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Mu'in al-Din Chishti

Chishtī Muʿīn al-Dīn Ḥasan Sijzī (1143–1236), known more commonly as Muʿīn al-Dīn Chishtī or Moinuddin Chishti, or by the epithet Gharib Nawaz (lit.'comfort to the poor'),[6] or reverently as Shaykh Muʿīn al-Dīn or Khwāja Muʿīn al-Dīn (Urdu: معین الدین چشتی), was a Sunni Muslim preacher, ascetic, religious scholar, philosopher and mystic from Sistan, who eventually ended up settling in the Indian subcontinent in the early 13th-century, where he promulgated the famous Chishtiyya order of Sunni mysticism. This particular tariqa (order) became the dominant Islamic spiritual order in medieval India. Most of the Indian Sunni saints[4][8][9] are Chishti in their affiliation, including Nizamuddin Awliya (d. 1325) and Amir Khusrow (d. 1325).[6]

Muʿīn al-Dīn Chishtī
A Mughal miniature representing Muʿīn al-Dīn Chishtī
TitleKhwaja
Personal
Born
Sayyed Muinuddin Hassan

1 February 1143
Died15 March 1236 (aged 93)[citation needed]
Resting placeAjmer Sharif Dargah
ReligionIslam
FlourishedIslamic golden age
ChildrenThree sons—Abū Saʿīd, Fak̲h̲r al-Dīn and Ḥusām al-Dīn — and one daughter Bībī Jamāl.
Parent(s)Khwāja G̲h̲iyāt̲h̲ al-Dīn Ḥasan, Umm al-Wara
DenominationSunni[3][4]
JurisprudenceHanafi
CreedMaturidi
TariqaChishti (Founder)
Other namesKhwaja Ghareeb Nawaz, Sultan Ul Hind, Khwaja Moinuddin Chishty , Khwaja-e-Khwajgan
ProfessionIslamic preacher
Muslim leader
Influenced by
Influenced
ProfessionIslamic preacher

Having arrived in Delhi Sultanate during the reign of the sultan Iltutmish (d. 1236), Muʿīn al-Dīn moved from Delhi to Ajmer shortly thereafter, at which point he became increasingly influenced by the writings of the famous Sunni Hanbali scholar and mystic ʿAbdallāh Anṣārī (d. 1088), whose famous work on the lives of the early Islamic saints, the Ṭabāqāt al-ṣūfiyya, may have played a role in shaping Muʿīn al-Dīn's worldview.[6] It was during his time in Ajmer that Muʿīn al-Dīn acquired the reputation of being a charismatic and compassionate spiritual preacher and teacher; and biographical accounts of his life written after his death report that he received the gifts of many "spiritual marvels (karāmāt), such as miraculous travel, clairvoyance, and visions of angels"[10] in these years of his life. Muʿīn al-Dīn seems to have been unanimously regarded as a great saint after his death.[6]

Muʿīn al-Dīn Chishtī's legacy rests primarily on his having been "one of the most outstanding figures in the annals of Islamic mysticism."[2] Additionally, Muʿīn al-Dīn Chishtī is also notable, according to John Esposito, for having been one of the first major Islamic mystics to formally allow his followers to incorporate the "use of music" in their devotions, liturgies, and hymns to God, which he did in order to make the 'foreign' Arab faith more relatable to the indigenous peoples who had recently entered the religion.[11]

Early life edit

Of Persian descent,[12] Muʿīn al-Dīn Chishtī was born in 1143 in Sistan. He was sixteen years old when his father, Sayyid G̲h̲iyāt̲h̲ al-Dīn (d. c. 1155), died,[2] leaving his grinding mill and orchard to his son.[2]

Despite planning to continue his father's business, he developed mystic tendencies in his personal piety[2][clarification needed] and soon entered a life of destitute itineracy. He enrolled at the seminaries of Bukhara and Samarkand, and (probably) visited the shrines of Muhammad al-Bukhari (d. 870) and Abu Mansur al-Maturidi (d. 944), two widely venerated figures in the Islamic world.[2]

