Thursday 14 March 2019

Count Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy (1828-1910) embraced Islam - Лев Николаевич Толстой

A Confession by Count (Graf) Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy 

 Count Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy (1828-1910) embraced Islam - Лев Николаевич Толстой
  
"Say what is true, although it may be bitter and displeasing to people." (Saying of MUHAMMAD)


Yasnaya Polyana estate of Leo Tolstoy

 Tolstoy with his grandchildren c.1900

 Tolstoy 1900



Pushkin, Aleksandr Sergeyevich
Russian literature: Leo Tolstoy
Probably even more than Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy has been praised as being the greatest novelist in world literature. The 19th-century English critic and poet Matthew Arnold famously expressed the commonest view in saying that a work by Tolstoy is not a piece of art…[ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA]



WIKIPEDIA
"Count Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy[note 1] (/ˈtlstɔɪ, ˈtɒl-/;[2] Russian: Лев Николаевич Толстой,[note 2] tr. Lev Nikoláyevich Tolstóy; [lʲef nʲɪkɐˈlaɪvʲɪtɕ tɐlˈstoj] (About this soundlisten); 9 September [O.S. 28 August] 1828 – 20 November [O.S. 7 November] 1910), usually referred to in English as Leo Tolstoy, was a Russian writer who is regarded as one of the greatest authors of all time.[3] He received multiple nominations for Nobel Prize in Literature every year from 1902 to 1906, and nominations for Nobel Peace Prize in 1901, 1902 and 1910, and his miss of the prize is a major Nobel prize controversy.[4][5][6][7]
Born to an aristocratic Russian family in 1828,[3] he is best known for the novels War and Peace (1869) and Anna Karenina (1877),[8] often cited as pinnacles of realist fiction.[3] He first achieved literary acclaim in his twenties with his semi-autobiographical trilogy, Childhood, Boyhood, and Youth (1852–1856), and Sevastopol Sketches (1855), based upon his experiences in the Crimean War. Tolstoy's fiction includes dozens of short stories and several novellas such as The Death of Ivan Ilyich (1886), Family Happiness (1859), and Hadji Murad (1912). He also wrote plays and numerous philosophical essays."


"The Prize in Literature has a history of controversial awards and notorious snubs. Many indisputably major authors have been ignored by the Nobel Committee, possibly for political or extra-literary reasons.[46] Conversely, many writers whom subsequent criticism regarded as minor, inconsequential or transitional have won the prize.[weasel words]
From 1901 to 1912, the committee's work reflected an interpretation of the "ideal direction" stated in Nobel's will as "a lofty and sound idealism", which caused Leo Tolstoy, Henrik Ibsen, Émile Zola and Mark Twain to be rejected. Sweden's historic antipathy towards Russia was cited as the reason neither Tolstoy nor Anton Chekhov took the prize. During World War I and its immediate aftermath, the committee adopted a policy of neutrality, favoring writers from non-combatant countries.[47]
Another notable omission for the Prize is R. K. Narayan, an Indian writer known for his works set in the fictional South Indian town of Malgudi and the abridged versions of the Indian epics – The Ramayana and The Mahabharata. Despite being nominated and shortlisted for the Nobel Prize in Literature multiple times,[48] Narayan never won the honor."

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TOLSTOY The Treatise of Famous Russian Writer ... - EMAANLIBRARY





Muhammad (PBUH) had been hidden from readers for long years. Prof. .... By compiling these narrations in his book, Tolstoy emphasized that the ... Thus, this translation into English of Tolstoy's treatise gains four identifications. First,.

EXTRACTS [Chosen by BAFS]
 
 My granddaugter Layana "Mavis-Moana" is convinced rightly that God is in our imagination and heart! [My teaching!]

We have God’s light in our hearts, and its name is consciousness.

Tolstoy Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy was born on August 28,1828 at his family's estate at Yasnaya Polyana close to City Tula as the forth son of the rich and wealthy family. His mother shortly passed away after his birth. His father Count Nikolay Tolstoy took the responsibility to educate him. When he was nine, his father was poisoned and killed. Shortly afterwards, he lost his grandmother and his aunts took his responsibility together with his siblings. In his childhood he learned French and German.

Muhammad has always been standing higher than Christianity. He does not consider God as a human being and never makes himself equal to God. Muslims worship nothing except
God and Muhammad is his Messenger. There is no mystery and secret in it.
Leo Nikolayevich TOLSTOY wrote this in his letter to Elena Vekilova.

