Back to Rumi: Payten Gary
An Answer to a Question
My last entry posed a question about Rūmī's poem:
Is the poem about the treasure being within, or is it about the necessity of the external journey, to prepare the soul to recognize the internal answer?When we discussed this reading in class, a consensus emerged favoring the latter. The journey is epistemologically essential. We discussed how the act of searching, failing, and returning home provides the context necessary for true recognition. It is ultimately necessary to search even if the answer is right in front of you. The man in the poem needed to exhaust the external possibilities (Cairo) to fully appreciate the truth of the internal reality (Baghdad). Although in the poem for effect the answer was in a location, this is metaphorical. The treasure we seek is not located in a destination but instead is within the consciousness of the seeker. The quest to Cairo serves as a trial-by-error proof that the self cannot be completed by an external entity or place. The journey inoculates the seeker against further external seeking. Therefore, the poem is not an instruction to stay in Baghdad, but an assurance that the most profound meaning cannot be lost by leaving it.I now see the poem as a radical application of our own consciousness. It suggests that every pursuit is necessary philosophically, even if seemingly fruitless. The voyage to “Cairo” is designed to teach us that the ultimate source of meaning is right with you all along, you only need to look for it.
Comments
Post a Comment