While traveling to Iran, in the district of Nishapur, he came across the famous Sunni mystic Ḵh̲wāj̲a ʿUt̲h̲mān, who initiated him.[2] Accompanying his spiritual guide for over twenty years on the latter's journeys from region to region, Muʿīn al-Dīn also continued his own independent spiritual travels during the time period.[2] It was on his independent wanderings that Muʿīn al-Dīn encountered many of the most notable Sunni mystics of the era, including Abdul-Qadir Gilani (d. 1166) and Najmuddin Kubra (d. 1221), as well as Naj̲īb al-Dīn ʿAbd al-Ḳāhir Suhrawardī, Abū Saʿīd Tabrīzī, and ʿAbd al-Waḥid G̲h̲aznawī (all d. c. 1230), all of whom were destined to become some of the most highly venerated saints in the Sunni tradition.[2]

South Asia edit

Arriving in South Asia in the early thirteenth century along with his cousin and spiritual successor Khwaja Syed Fakhr Al-Dīn Gardezi Chishti,[13] Muʿīn al-Dīn first travelled to Lahore to meditate at the tomb-shrine of the famous Sunni mystic and jurist Ali Hujwiri (d. 1072).[2]

From Lahore, he continued towards Ajmer, where he settled and married two wives, the first was the daughter of Saiyad Wajiuddin, whom he married in the year 1209/10. The second was the daughter of a local Hindu raja who had been seized in a war and had embraced Islam[2][14] He went on to have three sons—Abū Saʿīd, Fak̲h̲r al-Dīn and Ḥusām al-Dīn — and one daughter, Bībī Jamāl.[2] It is generally accepted that besides Abū Saʿīd sons are believed to be from the daughter of Hindu raja.[14] After settling in Ajmer, Muʿīn al-Dīn strove to establish the Chishti order of Sunni mysticism in India; many later biographic accounts relate the numerous miracles wrought by God at the hands of the saint during this period.[2]

Preaching in India edit

 
Detail of Hazrat Muin-ud-Din from a Guler painting showing an imaginary meeting of Sufi saints

Muʿīn al-Dīn Chishtī was not the originator or founder of the Chishtiyya order of mysticism as he is often erroneously thought to be. On the contrary, the Chishtiyya was already an established Sufi order prior to his birth, being originally an offshoot of the older Adhamiyya order that traced its spiritual lineage and titular name to the early Islamic saint and mystic Ibrahim ibn Adham (d. 782). Thus, this particular branch of the Adhamiyya was renamed the Chishtiyya after the 10th-century Sunni mystic Abū Isḥāq al-Shāmī (d. 942) migrated to Chishti Sharif, a town in the present day Herat Province of Afghanistan in around 930, in order to preach Islam in that area about 148 years prior to the birth of the founder of the Qadiriyya sufi order, Shaikh Abdul Qadir Gilani. The order spread into the Indian subcontinent, however, at the hands of the Persian Muʿīn al-Dīn in the 13th-century,[7] after the saint is believed to have had a dream in which the Islamic prophet Muhammad appeared and told him to be his "representative" or "envoy" in India.[15][16][17]

According to the various chronicles, Muʿīn al-Dīn's tolerant and compassionate behavior towards the local population seems to have been one of the major reasons behind conversion to Islam at his hand.[18][19] Muʿīn al-Dīn Chishtī is said to have appointed Bakhtiar Kaki (d. 1235) as his spiritual successor, who worked at spreading the Chishtiyya in Delhi. Furthermore, Muʿīn al-Dīn's son, Fakhr al-Dīn (d. 1255), is said to have further spread the order's teachings in Ajmer, whilst another of the saint's major disciples, Ḥamīd al-Dīn Ṣūfī Nāgawrī (d. 1274), preached in Nagaur, Rajasthan.[7]

