they followed the right path and that their efforts were
effective. All believers who work for the cause of the morality of the
Qur'an will encounter such accusations. Allah reveals this reality in
the following way:
Or did you suppose that you would enter the Garden without
facing the same as those who came before you? … (Surat al-Baqara, 214)
Truly, a matter which needs to be considered by all Muslims, is that
prophets and believers in the past repeatedly experienced cruelty and
false accusations. For this reason, it will be beneficial for Muslims
to consider the numerous attacks, conspiracies and accusations Bediuzzaman
was exposed to in light of verses of the Qur'an.
Slander Against Bediuzzaman Said Nursi: Abusing Religion
For The Purpose Of Personal Gain
One of the gravest accusations assailed against Bediuzzaman was that
he sought to obtain material gain or prestige from his activities. Bediuzzaman
was accused of fleecing his students, and that he was seeking to satisfy
his leadership complex, though he lived a simple and modest life, owned
no property, and in his own words, it was his chosen profession to be
dissatisfied with himself. We see in the verses of the Qur'an that believers
encountered similar accusations in the past:
The ruling circle of those of his [Nuh's] people who
disbelieved said, "This is nothing but a human being like yourselves who
simply wants to gain ascendancy over you…" (Surat al-Muminun, 24)
They said [to Musa], "Have you come to us to turn us
from what we found our fathers doing, and to gain greatness in the land?
We do not believe you." (Surah Yunus, 78)
Bediuzzaman's exemplary life and the works he left behind would suggest
that these accusations were invented and wholly unfounded.
Bediuzzaman's Followers Were Belittled
A propaganda campaign was launched against the students of Bediuzzaman,
who had listened to him and tried to learn from him. Those who accused
them of being naïve, stupid and blind followers of him, showed that they
shared the same ill-intent as unbelievers of the past. The Qur'an reveals
that the unbelievers responded with the following to those who called
them onto the right path:
The ruling circle of those of his [Nuh's] people who
disbelieved said, "We do not see you as anything but a human being like
ourselves. We do not see anyone following you but the lowest of us, unthinkingly.
We do not see you as superior to us. On the contrary, we consider you
to be liars." (Surah Hud, 27)
When they are told, "Believe in the way that the people
believe," they say, "What! Are we to believe in the way that fools believe?"
No indeed! They are the fools, but they do not know it. (Surat al-Baqara,
13)
Accusation of Madness
One of fiercest accusations believers had to face in history was that
of madness. Bediuzzaman, who worked for the spread of the Islamic morality,
was accused many times of the same. The following are some verses in this
regard:
He said, "This Messenger, who has been sent to you, is
mad." (Surat ash-Shu'ara', 27)
Before them the people of Nuh denied the truth. They
denied Our servant, saying, "He is madman," and he was driven away with
jeers. (Surat al-Qamar, 9)
The example of this in Bediuzzaman's life
took place in 1908, when he was taken to the Yildiz military court, for
contesting religious subjects, and where a commission of five doctors,
2 Jewish, 1 Greek, 1 Armenian, 1 Turkish, certified him insane. Subsequently,
he was sent to a mental hospital where, following his examination, the
psychiatrist said: "if this man is mad, then there are no sane people
in the world."32
Bediuzzaman was later frequently alleged to be insane by the media, then
under the influence of certain circles. However, everyone who knew him,
friend or foe, knew him to be a great scholar, and a man of intelligence,
insight and sincerity. The great masterwork on matters of faith and truth
of the Qur'an he left behind confirms his true state of mind.
The Allegation That He Was Misleading His Followers
Those far from the religious morality have always accused believers of
misleading those they call to the right path. Even though they themselves
have gone astray, they accuse those who abide by Allah's book, demonstrating
that it is with the religion itself that they are at war. Allah had revealed:
They said, "These two magicians desire by their magic
to expel you from your land and abolish your most excellent way of life."
(Surah Ta-Ha, 63)
Accusation Of Heresy
One of the allegations against Bediuzzaman was that he was promoting
a religion other than Islam and that he had invented his own religion.
The purpose behind these allegations was to incite the public and religious
but ignorant people against him. The verses of the Qur'an reveal that
the same allegations were made against believers in the past:
The ruling circle of his [Nuh's] people said, "We see
you in flagrant error." (Surat al-A'raf, 60)
For this purpose, they misinterpreted some
of Bediuzzaman's practices and exploited them in their propaganda war
against him. Bediuzzaman writes, in one of his letters, that incited by
a secret committee, some naïve Imams accused him of not attending the
Friday prayers and not growing a beard.33 In response
to such provocations, Bediuzzaman always made the appropriate statements
and his innocence was thus established.
Plots Against Bediuzzaman: Conspiracy And Slander
Nuh said, "My Lord, they have disobeyed me and followed
those whose wealth and children have only increased them in loss." They
have hatched a mighty plot. (Surah Nuh, 21-22)
As the Prophet Nuh (as) states, the unbelievers offered every effort
to hinder the believers. Conspiracies and slander are some of these which
Bediuzzaman also had to deal with.
