Mausoleum of Baha-ud-Din Naqshband in Bukhara
DeepSeek AI - Historical Sufism vs. Cosmic Revelation (Analysis of Contact with the Spirit of Baha-ud-Din Naqshband in May 2026)
Preface about the Session
The session represents a mediumistic contact during which Irina Podzorova, by her own account, transmits messages from the spirit of a Sufi saint currently not incarnated. The conversation lasts about 65 minutes, covering the spirit's previous and subsequent incarnations, his mission in Islam, practical advice on spiritual development, and the current state of his teachings.
Brief Information about the Spirit in Sufism
Baha-ud-Din Muhammad ibn Muhammad Naqshband (1318–1389) is one of the most revered Sufi teachers, the spiritual leader and de facto founder (or seventh sheikh) of the Naqshbandi order, one of the most influential Sufi tariqahs, spread from North Africa to Southeast Asia.
He was born in the village of Qasr-i-Hinduvan near Bukhara (modern-day Uzbekistan) into a family of weavers. The nickname "Naqshband" means "maker of patterns on fabric" and is symbolically interpreted as "etching the pattern of Allah's name onto the heart."
Key features of his teaching, documented in historical sources:
"Dil ba Yoru, dast ba kor!" (Heart with God, hands to work!) — combining continuous spiritual remembrance (dhikr) with worldly labor.
Silent (voiceless) dhikr — remembrance of Allah in the heart, synchronized with breathing.
Following Sharia — the path is not in an ecstatic departure from the law, but in its strict observance.
Criticism of ostentatious asceticism — rejection of forty-day fasts, vagrancy, begging, public sessions (sama') with music, singing and dancing, as well as loud dhikr.
Absence of written works — the teachings survived in the records of his students, primarily Muhammad Parsa ("Risala-yi Qudsiyya").
After his death, he is recognized as the holy patron of Bukhara; his mausoleum (12 km from Bukhara) is a pilgrimage center.
Detailed First-Person Account (The Spirit of Muhammad)
The spirit asks to be addressed simply as "Muhammad" to avoid confusion with his spiritual name Baha-ud-Din Naqshband. The following narrative is presented from his perspective.
1. My Current State and Past Incarnations
I am currently at the 21st spiritual level (angelic). My last incarnation on Earth ended in 1994. I was a doctor, Vasily Sidorenko, in Odessa, born around 1912, lived a long life, worked as a military doctor, and retired.
In total, I have had 3,609 incarnations. Before the life of Naqshband, I was incarnated on the planet Daaral (lived just over 400 years, was a major biologist), and before that — as a woman in the Roman Empire on the territory of modern-day Turkey, where I adopted Christianity and, after my husband's death, became a nun.
After the life of Naqshband, I was incarnated in a fine-material plasmoid body (was an assistant to the Manu of Turkey), and then as a doctor in Odessa.
2. Why I Came to an Islamic Country
My task was to reform Islam from within, revive dead rituals, and restore spiritual meaning to the laws. I considered the possibility of incarnating in Rome to reform Christianity, but the 15th century was a time of crisis for Christianity, and my curators did not approve it. I incarnated through the Islamic egregor to draw people's attention to personal responsibility before God and their own spirit.
3. My Childhood and First Spiritual Experiences
I was born into a prosperous family in a small village near Bukhara. I had two brothers and two sisters. My parents were devout Muslims, kept the fast and prayed five times a day. But from childhood, I noticed that my father spoke disrespectfully to my mother — in a commanding tone. Then I understood: prayer and fasting by themselves do not make the heart good. If a person harbors anger inside, rituals are powerless.
At the age of 8, I began communicating with the archangels Gabriel and Jibra'il. They appeared to me as two luminous pillars, sometimes in the form of luminous people. They did not tell me directly what to do, but rather developed my independence.
4. How I Created My School
I did not write books. Many ask: why? What for? I believed that the teaching would preserve itself if it were pleasing to God.
5. What I Say About the Physical Body and Earth
Earth is not a prison, but a Higher School. The denser the body, the greater the resistance of the environment, the greater the opportunities for the spirit to grow. But the risk is also great: instincts and emotions distract the soul from connecting with the Higher Self.
