بِسْمِ اللّٰهِ الرَّحْمٰنِ الرَّحِيمِ
There are verses that reach us with a named poet, a known book, and a numbered place.
And there are verses that travel by another road.
They pass from teacher to pupil. From the khānqāh to the home. From a handwritten notebook to a printed page. They are recited in gatherings, explained in Urdu, copied into diaries, and remembered because they contain a counsel the heart is unwilling to lose.
A friend of mine sent me this image, and this image before us belongs to this second family.
Written in large Persian script, with Urdu explanations beneath, it gathers six couplets concerning companionship, the sanctity of the heart, the light of the awliyāʾ, the meaning of the spiritual guide, and love for the dervishes.
It feels like one poem because its spiritual movement is one.
Textually, however, it is not one continuous poem by one poet.
It is a garland.
Some of its flowers have known gardens. Some have travelled anonymously. The thread joining them is the devotional memory of South Asia.
To identify this honestly does not diminish the verses. Beautiful words do not become poorer when we stop placing a famous signature beneath them.
Indeed, care for words is itself a form of adab.
A Textually Responsible Reading
The Persian below gives the most coherent form that can presently be justified from the available textual evidence. Diacritical marks have been added for readers who are learning Persian or who wish to recite the lines aloud.
صُحْبَتِ صَالِح تُرَا صَالِح کُنَد
صُحْبَتِ طَالِح تُرَا طَالِح کُنَددِل بِه دَسْت آوَر، کِه حَجِّ اَکْبَر اَسْت
اَز هَزَارَان کَعْبَه، یَک دِل بِهْتَر اَسْتکَعْبَه بُنْیَادِ خَلِیلِ أَطْهَر اَسْت
دِل نَظَرْگَاهِ جَلِیلِ اَکْبَر اَسْتنُورِ حَقّ ظَاهِر بُوَد اَنْدَر وَلِی
نِیکبِین بَاشِی، اَگَر اَهْلِ دِلِیپِیرِ کَامِل، صُورَتِ ظِلِّ اِلٰه
یَعْنِی دِیدِ پِیر، دِیدِ کِبْرِیَاحُبِّ دَرْوِیشَان کِلِیدِ جَنَّت اَسْت
دُشْمَنِ اِیشَان سَزَایِ لَعْنَت اَسْت
The Urdu explanations in the image are devotional paraphrases rather than strict translations. They communicate the moral intention of the Persian, but sometimes expand it or move away from its exact wording.
The Persian must therefore be allowed to speak in its own voice.
The Company That Enters the Heart
صُحْبَتِ صَالِح تُرَا صَالِح کُنَد
صُحْبَتِ طَالِح تُرَا طَالِح کُنَد
Ṣuḥbat-e ṣāliḥ turā ṣāliḥ kunad
Ṣuḥbat-e ṭāliḥ turā ṭāliḥ kunad
The company of the righteous makes you righteous;
the company of the corrupt makes you corrupt.
The word ṣuḥbat means more than conversation.
It is companionship. Association. Shared time. The atmosphere in which one repeatedly places the heart.
We become accustomed to what surrounds us. We begin by tolerating a manner of speaking, and soon we speak in the same manner. We laugh at what our companions laugh at. We become troubled by what troubles them. Their measurements quietly become our measurements.
Character passes from heart to heart without announcing itself.
This is especially true for children. A child does not learn character only from instruction. A child breathes it from the adults, friendships, habits, stories, and silences that form the daily environment.
Before asking, “What am I teaching?” it is worth asking:
“What is my presence teaching?”
The couplet is often repeated under Mawlānā Rūmī’s name. Yet Sufinama records it under oral tradition, without assigning it to a named classical poet. Until a dependable textual location is established, it is more responsible to call it a widely transmitted Persian maxim than a securely authenticated verse of Rūmī. (Sufinama)
Its author may be uncertain.
Its warning is not.
Company becomes character.
