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(1938) Sufism Its Saints and Shrines

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Hadrat Bu 'All Shah Qalandar.


SUFISM

ITS SAINTS AND SHRINES.

An Introduction to Study of Suftsm with


the

Special Reference to India

BY

JOHN A. SUB.MAN, B.A., B.D.


or THB
MKTHOPIST EPISCOPAL CHUVCH
LCTU
TH HCNHY MAIITTN SCHOOL or ISLAMICS, LAMOCE
or 'TH QAOABI OBDVR

LUCKNOW iHINO *IF


To

WILLIAM PATON
AND

MURRAY TITUS

IN GRATEFUL RECOGNITION OF THE FACT THAT IT


WAS THROUGH THEIR INSTRUMENTALITY THAT
I UNDERTOOK THE SPECIAL WORK IN WHICH
I AM NOW ENGAGED.
PREFACE
At
the very outset I desire to acknowledge with
deep gratitude the invaluable assistance given to me
by my revered friend and counsellor, Rev. L. Bevan
Jones, Principal of the Henry Martyn School of Islam-
ics, Lahore, in the composition of this book in proper

English. He has helped unstintingly by going over the


whole manuscript, sentence by sentence, correcting
and improving its language and thus making its publi-
cation possible. Without his help and encouragement
this book would, probably never have seen the light.

I am also deeply indebted to my friend and colleague,


Rev. J. W. Sweetman, for kindly re-writing Ch. II, and

translating into English the original passages quoted in


this book, and also for his generous help in Proofs
reading.
I also desire to express my great indebtedness to
Dr. L. E. Browne, my former colleague and to my friend
and benefactor Dr. M. T. Titus for thir most valu-
able criticism and helpful suggestions most of which
have found their way into this book.
I am conscious that the subject here dealt with has
not received adequate treatment. But in view of the
fact that the resources for our knowledge of such parts
of it as, the history of the Religious Orders and details

of the Saints, are so obscure and at times so unacces-


sible, readers who are in a position to see the book's
ii PREFACE
shortcomings will kindly forgive the deficiencies and
favour me with their criticisms.
The book claims no originality and no great re-
search. It is an effort to place before English readers
in systematic form, the varied and extensive, though
often hidden, material on the subject of Mysticism and
Saint worship in Islam, available in Urdu and Persian
literature.
A word must be added on the system of translitera-
tion adopted in this book. While it has not been poss-
ible to give an exact idea of the pronunciation of
Arabic and Persian words, the following method has
been adopted.
The elision of alif is indicated by an apostrophe ('),

e.g., 'Allu'l-Hujwiri. The cases where apostrophe is

used for hamza or for the elision ofalif can easily be


determined by persons acquainted with Arabic and
Persian. The Arabic 'ayn is represented by an inverted

apostrophe O e. g. Shara\
The long vowels are represented by a short hori-
zontal overline, a, I, u, and have approximately the sound
of the vowels in the following words: father, seen,
loot. ,

Diacritical points or lines appear under h, s, z,t, o,

th, kh, gh, to represent certain Arabic values. Some


few words, however, such as current proper names, are

spelled according to usage, e. g., Muhammad, Quran,


Islam. In footnotes and headings Arabic or Sanskrit
words are spelled in Roman without any diacritical

points.
PREFACE iii

Lastly, I offer my my wife for the sym-


thanks to
pathy, encouragement and wise counsel that I have
received from her in writing of this book, which other-
wise because of the peculiar nature of its subject and
being my first effort to write for English readers would
not have been an easy task.

Lahore, India. J. A. S.

March, 1938.
CONTENTS
PAGE
Chapter-
Introduction ... ... 1

I. The early History of ufism ... 6


The derivation of the word ufl The
beginning of ufism The earliest

form of ufism.

II. Later Development of ufism ... 17


Speculative elements in ufism ufism
wins recognition in Islam The classic

period
4
of ufism Farldu'd-Dln,
Attar Jalalu'd-Dm Ruml Sa'dl
Later ufl peots Shabistari Hafig
Jami.
III. The ufl Gnostic System ... 52
ufl speculative concerning God
Tanazzuldt, the descent of the Abso-
lute The Haqlqatul-Muhammad-
diyya The Latd'if, the organs of
spiritual apprehension.

IV. The Path ... ... 67


The Stages of the Path The Divine
Effulgence and mystic Illumination
Fand, Annihilation.
vi CONTENTS
V. The Path (Continued) ... 87
Devotion to the plr ufi devotions

General acts of devotions Special


acts of devotions.

VI. Notable f eatutes of ufl Practice . . . 102


Veneration of Saints The hierarchy of
the Saints Visitation to a Shrine-
Miracle Sama\ musical festivals

Khidr and Ilyas.

VII. The Introduction of ufism into India 118


Baba Ratan Bibl Pakdamanan Sayyid
Salar Mas'ud Ghazi 'Allu'l-Hujwiri.

