Saadi Shirazi was a major Persian poet and literary of the medieval period.
Background
It is generally believed, however, that Saadi Shirazi was born around the year 1200 in the town of Shiraz, Persia (now Iran). Shiraz was located in the region of Fars Province, which was known in antiquity as Persis, a name the Greeks used for the entire country, bringing about the name Persia. The popular name Sa'di was actually an assumed pen-name, or takhallus, for the author, whose given name may have been Masharrif al-Din ibn Moslih al-Din, or some similar form of this name. The pseudonym was drawn from the names of the leaders who ruled Fars Province during his lifetime: Sa'd ibn Zangi, his son Abu Bakr ibn Sa'd, and grandson Sa'd ibn Abu Bakr.
Education
Sa'd ibn Zangi played an important role in Sa'di's life, taking the boy into his care and providing him with an education after the death of Sa'di's father, a minor poet and court official for the ruler. After completing his studies in Shiraz, Sa'di was sent to Baghdad to attend Nizamiya College, possibly the finest institution of learning in the world at that time. While in Baghdad, he studied under the well-known Sufi Shaikh Shihabud-Din Suhrawardi, of whose unselfish piety Sa'di makes mention in his first major work, the Bustan.
Career
Sa'di soon gained fame as a wit and poet of short descriptive passages. His early poetry on the whole represented well the clever, half-pious, half-wordly side of the Persian character. But the young man was not much interested in academics; in his later writings he recalled his duties as a teaching assistant to be a tiring chore. He much preferred to spend his time in a more celebratory fashion and devoted a great deal of energy to socializing and enjoying himself. Wandered Middle East for Thirty Years After leaving the college, Sa'di entered a lengthy period, from 1226-1256, in which he traveled extensively, simply traveling to various towns and countries in search of adventure. His wanderings led him all over the Middle East and to parts of Asia and Northern Africa, including such countries as Iraq, Syria, Palestine, Egypt, Arabia, Turkey, and perhaps India. It is thought that he began this style of life in order to escape the Mongol forces that were invading and conquering large parts of his homeland; it may also be that he was a follower of the Sufi dervishes, a nomadic mystical Moslem order that engaged in chanting and dancing to achieve religious ecstasy. Whether he was truly committed to Sufi doctrine or not, he benefitted from traveling with them, as it insured him a greater amount of safety and hospitality during these years. Sa'di's books are filled with tales that are supposedly based on incidents from his itinerant years. In The Rose Garden he relates how he was captured in Palestine by Christian Crusaders and forced into manual labor digging moats. He was only released after a friend passed by and, upon recognizing Sa'di, bought his freedom from the captors for ten dinars. The friend later engaged his daughter to the writer with a dowry of 100 dinars. Sa'di's new wife was apparently a nagging woman and he probably left her. But she did provide him with good material for his book.
After a number of other troublesome adventures, including being run out of India for his insults to religious figures there, Sa'di finally ended his rambling life around 1250 and settled in his home town. There he lived a secluded life and engaged in writing the works that would make him famous. His first major work, The Orchard, was completed in 1257. This book is designed as a kind of guide on morality and other aspects of life and draws upon literary, religious, and folk themes to create pithy maxims and philosophical reflections. It is written mostly in verse form, utilizing the mathnavi style of rhymed couplets. His next and last important book was The Rose Garden, a 1258 work that also touches on ethical issues, but in a more informal, light-hearted manner than The Orchard. The Rose Garden contains verse, mostly written in quatrains, as well as prose writings such as humorous stories and instructive homilies. Both of the books are organized into chapters on topics applying to specific areas of life, ranging from "On Love, Intoxication, and Delirium" to "On the Advantages of Silence. " Much has been said of the "ethical" nature of Sa'di's writing, but this is so in a unique sense. The moral of the first story in The Rose Garden is that "an expedient falsehood is preferable to a mysterious truth. " The fourth story tries to show that the best education of a man is useless if he has inherited criminal tendencies. The eighth warns that a cornered cat will scratch out the eyes of a leopard. The ninth reiterates the sad truth that often a man's worst enemies are the inheritors of his wealth. And the fourteenth commends a soldier who deserted because his pay was in arrears. As a moralist, Sa'di gained much from the vicissitudes of life that he experienced on his travels. His knowledge of the world adds much to his cosmopolitan view. He seems to look upon the world with sympathetic humor and not harsh satire. And yet he is sometimes Machiavellian. Revenge is sometimes recommended in place of mercy, insincerity in place of veracity. Above all, man is encouraged to keep his independence from other people. The different aspects of Sa'di's morality make it difficult to believe in his sincerity. However, with a Persian poet it is often difficult to separate what belongs to the poet himself and what are concessions to his patrons. In any case, his popularity in the Eastern world should not be overlooked. Sa'di has shown himself in all his humanity, and he has satisfied the predilections of the Persians for moralizing. When speaking to the philosophy of his day - mysticism - there is no doubt that Sa'di was a diligent student and believer. But when referring to the Sufis of his day, he is always more of a moralizer than a mystic. It was precisely the perishability of the world that made it of value for Sa'di. He preached a this-worldliness with only a moderate fatalism, and he disapproved of extreme piety. Around 1258 Mongol invaders conquered the city of Baghdad, killing its entire population of more than one million people. While Sa'di was safe from such a threat, thanks to an arrangement made with the Mongols by the leader of Fars Province, he mourned the loss of the great center of Islamic culture and composed a lament on the occasion. This period also seemed to mark the end of Sa'di's literary prowess; while his two major works earned him great acclaim in his later years, his last major work, the Diwan, was completed near the end of his life and is more biographical in nature.
But his place as a literary icon was well secured. Copies of The Orchard and The Rose Garden began to be circulated throughout Persia and he was celebrated by his contemporaries as "the Shaykh" or "wise old man. " He was even invited to stay at the court of Abu Bakr ibn Sa'd, but Sa'di opted to continue his quiet private life. More than thirty years after the appearance of his best-known works, Sa'di died in Shiraz, probably around 1291.
While the writings of Sa'di have been a central part of the literature of Iran for seven hundred years, English translations of his works did not appear until Victorian times. Western readers have since come to enjoy the wisdom and witticisms of Sa'di, but have also had some hesitation over his blatantly sexual content. Another aspect that may disturb modern readers is Sa'di obvious racism regarding Jews and blacks (a typical attitude for people of his culture during his time). But despite these cultural barriers to a complete appreciation of his work in the West, Sa'di remains a cultural treasure in Iran, where his sayings permeate the language to such a degree that it is said only the Koran is quoted more often. For the rest of the world, the writings of Sa'di serve as a lively means of studying the cultural beliefs and practices of thirteenth-century Persia, which in turn can illuminate the modern culture of that land.
Views
Quotations:
"Quote Left The best loved by God are those that are rich, yet have the humility of the poor, and those that are poor and have the magnanimity of the rich. "
"A man is insensible to the relish of prosperity until he has tasted adversity. "
Personality
Quotes from others about the person
Alexander Pushkin, one of Russia's most celebrated poets, quotes Saadi in his work Eugene Onegin, "as Saadi sang in earlier ages, 'some are far distant, some are dead'. "