Poet Robert Bly on The Great Persian Poets ; Hafez and Rumi ; Interviewed by Bill Moyers

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  • čas přidán 10. 10. 2011
  • "Rumi and Hafez have been the guiding light, Rumi especially, of American poetry for the last five or ten years. But also it seems to me that if we're ...criticizing the Muslim world so much, we should be able to give thanks for the genius that is there...So, this is Persian poetry-14th century. "The foods turned out by the factors of time and space are not all that great. Bring some wine because good things of this world are not all that great." Robert Bly,
    American poet

Komentáře • 333

  • @shawn19700
    @shawn19700 Před 11 lety +44

    im Persian , and i can say Farsi is one of strongest language for making poem

    • @zeldaaachen7200
      @zeldaaachen7200 Před 4 lety +1

      shawn shawni why ?

    • @maccybear8093
      @maccybear8093 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@zeldaaachen7200 because Iranians are a nation of emotions, for good, and the bad. They feel life, and all of life, like no other.

    • @thecrimsondragon9744
      @thecrimsondragon9744 Před 26 dny

      ​@@zeldaaachen7200 the language seems desihned for poetry. The words are beautiful, the sounds melodic. Persian is one of the sweetest, easy flowing languages.

  • @parysatissh6978
    @parysatissh6978 Před 4 lety +12

    My beautiful country needs to be respected!🇮🇷❤

  • @yaqubleis6311
    @yaqubleis6311 Před 9 lety +136

    Persian poetry is the best poetry in history

    • @monikasahar
      @monikasahar Před 5 lety

      Yaqub Leis wrong. It's Arabic

    • @mahtabgolshanebrahimi494
      @mahtabgolshanebrahimi494 Před 5 lety +3

      @Yousef Ghaneemah shut up arab. Persian is most beautiful Language.. Arabic is så Hard

    • @mahtabgolshanebrahimi494
      @mahtabgolshanebrahimi494 Před 5 lety

      @Yousef Ghaneemah are arvaye amat..i dont know why you arabs stampled every thing from persian in your name.. Every book in the history wrote Rumi is Persian and The name is The Persian golf but you arabs put arab name on it..big lier you are realy.. Boro baba

    • @mahtabgolshanebrahimi494
      @mahtabgolshanebrahimi494 Před 5 lety

      @Yousef Ghaneemah sure, så persians empire is lier too but arabs didnt leaved in the Sahara of course .he he he he ..just gå to the museum så you see you just talking bullskit

    • @mahtabgolshanebrahimi494
      @mahtabgolshanebrahimi494 Před 5 lety

      @@monikasahar 😂😂😂😂

  • @leonardomax2941
    @leonardomax2941 Před 4 lety +13

    The video shows not only Hafez's tomb, the one which has the blue ceramic's with white writing on it is Sa'di's tomb. I've been on both, it is amazing at night a lot of young people chilling around the poet's graves, singing their poems, having a good time. Persian culture is very deep, rich and spiritual.

  • @mohsensadst7494
    @mohsensadst7494 Před 5 lety +6

    I'm Iranian,,I can sit and read the rumi poets fore thosends years,,l sower to romis god!!!😇

  • @elliefarhangfar5584
    @elliefarhangfar5584 Před 9 lety +5

    He is close to my heart. Joy of LIFE I see in his poems.

  • @tobik.2849
    @tobik.2849 Před rokem +4

    What a great soul Bly is. I love how passionate he reads those poems and I find his gesticulation very funny 😂

  • @alibadeh9468
    @alibadeh9468 Před 10 lety +3

    Arrived in Orland I n 1968. protested against war, saw Mr.Bly once, loved his message. love Hafez and Rumi. It is the message that lasts not the medium.

  • @madhusingh6266
    @madhusingh6266 Před 4 lety +4

    Great to hear Bly. How souls can connect to souls!

  • @retf054ewte3
    @retf054ewte3 Před 11 měsíci +2

    what a treat to hear about our Hafez from these scholars. with love from Iran

  • @juliawoodman7916
    @juliawoodman7916 Před 9 lety +11

    I so love this...... a great poet is also a philosopher and a lover of the world and its people, and also one prepared to stand up and say when things are wrong and yet carry on when it doesn't seem to make any difference, but it does, it does - and even though they may "steal sugar" they really only do it through love in the first place..... love of sharing beauty, thought, love itself..... joy, and I am so grateful for what is shared of his own work and of all the other poets work he also shares, and the difference it has made to my life, which was following that dance anyway, but the shared joy always enriches everything.

  • @vampireducks1622
    @vampireducks1622 Před 3 lety +2

    The purity and tenderness of a love between two old men... Beautiful.

  • @Savalandan
    @Savalandan Před 10 lety +3

    Wonderful! There are so much still to learn and enjoy! Thank you!

  • @djhannas
    @djhannas Před 7 lety +8

    Such a great guy! He gets it very well

  • @jasannaservices
    @jasannaservices Před 11 lety +3

    Thanks your Robert Bly for sweet water to a thirsty soul!

  • @desmondsusu
    @desmondsusu Před 5 lety +2

    What an inspiring watch. Feel nourished.

  • @MDeeb-lv3xi
    @MDeeb-lv3xi Před 5 lety +5

    For Those Arguing About The Origin of Rumi Here:
    With due respect, the history of Afghanistan as a state began in 1747 with its establishment by Ahmad Shah Durrani. Prior to that, Afghanistan was part of Iran; that is the reason that they speak Persian or “Parsi / Farsi”. Plus, if you refer to Rumi’s Lamenting poems regarding the Mongols attacking his land Iran, then you will stop arguing on this topic.
    In any case, it is great that many like to own a piece of Rumi; this is a reflection of his amazing achievement and influence. Rumi’s love, spiritual beauty and enlightenment is shared not only by all Persian language speaking brothers and sisters in neighboring countries, but by the whole planet: HE BELONGS TO HUMANITY IN GENERAL.

  • @nonexist
    @nonexist Před 12 lety +3

    Amazingly enlightening.

  • @benlogan100
    @benlogan100 Před 11 lety +1

    A couple of my favorite men. Super conversation.