The Greater Pilgrimage
دِل بِه دَسْت آوَر، کِه حَجِّ اَکْبَر اَسْت
اَز هَزَارَان کَعْبَه، یَک دِل بِهْتَر اَسْت
Del be-dast āvar, ke ḥajj-e akbar ast
Az hazārān Kaʿba, yak del behtar ast
Win a heart, for that is the greater pilgrimage;
one heart is worth more than a thousand Kaʿbahs.
The Persian expression del be-dast āvardan literally means to bring a heart into one’s hand.
It can mean to win someone’s heart, console a wounded person, restore goodwill, reconcile after estrangement, or treat another person with such tenderness that the heart feels safe again.
The Urdu explanation beneath the verse emphasizes not hurting anyone’s heart. That is certainly part of its meaning.
But the Persian asks for more.
It does not merely say:
“Do not break a heart.”
It says:
“Go and win one.”
Look for the person who has been forgotten. Repair what pride has damaged. Speak gently where harshness has become habitual. Return dignity to someone who has been humiliated. Make room for the lonely. Carry another person’s burden without turning the act into a performance.
The expression ḥajj-e akbar here belongs to the language of spiritual intensification. It is not a legal ruling, nor does the couplet replace the obligatory pilgrimage with private kindness.
It asks what pilgrimage has done to the pilgrim.
Has circling the House taught us to stop circling the self?
Has standing together before Allah loosened our attachment to rank, race, wealth, family name, and social position?
Has wearing the simple cloth of iḥrām taught us that every human being carries a dignity which cannot be measured by clothing?
One may travel a great distance toward the Sacred House and still refuse to cross the small distance toward another person.
The feet may complete the pilgrimage while the ego remains at home.
The House Raised by Ibrāhīm and the Heart Carried in the Breast
کَعْبَه بُنْیَادِ خَلِیلِ أَطْهَر اَسْت
دِل نَظَرْگَاهِ جَلِیلِ اَکْبَر اَسْت
Kaʿba bunyād-e Khalīl-e Athar ast
Del naẓargāh-e Jalīl-e Akbar ast
The Kaʿbah is the foundation raised by Ibrāhīm, the purest Friend;
the heart is the place regarded by the Majestic, the Most Great.
The beauty of the couplet lies in its balance.
The Kaʿbah has a bunyād—a foundation.
The heart is a naẓargāh—a place upon which regard falls.
The outward House was raised by Ibrāhīm عليه السلام, the Athar Khalīl, the purest intimate friend of Allah.
The inward heart stands beneath the regard of al-Jalīl, the Majestic.
The poem does not say that Allah physically dwells inside the human heart. Naẓargāh means a place of regard, not a dwelling place. It is the language of moral and spiritual responsibility.
The heart is where faith is received.
It is where remembrance is guarded.
It is where repentance begins.
It is where compassion grows—or where cruelty is permitted to settle.
To call the heart sacred is not to make it a rival to the Kaʿbah. It is to remember that the Lord who commanded honour for His House also commanded justice, mercy, truthfulness, and care for His servants.
The Kaʿbah must not be desecrated.
Neither should the heart.
A widely cited Persian form of these lines reads az hazārān, bunyād, and naẓargāh, the readings adopted here. (Hawzah)
The comparison is not a calculation in law.
It is a cry of conscience.
It says that public worship cannot compensate for private cruelty.
It says that a person should not raise the voice in praise of Allah and then use the same voice to crush those who have less power.
It says that the most convincing sign of worship is not display, but transformation.
The Light in the Friend of Allah
نُورِ حَقّ ظَاهِر بُوَد اَنْدَر وَلِی
نِیکبِین بَاشِی، اَگَر اَهْلِ دِلِی
Nūr-e Ḥaqq ẓāhir bovad andar valī
Nīk-bīn bāshī, agar ahl-e delī
The light of the Real appears in a friend of Allah;
you will see truly, if you are of the people of the heart.
The light belongs to Allah.
The walī does not manufacture it, own it, or contain it independently.
The moon shines, but it does not claim to be the sun.
The mirror reveals light, but it does not become its source.