VIII. The Relation of ufism to Indian Thought 1 32


The ufi attitude towards Hinduism
The ufl plr and Hindu guru ufl

speculative concerning God compared


with the teachings of Hindu Philo-
sophy Wahdatul-WujUdiyya and
Advaita Philosophy Shuhudiyya and
Vishistadvaita LatcCif and Chakras
Fand and Nirvana or Moksa.
IX. The Origin of Religious Orders ... 159
Hasan of Basra The Zaydiyya The
Hablbiyya.
X. The Four Main Orders ... 174
The Chishtl Order The Qadiri Order
The Suhrawardll Order The Naqsh-
bandl Order.
CONTENTS vii

XL The Chishti Order ... ... 193


Khwaja Mu inu'd-Din
4

Chishti.

XII. The Chishti Order after the death of


Mu'inu'd-Din ... ... 209
Khwaja Qutbu'd-Din Mu s i c in the
Chishti Order Faridu'd-Din Shafkar-

ganj.

XIII. The Nizami and abiri Section of the


Chishti Order ... ... 220
The Nizami S e c t i o n Hisamiyya
Hamza Shahi
The Sabiri Section of the Chishti
Order.

XIV. The Suhrawardl Order. . . ... 228


Baha'u'd-Dm Zakariya Sadru'd-Din -

Shaykh Ahmad Ma shuq Sub-sections


4

of the Suhrawardl Order.

XV. The Sub-divisions of the Suhrawardl


Order ... ... 236
Bd-Sara SectionsThe Jalali Section
The Makhdumi S e c t i o n The
Ismail Shahi Section-The Dawla
Shahl Section Be-Shara Sections
Lai Shahbaziyya and the Rasul Shahi
sections.

XVI. The Qadirl Order ... ... 253


Some early Saints of the Order The
Qumesiyya The Bahlul Shahi Section
viii CONTENTS
The Muqlm Shahl Section The
Nawshahl Section,

XVII. The Qadirl Order (Continued) ... 265


The Husayn Shahl and Miyao Khel Sec-
tions.

XVIII. The Naqshbandl Order ... 275


The early Saints of the Naqshbandl
Order in India Ahmad FaruqlMuj-
addadiyya-Naqshbandiyya.

XIX. The Naqshbandl Order ... 285


The doctrine or Qayyumiyat The four
Qayyums.

XX. Some Minor Orders ... ... 299


The Uwaysi Orders Tha Madari Order
The Shattarl Order-The Qalandari
Order The Malamati Order.

Epilogue. ... 319

APPENDICES
A. A List of the Principal Saints of
Indian Sufism ... 331

B. The Principal Anniversaries of the


Saints in India. ... 369

INDEX. ... 377


INTRODUCTION.
ON THURSDAY NIGHT.
TONIGHT is Thursday night, the night which is

specially sacred to the ufl.Come, let us visit some


shrines and see for ourselves what strange religious rite5
are practised almost at our very doors.
Weenter a dimly-lighted room where a number of
men are gathered. As we do so a signal is given by a
man who appears to be the leader of the assembly and
the doors are shut. There is a hush as twelve men
form into two parallel lines in the centre of the room.
The glimmer of a solitary hurricane lamp falls on dark
faces in which only the eyes seem to live. The rest of
us fall back to the sides of the room. The dhikr is

about to begin.
With a startling clap of the hands the leader starts

swaying from right to left.Very slowly he begins and


the men fall into the rhythm of his swaying. Every
time they sway to the left, they call "Hu !" in chorus,
tl
Hu....Hu...Hu..." So the monotonous chant proceeds
with at hardly any perceptible increase in tempo.
first

But gradually the movement of their bodies becomes


more rapid and the sound of "Hu Hu Hu!" comes ! !

faster and faster and with a crescendo corresponding


with the quicker time. At last the excitement becomes
so intense that a man there, and a boy here, slip to
their knees, still swaying in unison with the others till
2 INTRODUCTION
finally they fall floor. One man goes
in collapse on the
forward and looks at the faces of these two and leaves
them where they lie. Thus course after course of this
chanting and swaying beginning from the slower and
proceeding to the wild orgy of motion and shouting,
according to the leader's direction, who brings the
'
whole course to end by a loud shout of "Huf and a
its

wild jerk to the left. Then dead silence prevails,


succeeded by the low undertone of prayer in which all
who have not fallen unconscious join.
We leave the room as the unconscious begin to
revive, in order that we may witness a more extraordi-
nary performance in a neighbouring shrine. Wending
our way through the narrow lanes, we eventually reach
our destination. We pass the threshold and enter a
maze of rooms in the dark, till we find ourselves in a
gloomy Against the end wall, five men sit facing
hall.

