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Syed Shah Murshed Ali also known as ‘Huzur Purnur’ was the eldest son and Sajjada nashin of Aala Huzur. He was an accomplished scholar and a unique Sufi poet. His diwan is regarded as one of the most sacred books on Sufism. [6] The second son Syed Shah Ali Murshed was also a saint and his shrine is at Payardanga. The youngest son Syed Shah ...
After practicing chilla in complete fasting for forty days, Shah Ali Baghdadi died in c. 1480 and was buried in Mirpur, Dhaka. [5] [6] However, according to a book preserved in his mausoleum, he died in 1577 AD. [1] The Bangladeshi Islamic scholar Nur Muhammad Azmi identifies Shah Ali's year of death as 913 AH (1507 AD). [4]
Pir Meher Ali Shah (Urdu: پیر مہر على شاهؓ; 14 April 1859 – May 1937), was a Punjabi Muslim Sufi scholar and mystic poet from Punjab, British India (present-day Pakistan). Belonging to the Chishti order , he is known as a Hanafi scholar who led the anti- Ahmadiyya movement.
Mazār is the Arabic word borrowed by Persian, Urdu and Hindi. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] It is thus largely used in Iran and other countries influenced by Persian culture , in Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. Weli (plural awliya ): in Palestine , weli is the common term both for a saint and his sanctuary.
Qutb ud-Din Ahmad ibn ʿAbd-ur-Rahim al-ʿUmari ad-Dehlawi (Arabic: قطب الدين أحمد بن عبد الرحيم العمري الدهلوي, romanized: Quṭb ad-Dīn Aḥmad ibn ʿAbd-ur-Raḥīm al-ʿUmarī ad-Dehlawī ; 1703–1762), commonly known as Shah Waliullah Dehlawi (also Shah Wali Allah), was an Islamic Sunni scholar and Sufi reformer, [13] who contributed to Islamic ...
Abdul Qadir Gilani (Persian: عبدالقادر گیلانی, romanized: 'Abdulqādir Gīlānī, Arabic: عبد القادر الجيلاني, romanized: ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Jīlānī) was a Hanbali scholar, preacher, and Sufi leader who was the eponym of the Qadiriyya, one of the oldest Sufi orders.
Ultimately his own book Ahqaq-ul-haq was presented as evidence against him, he was declared a heretic and sentenced to death due to his religious beliefs. [8] [9] He was executed by flogging in Jumada II 1019/September 1610, at the age of 61. [10] [11] [12] There is a famous debate shedding light on his assassination in the book Peshawar Nights ...
The Arabic text of the same is found in Abu Musa al-Hariri's al-Alawiyyun al-Alawiyya (Dubai: Dar al-Itisam, 1980), 145-74. An English translation by Edward E. Salisbury was published in Journal of the American Oriental Society in 1866. [5] The man who revealed the alleged book was Sulayman al-Adani, an Alawite convert to Christianity. [6]