  • @AfsanehYouTube
    @AfsanehYouTube Před 8 lety +11

    HAFEZ + WALT WHITMAN: At 3:40 - Lovely description of Bly going to the Persian mystic's tomb, with children around the tomb. Bly wonders why little children don't go to the tomb of Walt Whitman. Q: What do you think it would mean if we went to the graves of our poets? "You would bring the poets into the heart; instead of having them in your head in graduate school. And that's what you do with children. YOu bring children in and they get associated with their heart, when they're very small, and then they can feel it all their lives!" Some of the loveliest sentences I've heard in a long, long time. You feel poetry, you don't study it. Takes a poet to understand that.

    • @rbettsx
      @rbettsx Před 8 lety +3

      Takes a culture to understand that. I grew up in Iran. I miss that culture terribly. For all else that happens there, that culture will not be brought down.

    • @AfsanehYouTube
      @AfsanehYouTube Před 8 lety +1

      ***** Culture and Freedom/Politics are separate entities, and I do agree Robin!

  • @charlesmugleston6144
    @charlesmugleston6144 Před 5 lety +2

    Poets delight in poetry - Light delights in Light... Genius awakens Genius. Edward FitzGerald translator and adapter of The Ruba'iya't of Omar Khayya'm commented "Hafez and Khayya'm ring like true metal". How true. Our thanks to Robert Bly. Charles Mugleston Omar Khayyam Theatre Company

  • @amsh1366
    @amsh1366 Před 9 lety +1

    thanks for sharing

  • @nizarjiwan6970
    @nizarjiwan6970 Před 2 měsíci

    Islamic poetry has something useful to contribute to our soul. This link explains how Rumi’s poetry helps us achieve the goal. Thanks to you.

  • @dreamland7078
    @dreamland7078 Před 3 lety +1

    He's such a lovely and wise man

  • @faza553
    @faza553 Před 10 lety +14

    Rumi was born in Balkh, Afghanistan, September 30, 1207. His family emigrated to Konya, Turkey, fleeing the threat of invading Mongol armies, sometime between 1215 and 1220. Rumi means "from Roman Anatolia." (Coleman Barks). He wrote in Persian.
    Both poets are generally described by westerners as from the Islamic tradition, although Sufis by definition are not card-carrying members of orthodoxy.
    Extensive learning & wisdom is necessary for open, accepting hearts & minds - poetic messages are universal.

    • @mikezandi2756
      @mikezandi2756 Před 10 lety +7

      No his name is Moulana Jalal Al deen AR Rumi Al Balkhi for the city of Balkh in northern Afghanistan. In following his teacher he left the Balkh and ended in Turkey. He has nothing to do with Turkey except the foot print that he left upon Turkish Sufism. All his work Mathnavi, Divan Shams, and Feyh wa Mafeeh were in Persian. His son Baha'aldeen Mohammad was also born in Balkh. Turkey just out smarted Iran and Afghanistan by claiming him and register him as Turkish due to place of his death.

    • @faza553
      @faza553 Před 10 lety

      MIke Zandi Yes you are correct about Rumi's birthplace. I've revised my initial input. Other accounts of his life will vary. It's my understanding that Shams of Tabriz was directed to & traveled to Konya seeking Rumi as someone who could "endure my company."
      But none of this matters in the enjoyment of his work.

    • @halaambe
      @halaambe Před 10 lety +9

      Fazia A
      balkh is just another province of the seljuk empire at the time. it used to be part of the persian empire. afghan pashto, tajiks and kurds are all persian people. from central asia to iraq (kurdistan) is the domain of persian and turkic peoples. rumi was persian.

    • @faza553
      @faza553 Před 10 lety +3

      Haleem AH
      Thanks.
      Know your labels, but lay them aside when you deal with the beauty of the human soul - C.G. Jung

    • @mikezandi2756
      @mikezandi2756 Před 10 lety

      +Fazia A well said in one of his poem talking about his state of consciousness he says I am neither an Arab or a tuurk,neither Muslim or Hindu, neither Christian or Jew, neither Persian or a Roman and .....

  • @joetylerdale
    @joetylerdale Před 12 lety

    I run from the deep, even though I need it so. Wonderful video.

  • @alibadeh9468
    @alibadeh9468 Před 10 lety

    arrived in US in 1968. It was the war time. We resisted and talked about piece. I saw Mr. Bly once, loved his message. it is the same today. peace, hate war and killing. Love him more for his understanding of Hafez and Rumi. The message is love and lovers.

  • @RadmilaNastic
    @RadmilaNastic Před 11 lety +1

    Lovely man.

  • @fractally
    @fractally Před 5 lety +12

    Cannot believe how many ignorant people are commenting here.
    Rumi and Hafiz are both SUFI poets---all their poems are centered in the Sufi philosophy and mystical viewpoint.
    For those that say they should not be referred to by their spiritual path---
    It is like saying Mathew, Mark, Luke and John are Israeli writers, not Christian...
    Perhaps if the people commenting here BOTHERED to read up on the Sufi tradition, they would know that the term SUFI POET is the correct term for both men---every poem they write celebrates their mystical vision of love, harmony, beauty and unity.

  • @fjooyande1945
    @fjooyande1945 Před 7 lety +4

    one of the essential part of sufism ( included Rumi, attar ,hafez ,sadi ...) is that they don't have a religion - they love all prophets but don't believed in religions because they believe always in any time there is a man like Moses, christ or mohammad so they just belive in him / her that now is here and alive - I love this poet all the persian love this man