us. The middle one is the leader, but the other four
are also elders. Upon the wall to the right of the
leader, knives, cutlasses and other pointed instruments
of iron are suspended. In the front of him a group of
some twenty men are seated forming a semi-circle.
Here the performance seems to have been in progress
already for some time. The leader is repeating some-
thing and swaying his body from right to left. The
rest in unison with him sway in the accustomed manner
from side to side and shout in chorus, "Allah!" Sudden-
ly in the midst of the performance one man on the right
of the leader begins to chant a prayer all change the
;

movement of their bodies and begin to sway backwards


INTRODUCTION 3

and forwards, continuing the chorus of "Allah." Thus


they proceed for about an hour when all rise up, and
the two elders on each side of the leader begin an
antiphonic chant, responding alternately. The rest with
a rising and falling movement from the hips, now shout
44
in chorus Ya Hu! Ya HU!" and at the same time is
heard a mingled sound of sob, sigh and cry. Soon they
become more excited; rising to their feet they form into
a circle and begin to stamp their feet on the floor, ac-
cording to the rhythm of the singing elders. Then at a
measured pace they make the circuit of the hall. At
the point when their strength seems to be exhausted,
the scene takes a new turn. Some of the men take
down the sharp weapons and heat them in the fire
which has all the time been burning in the corner.
When these are red-hot they are taken to the leader
and he breathes on them. The men, filled with fresh
energy and with a frenzy almost amounting to madness,
rush to the leader and take these red-hot irons from
him, snatching them, licking them, holding them be-
tween the teeth. Those who cannot get irons, take
hold of the knives and cutlasses hanging on the
still

wall, and with indescribable fury stick them into their


sides, legs and arms. It does not take long for them to

lose their strength, and one after another they stagger


and fall on the floor. They utter no word of complaint
and do not show any sign of pain. All is quiet the :

yells and shrieks have given way to a fearful silence, a

strange contrast to the pandemonium only a little while


before. The riotous scene has changed into a horrible
4 INTRODUCTION
spectacle of wounded men lying all over the floor. The
leader now walks round the hall, examines each person
and applies his saliva to their wounds. As we turn to
leave the hall, one of the elders comes up to us and in

quite a confident tone assures us that in twenty-four


hours they will be perfectly healed and not even a scar
of theirwounds will be left.
It is now past midnight and we shall visit one more
shrine where the dhihr continues all night long. We
leave the city and come to a place which appears like

a village. In an open space with a small shrine in the


background we find a large number of people gathered
and a musical festival in progress. People are sitting
close to one another and a large crowd of spectators is
standing all round. The entire gathering strikes us by
its disorderliness. One man in a corner is shrieking
"Hu !", another is raving like a madman, a third is

whirling round and round, and yet a fourth is lying un-


conscious, while all the time the musicians, paying no
heed to the behaviour of these men who are in frenzy

or, as they would say, in a state of religious ecstasy -

go on with their singing and keep on playing their in-


struments. Then certain men, apparently appointed to-
do this* come forward and seize the men far gone in
ecstasy, carry them off to some nearby trees and hang
them up by their heels. In the dim light of oil-lamps

burning here and there,we had not noticed that there


were already some suspended in this way. Some of
these are now recovering their senses and they are
loosed. They go back and join the crowd to listen to
INTRODUCTION 5

the music. We are told that this treatment meted out


to men in a state of ecstasy is a part of their mystic
rites.

Thefollowing pages will throw some light on the


history of the ufis, ^and an attempt will be made to set
forth some of their mystical doctrines which have in
some instances degenerated into these strange spectacles
and orgies of emotion.
CHAPTER I.

THE EARLY HISTORY OF SUFISM.


ufism is that mode of the religious life in Islam in
which the emphasis is placed, not on the performances

of external ritual, but on the activities of the inner-self


in other words it signifies Islamic mysticism. This
term has been popularised by Western writers, but the
one in common use among Muslims is Tasawwuf, while
its cognate, ufi, is used for the mystic.

THE DERIVATION OF 'SUFF.

A variety of opinions exists among scholars as to


the meaning and derivation of the word ufi. Some of
the ufis themselves associate with the Arabic safa
it

(purity). Others again see in it an historical allusion


to Ajhdbu's-safd, or the people of the bench. They
spent their time in worship, imitation of the Prophet
and searching the Quran and Hadlth- They did not
engage in any worldly business; men who married were
expelled from their company; they wore little dress and
were devoted to poverty; for a living they gathered
sticks and they often fed on fallen dates; Muhammad
fed them and commanded his companions to do like-
wise.* The porch of the temple (i. e. where they
used to assemble on the benches) became their man-

*Bukhari, Sahih Book 8Ch. 58; Book 9Ch. 41; Ibn Sa'ad,
Vol. I.
THE EARLY HISTORY OF SUFISM 7

sions,and hence they obtained their name. But the


word, however, can be traced with greater certainty to
$uf, wool, inasmuch as we know that in the early days
of Islam woollen garments were frequently worn by
not only as their distinctive garb, but also as a
ascetics,

symbol of their voluntary poverty, and renunciation of


the world and all its pleasures.
According to QushayrI (988 A. D.) and Shihabu'd-
Din Suhrawardi (1234 A. D.) the term ufi first came
into use at the end of the second century after Hijra
(815 A. D.), and their claim receives further support
from the fact that the word does not find a place either
in the Sittah
compiled and 10th century
in the 9th
A. D. or even in the Qamus, the standard Arabic Dic-
tionary compiled in 1414 A. D.

THE BEGINNINGS OF SUFISM.