Spiritual lineage edit

 
19th century die with the genealogy of the Chishti Order

As with every other major Sufi order, the Chishtiyya proposes an unbroken spiritual chain of transmitted knowledge going back to Muhammad through one of his companions, which in the Chishtiyya's case is Ali (d. 661).[7] His spiritual lineage is traditionally given as follows:[7]

  1. Muhammad (570 – 632),
  2. ʿAlī b. Abī Ṭālib (600 – 661),
  3. Ḥasan al-Baṣrī (d. 728),
  4. Abdul Wahid bin Zaid (d. 786),
  5. al-Fuḍayl b. ʿIyāḍ (d. 803),
  6. Ibrahim ibn Adham al-Balkhī (d. 783),
  7. Khwaja Sadid ad-Din Huzaifa al-Marashi (d. 890),
  8. Abu Hubayra al-Basri (d. 900),
  9. Khwaja Mumshad Uluw Al Dīnawarī(d. 911),
  10. Abu Ishaq Shami (d. 941),
  11. Abu Aḥmad Abdal Chishti (d. 966),
  12. Abu Muḥammad Chishti (d. 1020),
  13. Abu Yusuf ibn Saman Muḥammad Samʿān Chishtī (d. 1067),
  14. Maudood Chishti (d. 1133),
  15. Shareef Zandani (d. 1215),
  16. Usman Harooni (d. 1220).
 
Family Tree / Shajra e Nasab of Hazrat Khwaja Sayyed Moinuddin Hassan Chishti R.A. Engraved on a white marble board in Urdu, Hindi and English Language.

Dargah Sharif edit

 
Dargah of Muʿīn al-Dīn Chishtī, Ajmer, Rajasthan, India

The tomb (dargāh) of Muʿīn al-Dīn became a deeply venerated site in the century following the preacher's death in March 1236. Honoured by members of all social classes, the tomb was treated with great respect by many of the era's most important Sunni rulers, including Muhammad bin Tughluq, the Sultan of Delhi from 1324 to 1351, who paid a famous visit to the tomb in 1332 to commemorate the memory of the saint.[20] In a similar way, the later Mughal emperor Akbar (d. 1605) visited the shrine no less than fourteen times during his reign.[21]

In the present day, the tomb of Muʿīn al-Dīn continues to be one of the most popular sites of religious visitation for Sunni Muslims in the Indian subcontinent,[6] with over "hundreds of thousands of people from all over the Indian sub-continent assembling there on the occasion of [the saint's] ʿurs or death anniversary."[2] Additionally, the site also attracts many Hindus, who have also venerated the Islamic saint since the medieval period.[2] The 1992 Ajmer scandal was a series of gangrapes and blackmailing where reportedly 250 school and college going girls aged between 11 and 20 years were the victims of this monstrous crime. The perpetrators were a group of men led by Farooq and Nafis Chishty, extended members of the Khadim family that oversees the caretaking of the Ajmer Sharif Dargah Ajmer_rape_case. A bomb planted by Hindu extremists on 11 October 2007 in the Dargah of Sufi Saint Khawaja Moinuddin Chishti at the time of Iftar had left three pilgrims dead and 15 injured. A special National Investigation Agency (NIA) court in Jaipur punished with life imprisonment the two convicts in the 2007 Ajmer Dargah bomb blast case.[22]

Popular culture edit

Indian films about the saint and his dargah at Ajmer include Mere Gharib Nawaz by G. Ishwar, Sultan E Hind (1973) by K. Sharif, Khawaja Ki Diwani (1981) by Akbar Balam and Mere Data Garib Nawaz (1994) by M Gulzar Sultani.[23][24][25][26] A song in the 2008 Indian film Jodhaa Akbar named "Khwaja Mere Khwaja", composed by A. R. Rahman, pays tribute to Muʿīn al-Dīn Chishtī.[27][28]