  • @maritlebliss
    @maritlebliss Před rokem

    that last Row poem found me several months ago. ❤

  • @neiljohnson7914
    @neiljohnson7914 Před 4 lety +1

    From my novel Shards Of Divinities
    Shifting Paradigms
    Ever since I was a child I always felt like a citizen of a different realm.
    I have sown the seeds of that realm in my childhood,
    but I can only know the fruits of the reaping once I cross over,
    Into that other realm.
    I was born in the shadow of an old paradigm,
    But I always could see the light.
    I was born seeing a new paradigm,
    As others have before me.
    But in our own time we are at best tolerated,
    And at worst despised.
    This has always been the case,
    And will continue to be so until the end of time.
    Yet the end of time will give birth to a new beginning,
    The navel of Creation is a loop in Eternity.
    The leaf is the mother of the tree..
    When I stepped out of the shadow,
    My new-found realization caused me to become intoxicated.
    It was with a sudden intellectual and spiritual freedom that need not serve any institution,
    That bows to no tradition,
    And is unencumbered with the artificial constraints of a paradigm constructed by man,
    And which serves only man and not the divine.
    I realized I could heartily drink from this overflowing cup of Truth without following the customs and etiquette of a society steeped in the stinking garbage heap of idolatry.
    It is a heap composed of the rotting bodies of a pantheon of ideologies I once cherished as the fundamental, indivisible principle of Creation,
    But which I now realized could not possibly be at the root of the magnificent beauty and unity of this edifice.
    This epiphany was an unexpected visitor,
    And when it came knocking on my door I greeted it,
    As a lover I had only ever known in the recesses of my soul,
    And who now appeared before me as flesh and blood.
    This epiphany was a rose bush whose seed I planted long ago,
    and which now burst the earth after a long and arduous winter in the unknowing, white-eyed womb of Creation.
    And when I reached for its tempting yet thorny flower I felt a piercing pain shooting through my soul,
    And I came face to face with the awe-full ONE,
    The great El-Shaddai,
    The principle of Creation,
    The great veiled One,
    The Truth overflowing my cup.
    Deep in my soul an unspeaking voice woke from an eternal slumber,
    And I at once came to know that land for which I had always felt a kinship,
    That realm of which I am a citizen,
    Until the end of time.

  • @StunningDesigns
    @StunningDesigns Před 12 lety

    Wow!

  • @beverlybutton1406
    @beverlybutton1406 Před 4 lety

    Fabulous

  • @hochang927
    @hochang927 Před 7 lety +3

    Khwāja Shams-ud-Dīn Muḥammad Ḥāfeẓ-e Shīrāzī (Persian: خواجه شمس‌‌الدین محمد حافظ شیرازی‎‎), known by his pen name Hafez (حافظ Ḥāfeẓ 'the memorizer; the (safe) keeper'; 1315-1390), was a Persian poet who "lauded the joys of love and wine but also targeted religious hypocrisy."[1] His collected works are regarded as a pinnacle of Persian literature and are to be found in the homes of most people in Iran, who learn his poems by heart and still use them as proverbs and sayings. His life and poems have been the subject of much analysis, commentary and interpretation, influencing post-14th century Persian writing more than any other author.[2][3]

  • @59farshad
    @59farshad Před 10 lety

    Lovely *************

  • @potdog1000
    @potdog1000 Před 5 lety

    I am just discovering Rumi, I heard Hafiz years ago but I'd forgotten about him

  • @maureennelson4513
    @maureennelson4513 Před rokem +1

    Thank you the Soul named Robert Bly.
    Rumi: The Edge of the Roof
    " I don't like it here, I want to go back.
    According to the old Knowers
    If you're absent from the one you love
    Even for one second that ruins the whole thing!
    There must be someone... just to find
    One sign of the other world in this town
    Would be enough.
    You know the great Chinese Simurgh bird
    Got caught in this net...
    And what can I do? I'm only a wren.
    My desire-body, don't come
    Strolling over this way.
    Sit where you are, that's a good place.
    When you want dessert, you choose something rich.
    In wine, you look for what is clear and firm.
    What is the rest? The rest is mirages,
    And blurry pictures, and milk mixed with water.
    The rest is self hatred, and mocking other people, and bombing.
    So just be quiet and sit down.
    The reason is: you are drunk,
    And this is the edge of the roof."
    from, The Soul Is Here For Its Own Joy, Sacred Poems From Many Cultures, edited by Robert Bly

  • @abstractentities354
    @abstractentities354 Před rokem

    This is what we lack in 2023. Where did we lose ourselves?

  • @maryb6074
    @maryb6074 Před 5 lety +7

    Rumi and Hafez are Iranian/ as westerns called persian poet who was escaping mongol and Turk warmongers and seeking peace.

    • @michellek4349
      @michellek4349 Před 5 lety +7

      Yousef Ghaneemah nope. he was Persian. He was born in Khorasan.

    • @AliHuffman
      @AliHuffman Před 4 lety +1

      @Yousef Ghaneemah lol

  • @yacovmitchenko1490
    @yacovmitchenko1490 Před 6 lety +2

    If you enjoy Persian poetry, you may be interested in my book that's due to be published this year (probably in October, perhaps a little sooner). Here are some sample poems (found on Wordpress):
    1. Amsterdam Park
    2. Meditation
    3. Shattered Mirror
    4. It Used to Matter
    5. My Wife
    6. Everywhere
    7. Human Consciousness
    8. The More and Emptiness
    9. I Dreamt Once...
    10. The Whole Artwork
    11. Lucid Streams of Deference
    12. The Young Man
    13. More Beautiful Differences
    14. Rain
    15. Red Cottage Days
    16. Lovely Sun
    17. The Proof
    18. Purify Purify
    19. You Sit, Face Averted
    20. You're Lying There Still Asleep
    21. Poem For a Friend
    22. Poem For the World
    23. Picture of Me
    24. Come and Tell Me, Death
    25. Companion of Christmas Trees
    26. Pain
    27. Blossoming From the Ground of Your Truth
    28. Billowing Rain on a Sunday
    29. I Have Been Moved

  • @KaberleeTV
    @KaberleeTV Před 12 lety +2

    This guy is a wise sage much like Obi won or Yoda, and let us not forget Qui Gon Jin.

  • @franksaremi1
    @franksaremi1 Před 11 lety +6

    HAFEZ AND RUMI ARE PERSIAN AND THEY BELONG TO EVERY ONE ON THIS WORLD , BUTT IT HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH MOSLEM AND THEIR BOOKS ARE IN FARSI . IT IS LIKE THIS FOR EXAMPLE

    • @Che18335
      @Che18335 Před 3 lety

      You know that Rumi was called Maulana for a reason?

  • @petrustella
    @petrustella Před 11 lety +2

    Brilliant, although very little (in time, not in love...) about Rumi and Hafiz...

  • @suzanneziai9127
    @suzanneziai9127 Před 8 lety +15

    Rather shocked by the comment ISLAMIC POET!! nothing against Islam but had never heard a poet related to a religion!!!!!

