Concept

The Metaphor of the Sword of Forbearance in the Masnavi

In Jalaluddin Rumi's Masnavi, the conclusion of the encounter between Imam Ali and the spitting adversary highlights the transformative power of spiritual restraint, which Rumi terms the 'sword of forbearance' (تیغحلمتیغ حلم). After Ali explains that he spared the warrior because his personal anger had compromised his purely divine intention, the bewildered adversary experiences a spiritual awakening, severs his zunnar (a symbol of unbelief), and embraces Islam alongside fifty of his kin. Rumi contrasts physical warfare with spiritual conquest, asserting that the 'sword of forbearance is sharper than the iron sword.' While an iron weapon merely destroys bodies and takes lives, Ali's deliberate refusal to strike out of ego conquers hearts and brings true victory. This metaphor illustrates the Sufi ideal that suppressing the lower self and acting solely for God yields a far greater, life-giving triumph than any conventional battlefield success.

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Updated 2026-05-08

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