Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Khoja Akhmet Yassawi

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School
  
Sufism

Role
  
Poet

Region
  
Central Asia

Name
  
Khoja Yassawi

Parents
  
Shaikh Ibrahim

Main interests
  
Fiqh, Hadith

Khoja Akhmet Yassawi testentrutarihvelludiAhmedYasayimjpg
Died
  
1166, Turkistan, Kazakhstan

Books
  
Divan-i Hikmet, Divine Wisdom, Diuani khikmet: aqyl kitaby, Khikmet zhinaq

Similar People
  
Haji Bektash Veli, Rumi, Yunus Emre, Mahmud al‑Kashgari, Edip Ahmet Yukneki

Khoja Akhmed Yassawi (Arabic: خوجة أحمد‎) (Uzbek: Xoja Ahmad Yasaviy; Kazakh: Қozha ahmet Yasaui, Turkmen: Hoja Ahmet Yasawy, Turkish: Hoca Ahmet Yesevi or Ahmed ibn-i Ibrahim ibn-i Ilyas Yesevi also spelled Ahmad Yasawi, Ahmet Yasevi, Ahmed Yesevi or Ata Yesevi) (born in Sayram in 1093, and died in 1166 in Hazrat-e Turkestan, both cities now in Kazakhstan), was a Turkic poet and Sufi (Muslim mystic), an early mystic who exerted a powerful influence on the development of mystical orders throughout the Turkic-speaking world. Yasavi is currently the earliest known Turkic poet who composed poetry in a Turkic dialect. Ahmed Yesevi was a pioneer of popular mysticism, founded the first Turkic Tariqah (order), the Yasaviyya (Yeseviye), which very quickly spread over the Turkic-speaking areas. He was an Hanafi scholar like his murshid Abu Yaqub Yusuf Hamdani.

Contents

International symposium dedicated to Khoja Akhmet Yassawi held in Istanbul - Kazakh TV


Background

Yassawi was born to Shaykh Ibrahim. At age seven, when he was orphaned by the loss of his father, Yasawi was raised by another spiritual father, Arslan Baba. By age seven, Ahmad Yasawi had already advanced through a series of high spiritual stages and then, under the direction of Arslan Baba, the young Ahmad reached a high level of maturity and slowly began to win fame from every quarter. His father Shaikh Ibrahim had already been renowned in that region for performing countless feats and many legends were told of him. Consequently, it was recognized that, with respect to his lineage as well, this quiet and unassuming young boy, who always listened to his elder sister, held a spiritually important position.

Ahmad Yassawi later moved to Bukhara and followed his studies with the well known Abu Yaqub Yusuf Hamdani. Upon the demise of Khawaja Yusuf Hamdani, first `Abd Allah-i Barki and then Shaykh Hassan-i Andaki became the head of the Yusuf Hamdani's dervish lodge. Khawaja Ahmad-i Yassawi became the head murshid of Naqshbandiyyah Tariqah when Shaykh Hassan-i Andaki died in 1160. He then turned this position to Abdul Khaliq Gajadwani as a consequence of Yusuf Hamdani's previous advice and moved to Turkistan in order to spread Islam in Turkistan.

Influence

Khoja Akhmet Yassawi made considerable efforts to spread Islam throughout Central Asia and had numerous students in the region. Yasawi's poems created a new genre of religious folk poetry in Central Asian Turkic literature and influenced many religious poets in the following countries. Yassawi made the city of Yasi into the major centre of learning for the Kazakh steppes, then retired to a life of contemplation aged 63. He dug himself an underground cell where he spent the rest of his life. Turkish scholar Hasan Basri Cantay noted that "It was a Seljuk king who brought Rumi, the great Sufi poet, to Konya; and it was in Seljuq times that Ahmad Yesevi, another great Sufi, lived and taught. The influence of those two remarkable teachers has continued to the present." Yasavi is also mentioned by Ernest Scott (pseudonym) as a member of the Khwajagan Sufis.

Legacy

A mausoleum was later built on the site of his grave by Tamerlane the Great in the city (today called Turkistan). The Yasav’iyyah Tariqah which he founded continued to be influential for several centuries afterwards, with the Yasavi Sayyid Ata Sheikhs holding a prominent position at the court of Bukhara into the 19th century. In the Yasaviyya Sufis one comes across the greatest number of the shamanistic elements compared to other Sufi Orders.

The first Kazakh-Turkish university, Ahmet Yesevi University, and liceum, Hoca Ahmed Yesevi Lisesi, were named in his honor.

Naqshbandi Sufi Idries Shah mentions Ahmed Yasavi's lineage in his "The Book of the Book". Yasavi Sufis are also present in Kashmir. They came to Kashmir from Turkistan via Silk Route with Hazrat Amir-e-Kabir Mir Syed Ali Hamdani. A historical background of the Yasavi order can be found in the book SILSLAY YASAVI, written by Peerzada Mohammad Shafi Yasavi, eldest member of the Yasavi family in Kashmir. The book is written in Urdu.

References

Khoja Akhmet Yassawi Wikipedia