Various qawwalis portray devotion to the saint including Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan's "Khwaja E Khwajgan", Sabri Brothers' "Khawaja Ki Deewani"and Koji Badayuni's "Kabhi rab se Mila Diya".[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Chishti, Mu'in al-Din Muhammad". Oxford Islamic Studies.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Nizami, K.A., "Čis̲h̲tī", in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs.
  3. ^ Francesca Orsini and Katherine Butler Schofield, Telling and Texts: Music, Literature, and Performance in North India (Open Book Publishers, 2015), p. 463
  4. ^ a b Arya, Gholam-Ali and Negahban, Farzin, "Chishtiyya", in: Encyclopaedia Islamica, Editors-in-Chief: Wilferd Madelung and, Farhad Daftary: "The followers of the Chishtiyya Order, which has the largest following among Sufi orders in the Indian subcontinent, are Ḥanafī Sunni Muslims."
  5. ^ a b Ḥamīd al-Dīn Nāgawrī, Surūr al-ṣudūr; cited in Auer, Blain, "Chishtī Muʿīn al-Dīn Ḥasan", in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE, Edited by: Kate Fleet, Gudrun Krämer, Denis Matringe, John Nawas, Everett Rowson.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Blain Auer, "Chishtī Muʿīn al-Dīn Ḥasan", in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, THREE, Edited by: Kate Fleet, Gudrun Krämer, Denis Matringe, John Nawas, Everett Rowson.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Arya, Gholam-Ali; Negahban, Farzin. "Chishtiyya". In Madelung, Wilferd; Daftary, Farhad (eds.). Encyclopaedia Islamica.
  8. ^ See Andrew Rippin (ed.), The Blackwell Companion to the Quran (John Wiley & Sons, 2008), p. 357.
  9. ^ M. Ali Khan and S. Ram, Encyclopaedia of Sufism: Chisti Order of Sufism and Miscellaneous Literature (Anmol, 2003), p. 34.
  10. ^ Muḥammad b. Mubārak Kirmānī, Siyar al-awliyāʾ, Lahore 1978, pp. 54-58.
  11. ^ John Esposito (ed.), The Oxford Dictionary of Islam (Oxford, 2004), p. 53
  12. ^ Avari 2013, p. 544.
  13. ^ The Chishti Shrine of Ajmer: Pirs, Pilgrims, Practices, Syed Liyaqat Hussain Moini, Publication Scheme, 2004.
  14. ^ a b Sayyad Athar Abbas Rizvi (1978). A History of Sufism in India. Vol. 1. Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers. p. 124.
  15. ^ ʿAlawī Kirmānī, Muḥammad, Siyar al-awliyāʾ, ed. Iʿjāz al-Ḥaqq Quddūsī (Lahore, 1986), p. 55
  16. ^ Firishtah, Muḥammad Qāsim, Tārīkh (Kanpur, 1301/1884), 2/377
  17. ^ Dārā Shukūh, Muḥammad, Safīnat al-awliyāʾ (Kanpur, 1884), p. 93.
  18. ^ Rizvi, Athar Abbas, A History of Sufism in India (New Delhi, 1986), I/pp. 116-125
  19. ^ Nizami, Khaliq Ahmad, 'Ṣūfī Movement in the Deccan', in H. K. Shervani, ed., A History of Medieval Deccan, vol. 2 (Hyderabad, 1974), pp. 142-147.
  20. ^ ʿAbd al-Malik ʿIṣāmī, Futūḥ al-salāṭīn, ed. A. S. Usha, Madras 1948, p. 466.
  21. ^ Abū l-Faḍl, Akbar-nāma, ed. ʿAbd al-Raḥīm, 3 vols., Calcutta 1873–87.
  22. ^ "Ajmer blast sentence: Life sentence for two in Ajmer Dargah blast case | India News - Times of India". The Times of India. 22 March 2017.
  23. ^ Screen World Publication's 75 Glorious Years of Indian Cinema: Complete Filmography of All Films (silent & Hindi) Produced Between 1913-1988. Screen World Publication. 1988. p. 85.
  24. ^ Ramnath, Nandini (4 September 2015). "Prophets and profit: The miraculous world of Indian devotional films". Scroll.in. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
  25. ^ "Sultan E Hind". Eagle Home Entertainments. 3 March 2016.
  26. ^ "Mere Data Garib Nawaz VCD (1994)". Induna.com.
  27. ^ . Planet Bollywood. Archived from the original on 29 July 2017. Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  28. ^ "Khwaja Mere Khwaja". Lyrics Translate. Retrieved 25 May 2015.