It is asserted by M uslims that ufism had its rise in

Muhammad himself, and that all the religious orders


trace their lines of succession back to him. "He is said
to have been the recipient of a two-fold revelation, the
one embodied Quran, the other
in the contents of the
within his heart. The former was meant for all and is
binding on all; the latter was to be transmitted to the
chosen few through these lines of succession. Hence
it is that Muhammad's knowledge is described as being
'ilm-i-safina, book knowledge, and 'ilm-i-sina, heart
knowledge. The former is incorporated in the doctrinal

*
t. e. The Six Correct Boobs of Traditions.
8 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

teaching of the 'Ulama; the latter is strictly esoteric,


the mystical teaching of the Sufis." :

As a matter of fact ufism passed through several


phases in the process of its development. From certain
passages in the Quran would appear that
it its germ did
exist in Muhammad himself, for that book is propably
best understood as reflecting his own mind. In it are
to be found also justification and support for the my-
stical tendencies so strongly manifested by some of
Muhammad's companions and friends, tendencies which
life of detachment, poverty and
inevitably resulted in a
So that one may say that the companions
mortification.
of Muhammad and their successors were, in a sense,
forerunners of the ufis.

THE EARLIEST FORM OF SUFISM


The ufism of these early Muslims was characterised
by the renunciation of worldly pleasures and an intense
fear of Allah and His judgments. It was not till some
three hundred years after the death of Muhammad,
that pantheism and idealism came to be outstanding
features of ufism. In other words the early ufis were
strictly speaking ascetics, with poverty as the ideal of
their religious life.

Ibn Khaldun (1406 A. D.) has express**! a somewhat


similar view in the Prolegomena to his great historical
work: "The way of the ufis was regarded by the
ancient Muslims and their illustrous men the Com-
panions of the Prophet (ds-$ahaba)i the Successors
*Bevan Jones. The People of the Mosque, p. 265.
THE EARLY HISTORY OF SUFISM 9

and the generation that came after them


n),
as the way of Truth and Salvation. To be assiduous in

piety, to give up all else for God's sake, to turn away


from worldly gauds and vanities, to renounce pleasure,
wealth and power, which are the general objects of
human ambition, to abandon society and to lead in
seclusion a life devoted to the service of God these
are the fundamental principles of ufism which prevail-
ed among the companions and Muslims of the old
time.' 1M)

ASCETICISM, RESULTING FROM THE


ISLAMIC CONCEPTION OF ALLAH.
It thus becomes evident that the earliest phase of
ufism was a form of asceticism, and this was a product
of Islam itself, since it arose as one of the direct

consequences of the Islamic conception of Allah. That


conception, as commonly held, has, from the beginning
of Islam, been such as "produce fear and servility, also
listlessness and formality in life and practice. Allah is

one to be feared rather than loved. Islam would


propound as the greatest commandment of all, Thou
"
shalt fear the Lord thy God/ (2)
The Traditions provide us with striking illustrations
of what has just been said, in the lives of certain

companions of the Prophet and their successors who


had an exaggerated consciousness of the sin of dis-
obedience and extreme dread of Divine punishment.

(1) Muqaddima (Beyrut, 1900), p. 467.

(2) Be van Jones. ov. cit. p. 265.


10 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

Thus we read that Tamlmu'd-Dri, one


of the Prophet's

companions, who was


formerly a Christian, passed the
whole night until daybreak, repeating a single verse of
the Quran (Ch. 45:20) "Do those who commit evil
deeds count that we will make them like those who
believe and work righteous deeds, equal in their life
11
(1)
and in their death? Ill do they judge! Abu'd-Dards,
another of the companions, used to say: "If ye knew
what ye shall see after death, ye would not eat food
nor drink water with any relish; as for myself I wish
that I were a tree which is lopped and then
devoured/ M2) Another tradition to the same effect is
recorded by Ibn Sa'ad and Ibn Hanbal that one
day 'Uthman b. Maz'un said to Muhammad: "O
Apostle of God, my heart urges me to become a
devotee; to go to the mountains and adopt the monastic
life; should take to wandering on the face of the
that I

earth and get rid of all my wealth; that I should divorce


my wife, Khawla, eat no meat and abstain from the use
1
(8)
of perfumes.*
A further reason for the adoption of a life of
asceticism is to be found in the political condition of
the period immediately following the reigns of the first
four khalifas. For there were many pious Muslims
who, becoming disgusted with the tyrannical and
impious rule of the Umayyad Khalifas, withdrew from
the world to seek peace of soul in a life of seclusion.
(1) Sha'rani, Lawaqihul-Anwar (Cairo 1299 A. D.), p. 31.
(2) Ibid.
(3) Ibn Sa'ad, Tabaqat Vol. III. Part I. p. 287. (Lcyden
1904-8) Ibn Hanbal, Musnad, Vol. I. 176 and 183 (Cairo 1313 A. H.)
THE EARLY HISTORY OF SUFISM 11

The outstanding figure in this early ascetic

movement was Hasan of Basra (728 A. D.). It is sauj

that the fear of God him so mightily that, in the


seized
words of his biographer, "it seemed as though hell-fire
had been created for him alone." It is said that "one
day a friend saw him weeping and asked him the cause.
"I weep/* he replied, "for fear that I have done some-

thing unintentionally, or committed some fault, or


spoken some word which is unpleasing to God, then
He may have said, "Begone, for thou hast no more
favour with me."*
Towards the end of the first century A. H. there
arose a class of people who were not merely ascetics but
something more. In them the life of seclusion led on to
contemplation, and contemplation to vision and ecstasy.
At this stage renunciation and poverty were regarded
by the asceties not as meritorious works in themsleves,
but as expressions of one's selfless devotion to God. In
the earlier days of Islam renunciation and its rewards
were conceived of in a material sense. To have as few
goods as possible was believed to be the surest means
of gaining paradise. The following illustration will serve
the purpose of showing the ideal of poverty as held by
the ascetics of those days. Itis said that a certain man

dreamed that he saw Malik Wasi* being led into


b.

paradise. Malik was admitted before his companion.