    • @abbasyaqobi67
      @abbasyaqobi67 Před 8 lety +5

      +Suzanne Ziai lol read about Rumi

    • @maryb6074
      @maryb6074 Před 5 lety +1

      Hehe, Has anyone called Shekspear a Christian writer? 😂

    • @morugascorpion6021
      @morugascorpion6021 Před 5 lety

      Suzanne Ziai read rumi and hafez before commenting or else you sound ignorant.

    • @morugascorpion6021
      @morugascorpion6021 Před 5 lety +2

      Mary B that’s because Shakespeare used many pagan themes in his lit, many were comedies, many lines were super raunchy, etc. He didn’t use Christian terminology much or themes. At his age, the Greco Roman world started coming into fashion after a thousand years of suppression by the Christian world, thanks to the Islamic world for preserving the texts for 1000 years.

  • @hooman1122
    @hooman1122 Před 4 lety

    🙏❤

  • @HNewnan
    @HNewnan Před 9 lety +1

    A Bill Moyer Interview with Grace Lee Boggs and Robert Bly. "Poet Robert Bly on The Great Persian Poets ; Hafez and Rumi ; Interviewed by Bill Moyers"
    "Uploaded on 11 Oct 2011
    "Rumi and Hafez have been the guiding light, Rumi especially, of American poetry for the last five or ten years. But also it seems to me that if we're ...criticizing the Muslim world so much, we should be able to give thanks for the genius that is there...So, this is Persian poetry-14th century. "The foods turned out by the factors of time and space are not all that great. Bring some wine because good things of this world are not all that great." Robert Bly,
    American poet" czcams.com/video/e9by9LB-tqY/video.html

  • @monikawinkelmann4222
    @monikawinkelmann4222 Před 2 měsíci

    Impressive!
    Clear political stand, so rare!

  • @francismausley7239
    @francismausley7239 Před 5 lety +1

    "It is the immediate influence of the Holy Spirit that causes words such as these (lines from the poet Hafiz) to stream from the tongue of poets, the significance of which they themselves are oftentimes unable to apprehend." - The Bab, The Dawnbreakers, Baha'i Faith

    • @AliRzv313
      @AliRzv313 Před 2 lety

      Hafez and Rumi poetry has nothing to do with a z!oin!st cult made by jews named Bahaism!

  • @birdlynn417
    @birdlynn417 Před 10 lety +1

    "Just tell Bush to sit down and be quiet" . ha! So glad to find Robert Bly again!

  • @KeyhaneBishomar
    @KeyhaneBishomar Před 4 lety +1

    The persian poems explaining the world arround them with a cultural and faithful language, which is because of their birthplace and their persian lifestyle, thoughts and culture, you cant call them muslim poems, although they even talked about Islam in their poems, they talked about holy spirits in their poems. You always see a similar culture in all of persian poetry which has not match anywhere else.

  • @abbasyaqobi67
    @abbasyaqobi67 Před 8 lety

    does anyone know what book he is reading from? Is it published?

  • @shadowmourne302
    @shadowmourne302 Před 4 lety +2

    rumi isn't turkey, he just died in turkey , he's a persian poet who born in balkh "Afghanistan" and grow up in great persian country include "Afghanistan, iraq, some parts of turkey, Pakistan, some part of Turkmenistan and Tajikistan" so he's a persian poet who can't say is from turkey or iran or Afghanistan. he was only persian.

  • @mahtabgolshanebrahimi494
    @mahtabgolshanebrahimi494 Před 5 lety +1

    For you Who faithing about Mulana Rumi Who is not Persian, , just read his poem all are made in the beautiful persians Language nothing else, no arabic no turkish not one single Word in turkish or arabic, just read his poem you find ut he is a pure Persian PAYANDE IRAN ZAMIN SARZAMINE ARYA

  • @delta1o1
    @delta1o1 Před 6 lety

    To those saying he was a persian poet and not an islamic one... he was both. He was a Sufi saint who referred to the Qur'an about as much as you'd expect a christian writer to incorporate Christian allegory and themes in their works. The translations you've read have been secularized with a lot of the Islamic references removed since most Americans would not understand or respond effectively to his prose otherwise. You'd have to read it in the original persian in order to see this.
    newyorker(dot)com/books/page-turner/the-erasure-of-islam-from-the-poetry-of-rumi

  • @morugascorpion6021
    @morugascorpion6021 Před 5 lety +1

    People in the comments section enraged by rumi and hafez being called “Islamic poets”, obviously never read rumi, hafez, Kabir etc. They frequently cite the Quran and Prophet Muhammad. It’s amusing to see how people jump to comment on something they know little about and is so irrelevant. Bly makes such beautiful points and quotes things that ought to inspire reflection for the soul. It sad to see people so filled with hate. They badly need to open a book or two of Rumi! ☺️ 📚

    • @nomesa7374
      @nomesa7374 Před 4 lety

      I did read them. They got some influences. But these poets teachings are rooted in Zarathustra and Mani and Mithraism teachings! Kishe-Mehr!

    • @Dark-pagan
      @Dark-pagan Před rokem

      شاعرانی اوکراینی که شعر به زبان روسی میخوانند ایا روس هستند؟

  • @hamoonkhalili8022
    @hamoonkhalili8022 Před 11 lety +4

    "Wherever I am, let me be, the sky is mine," by Sohrab Sepehri.
    So ya'll shut up. It doesn't matter what you'r fighting over...

  • @mna1171
    @mna1171 Před 7 lety +4

    Mr. Moyer, I am very disappointed that you call Rumi and Hafez as 'Islamic poets'. Would you call Shakespear and Chaucer as Christian poet? No, they are called English poets. Rumi and Hafez were Persian poets, their religion was secondary in their poems.
    I am repeating the comment below and thank you for this comment i don't understand why west media scared of using persian word for our poets or scientist. persian people they kept their culture and language for thousands of years but unfortunately west media for hundreds of years trying to introduce our scientist and poets to the world as a "Islamic".
    They need to educate their people truthfully,thanks to social media to give this opportunity to people to find out the truth.

  • @KeyvanGeula
    @KeyvanGeula Před 10 lety

    i like the notion of going to the third world meaning to the land of Beloved as Baha'u'llah refers to.

