shivaathervedi wrote:You were explained in my previous post that until Imam changes or replaces any Farman, it will stay active and need to be obeyed. Hazar Imam has not replaced Farman of MSMS on fasting in the month of Ramadan. Shah Karim has not mentioned of Bheej and Dasond frequently in his Farmans do we discontinue Bheej and Dasond?.
There is no Farman of MSMS to fast exclusively on the month of Ramadhan. Rather, there is a Farman to fast for 365 days. If Shah Karim has not mentioned explicitly about Dasond and Beej, then they should continue to be practiced unless there is a Farman otherwise.
shivaathervedi wrote:
Please quote the proper wordings of Tusi In Persian, or complete paragraph on Saum by Tusi. I don't think Tusi was against fasting. What you mentioned is about dissimulation of maintaining fast. We believe in Qadi No'aman more than Tusi who left Ismailism and conspired against Imam and sided with Helagu Khan..
Tusi's book has been translated by well known Ismaili scholar Jalal Badakshani in his book the Paradise of Submission. To demonstrate how tenets can change. The following are tenets during the Fatimid times:
According to Shia interpretation as articulated by Imam Muhammad al Baqir, Islam is based upon seven pillars:
1. Walaya (Devotion to the Imam) and this is the most excellent; and through it and the Imam, the true knowledge of faith can be obtained.
2. Tahara (Ritual purity)
3. Sala (Prayer)
4. Zaka (Poor tax)
5. Sawm (Fasting)
6. Hajj (Pilgrimage)
7. Jihad( Holy war)
The above were reinterpreted during the Alamut period as:
The following are the seven pillars of religious law and their esoteric meaning as explained by Nair Tusi in the "Tasawwurat".
1. Cleanliness (taharat) - to dissociate oneself from previous religions and traditions.
2. Confession of faith (Shahadat) - to know God through Himself.
3. Prayer (Namaz) - to be always speaking about recognition of God.
4. Fasting (Sawm) - to speak with the followers of falsehood using precautionary dissimulation (taqiyyah) in order to maintain continual fasting.
5. Charity (Zakat) - to give to other brothers in religion part of that which God, the Exalted, has given you.
6. Pilgrimage (hajj) - to abandon this temporal world and seek the eternal abode (of the hereafter).
7. Holy war (jihad) - to annihilate oneself in the essence of God, the Exalted.
shivaathervedi wrote:
Regarding your question of mentioning non Satpunthi literature on fasting, please read the Fatimid literature on fasting, Hasan bin Sabah, Nasir Khusraw and others fast in the month of Ramadan. Pir Sadardi Pir Hasan Kabiruddin and other Sadaat fast in the month of Ramadan, I do not understand why khoja Satpunthis hesitate!.
There has been a significant departure from the Fatimid period reqarding our practices especially after the proclamation of Qiyama. We must pay attention to post Fatimid literature. As I mentioned earlier we do not follow what the Pirs did but what they told us in the Ginans.
shivaathervedi wrote:
Ginans of Pirs are not recited in central Asian countries where Ismailis live, and mostly they do not understand English. Let me ask you, Are Ginans translated in Persian and provided to these jamaits. The jamaits even do not know about Oum, Hari, Krishna, or Rama.
According to the Farmans of the present Imam, all Ismailis are expected to learn English. Hopefully the younger Iranians will translate the Ginans into Persian.