Ivan Aguéli: Difference between revisions
Faridshahi79 (talk | contribs) |
Faridshahi79 (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
It was in Paris sometime in 1893 that Aguéli was visited in a dream by the great Sufi [[Ibn Arabi|Muhyiddin Ibn al-Arabi]], who invited him to [[Islam]] and [[Sufism]].<ref>Gauffin II, p.143</ref> |
It was in Paris sometime in 1893 that Aguéli was visited in a dream by the great Sufi [[Ibn Arabi|Muhyiddin Ibn al-Arabi]], who invited him to [[Islam]] and [[Sufism]].<ref>Gauffin II, p.143</ref> |
||
During this period he was also active in French anarchist circles. In 1894 he was arrested for association with French [[anarchism|anarchists]] such as [[Maximilien Luce]] and [[Félix Fénéon]] and hence in the famous |
During this period he was also active in French anarchist circles. In 1894 he was arrested for association with French [[anarchism|anarchists]] such as [[Maximilien Luce]] and [[Félix Fénéon]] and hence in the famous "[[Trial of the thirty]]" sentenced to 4 months in the [[Mazas Prison|Mazas prison]]. While in prison Aguéli used his time to study the [[Qur'an|Koran]] and [[Oriental languages]]. |
||
Within months of his release in 1895 he left France for Egypt, where he lived until he returned to Paris in 1896.<ref>Gauffin I, pp.131</ref> |
Within months of his release in 1895 he left France for Egypt, where he lived until he returned to Paris in 1896.<ref>Gauffin I, pp.131</ref> |
Revision as of 18:32, 23 April 2008
Ivan Aguéli (born John Gustaf Agelii) (May 24, 1869 - October 1, 1917) also named Sheikh 'Abd al-Hadi Aqhili (Arabic: شيخ عبد الهادی عقیلی) upon his acceptance of Islam, was a Swedish-born wandering Sufi, painter and author. As a devotee of Ibn al-Arabi, his metaphysics applied to the study of Islamic esoterism and its similarities with other esoteric traditions of the world. He was the initiator of René Guénon into Sufism[1] and founder of the Parisian Al Akbariyya society. His art was a unique form of miniature Post-Impressionism where he used the blend of colours to create a sense of depth and distance. His unique style of art made him one of the founders of the Swedish contemporary art movement.
Ivan 'Abd al-Hadi Aguéli | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | October 1, 1917 | (aged 48)
Childhood and Youth
Ivan Aguéli was born John Gustaf Agelii in the small Swedish town of Sala in 1869, the son of veterinarian Johan Gabriel Agelii. Between the years 1879-1889 he conducted his studies in Gotland and Stockholm. Early on in his youth he began showing an exceptional artistic talent and a keen interest in religious mysticism.
In 1890 he adopted the name Ivan Aguéli, possibly under the influence of the writings of Fyodor Dostoyevsky and August Strindberg. The same year he travelled to Paris where he became the student of the Symbolist painter Émile Bernard, who was a close friend of Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin. Before returning to Sweden in 1890 he made a detour to London, where he met the Russian anarchist scholar Prince Kropotkin.[2]
Attending art school in Stockholm, he was taught by the Swedish artists Anders Zorn and Richard Bergh.
Ibn al-Arabi and the Holy Koran
Records kept at the Royal Library in Stockholm indicate that he first borrowed a Swedish translation of the Holy Koran on 11 March 1892.[3] Not only did he start reading about Islam, but Aguéli also began openly displaying Oriental character traits. At one famous occasion when visiting the exclusive café Du Nord in Stockholm he persuaded all his friends to settle down on the floor, to the great surprise of the waiters.[4]
By the end of 1892 he left Stockholm to return to Paris where he was drawn into the city's political turmoil.
Paris and Anarchism
I had read his books before I knew Arabic, I had seen his face before I knew his name... — Abd al-Hadi on Ibn al-Arabi
It was in Paris sometime in 1893 that Aguéli was visited in a dream by the great Sufi Muhyiddin Ibn al-Arabi, who invited him to Islam and Sufism.[5]
During this period he was also active in French anarchist circles. In 1894 he was arrested for association with French anarchists such as Maximilien Luce and Félix Fénéon and hence in the famous "Trial of the thirty" sentenced to 4 months in the Mazas prison. While in prison Aguéli used his time to study the Koran and Oriental languages.
Within months of his release in 1895 he left France for Egypt, where he lived until he returned to Paris in 1896.[6] It was later on in Paris, between 1898 and 1899, that Aguéli finally converted to Islam and adopted the name 'Abd al-Hadi (meaning the servant of the Guide).