Tolstoy emphasized that the only source of true justice and equity, and true brotherhood and devotion is in Islam...

His small treatise "“The Sayings of Muhammad which were not compiled in the Qur’an” (1909) is regarded as a possible sign of him being a Muslim, and of his admiration of Islam.

Muslim revert Mrs. Porokhova (who translated the Qur'an in Russian) declared for the first time in the Soviet media that Tolstoy had embraced Islam and made a will to bury him as a Muslim. The Soviet government tried to hide this truth for many, many decades. Mrs. Porokhova courageously uncovered this important document and published it. According to her discoveries, Tolstoy was buried according to Islamic rites. Its proof is inexistence on his grave of crucifixion, a Christian sign.

If human being has truly had a right of choice, every Christian and every human being with conscience would accept Mohammedanism: one God and His Messenger without doubt and suspicionTOLSTOY

It is impossible to think that Prophet Muhammad’s words and actions, his tolerance, morality, justice, honesty and many other universal values could not attract sane people as Tolstoy expressed.

“The Sayings of Muhammad which were not compiled in the Qur’an” was not published.

Many who did not accept this ideology (ATHEISM) were executed in 1938 and have being commemorated as the victims of Repression.  In such period of time, Leo Tolstoy’s case was not exceptional.

When I read a report of Captain Cousteau’s conversion into Islam in French magazine “Match”, I could not believe first. I showed the same amazement when I read an article about Clement Torrez in the same magazine in May, 1983. Torrez was a General Secretary of the French Communist Party. He said: 

Humanity will turn to his true direction of Kaaba, instead of communism…” 

and posed in front of the newspapers and magazines together with his Palestinian wife. Of course, these names were not the only famous people who converted into Islam. If we search the history, Prince Bismarck, Goethe and others, Russian A. Pushkin and others could be added. 

One of them is Polosin, who was chairman of the Committee of the Supreme Soviet on Freedom of Conscience became a Muslim in the beginning of 2000. Almost nobody knew this news in Turkey, except journalist Alev Alatli.

All of us are temporary in life. At the end, all of us will depart from this world. İt’s better to depart from it submitting myself in Truth instead of obeying to the delusions of human being!POLOSIN

In 1978, the well-known thinkers Maurice Bucaille and Roger Garaudy also reverted
to Islam.

"O God! Pardon my sins, and open for me the Gates of Your Compassion."

“The Prophet Muhammad was sleeping under the date tree. Suddenly, an unbeliever, a dagger in his hand, appeared and said: “O Muhammad, who will save you from me now?
The Prophet answered: “God!”.
In a sudden shock, Dusur dropped his dagger. The Prophet took it and said: “And now, who will save you from me?”
Dusur answered in fear: “Nobody!”.
The Prophet set him free and said: “Stand up and go!
When Dusur left, he said: “You were better than me.”
The Prophet said: “I have more right to be so.”
Dusur became a Muslim by testifying “And I testify that there is no god except Allah and you are His Messenger.” He became one of the Prophet’s best friends.” (1)


O Lord grant to me the love of Thee; grant that I love those that love Thee; grant that I may do the deed than win Thy love; make thy love dearer to me than self, family and wealth.” (2)
***

Say what is true, although it may be bitter and displeasing to people.” (3)
***

Assist your Muslim brother, whether he be an oppressor or oppressed.
"But how shall we do it when he is an oppressor?" enquired a companion.
Muhammad replied, "Assisting an oppressor by forbidding and withholding him from oppression." (4)
***

When my servant draws close to me by the span of a palm, I draw close to him by the space of a cubit, and when he draws close to Me by the space of a cubit, I draw close to him by the space (covered) by two hands, and when he draws close to Me by the space (covered by) two hands, I go in hurry towards him.” (5)
***

O Lord! Keep me alive a poor man, and let me die poor: and raise me amongst the poor.
Aisha asked: “Why, O the Messenger of God?”
“Because they will enter to Paradise forty spring earlier than the rich. O Aïshah! Love the poor and make them come to the scholars’ gatherings so that God will approach you in the Day of Judgement.”
O Lord! Keep me alive a poor man, and let me die poor: and raise me amongst the poor.” (6)
***

The most excellent of alms is that of a man of small property, which he has earned by labour, and from which he gives as much as he is able.” (7)
***

No person has swallowed a better drink than that of anger which he has swallowed for God's sake. “ (8)
***

