| ‘Love, not knowledge leads to God’ By Staff Report Daily Times: August 28, 2007   LAHORE: Famous Sufi poet and saint Bulleh Shah has conveyed message of   secularism and to understand his message one needs to understand history,   culture and civilisation of the time, said Academy of Adbiyat director Qazi   Javed in a seminar organised by the Punjab Institute of Language, Art and   Culture on Monday.
 The seminar titled ‘Bulleh Shah da Zehni Virsa’   (Bulleh Shah’s heritage) was held to celebrate Bulleh Shah’s 257th anniversary.   Javed said Bulleh Shah belonged to the ultimate unity of Being   (wahdat-ul-wajood) school of thought and that his objectives were to fight   against sectarianism, introducing free expressions of mysticism and promoting   interfaith harmony. He said his poetry emphasised to avoid sensitive religious   issues that could cause disharmony.
 
 Javed said the philosophy of ultimate   unity of Being was rejected during Bulleh Shah’s time but he remained an ardent   adherent of it. He said the cornerstone of his philosophy was self-recognition   and the promotion of humanitarianism instead of praying and ceremonial rituals.   “Knowledge is not the solution of the problem but it creates problem. Only ishq   (love) can help find God and if any person, belonging to any religion, sincerely   searches for God, he will find Him,” said Javed.
 
 Javed said mysticism had   no link with orthodoxy and that for this reason mystic saint Mansoor Hilaj had   been killed in 980. He said Data Gunj Baksh had been born the year Hilaj had   been killed. He said Data Gunj Baksh and Imam Ghazali had initiated moderate   mysticism which had been acceptable to the orthodox rules of the time. He said   Data Gunj Baksh had built dialectical relation between the orthodoxy and   mysticism. He said after these mystic saints, the Chistian order had been   introduced in the Punjab by Moinud Din Chishti and Qutbuddin Bakhtiar Kaki. In   this sequence, he said, was saint Baba Farid Ganj Shakar who united all sects   and religions. He said afterwards Shah Hussain and Sultan Bahu from the Qadri   Sufi order had propagated mysticism in the Punjab.
 
 Javed said Shah Aniyat   Qadri had been the mentor of Bulleh Shah who adhered to three Sufi orders –   Qadri, Malamti and Shattari – and that Bulleh Shah had also adhered to these   three Sufi orders’ philosophy.
 
 Javed said, “The history of the Punjab   reveals rich Sufi heritage in this area and it is our duty to preserve the   teachings and traditions of these Sufi saints.”
 
 Sir Baghit Singh, who had   come from India, said, the heritage of the Punjab was its Punjabi language which   was written in India in two scripts – Gurmukhi and Shahmukhi.
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