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The Karimjee family are a Tanzanian business family of Indian origin and owners of the Karimjee Group. Since the 1800s, [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Karimjee family business ventures have included trade, agriculture, [ 3 ] real estate and various products in the mobility sector.
Najmuddin [c] was born in 1859 in the village of Gotsob, in the Russian Empire's Dagestan Oblast to an aristocratic family. [4] His Avar father, Muhammad Donogo [], had been a naib under Imam Shamil that defected to the Russian government, becoming a high-ranking military officer and significant landowner as a result of his defection.
Najm ad-Din al-Kubra Mausoleum in Konye-Urgench, Turkmenistan. Born in 540/1145 in Khiva, Najmuddin Kubra began his career as a scholar of hadith and kalam.His interest in Sufism began in Egypt where he became a murid of Ruzbihan Baqli, who was an initiate of the Uwaisi.
The Kubrawiya order (Arabic: سلسلة کبرویة) or Kubrawi order, [1] also known as Kubrawi Hamadani,or Hamadani Kubra, [citation needed] is a Sufi order that traces its spiritual lineage to the Islamic prophet, Muhammad, through Ali, Muhammad's cousin, son-in-law and the First Imam.
Najmuddin of Gotzo and Uzun-Hajji of Salta in Gergebil, a 1919 artwork by Xalilbeg Musajasul. The Red Army invaded Dagestan in March 1918, bringing the Russian Civil War to the North Caucasus. [23] In May of the same year, detachments under Najmuddin, Uzun-Hajji, and other military commanders met in Gunib.
He was eventually appointed the 23rd Dai as his successor and became the first from the Indian community to lead the Tayyibi Da’wa as the 24th al-Mutlaq. When Najmuddin died in CE 1567/H 974, the central headquarters of the Da’wah were transferred from Yemen to Gujarat by his Indian successor, Jalal bin Hasan. [16]
Najmuddin Kubra (1145–1221), Persian Sufi philosopher; Najm al-Din Razi (1177–1256), Persian Sufi philosopher; Al-Malik as-Salih Najm al-Din Ayyub, or just As-Salih Ayyub (c. 1205–1249), Ayyubid ruler of Egypt; Najm al-Dīn al-Qazwīnī al-Kātibī (died 1276), Persian Islamic philosopher and logician of the Shafi`i school
Abu Taher Khuzaima Qutbuddin [1] [2] (5 June 1940 – 30 March 2016) was the son of the 51st Da'i al-Mutlaq, half brother of the 52nd Da'i and a Mazoon of the Dawoodi Bohras, [3] [4] a subgroup within the Mustaali, Ismaili Shia branch of Islam.