***Question received on the channel***
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As-salāmu ʿalaykum wa raḥmatullāh. Thank you for the opportunity to ask questions. My questions are:
1. What is the evidence for tawajjuh rūḥī from the Shaykh, such that the shaykh is able to do tawajjuh to a person in his absence and benefit the person thereby, and through this tawajjuh the murīd is able to ascend to higher levels of certainty and sanctity?
2. Why do mashāyikh of tasawwuf sometimes seem to lack waraʿ, while the norm among the righteous predecessors was waraʿ? For example: the shaykh allows a lot of praise in gatherings, people speak about his rank, and this feels different from the Salaf who embodied humility, fled praise, feared their end, and made no claims.
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Answer (Part 1): Tawajjuh rūḥī, the Prophetic Nūr, and benefiting in absence
1) The Prophetic Nūr and how hearts receive openings
Allah سبحانه وتعالى described the Messenger ﷺ as a light (nūr). The people of tazkiyah use this Qur’anic language to explain a lived reality:
• The Prophet ﷺ illuminated the Companions directly through suhbah, tarbiyah, and presence.
• That Prophetic nūr continues to benefit this ummah: sometimes directly by Allah’s mercy, and often through the true, established waratha Muḥammadiyya, the inheritors of Prophetic tarbiyah.
One necessary protection in wording:
This nūr is a divine gift and a created opening in hearts. It is not divinity, not incarnation, and not an independent power. The One who opens hearts is Allah, and He grants openings through causes He chooses.
2) The Companions were elevated by Prophetic presence and state
The Companions were transformed by the Prophet ﷺ through suhbah, tarbiyah, and Prophetic attention. The Prophetic nūr reached their hearts and illuminated them. The well known report of Ḥanzalah points to the extraordinary state they experienced with him, to the point that if they remained upon that state, angels would greet them openly. In meaning, the Prophet ﷺ said: if you remained on the same state you have with me, the angels would shake your hands in the roads.
This teaches a key principle for seekers:
The heart is affected not only by information, but by ḥāl and nūr by Allah’s permission.
3) What tawajjuh means in this path, and what the seeker must not get distracted by
This is why the people of the path speak of tawajjuh: a focused himmah and spiritual orientation from the shaykh to the murīd, by which Allah opens the murīd’s heart.
The true shaykh of tazkiyah is a wārith Muḥammadī, an inheritor of Prophetic tarbiyah, and a conduit through which the Prophetic nūr reaches the murīd’s heart. The shaykh does not “own” openings. He is a means through which Allah grants openings, and a mirror that helps the murīd see himself.
This also explains why benefit can occur even in absence: not as a “force” that must be systematized, but as an opening Allah grants through duʿā, himmah, sincerity, and the bond of tarbiyah.
A very important distinction:
Not every spiritual “unveiling” is beneficial. There is a difference between:
• kashf related to the unseen, which can become a distraction and a source of temptation,
• and kashf of one’s own faults, which is what truly benefits with Allah, because it pushes you to repentance and purification.
Many people become impressed by the effects of obedience, sweetness in worship, early openings, or even unusual experiences, then they stop there, and their journey to Allah gets cut off.
This is one of the strongest reasons a true murabbī is valuable: he prevents you from mistaking “effects” for “arrival.”
4) No monopoly: Allah opens by many doors, sometimes directly through the Prophet ﷺ
Even while affirming tawajjuh and the need for التربية, it is a mistake to imagine spiritual ascent has only one gatekeeper. The shaykh-murabbī is a tremendous door for many seekers, but it is not a monopoly.
On the path:
• Allah may open directly for a servant through attachment to the Prophet ﷺ, ṣalawāt, sincere duʿā, Qur’an, and repentance.
• And Allah may open through the means of a true warith Muḥammadī.