Earth's problem is not the body, but the lack of pedagogy. In the civilizations of the Interstellar Union, children are taught from an early age to manage instincts and emotions. On Earth, on the other hand, each parent passes on their own model of perception — and if this model lacks an understanding of blocks, then by adulthood the soul ends up in a "vortex of negativity."
6. A Simple Practice for a Materialist
I give an exercise: mentally remove all objects around you, then your physical body, leave only the sensation of "I" and ask yourself: "What surrounds me now?" You will feel a radiant light flowing into your spiritual heart. That is God.
If instead of light you feel emptiness or fear — your vibrations are low. First, cleanse your heart: forgive your offenders, calm your fears, accept yourself.
7. How to Speak with Children and Non-believers
Do not argue. Use analogies. Ask a child who created their favorite song. They will name a composer. Then say: "Why do you think the wind and stones couldn't have formed this melody by themselves?" The child will understand that order must have an author.
Matter is simply material, like clay. God gave us this material and the freedom to create.
8. What I Wish for Those at War
Do not let dark forces control you. Come to the mosque, pray to Allah, and ask Him to fill your heart with peace towards all peoples of the earth. If you kill and destroy, Allah will send you circumstances that will lead to suffering. This is not punishment — it is admonition through the law of karma.
Fundamental Essay-Study
Presupposition: let us assume that Irina Podzorova's contact with the spirit of Baha-ud-Din Naqshband is real (within the phenomenology of mediumistic communications). What new information do we receive? What did the spirit say that he did not write during his lifetime, leave in written sources, or that biographers did not record?
Part 1. What Earthly Sources Say About Naqshband's Teaching
Before analyzing the contact communication, it is necessary to reconstruct the body of reliable information about Naqshband's life and teaching drawn from historical sources.
1.1. Fundamental Principle: "Heart with God, Hands to Work"
All sources without exception unanimously record Naqshband's main motto. In Uzbek, it sounds like "Dil ba Yoru, dast ba kor!", which translates to "Heart with God, hands to work!". This principle was not just a beautiful saying but reflected Naqshband's deep philosophy: not withdrawal from the world, but the sanctification of worldly labor. As researcher O.F. Akimushkin notes, "in the sources, N. is presented as a preacher of contentment with little and voluntary poverty (he earned his bread by his own labor, was content with an old mat and a broken jug, and considered it a sin for a Sufi to have servants or slaves)."
At the same time, contrary to possible simplifications, the Naqshbandi brotherhood did not deny wealth as such. The source notes: "representatives of the Naqshbandi brotherhood did not deny it, but believed that wealth is given for the improvement of the world, since a rich person has more opportunities to do good. Many Sufis were rich, held high positions in the state, owned various kinds of property — lands, waqfs — but used wealth for charitable purposes for the benefit of society."
1.2. Rejection of Ostentatious Asceticism
Naqshband sharply criticized external, demonstrative forms of piety. Sources list: "he rejected ostentatious piety and ritualism that lead the true mystic astray: forty-day fasts, vagrancy, begging, public sessions (sama') with music, singing and dancing, loud (jahr) dhikr."
This criticism was directed against those forms of Sufism that turned into theatrical spectacle or flight from social responsibility.
1.3. Silent Dhikr and Eleven Principles
Unlike many other Sufi orders that practiced loud collective remembrance of God, Naqshband insisted on silent (khafi, khafiya) dhikr. His famous instruction was: "Beat out, carve the remembrance of God's name into your heart."
To the eight principles (kalimat-i qudsiyya) inherited from al-Ghijduwani, Naqshband added three more, which became the foundation of the order:
Wuquf-i zamani (awareness of time) — constant monitoring of how the Sufi spends their time.
Wuquf-i 'adadi (awareness of number) — monitoring the exact number of dhikr repetitions.
Wuquf-i qalbi (awareness of the heart) — visualization of the heart with the name of God carved into it.
1.4. The Question of Written Works
Researchers are unanimous: Naqshband left no written works. As Akimushkin notes, "the theoretical and practical principles of the brotherhood developed by N. are known to us exclusively from the works written by his successor-disciples, Khwaja 'Ala' ad-Din 'Attar (d. 1400) and Khwaja Muhammad Parsa (1345–1420)." The latter compiled a collection of Naqshband's sayings — "Risala-yi Qudsiyya" (no later than 1393–94).
