تصنیف به جهان خرم از آنم، شعر سعدی،آواز استاد شهرام ناظری،آهنگ از استاد جلیل عندلیبی،موسیقی ایرانی

Awayeirani Institue Of Culture And Arts
Awayeirani Institue Of Culture And Arts
تصنیف به جهان خرم از آنم، شعر سعدی،آواز استاد شهرام ناظری،آهنگ از استاد جلیل عندلیبی،موسیقی ایرانیMake the world bea ...
تصنیف به جهان خرم از آنم، شعر سعدی،آواز استاد شهرام ناظری،آهنگ از استاد جلیل عندلیبی،موسیقی ایرانی


Make the world beautiful
We are all human and the same
Respect each other
My world house is everywhere
The world is beautiful when there is no war
All beliefs are respectable as long as they do not harm humanity

لطفا برای استفاده بهتر و سریع تر به پلی لیست ها مراجعه فرمایید
please see playlists

به جهان خرم از آنم که جهان خرم از اوست

عاشقم بر همه عالم که همه عالم از اوست

به غنیمت شمر ای دوست دم عیسی صبح

تا دل مرده مگر زنده کنی کاین دم از اوست

نه فلک راست مسلم نه ملک را حاصل

آنچه در سر سویدای بنی‌آدم از اوست

به حلاوت بخورم زهر که شاهد ساقیست

به ارادت ببرم درد که درمان هم از اوست

زخم خونینم اگر به نشود به باشد

خنک آن زخم که هر لحظه مرا مرهم از اوست

غم و شادی بر عارف چه تفاوت دارد

ساقیا باده بده شادی آن کاین غم از اوست

پادشاهی و گدایی بر ما یکسان است

که بر این در همه را پشت عبادت خم از اوست

سعدیا گر بکند سیل فنا خانهٔ عمر

دل قوی دار که بنیاد بقا محکم از اوست

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Abū-Muhammad Muslih al-Dīn bin Abdallāh Shīrāzī (Persian: ابومحمّد مصلح‌الدین بن عبدالله شیرازی), better known by his pen name Saadi (/ˈsɑːdi/;[3] Persian: سعدی, romanized: About this soundSaʿdī, IPA: [sæʔˈdiː]), also known as Saadi of Shiraz (سعدی شیرازی, Saʿdī Shīrāzī; born 1210; died 1291 or 1292), was a major Persian poet and prose writer of the medieval period. He is recognized for the quality of his writings and for the depth of his social and moral thoughts. Saadi is widely recognized as one of the greatest poets of the classical literary tradition, earning him the nickname "Master of Speech" (استاد سخن ostâd-e soxan) or simply "Master" (استاد ostâd) among Persian scholars. He has been quoted in the Western traditions as well. Bustan has been ranked as one of the 100 greatest books of all time by The Guardian
Saadi was born in Shiraz, Iran, according to some, shortly after 1200, according to others sometime between 1213 and 1219.In the Golestan, composed in 1258, he says in lines evidently addressed to himself, "O you who have lived fifty years and are still asleep"; another piece of evidence is that in one of his qasida poems he writes that he left home for foreign lands when the Mongols came to his homeland Fars, an event which occurred in 1225. Saadi was a Sunni Muslim. According to Annemarie Schimmel the tendency of Shia to associate with the Sunni poet became the norm after Twelver Shiaism became the state religion of the Safavid Empire.

Saadi Shirazi whose family were from religious scholars, missed his father when he was a child. Then he was under the guardianship of his maternal grandmother. He narrates memories of going out with his father as a child during festivities.

After leaving Shiraz he enrolled at the Nizamiyya University in Baghdad, where he studied Islamic sciences, law, governance, history, Persian literature, and Islamic theology; it appears that he had a scholarship to study there. In the Golestan, he tells us that he studied under the scholar Abu'l-Faraj ibn al-Jawzi (presumably the younger of two scholars of that name, who died in 1238).

In the Bustan and Golestan Saadi tells many colourful anecdotes of his travels, although some of these, such as his supposed visit to the remote eastern city of Kashgar in 1213, may be fictional. The unsettled conditions following the Mongol invasion of Khwarezm and Iran led him to wander for thirty years abroad through Anatolia (where he visited the Port of Adana and near Konya met ghazi landlords), Syria (where he mentions the famine in Damascus), Egypt (where he describes its music, bazaars, clerics and elites), and Iraq (where he visits the port of Basra and the Tigris river). In his writings he mentions the qadis, muftis of Al-Azhar, the grand bazaar, music and art. At Halab, Saadi joins a group of Sufis who had fought arduous battles against the Crusaders. Saadi was captured by Crusaders at Acre where he spent seven years as a slave digging trenches outside its fortress. He was later released after the Mamluks paid ransom for Muslim prisoners being held in Crusader dungeons.

Saadi visited Jerusalem and then set out on a pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina. It is believed that he may have also visited Oman and other lands in the south of the Arabian Peninsula.

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