No man is a true believer unless he desires for his brother that which he desires for himself.
(9)
***

Hell is veiled in delights, and Heaven in hardships and miseries.” (10)
***

God says, "O Man! Only follow My laws, and you shall become like unto Me, and then say, 'Be' and behold, It is." (11)
***

Do not exceed in eating so that you overcharge your hearts.” (12)
***

“The angels asked, "O God! Is there anything of Your creation stronger than rocks?"
God said, "Yes; iron is stronger than rocks, for it breaks them."
The angels said, "O Lord! Is there anything of Your creation stronger than iron?"
God said, "Yes; fire is stronger than iron, for it melts it."
And the angels said, O Defender! Is there anything of Your creation stronger than
fire?"
God said, "Yes; water overcomes fire; it kills it and makes it cold."
Then the angels said, "O Lord! Is there anything of Your creation stronger than water?"
God said, "Yes; wind overcomes water: it agitates it and puts it in motion."
They said, "O our Cherisher! Is there anything in Your creation stronger than wind?"
God said, "Yes, the children of Adam, giving alms; that is, those who give with their right hands and conceal if from their left, they overcome all."(13)
***

God said, "I was a hidden treasure. I would fain be known. So I created Man." (14)
***

“Verily you are ordered the divine commandments, then forsake them not; you are forbidden the unlawful, then do not fall therein; there are fixed boundaries, then pass not beyond them; and there is silence on some things without their being forgotten, then do not debate about them.” (16)
***

Whoever is kind to His creatures, God is kind to him; therefore be kind to man on earth,
whether good or bad; and being kind to the bad, is to withhold him from badness, thus in
heaven you will be treated kindly.” (17)
***

“The Prophet was asked: “What is the foundation of the religion?” he said: “Wish for your
brother that which you wish for yourself. Wish not for your brother that which you wish not for yourself.” (18)
***

“The measure of a Muslim’s sincerity is his humility before the things which he does not have a power over .”(19)
***

“God has made a straight road, with two walls, one on each side of it, in which are open
doors, with curtains drawn across. At the top of the road is an Admonisher who says, "Go
straight on the road, and not crooked;" and above this Admonisher is another who says to any who passes through these doorways, "Pass not through these doors, or verily you will fall."
Now, the Road is Islam; and the open doors are those things which God has forbidden; and the curtains before the doors the boundaries set by God; the Admonisher is the Qur’an, and the Upper Admonisher is God, in the heart of every Believer. (Muslim).”

(Note: There is some addition in this saying which Tolstoy compiled. The sayings from its own source is as follows:

One man asked: “What is the straight path?” The Prophet answered: “The Prophet Muhammad left us in the beginning of this path. The other end of this path leads to the
Garden. There are other paths in the right and left of this path. There are people on these paths who invite people to follow their paths. Whoever goes astray from my way will go to Hell. And whoever continues his way on my path will enter the Garden.” Ibn Mas’ud read this verse after he interpreted it:

Verily, this is My way, leading straight: follow it: follow no other paths: they will scatter you about from His great path: thus doth He command you, that ye may be righteous.” (20)
 ***

Muhammad said, "It is indispensable for every Muslim to give alms."
The companions asked, "But if he has not anything to give?" He said, "If he has nothing, he must do a work with his hand, by which to obtain something and benefit himself; and give alms with the remainder." They said, "But if he is not able to do that work, to benefit himself and give alms to others?"
The Messenger (Muhammad) said, "Then he should assist the needy and the oppressed." They asked, "What if he is not able to assist the oppressed?"
He said, "Then he should exhort people to do good."
They asked, "And if he cannot?"
He said, "Then let him withhold himself from doing harm to people; for verily that is as alms and charity for him."
(21)
***
 
 Written A Hundred Years Ago, Will Be Appreciated In Future

Source: http://eng.islam.ru/newmuslims/confession/ This page is not found
Please lokk at:http://islam.ru/en 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d999cPu-AZ4

TOLSTOY - İslam′ a Donuş 
 (Turkish for Islam return)


tolstoy

In the Introduction to the newly published English version of The last days of Leo Tolstoy by Vladimir Chertkov, his closest friend, the publisher writes: ”Nearly a century after his death, Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy remains a giant in the world of literature. While the impact of his ′spiritual′ mission cannot be fully gauged”. A Confession by Leo Tolstoy written in the last decades of the last century could not have been appreciated among the majority in a world that materialism was propagated as the only credible way of approaching knowledge. Talking about any spiritual dimension was miscomprehended as an attempt that could not lead but to irrationality and non scientific thinking. In the New Age where people have started to feel their existence as spirits and not only matter, Tolstoy′s experience is expected to receive so much appreciation.