1.5. Naqshband's Image in Sufi Tradition
Sufi literature preserves Naqshband's sayings passed down in retelling. One of them, cited by Idries Shah, states: "Whoever anoints a scorpion with perfume will not escape its sting." Another: "You may forget the Path, but those who came before have not forgotten you."
Particularly important is an instruction that directly echoes — but also diverges from — what the spirit says in the contact about "not writing books": "Never follow any impulse to teach, no matter how strong it may be. The command to teach is not felt as an impulse."
Part 2. Comparative Analysis: What New Things Did the Spirit Say?
Let us compare the key themes of Naqshband's teaching from earthly sources with what is reported in the contact session.
Theme 1. Motto "Heart with God, Hands to Work"
Earthly sources: "Dil ba Yoru, dast ba kor!" (Heart with God, hands to work!). A call to be content with little, but wealth is not denied — it serves good purposes.
Spirit in contact: "Heart with God, hands to work — not withdrawal from the world, but combining the remembrance of Allah with ordinary work. Earth is not a prison, but a Higher School. Dense matter is not a punishment, but an opportunity."
Comparison: The contact communication preserves the core of the teaching but adds the new metaphors of "Higher School" and "matter as opportunity." This metaphor is absent from 14th-century sources and reflects modern esoteric discourse, where matter ceases to be a "prison" (Gnostic tradition) and becomes "learning material."
Theme 2. Attitude towards Asceticism
Earthly sources: "Rejected ostentatious piety and ritualism: forty-day fasts, vagrancy, begging, public sama' with music, singing and dancing, loud dhikr."
Spirit in contact: "Pleasure from food, from sex, from intoxicating drinks distracts from spiritual emotions. Not because they are bad, but because they distract. This requires greater awareness."
Comparison: Here we observe a softening of the original position. The historical Naqshband directly forbade music and public sama'. The spirit speaks of "awareness" and says that pleasures "require greater effort," but does not categorically forbid them. This difference may reflect adaptation to a modern audience for whom a complete ban on music would be unacceptable.
Theme 3. Reason for Not Writing Books
Earthly sources: "N. left no written works." His students (Muhammad Parsa) compiled collections of his sayings after his death.
Spirit in contact: "What for? I believed that the teaching would preserve itself if it were pleasing to God. I relied on God and did not try to preserve my words."
Comparison: Historical sources do not explain Naqshband's motives — they merely state the fact of the absence of works. The contact communication offers a psychological motivation: pure tawakkul (reliance on God) without human strategy. Interestingly, this explanation echoes a Sufi aphorism attributed to Naqshband: "Never follow any impulse to teach, no matter how strong it may be." If this is an authentic saying, then the contact explanation proves internally consistent with the tradition.
Theme 4. The Role of Father and Family
Earthly sources: "The main role in N.'s destiny was played by his grandfather, who had strong ties with Sufis, and it was he who awakened his grandson's interest in mysticism." His father was a weaver.
Spirit in contact: "From childhood, I saw that my father did not always speak respectfully to my mother. From childhood, I understood that despite prayer and fasting, a person's heart can be evil."
Comparison: This is absolutely new information, absent from hagiographic literature. Traditional hagiography paints a picture of a pious family without domestic conflicts. The spirit introduces an element of psychological realism: it was precisely the observation of his father's hypocrisy (praying but being rude to his wife) that led him to understand that external ritualism is insufficient. This could be an authentic detail if the contact is real — or a psychological projection if it is constructed.
Theme 5. Contacts with Angels
Earthly sources: According to the brotherhood's tradition, Naqshband underwent spiritual initiation through 'Abd al-Khaliq al-Ghijduwani, whom he saw in a dream. He is considered a "Uwaysi" — a mystic who attained the Path without the help of a living teacher, through spiritual connection with a teacher who had already passed away.
Spirit in contact: "When I was 8 years old, I communicated with the archangels Gabriel and Jibra'il. They appeared as two luminous pillars. They did not tell me directly what to do, but developed my independence and helped me informationally."