So too, a servant of Allah may reflect something of truthfulness, mercy, patience, courage, remembrance, or inward peace. In the presence of such a person, one may remember Allah more readily—not because the person has become divine, but because servanthood has polished the mirror.
The verse also places a responsibility upon the observer:
نِیکبِین بَاشِی، اَگَر اَهْلِ دِلِی
You will see truly, if you are of the people of the heart.
Not everyone recognizes goodness.
The proud may mistake humility for weakness.
The loud may mistake silence for emptiness.
The ambitious may fail to understand someone who does not compete for attention.
And the spiritually careless may be impressed by costume, crowds, titles, family claims, and stories of marvels while overlooking truthfulness and mercy.
A saint is not known by how much attention gathers around him.
He is known by where he directs that attention.
A genuine friend of Allah makes people more honest, more compassionate, more responsible, and more aware of their need for their Lord.
The saint is luminous by reflection, never by independence.
The Guide as Mirror, Not Destination
پِیرِ کَامِل، صُورَتِ ظِلِّ اِلٰه
یَعْنِی دِیدِ پِیر، دِیدِ کِبْرِیَا
Pīr-e kāmil, ṣūrat-e ẓill-e Ilāh
Yaʿnī dīd-e pīr, dīd-e Kibriyā
The perfected guide is an image of the Divine shade;
that is, in seeing the guide, one should behold a sign of Divine Majesty.
This is the most delicate couplet on the page.
It is also the one for which I have not found a dependable classical source. Although it circulates in South Asian devotional settings and is sometimes assigned to Rūmī, it should be presented as an anonymous or uncertain verse unless firmer evidence is produced.
Its language must also be read within the protection of tawḥīd.
The line cannot mean that the pīr is Allah, contains Allah, shares in divinity, or becomes an object of worship.
Allah is Allah.
The servant remains the servant.
The teacher is a mirror, not the Sun.
A signpost, not the destination.
A means of guidance, not the Source of guidance.
The bracketed words in the English translation—“a sign of”—make explicit what a sound spiritual reading requires. To see a mature guide should be to remember something of Divine Majesty through the guide’s humility, justice, wisdom, mercy, and surrender.
A teacher may remind us of the road.
He cannot become the end of the road.
A true pīr makes Allah greater in the disciple’s sight and makes his own personality less important. He does not gather hearts in order to possess them. He helps free them from every possession other than Allah.
When the guide continually points beyond himself, he remains a mirror.
When he demands that every gaze stop at him, the mirror has become a veil.
This distinction is not hostility toward spiritual guidance.
It is what protects spiritual guidance from becoming spiritual domination.
The Dervish and the Key
حُبِّ دَرْوِیشَان کِلِیدِ جَنَّت اَسْت
دُشْمَنِ اِیشَان سَزَایِ لَعْنَت اَسْت
Ḥubb-e darvīshān kelīd-e jannat ast
Dushman-e īshān sazā-ye laʿnat ast
Love for the dervishes is a key to Paradise;
enmity toward them deserves exclusion from mercy.
A dervish is not merely someone who wears a particular garment.
The true dervish is one who knows his poverty before Allah.
He may possess little or much, but he does not imagine that possession has made him independent. He does not make wealth his identity. He does not use spiritual language to seek rank. He knows that every breath is received, every ability is entrusted, and every door is opened only by Allah.
To love the dervishes, then, is to love humility.
To honour sincerity.
To protect the unnoticed servant.
To prefer inward truth to outward display.
The word laʿnat is strong. In religious language it signifies being distanced from mercy. The line is therefore a warning against contempt for humble servants of Allah.
It is not permission to curse everyone who questions a shrine, a lineage, a spiritual organization, or a self-proclaimed guide.
The verse should make the proud afraid.
It should not make partisans aggressive.
This final couplet has a clear textual home. It appears in the section on humility and the companionship of dervishes in the Pand-nāma transmitted under the name of Farīd al-Dīn ʿAṭṭār. (Ganjoor)
The surrounding verses strengthen its meaning. They advise the reader to sit with dervishes, avoid backbiting them, place the foot upon the demands of the ego, remain patient in hardship, and remain grateful in ease.