Sources edit

chishti, chishtī, muʿīn, dīn, Ḥasan, sijzī, 1143, 1236, known, more, commonly, muʿīn, dīn, chishtī, moinuddin, chishti, epithet, gharib, nawaz, comfort, poor, reverently, shaykh, muʿīn, dīn, khwāja, muʿīn, dīn, urdu, معین, الدین, چشتی, sunni, muslim, preacher,. Chishti Muʿin al Din Ḥasan Sijzi 1143 1236 known more commonly as Muʿin al Din Chishti or Moinuddin Chishti or by the epithet Gharib Nawaz lit comfort to the poor 6 or reverently as Shaykh Muʿin al Din or Khwaja Muʿin al Din Urdu معین الدین چشتی was a Sunni Muslim preacher ascetic religious scholar philosopher and mystic from Sistan who eventually ended up settling in the Indian subcontinent in the early 13th century where he promulgated the famous Chishtiyya order of Sunni mysticism This particular tariqa order became the dominant Islamic spiritual order in medieval India Most of the Indian Sunni saints 4 8 9 are Chishti in their affiliation including Nizamuddin Awliya d 1325 and Amir Khusrow d 1325 6 Muʿin al Din ChishtiA Mughal miniature representing Muʿin al Din ChishtiTitleKhwajaPersonalBornSayyed Muinuddin Hassan1 February 1143Sistan 1 2 Nasrid kingdomDied15 March 1236 aged 93 citation needed Ajmer Delhi SultanateResting placeAjmer Sharif DargahReligionIslamFlourishedIslamic golden ageChildrenThree sons Abu Saʿid Fak h r al Din and Ḥusam al Din and one daughter Bibi Jamal Parent s Khwaja G h iyat h al Din Ḥasan Umm al WaraDenominationSunni 3 4 JurisprudenceHanafiCreedMaturidiTariqaChishti Founder Other namesKhwaja Ghareeb Nawaz Sultan Ul Hind Khwaja Moinuddin Chishty Khwaja e KhwajganProfessionIslamic preacherMuslim leaderInfluenced by Usman Harooni ʿAbdullah Ansari Abdul Qadir Gilani 5 Najib al Din Nakhshabi 5 Influenced Qutbuddin Bakhtiar Kaki Muḥammad Mubarak al ʿAlavi al Kirmani 6 Ḥamid b Faḍlallah Jamali 6 Abd al Haqq al Dehlawi 6 Ḥamid al Din Ṣufi Nagawri 7 Fakhr al Din Chishti 7 Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi and virtually all subsequent mystics of the Chishtiyya order South Asian Muslims Barelvi movement and Deobandi movementProfessionIslamic preacher Having arrived in Delhi Sultanate during the reign of the sultan Iltutmish d 1236 Muʿin al Din moved from Delhi to Ajmer shortly thereafter at which point he became increasingly influenced by the writings of the famous Sunni Hanbali scholar and mystic ʿAbdallah Anṣari d 1088 whose famous work on the lives of the early Islamic saints the Ṭabaqat al ṣufiyya may have played a role in shaping Muʿin al Din s worldview 6 It was during his time in Ajmer that Muʿin al Din acquired the reputation of being a charismatic and compassionate spiritual preacher and teacher and biographical accounts of his life written after his death report that he received the gifts of many spiritual marvels karamat such as miraculous travel clairvoyance and visions of angels 10 in these years of his life Muʿin al Din seems to have been unanimously regarded as a great saint after his death 6 Muʿin al Din Chishti s legacy rests primarily on his having been one of the most outstanding figures in the annals of Islamic mysticism 2 Additionally Muʿin al Din Chishti is also notable according to John Esposito for having been one of the first major Islamic mystics to formally allow his followers to incorporate the use of music in their devotions liturgies and hymns to God which he did in order to make the foreign Arab faith more relatable to the indigenous peoples who had recently entered the religion 11 Contents 1 Early life 2 South Asia 2 1 Preaching in India 3 Spiritual lineage 4 Dargah Sharif 5 Popular culture 6 See also 7 References 8 SourcesEarly life editOf Persian descent 12 Muʿin al Din Chishti was born