    • @mikezandi2756
      @mikezandi2756 Před 10 lety

      Your Bahaullah is one of the many mystic who followed the path of Islamic mysticism. With one exception the other reached the beloved and got drown in him while your Baha'ullah got lost in the seventh spheres called "Barahoot" and thought that all reality stems from him instead of one through God. The poor fellow did not have teacher nor he used one so he did not have the proper readiness. Hafiz says: Do not follow this path without a guide there are great danger fear of being mislead. What happened to him has happened to other mystics as well but with proper discipline and acts of worship and servitude they overcame it while your Baha'ullah proclaimed prophet-hood.

  • @snigdhajyotidas3057
    @snigdhajyotidas3057 Před 5 lety

    I want someone to look at me the way Bill Moyers looks at Bly at around the 8:40 mark

  • @shayanibrahim4127
    @shayanibrahim4127 Před 5 lety +1

    you guys leave all the great things said here and focus on the " islamic poet " part. Enjoy and rejoice that people love and praise our poetry

  • @OwlsEyelash
    @OwlsEyelash Před 9 lety +148

    Mr. Moyer, I am very disappointed that you call Rumi and Hafez as 'Islamic poets'. Would you call Shakespear and Chaucer as Christian poet? No, they are called English poets. Rumi and Hafez were Persian poets, their religion was secondary in their poems.

    • @ElJaf17
      @ElJaf17 Před 8 lety +17

      +OwlsEyelash They were devout Sufi practitioners. So much so that the poetry is 100% Sufi principle, values, decree etc etc. If their words resonate with you I advise you to study further. Maybe you will find more light :)

    • @OwlsEyelash
      @OwlsEyelash Před 8 lety +11

      Ellias Jafari Thank you for this historical and literally lesson. I was completely in dark who Rumi and Hafiz are. The only reason I used their names in my original comment was because I had read those names somewhere!!! You seriously think that I do not know who these great poets were and am not familiar with their poetry?? Then, how did I comment on them? You should think before you write. I do not need your advice and I do not need you to tell me to see the light!

    • @ElJaf17
      @ElJaf17 Před 8 lety +14

      That's a shame. As I began to read that I thought you were being quite humble. Sadly your words here are as spicy as your original comment.
      You simply cannot claim you know Rumi or Hafiz or their works and yet dismiss their work being Islamic. As for the "light" comment, I was not being condescending but simply saying that if you enjoyed the little taste you have had of these sages' works (we know it is minimal from your lack of knowledge) then keep reading because there is a lot more to enjoy and learn. We are all pupils to the end of this life and the next.
      I didn't intend to seem condescending and I do not claim to know all there is to know about these sages. But I do know they were Sufi masters, that is more than simply a title of "poet". Moreover, Sufism is a branch of Islam that focuses on the mystical nature of Allah and the Creation. So, indeed Rumi's and Hafez's poetry can be termed Islamic poetry, however you will find many Muslims who are not Sufis dismissing their works as being Islamic because they feel Sufis are non-believers. Such people would say these works are specifically Sufi rather than Islamic.
      Almost all ancient Persian art is created by Sufis, especially song and dance and poetry. We Iranians breathe poetry, too :)
      Peace

    • @OwlsEyelash
      @OwlsEyelash Před 8 lety +4

      Ellias Jafari Again, you annoying little person who always need to tell others you know so much. How is it that you assume others do not know and you need to lecture them all the time? How is it that you always assume that the person you are debating with does not know who Sufis are, what sufism is, and what poetry is. You want to appear humble, you want to appear that you have achieved a higher level but you cannot help being condescending at the end. Here is your own words, `` I was not being condescending but simply saying that if you enjoyed the little taste you have had of these sages' works (we know it is minimal from your lack of knowledge) ``. Enough said. You might have read Rumi and Hafez but you have achieved not much. Pretentious and condescending
      .
      *There is no worse sickness for the soul, O you who are proud, than this pretense of perfection. The heart and eyes must bleed a lot before self-complacency falls away.* (Rumi)

    • @ElJaf17
      @ElJaf17 Před 8 lety +4

      you are being very selective with your attention to my words. i could now quote to highlight a weakness of yours, too, but my time is worth more than that. its amazing how you say i "always" this and that as though youve known me a long time haha. strange person

  • @jeremiahstith2697
    @jeremiahstith2697 Před 10 lety +1

    Interesting, "the greedy soul."

  • @smerdyakovkb9782
    @smerdyakovkb9782 Před 6 lety +7

    All this on the question of calling Rumi an "Islamic poet" is frustrating and distracting from a good upload. First of all, no, nobody is going to call Shakespeare or Chaucer "Christian" poets, but they'll call Julian of Norwich or George Herbert that. You can also call Milton a Christian poet, though someone might want to specify that he's also a Protestant and a republican-we can check to see if the label fits, then afterward talk about the significance of its application.
    Here I think the issue with the label is that the Iranians in the house want a shout-out for a bit of national pride. In the thick cloud of ignorance these days people could automatically assume Islam = Arab. We don't want that so SHOUT OUT: Rumi and Hafez are Persians. But the flip side of the issue is that there are also a lot of people who want to deny that Islam has deep spiritual/humanist/mystical dimensions, and we definitely don't want that either, because it's idiotic.

    • @ethdow6817
      @ethdow6817 Před 5 lety +5

      smerdyakovkb You clearly don’t have enough historical information about the pre-Islamic Iran. For you people history starts with Islam, literally ! For us it is not about Hafez or Mowlana, they are hardly original. Rather it is about a tradition that is unequivocally and unmistakably Persian and has it roots in centuries before the even the idea of Islam started to gestate. And that is “Persian mysticism”. The problem is that it is the other way around. The Islamic countries need to understand that almost everything having to do with your religion (metaphysics, spirituality, eschatology, etc) are all borrowed from cultures that came before you. Even the very ideas of monotheism and the axiological rift of Good and Evil are creations of Zoroastrianism and Manichaeism. Islam is a very shallow imitation and the ensuing culture is a disappointment.
      Islam never was a part of our identity, for the simple reason that it did NOT add anything of value to it.

    • @bilodolo11
      @bilodolo11 Před 5 lety

      such fucking nonsense, you can't let muslims have ANYTHING can you, when muslims do shit things then we're muslim, but when scholars are entirely dedicated to writing about islam and sufism all of a sudden their religion isn't important? shut. the. fuck. up.