The dreamer cried out in astonishment, for he had always
thought that Muhammad b. Wasi* had the superior

*Faridu'd-Din 'Attar, Tadhkiritul-Awliya, (Lahore) p. 28


Translated by Prof. Nicholson, Part I, p. 37.
12 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
claim. A voice explained: "Yes, but Muhammad
1 '

b. Wasi' possessed two shirts and Malik only one.


But to the ascetics of this later period the ideal of
poverty meant not merely lack of wealth, but lack of
the very desire for it, As their phrase had it, it signified
the empty heart as well as the empty hand. Perhaps
nothing marks the development in the outlook of the
later more than this change in their conception of
ufis

true poverty. It came very close to the Christian

conception of it as defined by a modern writer in the


following words: "By poverty the mystic means an
utter self-stripping, the casting off of immaterial as well
as material wealth, a complete detachment from all
:

finite things."

These early ufis, however, were orthodox Muslims


in regard to their beliefs and practices. They laid
great emphasis on certain points in the teachings of the
Quran and Traditions. They had not yet begun to
indulge in pantheistic and theosophical speculations, but
confined their thoughts to matters bearing on practical
theology. The distinctive features of their creed
consisted in self-abandonment, self-mortification, fer-
vent piety, and quietism carried to the extreme.
The outstanding figures during this period were
l

Ibrahim b. Adham 783 A. D.), Fudayl b.


(d. lyad
(d. 801 A. D.), Rabi'a al-'Adwiyya (d. 802 A. D.)
Ibrahim b. Adham is described by the ufi bio-

graphers to have been the king of Balkfa. His royal


dignity is indicated by the fact that when he walked
'Underbill, Mysticism; p. 205.
THE EARLY HISTORY OF SUFISM 13

abroad forty golden scimitars and forty golden maces


were borne in front of him and behind. One day, while
hunting, he was warned by an unseen voice which
cried, "Awake! wert thou created for this?" Therefore
he renounced his throne and all the world's pleasures
for a life of ascetism and piety. One of his sayings is

reported as follows: "O God, Thou knowest that in


mine eyes the eight paradises weigh no more than the
wing of a gnat compared with that honour which Thou
hast shown me in giving me Thy love, or that
familiarity which Thou hast given to me by the
commemoration of Thy name, or that freedom from all
else which Thou hast vouchsafed to me when I meditate

on the greatness of Thy glory" (1)


Fudayl b. lyad, before he became an ascetic, was a
captain of banditti. one night when he
It is said that
was determined to gratify a lawless passion, he heard
some pious person reciting the following verse of the
Quran, "Is it not high time for those who believe to
open hearts to compunction?"
their These words
pricked him to the heart and produced in him profound
1

contrition. "Yea, Lord/ he exclaimed, "it is indeed


high time." Thus broken in spirit by sense of his sin,
he passed the night in solemn meditation. The next
morning he renounced all his possessions and became a
4

disciple of Abdu'l-Wahid b. Zayd, a successor of


Hasan of Basra. (2) In time he became widely cele-

(1) cp. Prof. Nicholson, A Literary History of the Arabs t

p. 232.

(2) 'Attar; op, cit. p. 69.


14 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
brated for his sanctity, and was appointed a vice-gerent
and successor by his master. Fudayl gave a rule of life
to his disciples, which is believed to be the original
monastic institute of Islam.
Rabi*a belonged to the tribe of Qays b. *Adi from
which she was known as al-'Adawiyya or al-Qaysiyya,
but she is most commonly spoken of as Basari (al-

Basariyya), from Basra, her birth place. Faridu'd-Din


4

Aftar, the author of the Memoirs of the Saints, speaks


of her in the following words: "She the secluded one
was clothed with the clothing of purity, and was on
fire with love and longing, and was enamoured of the

desire to approach her Lord and be consumed in His

glory. She was a second Mary and a spotless


woman."*
She was born in the poorest of homes, and her
father and mother died when she was only a little girl.
She was fourth of a family of sisters, as her name
indicates, They were all scattered by a famine and she
was sold as a slave for six dirhams. Her master made
her work hard. She, however, continually fasted in
the daytime and carried out her appointed tasks. One
night her master happened to look down through a
window of the house and saw Rabi'a absorbed in prayer,
and he heard her praying: "O my Lord, Thou knowest
that the desire of my heart is to obey Thee, and that
the light of my eyes is in the service of Thy court. If
the matter rested with me, I should not cease for one
hour from Thy service, but Thou hast made me subject
*'Attar; op, cit. p. 54.
THE EARLY HISTORY OF SUFISM 15

to a creature and much of my time is spent in his


service/' While she was he saw a lamp
still in prayer,
above her head suspended without a chain, and the
whole house was illuminated by its light. The master,
greatly afraid at the sight, set her free at the dawn of
the day. Thenceforth she devoted herself to the love
of God, living a of extreme poverty.
life

