The Changing Lantern
Pir Nawab traced a long lineage of forms. Hazrat Inayat Khan's words were once taken down in shorthand, then copied by hand, then turned out on a mimeograph and mailed from Switzerland. The records of the mureeds lived on index cards in a shoebox. Then came the database — for which Nawab himself argued, half a century ago. And now: shared drives, a new website, artificial intelligence.
Every one of those forms has become, in his words, barely a memory. The lantern is remade in each generation. He does not mourn the old ones — he helped retire them. He asks only this: when you change the lantern, do not forget what it was for.
For it was never the lantern that mattered. The light it carried is one.
“Almost all of those organizational structures are barely memories. We are starting a new one — and we need to keep the spiritual while we work with the organizational.”Pir Nawab