Sri Lanka
In 1899 he moved to Colombo (in today's Sri Lanka) where he settled down in its Malay community and enrolled at a local Islamic school "in order to study the influence of Islam on other nations than the Arab..."[7] However, due to monetary difficulties, Aguéli was forced to return to Paris in 1900.[8]
Sufism
Amongst the Truths of our religion [Islam] is that the world is as Allah has wished it to be. Hence you should only demand perfection of yourself... — Abd al-Hadi
In 1902 Aguéli moved to Cairo and became one of the first Western Europeans to be officially enrolled at Al-Azhar University, where he studied Arabic and Islamic philosophy.[9] Living a life in utmost poverty, adopting Arab dress and learning perfect Arabic, Aguéli soon won many friends among the Egyptians.
In 1902 he was also initiated into the al-'Arabiyya Shadhiliyya Sufi order by the great Egyptian Shaykh 'Abd al-Rahman Ilaysh al-Kabir (1840-1921).[10] Considered one of the greatest Sufi masters in Cairo, Shaykh Ilaysh had become a close friend of the Algerian Sufi Emir Abd al-Qadir during an exile to Damascus at the end of the 19th Century.[11]
Throughout his life, Aguéli was also drawn to the Malamatiyya Sufi order, which by many historians is deemed to explain his sometimes bizarre and highly unconventional behaviour, such as the Deuil incident related below.
Shaykh Ilaysh also gave Aguéli the title Muqaddim of Europe. This title would be of utmost importance during his future travels.[12]
Il Convito
With the blessing of Shaykh Ilaysh, Aguéli and an Italian journalist and fellow-convert named Enrico Insabato (1878-1963) founded and contributed to an Italian magazine published in Cairo (1904-1913) named "Il Convito/An-Nadi". To avoid writing in the colonial languages French and English, the magazine was written in Italian. [13]
The aim of this publication was to help bridge the cultural gap between Christian Europe and the Islamic world. Aguéli and Insabato, acting on the instructions of Shaykh Ilaysh, wished to counter British and French influence in the Islamic world by gaining Italian support and simultaneously promote the Sufism of Ibn al-Arabi in Europe.[14]
The greatest achievement of their efforts for an Italian-Islamic dialogue was when Shaykh Ilaysh, in order to spite the British, dedicated a large mosque in Cairo to the memory of the Italian King Umberto I in 1906.
The political agenda of the magazine, its pro-Sufi stance and opposition to the British rule of Egypt meant that it was branded as anti-colonial and subsequently closed down by the British administration in 1913.
First World War and Spain
Aguéli's opinions were clearly against the British colonial administration and thus Lord Cromer, the British Consul-General of Egypt, came to suspect that he was an Ottoman spy and expelled him to Spain in 1916. Stranded in Spain, Aguéli lacked the funds to continue back to Sweden.
Admit, that a landscape can reflect a spiritual state ... Religion is decisive for the sun in the landscape of my within. See, that is why I love monotheism and the Arabian spirit — Abd al-Hadi
Aguéli sent numerous letters to friends back in Sweden pleading for money. However, his conversion to Islam and his constant poverty had made most of his Swedish friends distance themselves from him, and noone came to his aid. Finally, on October 3, 1917 his friend and patron Prince Eugén Bernadotte of Sweden sent a cheque of 1,000 Spanish pesetas to the Swedish consulate in order to help him back, but it was too late. In the early morning hours of October 1, 1917 Aguéli had tragically been killed by a train at a rail crossing in the village of L'Hospitalet de Llobregat outside Barcelona.[15]
As the exact circumstances of Aguéli's death were never established, numerous theories have been discussed by Swedish historians. Since he in his last letter home had complained about the suspicion and hostility he had encountered in rural Spain, there have been suggestions that he might have been placed on the tracks by a xenophobic mob. However, the most plausible theory is that since Aguéli throughout his life suffered from an illness which made him totally deaf in cold weather, it is possible that he simply had not heard the train advancing while attempting to cross the tracks.
Upon learning of Aguéli's death, Prince Eugén ordered the cheque to be given to his impoverished mother, who had spent all her savings supporting her son. The Prince also commanded the Foreign Ministry to under his personal supervision repatriate and preserve all of Aguéli's belongings left behind in Barcelona, Cairo and Paris. These belongings were then passed on for safekeeping at the archives of the Swedish National Museum of Fine Arts in Stockholm.[16]
One can never be precise enough, simple enough, deep enough — Abd al-Hadi
At an exhibition in 1920 nearly 200 of Aguéli's recovered paintings were put on display at Prince Eugén's residence at Waldemarsudde. After the Prince and his nephew Crown Prince Gustav Adolf Bernadotte (future King Gustav VI Adolf of Sweden) had purchased their favourites, the rest were sold to a fascinated audience.[17]
Aguéli, René Guénon and the Al Akbariyya
René Guénon and Aguéli began their friendship in 1910 while Guénon was the editor of La Gnose, an esoteric magazine in Paris.[18] It was while writing numerous articles on metaphysics, Sufism and Taoism that Aguéli seems to have awakened Guénon’s interest in Islam. As a Moqaddim of the Shadhiliyya order and Shaykh Ilaysh’s personal representative in Europe Aguéli founded the secret Sufi Al Akbariyya society and then proceeded to initiate Guénon into Sufi Islam somtime between 1911-1912.[19]
Abdul Hadi, as Aguéli was known in the Islamic world and later in Europe, must be given his due as a pioneer in the serious introduction of Sufism to the West — Seyyed Hossein Nasr
It is believed that the Al Akbariyya society founded by Aguéli remained highly secretive. Guénon was not openly Muslim until 1930 when he moved to Cairo, following in Aguéli's footsteps.