One of the conspiracies against him is related
in the book titled, Bilinmeyen Taraflariyla Bediuzzaman Said Nursi (Bediuzzaman
Said Nursi As We Don't Know Him). The book says that one of the conspirators
wrote on a piece of paper "Said's servant bought Raki (an alcholic drink)
for him," and attempted to collect signatures from the drunken people
on this piece of paper in a store that sells alcohol,34
to discredit Bediuzzaman in the Muslim community.
Bediuzzaman relates another example of slanderous attacks on him in one
of his letters. According to a man who held public office, Bediuzzaman
was partying all night long, consumed tray loads of Baklava (a Turkish
dessert), and had prostitutes and dishonorable people frequent his place.
Bediuzzaman responded:
"My door was locked from the inside as well
the outside at nights and a guard was standing outside my door all night
by the order of the evil man who slandered me."35
As we have seen, these people accused Bediuzzaman of drunkeness and womanizing,
in order to discredit him in the eye of the public. However, it must not
be forgotten that Allah reveals in the Qur'an that such conspiracies cannot
harm the believers, and that all will conclude positively for them:
Those before them plotted but all plotting belongs to
Allah. He knows what each self earns, and the disbelievers will soon know
who has the Ultimate Abode. (Surat ar-Ra'd, 42)
Bediuzzaman was cleared of all these allegations, while those who slandered
him were publicly humiliated.
His Exile
The ruling circle of those of his people who were arrogant
said, "We will drive you out of our city, Shu'ayb, you and those who believe
along with you, unless you return to our religion." He [Shu'ayb] said,
"What, even though we detest it?" (Surat al-A'raf, 88)
They said, "Lut, if you do not desist you will be expelled."
(Surat ash- Shu'ara', 167)
Allah reveals in many verses of the Qur'an, as the ones quoted above,
that believers were forced into exile. Bediuzzaman was punished with exile
on more than one occasion. Certain circles, like the Freemasons, that
could not confront him on an ideological basis, found the solution in
having him exiled to remote regions, such as Barla, Kastamonu, Emirdag
and Isparta.
He was ordered to remote corners in towns and villages, he was kept under
inhumane conditions, and he was forbidden to leave the village of his
exile, in order to prevent contact with the outside world. Two days before
his death, he arrived in Urfa quite ill, but still they sought to evict
him from there nonetheless. With the intervention of his students, and
other conscientious people, he was allowed to remain there, but he finally
died.
Harassed by Hypocrites
One of the methods used to stop Bediuzzaman and his students was to have
hypocrites infiltrate their community. It was the responsibility of these
individuals to inform certain irreligious circles of what went on among
them, and to provide material for propaganda by the media they controlled.
An example of this was the serial article "Inanc Somuruculeri" (Belief
Exploitatives) published in 1964 by the newspaper Cumhuriyet. Yilmaz Cetiner
assumed a religious identity in order to infiltrate the Nur community.
He was with Bediuzzaman on a number of occasions, and was to produce the
most devastating smear campaign against the Nur community. Bediuzzaman
speaks in the following way about a spy among them:
There was an evil spy among us who worked
to have the students of Nur imprisoned. This man one day admitted freely
that he had found nothing to secure their imprisonment and said if he
were to find something he would most definitely have them imprisoned.
Two days later, he himself did something that got him imprisoned for two
years.36
Bediuzzaman never compromised in his struggle, in spite of all the conspiracies,
attacks and slander waged against him. What was done onto him and his
students served only to strengthen their determination. As the Qur'an
promised, the unbelievers' conspiracies were foiled. Allah states in these
verses that He will thwart the plots of the unbelievers:
They desire to extinguish Allah's Light with their mouths.
But Allah refuses to do other than perfect His Light, even though the
disbelievers detest it. It is He Who sent His Messenger with guidance
and the Religion of Truth to exalt it over every other religion, even
though the idolaters detest it. (Surat at-Tawba, 32-33)
Our Word was given before to Our servants, the Messengers,
that they would certainly be helped. (Surat as-Saffat, 171-172)
Bediuzzaman is one of the believers who were wronged like many before
him. However, it must be acknowledged that, every injustice, every hardship,
every hurtful word one would rather not hear, and every slander assailed
against the believers, is ultimately in their favor. For as long as the
believer remains patient and submissive to his Lord, his standing in Paradise
will be improved. Allah has promised victory on Earth to believers, and
for this very reason, and regardless of how the unbelievers try otherwise,
their efforts will come to naught, and return upon them in the form of
suffering in Hell.
Other than Bediuzzaman, Islamic scholars like Imam-i A'zam, Imam Ahmad
ibn Hanbal were sent to the School of Yusuf, subjected to suffering, cruelty
and even torture, and attempts were made to inhibit them such as arrest
and exile. Bediuzzaman stated the following about Islamic scholars who
defied hardship in the School of Yusuf:
It also occurred to my heart that since a
great interpreter of the Law like Imam-i A'zam had suffered imprisonment;
and a supreme mujahid like Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal had been severely tortured
in prison for the sake of a single matter of the Qur'an, and had endured
it in perfect patience, not remaining silent about the matter in question;
and numerous religious leaders and scholars had been completely patient
and unshaken, offering thanks, despite suffering torments far greater
than yours; for sure you are obliged to offer endless thanks for the very
few difficulties you suffer, although the reward and gain you receive
is great for those many truths of the Qur'an.37
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