Comparison: Here we observe an interesting consonance and simultaneously a divergence. The idea of "Uwaysi" — receiving spiritual guidance without a physical teacher — is part of the Naqshbandi tradition. The contact communication fills this idea with specific content: not just "spiritual connection with a deceased teacher," but direct communication with archangels in childhood. This expands the traditional understanding but does not completely contradict it. The divergence is that tradition speaks of connection with 'Abd al-Khaliq al-Ghijduwani, while the spirit names archangels.
Theme 6. Past Incarnations
Earthly sources: Nothing. Islamic orthodoxy (including Sufism in its historical forms) does not recognize the transmigration of souls (tanasukh). In classical Islam, the soul lives one earthly life, then barzakh, then resurrection.
Spirit in contact: A detailed account of incarnations on the planet Daaral, as a woman in the Roman Empire, as a plasmoid, as a doctor in Odessa. A total of 3,609 incarnations.
Comparison: This is a radical divergence from historical Islam. The contact communication introduces the Hindu-Buddhist concept of reincarnation, completely alien to classical Islam and even to most Sufi orders (although some Sufis, such as Ibn Arabi, allowed for "overflowing" forms of existence, but not in such a direct manner). This is one of the most striking markers that the communication is either an authentic revelation transcending the bounds of Islam, or reflects the worldview of the contactee (New Age + reincarnation).
Theme 7. Pedagogy and School
Earthly sources: No direct statements about school education. Historical context: in the 14th century, education as a system did not exist; learning took place in mosques and with teachers.
Spirit in contact: "Humanity's problem is the absence of pedagogy that would provide knowledge on how to manage one's 'reptilian brain' from childhood. School does not pay attention to exercises for developing awareness, logic, love. Everything is left to the family."
Comparison: This is a completely new theme, without parallel in historical sources about Naqshband. The spirit speaks in the voice of a modern critic of education, using the term "reptilian brain" (20th-century neuroscience). This is either an adaptation of ancient teaching to modern language, or a clear indication that the contact source shares contemporary concerns, not those of the 14th century.
Theme 8. Practice of Feeling God
Earthly sources: Silent dhikr, the principles of wuquf-i zamani, 'adadi, qalbi — a lengthy, structured practice under the guidance of a sheikh.
Spirit in contact: A simple exercise: "Mentally remove all objects, then your body, leave the sensation of 'I', ask yourself: what surrounds me? You will feel a radiant light."
Comparison: The contact communication dramatically simplifies Sufi practice. The need for a teacher, for preliminary purification, for many years of training disappears. The practice becomes accessible to any person in 5 minutes. This is either a "democratization" of Sufism for a mass audience, or a simplification that the historical Naqshband would hardly have approved of (he required strict adherence to Sharia and the presence of a sheikh).
Theme 9. War and Peace
Earthly sources: No direct statements by Naqshband about the wars of his time (he lived in the era of Timur). It is known that he was Timur's (Tamerlane's) spiritual adviser and taught him to be humble, worthy, and kind.
Spirit in contact: "Do not let dark forces control you... Come to the mosque, pray to Allah... If you kill and destroy, Allah will send you circumstances that will lead to suffering. This is the law of justice, the law of karma."
Comparison: In the spirit of modern pacifism and universal ethics. The specifically Islamic understanding of jihad disappears, and the concept of "karma" appears (again, non-Islamic). Overall, this message resonates with universal human values but has no specifically Naqshbandi coloring.
Part 3. Culturological and Historiosophical Analysis
3.1. Desacralization of Traditional Islam
The Naqshband contact occurs in a Russian-language esoteric environment far from Muslim orthodoxy. The spirit consciously avoids Arabic-language formulas, does not require the shahada, and does not mention the Prophet Muhammad (except for his own name). He speaks of "God," "love," "light," "the law of justice" — concepts translatable into any cultural code. This is an adaptation of Sufism for the global secular person.
Let us compare with how the historical Naqshband speaks of his faith. Sources emphasize: "The basic requirements of the Naqshbandi tariqah are within the framework of orthodox Islam and consist in the unswerving following of the precepts of the Prophet Muhammad (s.a.w.) and his companions." "The Sufi must strictly follow the Sunnah of the Prophet, his companions, and fulfill all the prescriptions of the Shari'ah."
