Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan

An internationally known spiritual leader, lecturer and author,
the past Head of the Sufi Order International.

Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan, a pioneering veteran in meditation, allied mysticism with concreteness, ecstasy with intellect, asceticism with achievement. He was a leading researcher in comparative methods of meditation in the traditional schools, updating them to the needs of people in our day and age and throwing light on our problems and the direction we choose to fulfill our life's purposes. He stressed the transforming effect of interfacing psychology, science and music upon our understanding, our personality and our motivations in our everyday life situations.

Pir Vilayat, born in London in 1916, was the spiritual successor of his father, the pioneer Sufi teacher in the West, Hazrat Inayat Khan, who had been a celebrated musician in India.

Pir Vilayat became a musician himself, playing cello, and studying composition with Nadia Boulanger. He took a degree in psychology from the Sorbonne, Paris. During the Second World War he and his older sister Noor served the British war effort. Noor, known as Madeleine, was a heroine of the France Resistance, executed at Dachau. Pir Vilayat served on a minesweeper which was torpedoed in the D-Day invasion in Normandy.

In the 1950s Pir Vilayat began teaching through the Sufi Order, and particularly in America he drew a large number of people. More than one hundred local centers for the study of Sufism exist in the United States, as well as many in Germany and in many other countries around the world. In 1975 he founded, in upstate New York, a spiritual community, the Abode of the Message, and also Omega Institute, a flourishing learning center embracing many teaching approaches.

In 1974 he published "Toward the One", a highly successful introduction to spiritual traditions and practices. He followed that up with "A Message in Our Time", 1978, a study of the life and teachings of his father. After that he published a series of books on various aspects of meditation and realization: "The Call of the Dervish" (1981), "Introducing Spirituality into Counseling and Psychotherapy" (1982), "That which Transpires through that Which Appears" (1994), "Awakening" (1999), and finally, in 2003, "In Search of the Hidden Treasure", a wide-ranging exploration of Sufi teachings in the form of an imagined congress of Sufis through the ages.

Pir Vilayat traveled very widely, and spent much time in India, learning meditation techniques from teachers of different traditions. He taught his students techniques of meditation drawn from Yoga, Buddhism, Jewish and Christian traditions, as well as established Sufi methods.

Since 1965, Pir Vilayat assembled every spring a Congress of Religions in or near Paris, where representatives of various traditions met together to discuss and understand each others' viewpoints.He also took a keen interest in new developments in science, and often spoke at symposia dedicated to dialogue between scientists and spiritual teachers.

He regularly incorporated the latest scientific thought into the discourses he delivered with great flair at seminars and meditation camps. Every summer, he conducted a camps in the Swiss Alps and in the United States, attended by thousands of people.

He was awarded the Hollister Prize for creating interfaith understanding, presented in Barcelona, at the Parliament of World Religions 2004, taking place by his wife.

Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan pasted away from this world in June 17th, 2004, at his home in Suresnes, just outside Paris, France, two days before his 88th birthday.

He is survived by his wife of more than 50 years, Mary Walls, his younger brother Hidayat and sister Claire Harper; by a daughter, Maria, and two sons, Zia of New York, who has been designated his spiritual successor, and Mirza of California, and three grandchildren. His body is buried in the tomb complex Basti Hazrat Nizamuddin, Delhi, India, where his father is buried too.

Additional information can be found at:
www.pirvilayat.org * www.centrum-universel.com * www.universel.net * www.sufiorder.org.

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