‘Moses!
I am your Lord. Take off your
sandals: you are in the sacred valley of Tuwa.
I have chosen you, so listen to what is being revealed.
I am
Allah; there is no god but Me, so worship Me and keep up the prayer so that you
remember Me'. (20:
12-15)
These verses in the Holy Qur’an allude to a time when Allah (swt) directly spoke
to a servant of His, intimating him about the great Divine Mission that lies ahead
of him; urging him to be detached from the personal relations that come in the way of remaining engrossed in Divine Remembrance
through fervent prayers and other devote supplications. In mystical commentaries of the aforesaid verses, the idea of "taking off the sandals" certainly points to the same: in being asked to remove his sandals, Hadhrat Musa (as) was being asked to cast aside this world by turning his face towards the Ocean of Divine Presence alone, dedicating oneself solely to Allah (swt). In a famous poem by that medieval polymath Sheikh-ul-Akbar Muhyi-ud-Din Ibn Arabi, the imagery is explained eloquently:
"Take off the sandals if you come
"Take off the sandals if you come
to this valley, for therein is Our Holiness.
Of the two worlds divest yourself,
and lift the veils of in-betweenness"