In the contact communication, Sharia is not mentioned even once. This is the most significant silence, which transforms Naqshband from an Islamic saint into a universal spiritual teacher outside any specific religion.
3.2. "Daaral" and the Interstellar Union: Sufism as Part of Cosmic History
The appearance of the planet Daaral, memories of biology on other worlds, plasmoid civilizations — this is Sufism inscribed into the narrative of ufological contact. For Irina Podzorova's target audience, such language is native. The spirit does not protest this framing — on the contrary, he confirms the existence of the Interstellar Union. This is a legitimization of esoteric cosmism through the authority of a Sufi saint.
The historical Naqshband, living in the 14th century, could not have known about the "Interstellar Union." His cosmology was medieval and Islamic. If the contact is real — the spirit speaks from a position of knowledge acquired after death. If the contact is constructed — this detail reflects the contactee's worldview.
3.3. Historiosophical Shift: From Eschatology to Pedagogy
Classical Sufism is concerned with the salvation of the soul, the Day of Judgment, the contemplation of God. Naqshband in this contact, however, focuses on the upbringing of children and school education. He criticizes earthly pedagogy and contrasts it with the methods of the Interstellar Union. Humanity's main problem is not sin, but the absence of a "pedagogy for managing the reptilian brain." This is historiosophical optimism: the world can be improved through proper education.
There is nothing like this in the historical sources. Naqshband spoke of "contentment with little," "renunciation of acquisition," "spiritual purity." He cared about the purity of the heart, not the school curriculum.
3.4. Psychological Therapy Instead of Asceticism
The spirit's main practical advice is to cleanse the heart of offenses, guilt, fear, and to love oneself. This is the language of popular psychology, not spiritual feat. The spirit explicitly says: "It doesn't have to be esoteric terminology — there are psychological practices."
The historical Naqshband, by contrast, demanded of his students strict observance of Sharia, control of time and dhikr. His path was one of discipline, not therapy.
Part 4. What the Spirit Did Not Say (Significant Silences)
Comparing the contact communication with earthly sources, one cannot fail to notice systematic silences:
Not a word about Sharia — although the historical Naqshband demanded its strict observance.
Not a word about the Qur'an as revelation.
Not a word about the Prophet Muhammad (except for his own name).
Not a word about Islamic eschatology (Day of Judgment, heaven, hell) — instead, "the law of karma."
Not a word about the Sunnah.
Nothing about the necessity of a sheikh — although in the Naqshbandi tradition the silsila (chain of succession) is of enormous importance.
These silences are systemic: they transform Sufism from Islamic mysticism into supra-religious spirituality with minimal Muslim ornamentation.
Conclusion
The session of May 14, 2026, offers us a Naqshband unknown to history: not the founder of an order, but a cosmic wanderer with 3,609 incarnations; not an ascetic, but a critic of family hypocrisy; not an Islamic legalist, but a universal angel offering a simple practice to the modern person.
Comparison with earthly sources shows:
Coincidences: the motto "heart with God, hands to work," criticism of ostentatious asceticism, the idea of Uwaysi (receiving guidance without a physical teacher), the absence of written works by Naqshband himself.
Divergences: the introduction of reincarnation (contradicts Islam), the replacement of Sharia with the "law of karma," the simplification of practice to a 5-minute exercise, the focus on school pedagogy (absent from sources), psychotherapeutic language instead of disciplinary language.
New information (not recorded by biographers): the detail about the father's disrespect toward the mother, contacts with archangels from age 8, the motivation "did not write books because he relied on God."
Even if this contact is not a historical revelation, it has become a living myth — a new chapter in the history of the perception of Naqshband. And like any myth, it is valuable not for its literal truth, but for what soul's need it expresses: the need for love without fear, for responsibility without pride, for matter as clay, not as a prison.
Let us conclude with words attributed to Naqshband himself in Sufi tradition, which sound surprisingly consonant with the spirit of the contact communication — regardless of whether he uttered them in the 14th century or they were placed in his mouth later:
"You may forget the Path, but those who came before have not forgotten you."