in 1143 in Sistan He was sixteen years old when his father Sayyid G h iyat h al Din d c 1155 died 2 leaving his grinding mill and orchard to his son 2 Despite planning to continue his father s business he developed mystic tendencies in his personal piety 2 clarification needed and soon entered a life of destitute itineracy He enrolled at the seminaries of Bukhara and Samarkand and probably visited the shrines of Muhammad al Bukhari d 870 and Abu Mansur al Maturidi d 944 two widely venerated figures in the Islamic world 2 While traveling to Iran in the district of Nishapur he came across the famous Sunni mystic Ḵh waj a ʿUt h man who initiated him 2 Accompanying his spiritual guide for over twenty years on the latter s journeys from region to region Muʿin al Din also continued his own independent spiritual travels during the time period 2 It was on his independent wanderings that Muʿin al Din encountered many of the most notable Sunni mystics of the era including Abdul Qadir Gilani d 1166 and Najmuddin Kubra d 1221 as well as Naj ib al Din ʿAbd al Ḳahir Suhrawardi Abu Saʿid Tabrizi and ʿAbd al Waḥid G h aznawi all d c 1230 all of whom were destined to become some of the most highly venerated saints in the Sunni tradition 2 South Asia editArriving in South Asia in the early thirteenth century along with his cousin and spiritual successor Khwaja Syed Fakhr Al Din Gardezi Chishti 13 Muʿin al Din first travelled to Lahore to meditate at the tomb shrine of the famous Sunni mystic and jurist Ali Hujwiri d 1072 2 From Lahore he continued towards Ajmer where he settled and married two wives the first was the daughter of Saiyad Wajiuddin whom he married in the year 1209 10 The second was the daughter of a local Hindu raja who had been seized in a war and had embraced Islam 2 14 He went on to have three sons Abu Saʿid Fak h r al Din and Ḥusam al Din and one daughter Bibi Jamal 2 It is generally accepted that besides Abu Saʿid sons are believed to be from the daughter of Hindu raja 14 After settling in Ajmer Muʿin al Din strove to establish the Chishti order of Sunni mysticism in India many later biographic accounts relate the numerous miracles wrought by God at the hands of the saint during this period 2 Preaching in India edit nbsp Detail of Hazrat Muin ud Din from a Guler painting showing an imaginary meeting of Sufi saints Muʿin al Din Chishti was not the originator or founder of the Chishtiyya order of mysticism as he is often erroneously thought to be On the contrary the Chishtiyya was already an established Sufi order prior to his birth being originally an offshoot of the older Adhamiyya order that traced its spiritual lineage and titular name to the early Islamic saint and mystic Ibrahim ibn Adham d 782 Thus this particular branch of the Adhamiyya was renamed the Chishtiyya after the 10th century Sunni mystic Abu Isḥaq al Shami d 942 migrated to Chishti Sharif a town in the present day Herat Province of Afghanistan in around 930 in order to preach Islam in that area about 148 years prior to the birth of the founder of the Qadiriyya sufi order Shaikh Abdul Qadir Gilani The order spread into the Indian subcontinent however at the hands of the Persian Muʿin al Din in the 13th century 7 after the saint is believed to have had a dream in which the Islamic prophet Muhammad appeared and told him to be his representative or envoy in India 15 16 17 According to the various chronicles Muʿin al Din s tolerant and compassionate behavior towards the local population seems to have been one of the major reasons behind conversion to Islam at his hand 18 19 Muʿin al Din Chishti is said to have appointed Bakhtiar Kaki d 1235 as his spiritual successor