    • @blythegraham8686
      @blythegraham8686 Před 5 lety +1

      Ehsan Dowlatshah specific ideas do not belong to specific people or groups. They are free, malleable, evolve, migrate, branch off etc. Two very different people on the opposite ends of the earth can build similar or identical belief system/ideas/customs without coming to contact with each other. Yes, Persian ideas/beliefs etc are unique and full of depth and beautiful but it doesn’t mean you own certain ideas, or that over time it didn’t go through evolution or branched off, or mix with other belief systems to become something else that was unique in itself (perhaps Sufism).
      Plus Islam never makes the claim that it came first or that it’s original or separate from any other belief system. In fact, it says that god spread his message to various nations using diff prophets (but ppl started to go astray over time and the beliefs of community started to change). So the ‘message’ of Islam is supposed to share a lot with other previous belief systems. Two specified belief system are Judaism and Christianity.

    • @Dark-pagan
      @Dark-pagan Před rokem

      شاعران اوکراینی که به زبان روسی شعر میخونن ایا روسی هستن؟

  • @Che18335
    @Che18335 Před 4 lety

    Rumi was a great poet from afghanistan

    • @Che18335
      @Che18335 Před 3 lety

      @Arkam Knight and Iran was part of Afghanistan for some time so what? Almost everything great what modern state Iran claims comes from the soil what is today Afghanistan, from Rostam to Balkhi. And the people still are the same.

  • @amirbonyadi2611
    @amirbonyadi2611 Před 5 lety

    درود بر پدربزرگهای دوستداشتنی دوستدار ایران زمین.

  • @Rij7
    @Rij7 Před 11 lety +3

    Most of Rumi's English translations are distorted and subjectively exclude Islamic teaching, ethics from Rumi's works. But Mawlana Jalaluddin Rumi was a religious teacher in his time. Two third of Rumi’s poem is about -Quranic stories , Muhamed and islamic ethics . Rumi said-
    ''As long as I live, I am the slave of the Quran I am the ground of chosen Mohammed’s way...
    Whoever carries a word of me apart from this I am complainant of him and I am complainant of those words too.''

  • @MirKekaoos
    @MirKekaoos Před 6 lety +1

    All these poets (Rumi and Hafiz) were adherent Muslim and very practicing one. Nowadays most persian want to Isolate themselve from Islam and create there own separate identity, But know this we muslims were one and for me my persian bretheren are equally muslim and Islamic like an Arab or a Indian. Don't be divided and don't divide sufism from Islam.

    • @mmsherzad6352
      @mmsherzad6352 Před 4 lety

      به باغ تازه کن آیین دین زرتشتی
      کنون که لاله بر افروخت آتش نمرود
      بیار ساقی آن آتش تابناک
      که زرتشت میجویدش زیر خاک
      به من ده که در کیش رندان مست
      چه آتش پرست و چه دنیا پرست
      بنده پیر مغانم که ز جهلم برهاند
      پیر ما هر چه کند عین عنایت باشد
      منم که گوشه میخانه خانقاه من است
      دعای پیر مغان ورد صبحگاه من است
      نیکی پیر مغان بین که چو ما بدمستان
      هر چه کردیم به چشم کرمش زیبا بود
      سینه گو شعله آتشکده پارس بکش
      دیـده گـو آب رخ دجلـه‌ي بـغـداد ببر
      از آن بـه دیر مغانم عزیز می دارند
      که آتشی که نمیرد همیشه در دل ماست

  • @Zelda104
    @Zelda104 Před 6 lety

    there is so much about rumi everywhere but his teacher hafez not so much.

  • @Ahmed-us5ns
    @Ahmed-us5ns Před 4 lety

    Today’s poetry is all about rhyming words and not the philosophy and wisdom

  • @KeyvanGeula
    @KeyvanGeula Před 10 lety

    "Is not that great" is the essence of the game.

  • @xXSabzyKababzyXx
    @xXSabzyKababzyXx Před 7 lety

    But some writing must be shared. not for seeking praise but because writing and not sharing is like baking a cake and not sharing it

  • @thekeeper5260
    @thekeeper5260 Před 8 lety +10

    I'm an Iranian and not a Muslim but hafiz rumi ... where persian and Muslims and to say Islam had no influence on there work is just not true there work was mix of Persian and Islamic culture, but Muslims must admit how much influence Persians had on Islam they took so much from persia since, literature, architectur...

    • @bilodolo11
      @bilodolo11 Před 5 lety

      islam DID have influence on them

  • @abooswalehmosafeer173
    @abooswalehmosafeer173 Před 7 lety +1

    knowledge is everywhere and in everything including maggots bacteria fungi as well as in faeces; we human beings we are too arrogant -the Primal Sin.We need to learn how to Respect ourselves and others.sound so cliché but that is because it is everywhere so visible so enveloping we don't feel the atmospheric pressure but it is so everywhere water everywhere but not a drop....

  • @moham_bm6009
    @moham_bm6009 Před 6 lety +11

    I think they are wrong for putting omar khayyam and hafiz s poetries in islamic catagory. Im persian and grew up with their poetry. Islamic beliefs have not any place in their works so please dont present them as islamic poetry to western people

    • @faza553
      @faza553 Před 5 lety +2

      Genuine sufis are utterly opposed to religious orthodoxy.

    • @mmsherzad6352
      @mmsherzad6352 Před 4 lety

      در اشعار حافظ حتی یکبار هم از محمد علی وووو یاد نکرده و همیشه سپاسگزار پیرمغان بوده

    • @maureennelson4513
      @maureennelson4513 Před rokem

      All these men are dead and products of their times. Who has memorized the Qur'an is Hafiz. The meaning is memorizer or safe keeper. His full name is Khawāje Shams-od-Dīn Mohammad, and title, Hāfez-e Shīrāzī. He was a Sufi.
      He is my lover of life. I once wrote ghazals to him. The years that comprise this love in separation is divine bliss of the Spirit and is never corrupted by material forces

  • @wheres_wolfie
    @wheres_wolfie Před 9 lety +2

    Why can I only find old white men talking about hafiz

    • @JagWarGaming
      @JagWarGaming Před 7 lety

      would you say that hafez and rumi are more popular than omar khayyam?

