Hazrat Inayat Khan

Hazrat Inayat Khan

Sufi master and musician.

A Sufi teacher and musician who introduced Sufism to the Western world. His teachings emphasized the unity of all religions and the importance of love, harmony, and beauty as spiritual ideals. Through his writings and music, he sought to inspire individuals to experience the divine presence in everyday life and to transcend the limitations of the ego. His legacy continues to influence spiritual seekers, artists, and musicians worldwide.

Hazrat Inayat Khan Quotes about Truth

  • The one Spirit of life is given different names, the sacred names. We more easily recognize the Spirit of life by the particular name to which we are accustomed. So far we are right, but the mistake we make, and it is to our loss, is to ignore or deny the same truth because it is given to us in another form and under another name. We limit it. We say the truth existed only in that period when certain teachers came to the world, and that after that it stopped.
  • Many say that life entered the human body by the help of music, but the truth is that life itself is music.
  • The soul of all is one soul and the truth is one truth, under whatever religion it is hidden.
  • The truth is that man is one individual with two aspects, just like one line with two ends. If you look at the ends, it is two. If you look at the line, it is one. One end of the line is limited, the other end of the line is unlimited. One end is man, the other end is God.
  • People have fought in vain about the names and lives of their saviors, and have named their religions after the name of their savior, instead of uniting with each other in the truth that is taught.
  • The more sincerity is developed, the greater share of truth you will have. And however much sincerity a person may have, there is always a gap to fill, for we live in the midst of falsehood, and we are always apt to be carried away by this world of falsehood. Therefore we must never think we are sincere enough, and we must always be on our guard against influences which may carry us away from that sincerity which is the bridge between ourselves and our ideal. No study, no meditation is more helpful than sincerity itself.
  • When we are face to face with truth, the point of view of Krishna, Buddha, Christ, or any other Prophet, is the same. When we look at life from the top of the mountain, there is no limitation; there is the same immensity.
  • When one looks at the ocean, they can only see that part of it which comes within their range of vision; so it is with the truth.