who worked at spreading the Chishtiyya in Delhi Furthermore Muʿin al Din s son Fakhr al Din d 1255 is said to have further spread the order s teachings in Ajmer whilst another of the saint s major disciples Ḥamid al Din Ṣufi Nagawri d 1274 preached in Nagaur Rajasthan 7 Spiritual lineage edit nbsp 19th century die with the genealogy of the Chishti Order As with every other major Sufi order the Chishtiyya proposes an unbroken spiritual chain of transmitted knowledge going back to Muhammad through one of his companions which in the Chishtiyya s case is Ali d 661 7 His spiritual lineage is traditionally given as follows 7 Muhammad 570 632 ʿAli b Abi Ṭalib 600 661 Ḥasan al Baṣri d 728 Abdul Wahid bin Zaid d 786 al Fuḍayl b ʿIyaḍ d 803 Ibrahim ibn Adham al Balkhi d 783 Khwaja Sadid ad Din Huzaifa al Marashi d 890 Abu Hubayra al Basri d 900 Khwaja Mumshad Uluw Al Dinawari d 911 Abu Ishaq Shami d 941 Abu Aḥmad Abdal Chishti d 966 Abu Muḥammad Chishti d 1020 Abu Yusuf ibn Saman Muḥammad Samʿan Chishti d 1067 Maudood Chishti d 1133 Shareef Zandani d 1215 Usman Harooni d 1220 nbsp Family Tree Shajra e Nasab of Hazrat Khwaja Sayyed Moinuddin Hassan Chishti R A Engraved on a white marble board in Urdu Hindi and English Language Dargah Sharif edit nbsp Dargah of Muʿin al Din Chishti Ajmer Rajasthan India Main article Ajmer Sharif Dargah The tomb dargah of Muʿin al Din became a deeply venerated site in the century following the preacher s death in March 1236 Honoured by members of all social classes the tomb was treated with great respect by many of the era s most important Sunni rulers including Muhammad bin Tughluq the Sultan of Delhi from 1324 to 1351 who paid a famous visit to the tomb in 1332 to commemorate the memory of the saint 20 In a similar way the later Mughal emperor Akbar d 1605 visited the shrine no less than fourteen times during his reign 21 In the present day the tomb of Muʿin al Din continues to be one of the most popular sites of religious visitation for Sunni Muslims in the Indian subcontinent 6 with over hundreds of thousands of people from all over the Indian sub continent assembling there on the occasion of the saint s ʿurs or death anniversary 2 Additionally the site also attracts many Hindus who have also venerated the Islamic saint since the medieval period 2 The 1992 Ajmer scandal was a series of gangrapes and blackmailing where reportedly 250 school and college going girls aged between 11 and 20 years were the victims of this monstrous crime The perpetrators were a group of men led by Farooq and Nafis Chishty extended members of the Khadim family that oversees the caretaking of the Ajmer Sharif Dargah Ajmer rape case A bomb planted by Hindu extremists on 11 October 2007 in the Dargah of Sufi Saint Khawaja Moinuddin Chishti at the time of Iftar had left three pilgrims dead and 15 injured A special National Investigation Agency NIA court in Jaipur punished with life imprisonment the two convicts in the 2007 Ajmer Dargah bomb blast case 22 Popular culture editIndian films about the saint and his dargah at Ajmer include Mere Gharib Nawaz by G Ishwar Sultan E Hind 1973 by K Sharif Khawaja Ki Diwani 1981 by Akbar Balam and Mere Data Garib Nawaz 1994 by M Gulzar Sultani 23 24 25 26 A song in the 2008 Indian film Jodhaa Akbar named Khwaja Mere Khwaja composed by A R Rahman pays tribute to Muʿin al Din Chishti 27 28 Various qawwalis portray devotion to the saint including Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan s Khwaja E Khwajgan Sabri Brothers Khawaja Ki Deewani and Koji Badayuni s Kabhi rab se Mila Diya citation needed See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Moinuddin Chishti List of things