As an ascetic, Rabi'a followed all her life the path of


tawakhul, the resignation and dependence on God, with
unwavering step to the end. Again and again she was
offered assistance by her friends but she as often
declined it and her customary reply to those who
desired to help her was: "Verily, I should be ashamed
to ask for worldly things from Him to whom world
belongs; how, then should I ask for them from those to
11
whom it Another story to the same
does not belong.
effect tells how one day when Hasan of Basra came to
visit her he saw a wealthy man of Basra at the door of

RibiVs cell with a purse of gold, weeping. Hasan


asked him why was he weeping. He replied: "On
account of the ascetic of this age; if it was not for her
blessings, mankind would have perished. I have

brought something for her and my fear is that she may


refuse it. If you plead for me, she may accept it."
Hasan went in and gave the message to Rabi'a, who
looked at him out of the corner of her eye and said,
"Shall He whoprovides for those who revile Him, not
provide for those who love Him? He does not refuse
sustenance to one who speaks unworthily of Him, how
then should He refuse sustenance to one whose soul is
16 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

overflowing with love to Him? Ever since I have


known Him, I have turned my back upon mankind."
RabiVs
great contribution to the Islamic mysticism
was the conception of prayer as free and intimate
intercourse with God. Prayer, even the prescribed
namdz and other religious observances were not
regarded by her as meritorious acts, or as means of
avoiding hell and of gaining paradise, but they were to
her the means of gaining access to God's presence. Hers
is an outsanding figure in Islamic hagiology as of one
who held communion with God, and gave utterance to
prayers which were the spontaneous outpouring of her
heart to God. Among her prayers are the following:
"O my Lord, whatever share of this world thou dost
bestow on me, bestow on Thine enemies, and whatever
share of the next world Thou dost give me, give it to

Thy friends. Thou art enough for me." Another runs


as follow:
"O my Lord, if worship Thee from fear of
I

Hell, burn me in Hell, and if I worship Thee from hope


of Paradise, exclude me worship Thee
thence, but if I

for Thine own sake then withhold not from me Thine


Eternal Beauty/'"

*
For RabiVs life s*e Tadhkiratu 'l-Awl\ya, Professor Nicholson's
Translation and Margaret Smiths* Rain' a the Mystic.
CHAPTER II

Later Developments.

(a) Speculative Elements in $ufism.

While ufism was thus gaining ground and attracting


the pious by its promise of escape from formalism and

its encouragement of ideals of personal devotion, it was

soon subjected to a further modification, the beginnings


of which may be traced to the time of Ma'mun in the

eighth century. That was an age of speculation.


Ma'mun encouraged the discussion of religion by repre-
sentatives of various creeds and in this manner
speculative elements were soon assimilated into ufism.
Now the ascetic, while not losing altogether his
ascetic ideal, tends more
more to centre his
and
attention in Gnosis and the Zdhid becomes the 'Arif
(Gnostic). As Professor Macdonald says, "We pass
over the boundary between Thomas a Kerapis and St.
Francis to Eckhart and Suso."* Neo-Platonism played
its part in this change but not exclusively. Persian,
Indian, and Buddhistic thought each had its share,
and also Christian speculative mysticism after the

type of Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite and Bar


Sudhaili the Syrian. It would be a mistake to conclude
that ufism in its speculative form was derived solely

from one source or that it contains no original


*D. B. Macdonald, Muslim Theology, p. 180.
18 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

elements. It would be equally a mistake to regard it


as a unity, although some unifying principles can be
discerned in it and, of course, Islam lent it a superficial
unity. But it is not within the scope of the purpose
of this book to go at all deeply into such matters.
It is sufficient to remark here that towards the end
of the eighth century of the Christian era, there
appeared in ufism a new phase of its development.
The old asceticism and quietism, described in the
previous chapter, were subordinated to theosophical
and gnostic speculations. The great teachers of ufism
in whose sayings the influence of such ideas is discerni-
ble, were Ma'rufu'l-Karkhl, Abu Sulaymanu' d-Darani
and Dhu'n-Nun Misri. These three, as has been
pointed out by Professor Nicholson, lived and died in
the period which began with the accession of Harunu'r-
Rashld and ended with the death of Mutawakkil, that
is, from 786-861 A. D.* During these seventy-five
years Hellenic culture greatly influenced the current
of Islamic thought. Works of the Greek philosophers
were translated and eagerly studied. Hunayn b. Ishaq
(809-873 A. D.) and his son, who were Christians,
translated Plato, Aristotle and Porphyry. A strong
rationalistic movement resulted, under which ufism
took on its new form and was so moulded that it could
in the course of its later development absorb other
speculative elements. Thus certain extraneous and
non-Islamic elements such as theosophy, gnosticism,