A Confession by Leo Tolstoy is a very inspiring work for those who are interested in the question: what is the meaning of life? For Tolstoy it was not an exercise of the intellect; it was an arduous search from the side of someone who “had reached the impossibility of living, a cessation of life and the necessity of suicide”. How come that “so imperceptibly and gradually did the force of life” return to him? Was it a new discovery? Tolstoy says that it was “quite old-the same that had borne me along in my earliest days.” Why and how then did it leave him? Here is the whole story as much as possible in the words he expressed it.

At the age of 18 he started to be skeptical about all what he learnt at school as a Christian Orthodox. The signs of the cross and genuflection he made in prayers were, for him, meaningless actions and he could no longer continue doing them. He shared with others the impression that always religious persons were noticed to be “dull-witted, cruel, and immoral people who tend to consider themselves very important “, while “intelligence, honesty, straightforwardness, good naturedness and morality are qualities usually found among people who claim to be non believers.”

Nevertheless, he says, “ I did believe in something, without being able to say what it was. I believed in God, or rather I did not deny God, but what kind of God I could not have said; neither did I reject Christ or his teachings, but what I understood by the teachings again I could not have said.” At that point the young Tolstoy had no conflict because the natural faith in him was manifested in a sincere desire for “moral perfection” coupled with perfection of every other aspect in life.

Yet, however things were not that easy. “Everytime I tried to display my innermost desires-a wish to be morally good-I was met with contempt and scorn, and as soon as I gave in to base desires I was praised and encouraged.” Here was a turning point in Tolstoy′s life, moral perfection was replaced by a determination “to be more famous, more important, wealthier” and all passions of “animal instincts motivating my life.” In a world where “ambition, lust for power, self-interest, lechery, pride, anger, revenge, were all respected qualities,” Tolstoy says that he practiced “lying, thieving, promiscuity of all kinds, drunkenness, violence, murder-.” But was still considered by others as “a relatively moral man.”

At the age of 26 he started to mix with poets and writers and share with them a role that was bestowed upon them at the time of faith in “evolution”; the role of teaching people. “This faith in the meaning of poetry and in the evolution of life was a religion and I was one of its priests-..for a considerable length of time I lived in this faith without doubting its validity.”

He began to doubt the sincerity of his circle when he noticed that each group term themselves as “the finest and most useful teachers” and “others teach falsely”. Something very deep in him was telling him that if ever someone was carrying such a great mission of “teaching people” he should not seek personal esteem as first priority. But still he shared with them their “genuine, sincere concern” of “how to gain as much money and fame as possible” by writing books and journals. When he remembers this stage in his life Tolstoy says, ”we all spoke at the same time, never listening to one another. At times we indulged and praised each other in order to be indulged and praised in return, at other times we grew angry and shrieked at each other, just as if we were in a madhouse.”

Two events had affected him deeply: in a visit to Paris where he saw young men executed; “the sight of an execution revealed to me the precariousness of my superstition in progress--I realized that even if every single person since the day of creation had, according to whatever theory, found this (execution) necessary I knew that it was unnecessary and wrong, and therefore judgments on what is good and necessary must not be based on what other people say and do, or on progress, but on the instincts of my own soul”. The second event was his brother′s death “without having understood why he had lived, and still less why he was dying.” Tolstoy was so touched deep inside, but his supposition was that, “everything is evolving, and the reason why I am evolving together with all the rest will one day be known to me.”

Being involved in more work of writing, arbitration, teaching he began to feel spiritually ill without knowing a concrete reason for that illness. He got more involved in work as a means “of stifling any questions in my soul regarding the meaning of my own life in general.” Another means was getting married and putting for himself a new goal, “the straightforward desire for achieving the best for my family and myself.” Thus another fifteen years passed.

Attacks of despair then started to recur more and more frequently with questions, “Why, what comes next?” ”Well fine, you will have 6000 desyatins in the Samara province and 300 horses, and then what?” “Well fine, so you will be more famous than Gogol, Pushkin, Shakespeare, Moliere, more famous than all the writers in the world, and so what?”