It is also worth noting that Guénon's book, Orient et Occident (1924) deals extensively with the metaphysical similarities between Taoism and Sufism which was the subject Aguéli had already touched upon in La Gnose as early as in January 1911 in an article named Pages dedicated to Mercury, which subsuquently became his most famous article.[20] Subsequently, many scholars have chosen to follow Aguéli's lead, such as Toshihiko Izutsu’s Sufism and Taoism (published in 1984).
Aguéli and Swedenborg
As a teenager in Stockholm, Aguéli was introduced to the teachings of the 18th century Swedish mystic Emanuel Swedenborg.[21] The metaphysical teachings of Swedenborg and his unitarian approach to the Christian concept of divinity made a lasting impression on Aguéli and prepared him for his conversion to Islam later on.
It appears that although Aguéli was the first one to explore similarities between Sufi and Swedenborgian metaphysics, this was much later extensively written about by Henry Corbin in his book Swedenborg and Esoteric Islam (published in 1995).
Aguéli the Activist: Animal Rights and Feminism
As the son of a veterinarian, Aguéli had a very profound love for animals and he also participated in active protests.
In one famous incident in year 1900, outside a bull-fighting arena in the Parisian suburb of of Deuil, he shot and wounded a Spanish matador with a revolver. During the trial he vehemently defended his rights and refused to apologise. Rallying the entire French animal-rights movement he was only given a suspended sentence.[22]
While living in Cairo and in Colombo, Aguéli was known for taking care of many stray street cats. One of his favourite cats was a one-eyed, Sri Lankese street-cat he picked up in Colombo called "Mabruka" which he also took with him on his travels.
During his lifetime he also developed a close friendship with the equally eccentric French poet and animal-rights activist Marie Huot (1846 - 1930).
Aguéli was also outspoken on the issue of women's rights. In a letter to Marie Huot, he even states that Ibn al-Arabi and Sufism in many ways promote feminism, because of the existence of female Sufi saints. In one of his letters he also calls the Swedish writer August Strindberg "an idiot" for claiming that women are inferior to men.
Aguéli and Art
My art will one day explain the eccentricities of my life... — Abd al-Hadi
In 1912, while living in Paris, Aguéli began writing articles on art theory and contemporary art. One of his most exceptional pieces is an article, published in Paris, which deals with the Cubism of Pablo Picasso.[23] The article awakened the interest of the famous Parisian art critic Guillaume Appollinaire, who attempted in vain to get Aguéli to cooperate with him in a series of art publications.[24]
Simplicity is not only the principle of all art, but of all spiritual activity whatsoever — Abd al-Hadi
Later, Aguéli would also attempt to arrange for his patron Prince Eugéne to meet Picasso and Matisse.[25]
There are many accounts of Aguéli's enigmatic and bohemian life.
An eyewitness account from a visit by Aguéli to the Swedish Baltic Sea island of Gotland sometime between 1909-1910 reads as follows:
"...then there was a peculiar appearance in the street. A man with a dark beard and dark clothes, dark-blue velvet trousers, a red belt of silk carrying a dagger, a white shirt and on the head a fez, walking with a slight limp. The clothes were worn-out and dusty..."[26]
Aguéli's Heritage
A man with a dark beard and dark clothes, dark-blue velvet trousers, a red belt of silk carrying a dagger, a white shirt and on the head a fez, walking with a slight limp. The clothes were worn-out and dusty — Eyewitness from Gotland
In Sweden, Aguéli is admired as one of its most prominent contemporary painters and his paintings are considered to be national treasures. Most of his paintings are found at the Swedish National Museum of Fine arts, the Museum of Modern Art and the Aguéli museum.
Aguélis prominence in Sweden was clearly shown in 1969 when, at the centenary of his birth, six of his paintings were printed as stamps by the Swedish Postal Service.
Aguéli's remains were kept in Barcelona, Spain until 1981, when he was brought back to Sweden and re-buried with Islamic rites in his hometown of Sala. In Sala there is also the Aguéli museum, the Aguéli monument, the Aguéli street and the large Aguéli park dedicated to his memory.