*
Professor Nicholson, A Literary History of the Arabs, p. 232.
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 19

ecstasy and pantheism became characteristic features of

Ma/ruful-Karkhl (815 A. D.) and Abu Sulaymanu'd-


Darani (830 A. D.), both natives of Mesopotamia, were
tHe first to give expression to theosophical and gnostic
ideas. Certain utterances of theirs which have come
down to us contain such expressions. The former is
reported to have said that ufism is "the apprehension of
divine realities and renunciation of human possessions."
Another of his sayings runs as follows: 'The saints of
God are known by three signs. Their thought is of
God, their dwelling is with God, their business is in

God."
The following are some of the sayings of Abu
kt

Sulayman: None refrains from the lusts of this world


except him in whose heart there is a light which
always keeps him busied with the world to come."
44
Whenever a man on account of his actions is in despair
shows him the way
of his future welfare, that despair
to and happiness and
salvation Divine mercy.
It opens to him the door of joy, purges away sensual

corruption from his heart, and reveals to it Divine


'

mysteries."
same century we come to the great mystic
In the
Dfau'n-Nun Misri, who gave a definite turn to ufi
doctrine by introducing into it teachings about ecstasy
and the theory of gnosis. His repentance is attributed
to his meeting with desert ascetics. His reputation as
an alchemist and a worker of miracles is the theme of
*See, Tadhkiratul-Awliya.
20 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
many a later ufi writer. Professor Nicholson regards
him as the source of the Neo-Platonist elements in Islam.
When we remember that he was an Egyptian, it is not
too much to suppose that the school of Alexandria had
somewhat to do with the shaping of his thought. The
introduction of the idea that true knowledge of God is

to be obtained in ecstasy is attributed to him. A story


is told of how he fell into a swoon while at prayer, and
apparently he did not look unkindly at music in so far
as it induced this condition of ecstasy. There is then
in his advocacy of ecstasy a link with Neo-Platonism.
It is said that he described the mystic apprehension as
the communication which God makes of his spiritual

light to the depths of man's heart. seems certain It

that Dhu'n-Nun was a man of great learning and it was


that which in all probability got him a bad name and
roused suspicions of heterodoxy. Elements of specula-
tion and free-thought are not lacking in his recorded
words and acts. His present-day apologists are some-
times concerned to explain these so that orthodoxy may
not be outraged. Such, for example, is his advising a
fellow ascetic to omit his ritual prayer. But in all the
accounts of him he appears as a saintly figure, and this
was the impression he made on the zealous Khalifa
Mutawakkil by whom he was first imprisoned on
suspicion of heresy but later released and held in high
esteem. Some of the stories told of him remind one of
the Christian ascetics of the Thebaid. In Jami's
Nafhatu'l-Uns, which contains notices of most of the
Qfl saints, we read that he was the first Shaykh to
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 21

profess the tenets of ufism. Among the sayings


recorded of him is the following: "There are two sorts
of repentance, the repentance of conversion and the
repentance of shame. The former is simply repentance
through fear of God's punishment and the latter is
1

repentance through shame at God's mercy/


Somewhat same century appeared Abu
later in the
Yazldu'l-Bistaml, or Bayazld as he is called, one of the

earliest ufis of the pantheistic school. He was of,


Persian ancestry and belonged to Bistam a town in the
Province of Qumis near the south-east corner of the
Caspian Sea. His grandfather, Sharwasan, was a
-

Zoroastrian, and his master in Sufism was Abu Ali of


Sind. Abu Yazid first propounded the doctrine of fand,
annihilation, in its negative aspect, and in his teaching
Gfism became practically identified with pantheism.
Some of his sayings are as follows: "Beneath this cloak

of mine there is nothing but God." "Glory to me!


How great is my majesty!" "Verily I am God; there is
no god beside me, so worship me!"*
But the name which came to be held as the greatest
of all among the early pantheists was that of Husayn
b. Mansur, a wool-carder by trade, though some say
his name is simply one adopted to mark the unpreten-

tious and humble character of the ascetic or a nickname

given with the same intention. However this may be,


HalUj, a name by which he is known, means wool-

carder. MansGr, the name by which he is most fre-


*See Tadhkiratu'l-Awliya, the Chapter on Abu Yazid.
22 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

quently known, is really the name of his father who was


a convert from Zoroastrianism to Islam. Husayn was
a Persian. He was born in 858 A. D. In the first

place he was the disciple of several Sufi teachers, in


particular, Tustari, Junayd and Amr Makkl, but he
l

finally broke with them. He travelled as a missionary


in Khurasan, Ahwaz, Persia, India and Turkistan.