With no answers to relieve him life turned to a complete meaninglessness. “But it was impossible to stop, and impossible to turn back or close my eyes in order not to see that there was nothing ahead other than deception of life and of happiness, and the reality of suffering and death: of complete annihilation.” Tolstoy, at this stage was not yet fifty, very healthy, famous, rich, respected, leading a wonderful marital life with a beloved wife and wonderful children. He was only possessed by the questions: ”What will come of what I do today or tomorrow? What will come of my entire life? Is there any meaning in my life that will not be annihilated by the inevitability of death which awaits me?

“I searched for an answer to my questions in all branches of knowledge acquired by man. I sought long and laboriously. I did not search half-heartedly, or out of idle curiosity, but tormentedly, persistently, day and night, like a dying man seeking salvation, and I found nothing.” Tolstoy sums up the knowledge that science and philosophy, each out of its own perspective, gives but which he regards as giving not answer to his questions. Science says, ”you are that which you call your life; you are a temporary, incidental accumulation of particles. The mutual interaction and alteration of these particles produces in you something you refer to as your life. This accumulation can only survive for a limited length of time; when the interaction of these particles ceases, that which you call life will cease bringing an end to all your questions.” The speculative realm tells him, ”the universe is something infinite and incomprehensible. Man′s life is an inscrutable part of this inscrutable ′whole′”.

Finding no answer to his questions in books he turned to people around him. He found them having four forms of “escape”; either they are ignorant of the whole thing, involved in physical pleasure (epicurianism), strong enough to get rid of their lives, or weak enough to cling to life even if they knew well that it was evil and useless. The inner torture he faced was leading him to commit suicide; he did not even know why he did not kill himself.

Leo Tolstoy ′Please regard me as a Mohammedan...′



The great Russian writer and thinker who contributed a lot to the Russian literature and history is more famous as a writer, his philosophical views and works that reflect his ideas of God, soul, knowledge, love, the meaning of life, etc. are much less known.

The continuing quest for the meaning of life, the moral ideal, the covert general regularities of existence as well as his spiritual and social criticism run through all his creative work. Since the 1870-ies he pays more and more attention to the subjects of death, sin, penance, and moral revival.

His extraordinary way of thinking was in most cases incomprehensible to the Russian society of those days.

He was excommunicated and committed to anathema, his friends and acquaintances turned away from him. In 1910, at the age of 81, Leo Tolstoy left home and died on the way to the station “Astapovo”.

Why was the end of his life so sad and where was he going after leaving home? Perhaps, some of his letters will throw light upon it.

Here is what he wrote about the Church: “The world was doing what it wished to do and was letting the Church keep pace with it providing as good explanations of the meaning of life as it could possibly think of. The world was setting its own mode of life which was entirely different form the teaching of Christ, and the Church was inventing allegories which would suggest that people who violated the law of Christ lived in keeping with it. As a result, the world started living the life which was worse than that of pagans, and the Church came to approve of it. Moreover, it claimed that such life was what the teaching of Christ consists in”.

Yasnaya Polyana, March, 1909


The Russian woman who married the Muslim E. Vekilov, wrote to Tolstoy that her sons wanted to convert to Islam, and asked for his advice. This is what the writer answered her: 

“As far as the preference of Mohammedanism to Orthodoxy is concerned-, I can fully sympathize with such conversion. To say this might be strange for me who values the Christian ideals and the teaching of Christ in their pure sense more that anything else, I do not doubt that Islam in its outer form stands higher than the Orthodox Church. Therefore, if a person is given only two choices: to adhere to the Orthodox Church or Islam, any sensible person will not hesitate about his choice, and anyone will prefer Islam with its acceptance of one tenet, single God and His Prophet instead such complex and incomprehensible things in theology as the Trinity, redemption, sacraments, the saints and their images, and complicated services-”

Yasnaya Polyana, March, 15th, 1909

We can adduce another letter of his which explains his world outlook which formed as a result of his long painful search for the truth.

“I would be very glad if you were of the same faith with me. Just try to understand what my life is. Any success in life- wealth, honour, glory- I don′t have these. My friends, even my family are turning away from me.

Some- liberals and aesthetes- consider me to be mad or weak- minded like Gogol; others- revolutionaries and radicals- consider me to be a mystic and a man who talks too much; the officials consider me to be a malicious revolutionary; the Orthodox consider me to be a devil.


I confess that it is hard for me - And therefore, please, regard me as a kind Mohammedan, and all will be fine”.

Yasnaya Polyana, April, 1884

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