Shaykh ‘Umar al-Yafi’s Supplication for Rain – Nur Sacred Sciences
Shaykh ‘Umar al-Yafi’s Supplication for Rain
Shaykh Umar al-Yafi b. Muhammad al-Husayni was born in the city of Yafa (Jaffa) in Ottoman Palestine in 1759/1173. His family settled there after leaving Mecca for Morocco and then residing in the city of Dimyat in Egypt for a period. He memorized the Qur’an with its proper recitation (tajwid) before the age of ten. Afterwards, he set on the path of learning and spent many years in pursuit of sacred knowledge. Upon completion of his foundational training under the important figures in his region, he traveled to Nablus and then to Egypt where he sat at the feet of the some of greatest scholars of his time. After completing both his formal training in the Islamic Sciences and his spiritual training at the hands of his Shaykh al-Murshid Abu al-Fattah Kamal al-Din al-Siddiqi, he settled in Damascus where a section of the Umayyad Mosque was devoted to him and to this day is known as Mashhad al-Yāfī. He was a Ḥanafī who had a deep knowledge of Islamic Law (fiqh), hadith, Arabic grammar, and morphology. He was also a great spiritual guide who had a profound impact on the lives of the great many who were transformed by his teachings. He expressed much of his divine love and wisdoms in the many lines of poetry he composed, which were later collected by his students in what became known as Diwan al-Yafi. Amongst his most famous compositions is the short prayer for rain below. In a region where water is scarce and rain is considered a blessing whose abundance or scarcity correlates with the good actions and sins of the community, this composition became sung far and wide. Perhaps, what has distinguished this poem over others is the deep humility and sense of submission to God conveyed in Shaykh al-Yāfī’s plea, “If you are the Helper of only those who are obedient, who will then help those [of us] who are sinful? The mercy of the Most-Merciful is absolute without any restrictions. If none could hope for Your provision other than those who are obedient on Your path, in whom can those [of us] who disobey You seek refuge? For, You are the Guide for those who are astray.” If the elite who have devoted their entire lives to God implore Him as such, we are reminded of how much more we are utterly dependent on God’s mercy and guidance.
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