The key is not a costume.
The key is the death of pride.
Is the Whole Poem by Rūmī?
No.
At least, the evidence does not justify saying so.
The first couplet concerning good and corrupt company is preserved as an oral Persian saying. The four lines concerning the heart and the Kaʿbah circulate widely and are frequently attributed to Rūmī, but a secure location in his principal works has not been established.
Their spiritual meaning is certainly close to themes found in his poetry. In a clearly locatable ghazal, Rūmī writes:
طَوافِ کَعْبَهٔ دِل کُن، اَگَر دِلِی دَارِی
دِل اَسْت کَعْبَهٔ مَعْنِی، تُو گِل چِه پِنْدَارِیطَوافِ کَعْبَهٔ صُورَت حَقَت بِدَان فَرْمُود
کِه تَا بِه وَاسِطَهٔ آن دِلِی بِه دَسْت آرِیهَزَار بَار پِیَادَه طَوافِ کَعْبَه کُنِی
قَبُولِ حَق نَشَوَد، گَر دِلِی بِیَازَارِی
Circle the Kaʿbah of the heart, if you possess a heart.
The heart is the Kaʿbah of meaning—why think only of clay?
The Real commanded you to circle the outward Kaʿbah
so that, through it, you might learn to win a heart.
You may circle the Kaʿbah a thousand times on foot;
it will not be accepted by the Real if you wound a heart.
These lines occur in Ghazal 3104 of the Dīwān-e Shams. (Ganjoor)
This is important.
We do not need to force the anonymous heart-couplets into Rūmī’s collected works in order to show that their message belongs to the wider Persian Sufi tradition. Rūmī’s own locatable verses already state the teaching with unmistakable force.
The couplet beginning Nūr-e Ḥaqq ẓāhir bovad andar valī has a more complicated history. It appears in a text of the first book of the Mathnawī based on the edition of Sayyid Ḥasan Mīrkhānī. (MaktabeVahy.org) Yet the corresponding passage in Ganjoor’s base text moves directly from the preceding verse to the following one without including it. (Ganjoor)
It is therefore safest to describe it as a variant or additional verse found in some recensions.
The couplet concerning the pīr-e kāmil remains textually uncertain.
The final couplet concerning love for the dervishes belongs to the Pand-nāma tradition.
Thus the image should not be presented as “a poem by Rūmī.”
A more truthful description would be:
A South Asian garland of Persian devotional couplets, gathered from different textual and oral traditions.
This description may be less dramatic.
It is also more reverent.
Truth is part of adab.
What Remains
After the questions of wording and attribution have been considered, the page leaves us with a clear spiritual movement.
Company enters the character.
Character shapes the heart.
The heart gives meaning to worship.
The friend of Allah reflects light but never owns it.
The guide points toward Allah but never replaces Him.
The dervish teaches poverty before the One who possesses all things.
And the measure of spiritual life is not how impressive it appears from a distance.
Its measure is what happens to those who come near.
Do they feel safer?
Are the weak protected?
Are wounded hearts repaired?
Does worship produce humility?
Does knowledge produce mercy?
Does guidance produce freedom from the ego?
The image begins with companionship and ends with love.
Between them stands the heart.
Perhaps that is the whole lesson.
We become through company.
We are tested through hearts.
We return through love.
May Allah grant us the companionship of the truthful.
May He make our presence a source of safety rather than fear.
May He protect us from worship that enlarges the ego and knowledge that hardens the heart.
May He send us teachers who point beyond themselves and toward Him.
May He teach us to recognize His humble servants without turning human beings into objects of worship.
May He give us the courage not only to avoid breaking hearts, but to search for the hearts that need to be restored.
And may He make our own hearts houses of remembrance, mercy, truth, beauty, and goodness.
آمین یَا رَبَّ الْعَالَمِینَ