In 2006, under the patronage of King Carl XVI Gustav of Sweden the largest ever Aguéli exhibition was once again held at Waldemarsudde in Stockholm, this time also incorporating his Muslim heritage, with various lectures on Sufism.
After his death, Sufis have referred to Aguéli by the epithet of Abd al-Hadi "Noor-u-Shimaal" (meaning Abd al-Hadi "the Light of the North") for being the first ever officially named representative of a Sufi order to bring Sufism to Western Europe and Scandinavia.
Although it cannot be said that Aguéli himself was a perennialist or a traditionalist as such, his ideas constituted a certain proto-traditionalism that was later on clarified and established by Guénon and Schuon. Spiritually, the traditionalist teachings of René Guénon and Frithjof Schuon have been upheld in Sweden by Swedish Sufi traditionalist scholars such as Kurt Almqvist and Tage Lindbom.
Quotes
- My fatherland, is the universe...[27]
- Simplicity is not only the principle of all art, but of all spiritual activity whatsoever.
- One can never be precise enough, simple enough, deep enough.
- Admit, that a landscape can reflect a spiritual state ... Religion is decisive for the sun in the landscape of my within. See, that is why I love monotheism and the Arabian spirit.
- Amongst the Truths of our religion [Islam] is that the world is as Allah has wished it to be. Hence you should only demand perfection of yourself...[28]
- My art will one day explain the eccentricities of my life.
- Give me only bread and water, but let me paint!
Bibliography
Swedish:
- Almqvist, Kurt; I tjänst hos det enda - ur René Guénons verk, Natur och Kultur, 1977.
- Almqvist, Kurt; Ordet är dig nära. Om uppenbarelsen i hjärtat och i religionerna, Delsbo, 1994.
- Brummer, Hans-Erik (red.); Ivan Aguéli, Stockholm, 2006.
- Ekelöf, Gunnar; Ivan Aguéli, 1944.
- Gauffin, Axel; Ivan Aguéli - Människan, mystikern, målaren I-II, Sveriges Allmänna Konstförenings Publikation, 1940-41.
- Wessel, Viveka; Ivan Aguéli - Porträtt av en rymd, 1988.
English:
- Chacornac, Paul; The Simple Life of Réne Guénon, pp.31-37, Sophia Perennis. (It has to be noted that Chacornac has depended on secondary sources for his information on Aguéli, and that hence his description of Aguéli is deeply flawed.)
- Hatina, Meir; Where East Meets West: Sufism as a Lever for Cultural Rapprochement, pp.389-409, Volume 39, International Journal of Middle East Studies, Cambridge University Press, 2007.
- Nasr, Seyyed Hossein; Sufism: Love and Wisdom, page X of foreword, Worldwisdom Books, 2006.
- Turner, Jade (ed.); The Grove Dictionary of Art, pp.465-466, Grove, 1996.
- Waterfield, Robin; Réne Guénon and the Future of the West, pp.28-30, Sophia Perennis.
French:
- Abdul-Hâdi (John Gustav Agelii, dit Ivan Aguéli); Écrits pour La Gnose, comprenant la traduction de l'arabe du Traité de l'Unité, Archè, 1988.
References
- ^ Waterfield, p.29
- ^ Gauffin I, p.67
- ^ Gauffin I, p.73
- ^ Gauffin I, p.75
- ^ Gauffin II, p.143
- ^ Gauffin I, pp.131
- ^ Gauffin II, p.44
- ^ Gauffin II, pp.42
- ^ Gauffin II, pp.121
- ^ Almqvist, pp.17-19
- ^ Gauffin II, p.143
- ^ Gauffin II, p.143
- ^ See article by Hatina, pp.389-409
- ^ Gauffin II, p.191-192
- ^ Brummer, pp.63-64
- ^ Brummer, p.65
- ^ Brummer, pp.67-73
- ^ Almqvist, p.19
- ^ Almqvist, p.17-19
- ^ Waterfield p.30. For the article itself, see Écrits pour La Gnose.
- ^ Gauffin I, p.30
- ^ Gauffin II, pp.93-98
- ^ Gauffin, pp.218-219
- ^ Brummer, pp.124-125
- ^ Brummer, p.125
- ^ Gauffin II, p.179
- ^ Gauffin II, p.96
- ^ Gauffin II, p.191
See also
- Al Akbariyya
- Kurt Almqvist
- Titus Burckhardt
- Ashk Dahlén
- René Guénon
- Tage Lindbom
- Martin Lings
- Malamatiyya
- Seyyed Hossein Nasr
- Frithjof Schuon
- Shadhiliyya
External links
Part of a series on Islam Sufism |
---|
Islam portal |