  • @shafiahadi3565
    @shafiahadi3565 Před 6 lety +1

    Hafiz learnt all Quran in 6year old that's why people called him hafez. His name is not hafiz same as rumi he travel near to rum and he called rumi his name is molana jalaldin balkhy

  • @tonyk4554
    @tonyk4554 Před 10 lety +52

    hafez and roomi are not Islamic , they are Iranian ( persian ) poets.

    • @abdirahmanali8232
      @abdirahmanali8232 Před 10 lety +12

      he was a Muslim and a Islamic Sufi if you people could speak Persian you know 90% original Persian was about love the of Allah.

    • @bluerose19ll
      @bluerose19ll Před 10 lety +21

      Abdirahman ALi Really? I have read Hafez, Rumi, Saadi, Shahnameh. They are more about love and life than religion.

    • @bluerose19ll
      @bluerose19ll Před 10 lety +13

      Abdirahman ALi It's funny some of them even talks about wine and women too.

    • @generalzeedot
      @generalzeedot Před 10 lety +5

      Sara Mithra the use of erotic imagery are metaphors for divine Love- in keeping with the traditions of sufi poetry. perhaps you are simply ignorant of this but i am always very suspicious that the likes of you are part off an effort to amputate Molana Rumi from the poetic heritage of Islam.

    • @tonyk4554
      @tonyk4554 Před 10 lety +12

      Sara Mithra its not funny... what is funny that they call hafez a muslim.... he never liked islam... love, wine and happiness always been part of Persian culture

  • @NAKK786
    @NAKK786 Před 5 lety

    Those who hate Islam and studying Rumi,hafez,iqbal,gazali...(r.a)....do not understand anything.

  • @c0ll0
    @c0ll0 Před 2 měsíci

    Shams tabrizi rumi s teacher

  • @Quranmathematics
    @Quranmathematics Před 10 lety +1

    Iranian culture and civilization = Poets + Writers
    From the Arabic Ghor-on came out = Poetry + Writing
    Iranian Culture - The Arabic Ghor-on = -0-

    • @mikezandi2756
      @mikezandi2756 Před 10 lety +1

      well said: Rumi whenever the name of prophet of Islam was mentioned he used to stand up and say my parents be sacrificed for you
      O messenger of God.

    • @Quranmathematics
      @Quranmathematics Před 10 lety

      That was funny, he was sending his parents to the Altar, but not himself. . .

    • @karz12
      @karz12 Před 10 lety +4

      Iranians were writing poetry long before the quran

    • @mikezandi2756
      @mikezandi2756 Před 10 lety +2

      And Roudaki, Ferdousi Hafiz, Rumi, Attar, Sa'adi, Sanaie were all were followers of Islamic mysticism and great Sufi tradition and all their works start with praising of God and the holly prophet(sawa). Please Iranian who hate mulla mafia don't mistake them with Islam. Read Quran yourself

    • @Quranmathematics
      @Quranmathematics Před 10 lety

      You must be a very young person. Did you know that Roudki poems were in Arabic language? if you read sura poets in the Ghor-on, it says,
      "Only the people who are astray follow the poets."
      That is why Iranians kiss the Ghor-on and put it up on the top shelf and read poems form poets. If you study the Ghor on you would find out that none of the poets knew what was written in the Arabic Ghor-on. They used to memorize it in order to learn the technique of poetry. Sufism are just like poets they only follow their conjectures. You need to study the Arabic Quran. That is why Iranians are suffering so much and also the rest of Muslim countries, because they Do Not Read the Ghor-on. Yet they have been paralyzed by mullahs, and read resalah, hadith, sunna and sharia law written by human devil. Just imagine how Iranians frozen in time. They are not allowed to receive any knowledge from God. that is why they are not able to invent anything. I heard they just came up with "Aftabeh 2 Lule" . . .
      Try to educate yourself while you have time, that is, if God Allows you!?. Here are some proofs from 1500 pages of scientific reports.
      The Mathematical Miracle of the Arabic Quran (Tape 1) Religion Whistleblower
      The Mathematical Miracle of the Arabic Quran (Tape 2) Religion Whistleblower
      The Mathematical Miracle of the Arabic Quran (Tape 3) Religion Whistleblower
      Ultimate Mathematics Generator of the Quran # 1 of 10
      Ultimate Mathematics of the Arabic Quran- Sura 9

  • @samkhosroshahi2364
    @samkhosroshahi2364 Před rokem

    Not 72 years, is 43 years

  • @LAHHZE
    @LAHHZE Před 9 lety +51

    they were persian poets Not Islamic poets..

    • @fractally
      @fractally Před 5 lety +1

      Crazy talk.
      They are Sufis, and the mystical, anti-authoritarianism, heartfelt passion they write about, is exactly what Sufism celebrates.

    • @siavash5263
      @siavash5263 Před 5 lety

      @@wedshieb خخخخخخخخخخخخخخخخخ

    • @siavash5263
      @siavash5263 Před 5 lety +4

      @Yousef Ghaneemah Does Arab have literature? 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @morugascorpion6021
      @morugascorpion6021 Před 5 lety

      farhad sia you are seriously in need of some literacy. Arab lit is so far ranging. From 1001 nights, epics, romance eg Layla Majnun, to comedies/satire eg Mulla Nasreddin, and theatre, sci fi, the examples are endless and would require a university degree and postgrad at SOAS. Though you can start with a few books from a library or Amazon.

    • @siavash5263
      @siavash5263 Před 5 lety

      @@morugascorpion6021 Layla Majnoun is a Persian version of the Nizami . Mullah Nasruddin, who is an ethnic Turkic, has been translated into Arabic
      and persian

  • @farzad_assi
    @farzad_assi Před 10 dny

    Hafiz, rumi , saadi , atar , ibn sina , farabi they are all muslim and persian from Great khorasan

  • @miro1244
    @miro1244 Před 5 lety +2

    I have read some of the comments and could tell how many of you just heard the name Rumi. fIRST OF ALL, HE IS NOT IRANIAN. Now let's talk about his poetry being Persian, Farsi which meant at the time of him being alive, he came from Balkh which nowadays its one of the cities in Afghanistan. His written poetry is Pure Farsi; what Afghanistanis Dari/Farsi language literature is based. But he himself, in one of his poetry says 'Nor am I Balkhi nor from Rome, I am from Earth"
    So stop claiming a genius into one country that British has aligned the border for.

