IAM: Institute for Applied Meditation

The Origins of Heart Rhythm Meditation

Hazrat Inayat Khan was a Sufi sage born in India in 1882, who came to America in 1910. He lived thereafter in London, England during WWI, and then in Suresnes, a suburb of Paris, France, where he formed his school. He died in India in 1927.

"Peace comes when self is in harmony with the rhythm of the heart. This is accomplished in silent meditation when one enters into the life-stream in the heart so that it takes up the proper pulsation."

"If there is any form of concentration to be used in meditation, it consists in first getting into the rhythm of the heart, by watching the heartbeats, feeling them and harmonizing with them. Then one centers all feeling in the physical heart and out of feeling selects love, and out of love, Divine Love."

What is a Sufi?

A Sufi is a seeker of Truth, in any tradition or outside of any tradition. Most Sufis today have never heard the term. Those who know the name want to claim it for their own sect, but it cannot be narrowed or contained for it is the essence of wisdom; it comes from pure experience and it abides by no dogma or rules.

"Sufism originated from the ancient school of Egyptian mysteries, a school which existed even before Abraham, the father of three great religions: Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. Those who know Sufism from superficial writings, and, sometimes, from translations of the Arabic or Persian literature, are apt to think that Sufism is the mystical side of Islam. In reality, it is not true. Sufism existed before Mohammed, before Jesus Christ, before Abraham."

"Sufism is not a religion nor a philosophy, it is neither deism nor atheism, nor is it a moral, nor a special kind of mysticism, being free from the usual religious sectarianism. If ever it could be called a religion, it would only be as a religion of love, harmony, and beauty."   More...

Hazrat Inayat Khan

Hazrat

For a database of the teachings of Hazrat Inayat Khan, click Database.

 

 

 

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