named after Mu in al Din Chishti Bibliography of Mu in al Din Chishti Index of Sufism related articles List of Sufis Ajmer Dargah bombing Ali Hujwiri Ata Hussain Fani Chishti Alaul Haq Pandavi Urs festival AjmerReferences edit Chishti Mu in al Din Muhammad Oxford Islamic Studies a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Nizami K A Cis h ti in Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Edited by P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs Francesca Orsini and Katherine Butler Schofield Telling and Texts Music Literature and Performance in North India Open Book Publishers 2015 p 463 a b Arya Gholam Ali and Negahban Farzin Chishtiyya in Encyclopaedia Islamica Editors in Chief Wilferd Madelung and Farhad Daftary The followers of the Chishtiyya Order which has the largest following among Sufi orders in the Indian subcontinent are Ḥanafi Sunni Muslims a b Ḥamid al Din Nagawri Surur al ṣudur cited in Auer Blain Chishti Muʿin al Din Ḥasan in Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Edited by Kate Fleet Gudrun Kramer Denis Matringe John Nawas Everett Rowson a b c d e f g h Blain Auer Chishti Muʿin al Din Ḥasan in Encyclopaedia of Islam THREE Edited by Kate Fleet Gudrun Kramer Denis Matringe John Nawas Everett Rowson a b c d e f Arya Gholam Ali Negahban Farzin Chishtiyya In Madelung Wilferd Daftary Farhad eds Encyclopaedia Islamica See Andrew Rippin ed The Blackwell Companion to the Quran John Wiley amp Sons 2008 p 357 M Ali Khan and S Ram Encyclopaedia of Sufism Chisti Order of Sufism and Miscellaneous Literature Anmol 2003 p 34 Muḥammad b Mubarak Kirmani Siyar al awliyaʾ Lahore 1978 pp 54 58 John Esposito ed The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Oxford 2004 p 53 Avari 2013 p 544 The Chishti Shrine of Ajmer Pirs Pilgrims Practices Syed Liyaqat Hussain Moini Publication Scheme 2004 a b Sayyad Athar Abbas Rizvi 1978 A History of Sufism in India Vol 1 Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers p 124 ʿAlawi Kirmani Muḥammad Siyar al awliyaʾ ed Iʿjaz al Ḥaqq Quddusi Lahore 1986 p 55 Firishtah Muḥammad Qasim Tarikh Kanpur 1301 1884 2 377 Dara Shukuh Muḥammad Safinat al awliyaʾ Kanpur 1884 p 93 Rizvi Athar Abbas A History of Sufism in India New Delhi 1986 I pp 116 125 Nizami Khaliq Ahmad Ṣufi Movement in the Deccan in H K Shervani ed A History of Medieval Deccan vol 2 Hyderabad 1974 pp 142 147 ʿAbd al Malik ʿIṣami Futuḥ al salaṭin ed A S Usha Madras 1948 p 466 Abu l Faḍl Akbar nama ed ʿAbd al Raḥim 3 vols Calcutta 1873 87 Ajmer blast sentence Life sentence for two in Ajmer Dargah blast case India News Times of India The Times of India 22 March 2017 Screen World Publication s 75 Glorious Years of Indian Cinema Complete Filmography of All Films silent amp Hindi Produced Between 1913 1988 Screen World Publication 1988 p 85 Ramnath Nandini 4 September 2015 Prophets and profit The miraculous world of Indian devotional films Scroll in Retrieved 6 January 2021 Sultan E Hind Eagle Home Entertainments 3 March 2016 Mere Data Garib Nawaz VCD 1994 Induna com Jodhaa Akbar Music Review Planet Bollywood Archived from the original on 29 July 2017 Retrieved 25 May 2015 Khwaja Mere Khwaja Lyrics Translate Retrieved 25 May 2015 Sources editAvari Burjor 2013 Islamic Civilization in South Asia A history of Muslim power and presence in the Indian subcontinent Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 58061 8 nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Mu in al Din Chishti Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mu 27in al Din Chishti amp oldid 1220078548, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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