    • @MDeeb-lv3xi
      @MDeeb-lv3xi Před 5 lety +5

      miro 1
      With due respect, the history of Afghanistan as a state began in 1747 with its establishment by Ahmad Shah Durrani. Prior to that, Afghanistan was part of Iran; that is the reason that they speak Persian or “Parsi / Farsi”. Plus, if you refer to Rumi’s Lamenting poems regarding the Mongols attacking his "land, Iran", then you will stop arguing on this topic.
      In any case, it is great that many like try to own a piece of Rumi; this is a reflection of his amazing achievement and influence. Rumi’s love, spiritual beauty and enlightenment is shared not only by all Persian speaking brothers and sisters in neighboring countries, but by the whole planet: HE BELONGS TO HUMANITY IN GENERAL.

    • @mmsherzad6352
      @mmsherzad6352 Před 4 lety +2

      خدا را شکر که مولانا را بنام ایران میشناسند اگر بنام نامی افغانستان میبود مردم مولانا را با این اعمال افعان ها به باطله دانی مینداختن به خصوص بچه بازی که کودکان را میربایند و بعد میرقصانند و بعدش تجاوز میکنند که هیچ ابروی نه تنها به افغان ها بلکه برای مردم منطقه نمانده اند

  • @shahriarification
    @shahriarification Před 9 měsíci +1

    I would call Rumi and Hafiz Persian poets NOT Islamic

  • @onlypearls4651
    @onlypearls4651 Před 9 měsíci

    Some of Bly's poems are crap. If you labeled his poetry as having been written by "Dave Smith" or some other unknown poet, you'd think they suck. Similarly, if you listed some of Dave Smith's poems as having been written by Bly, you'd fall in love with them. READ THE WORK on its own merits.

  • @MarsinMaafi
    @MarsinMaafi Před 3 měsíci +2

    My apologies, correction good sir, Persia has a great literature not Muslims! Everyone that you mentioned and a lot more were all Persians and their religion was Muslim because of invasion of Arabs forcing their religion by killing thousands of thousands of people, before that, Persians were Zarathustrian.

  • @puya5240
    @puya5240 Před 5 lety +1

    Hafez is a straight up Mithraist

  • @mnoorist8223
    @mnoorist8223 Před 7 měsíci

    U cannot capture the lyrical nature of farsi poetry in english.
    Hafez is song.

  • @ilyassohrab8201
    @ilyassohrab8201 Před 10 lety +1

    Robert Blys work suck how and why is he being compared to the greatest and true poets of all time Hafez and Rumi? Btw Rumi is afghan born in Balkh

  • @jax9574
    @jax9574 Před 4 lety

    Rumi is the greatest poet in Farsi followed by Firdousi, Rumi has no equal in Farsi, the way Mir Taqi Mir has no equal in Urdu poetry.

    • @nomesa7374
      @nomesa7374 Před 4 lety +1

      Hafez. Hafez is the greatest of poets. To me, he is the Zarathustra-the-third!

  • @matthewstokes1608
    @matthewstokes1608 Před rokem

    Where is the song? Where is the music and the composition of the grace of sounds?
    This is half-baked.
    Read Blake aloud - and then read this American pap. Sorry, but read Blake aloud - or Shakespeare - or Eliot if you dare… Sorry, but this doesn’t cut it as GREAT poetry.
    … This isn’t Rumi!

  • @blackfeatherstill348
    @blackfeatherstill348 Před 2 lety

    What about Emily Dickinson?

  • @motorcop505
    @motorcop505 Před 10 lety

    Good thing people don't listen to Bly's whining against the liberation of people from one of the greatest tyrants of the 20th Century. He should stick to translating the true greats, like Rumi and Hafiz.

  • @annahita2528
    @annahita2528 Před 4 lety

    “ Islamic Poets “ !!!! What does it exactly mean? Is Islam a language? A culture? A what??? Islam is a religion, it does not have anything to do with these poets ; they are Persian poets ... poets from a culture that is fundamentally and basically different, very different than Islam ...

  • @YonkoMessi
    @YonkoMessi Před 9 lety +17

    To those saying Rumi was not Islamic, this is what Rumi himsef said:
    "My soul in my skin is such a slave to the Quran; I am dirt on the road of God’s d istinguished Prophet Muhammad. Whoever attributes other words besides these to me, I will complain before the words and the carrier of them." -Mevlana Rumi
    The message of Islamic Mysticist was universal and they adressed everyone irrespective of religion.

    • @OwlsEyelash
      @OwlsEyelash Před 9 lety +7

      TheShadowKnight7 Introducing Rumi as an Islamic poet is like introducing Shakespear or Chaucer as a Christian poet. Shakespear and Chaucer are always introduced as English poets and Rumi and Hafez should always be introduced as Persian poets. What their religion was is secondary to their poetry.

    • @YonkoMessi
      @YonkoMessi Před 9 lety +3

      OwlsEyelash While I do agree that Rumi's poetry was for people of all religions, I must say that comparing Rumi and Shakespeare is not appropriate. Rumi was an Islamic Scholar finding his inspiration is spirituality and faith. Nevertheless, Rumi belongs to people of all faiths.

    • @OwlsEyelash
      @OwlsEyelash Před 9 lety

      rollingklouds
      I have no idea why you are addressing this to me?

    • @OwlsEyelash
      @OwlsEyelash Před 9 lety

      rollingklouds
      What?

    • @Veedon7
      @Veedon7 Před 8 lety

      +TheShadowKnight7
      Unfortunately there is much misunderstanding concerning Rumi in the West .

  • @noughtsshadow5219
    @noughtsshadow5219 Před 6 lety

    As a Persian born and bred, I hereby let you all know that Hafez had fundamental problems with bigot muslim authorities of his time. So, please avoid calling these jewels of ours as Islamic geniuses: it is more than an insult for us to consider our geniuses to belong to Islam, a religion out of which darkness and ignorance come

  • @wpopal1
    @wpopal1 Před 11 lety

    That is not true.Who are those Persian scholars?

  • @jalalrumi9653
    @jalalrumi9653 Před 6 lety

    در حقیقت مثنوی معنوی
    هست قرآن در زبان پهلوی