After his third pilgrimage to Mecca he settled at


Baghdad and gathered many disciples about him. He
was a man of original genius and vehement spirit, a
profound mystic and a daring metaphysician. He has
been variously described as a dangerous intriguer, a
Christian, a rank blasphemer, a charlatan and a
martyred saint. In the year 922 A. D. after eight years

imprisonment, he was scourged, mutilated, hung on a


gibbet, and finally beheaded and burned. The charge
against him was that he had made use of the phrase

Ana'l-Haqq, I am the Truth, and that this was a claim to


divinity and, as such, blasphemy. The works
chief of his
which have come down to us is Kitdbu't-Tawdsln, which
has been edited and annotated by Louis Massignon
(1913). This book is written in Arabic rhymed prose.
Each of its eleven sections, with the exception of the
last, is called Td Sin, as "The Td Sin of the Decree/'
"The Td-Sin of the Unity," and 'The fa Sin of the
mysteries of the Unity*', etc. These names are from
the two unexplained letters at the beginning of certain
chapters of the
Quran. The resultant name of the
whole book an artificial plural formed from the
is

compound of fd and Sin. Massignon has most probably


LATER DEVELOPMENTS 23

done all that is possible in the interpretation of Hallaj


with the material at present available. If we had all

the material to reconstruct the doctrine of Hallaj, and


could follow him in his travels, much that is obscure in
later ufl speculation would, in all probability, be clear
to us. The adopted by Hallaj is recondite and
style
allusive. vehement "hyperdialectic", as Massignon
It is

so aptly calls it. His editor makes it abundantly plain


that the ejaculation Anal-Haqq was not the mere

raving of a demented mystic out of himself in ecstasy,


but only one mode of expressing a deep conviction
and, in addition, the formula of a philosophy. Later
conceptions of huwiyyat and aniyyat are no doubt
definitely related to this philosophy, and a study of Ibn
*Arabi and Jill throws light on the meaning of Hallaj in
his mystical theology. Of this more will be said in a
later chapter.
Oneof the reasons why some have thought that

Hallaj was a secret Christian is the very high place


which he gives to Jesus in his system. Jesus is the Seal
of the Saints, while Muhammad is the Seal of the
Prophets. Jesus is the perfect witness and representa-
tive of God, Al-Haqq. He is the deified man. His
being is in God. Take for example that famous tercet
in which Hallaj extols the manifestation of God in
Man.
"Praise be to Him Who manifested His humanity, the
secret of His glorious divinity.

And then visibly appeared to His creation in the form of one


who eats and drinks.
24 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
So that His creation could perceive Him as in the flicker of
an eyelid."

In the first part of this the reference is to Adam and


in the second part to Jesus. Both Ibn 'Arabl and Jill,
among others, follow Hallaj in this conception, and the
former has that extraordinary statement that Jesus is
the Creator who restores to life and the creature who
is restored. It is difficult to escape the conclusion that

Hallaj 's doctrine of Ldhut and Ndsut shows evidence of


the influence of the doctrine of the two natures in the
person of Christ, for these are the very words used in
Syriac to express the divine and human natures respec-
tively.
The circumstances of Hallaj's execution were most
revolting. Condemned to be crucified, when he saw
the cross and the nails he turned to the people standing
round him and exhorted them not to let the spectacle

of his sufferings lead them to doubt the goodness of


tl
God. God treats me in this matter as a friend treats
his friend. He passes me the cup of suffering which
He has first drunk Himself.
11
When he was put to the
torture, he is said to have prayed, and if the words we
have from Ibrahim Fatik are really the words he
b.

used, then we have in this final prayer of his the revela-


tion of a great spirit. For thus he prayed : "O Lord, I

entreat Thee, give me to be thankful for the grace Thou


hast bestowed upon me, in that Thou hast concealed
from others* eyes what Thou hast made manifest to me
of the glories of Thy shining countenance and in that
Thou hast made it lawful for me to behold the myster-
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 25

ies ofThine inner consciousness which Thou hast made


unlawful to others. As for these Thy servants who,
zealous for Thy religion and desirous of Thy favour,
have gathered to kill me, forgive and have mercy upon
them, for verily if Thou hadst revealed to them what
Thou hast hid from them, then should I not have
suffered this anguish. Praise be to Thee in whatsoever
Thou decreest."'

(b) ufism wins recognition in Islam.

It is not a matter for surprise to find that because of


this later mixture of theosophical and pantheistic ele-
ments, the ufls came to be regarded as heretics, if not

actual unbelievers (kdfir). It was not till the time of


the renowned Imam al-Ghazali that ufism attained a
firm and assured position in Islam.
Abu Hamid Muhammadu'l-Ghazall, generally
known by the Hujjatu 'l-Islam, the proof of
title of
Islam, was a native of Tus near Meshed in Khurasan
Left an orphan at a comparatively early age, he was
brought up by a ufi friend of his father's, and after-
wards studied at one of the colleges of his native city
Subsequently he went for further study to Nishapur.
He seems not to have been attracted much in his earlier
years by ufism but early showed marks of the sceptic-
ism which an outstanding feature of his temperament.
is

He had turned from ufism to speculation before he

* Sec M assignor* Kitab al Tawastn, Parsis 1913, and Quatre


cextes inedites relatif 'a labiographic d 'al-Hosayn Ibn Mansour al-
Hallaj (1914).
26 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
was twenty years of age. Taqtid, or the slavish follow-
ing of tradition became anathema to him. man of A
he soon found his way to the Seljuql
brilliant gifts,
court and under the patronage of the great minister
Nigamu '1-Mulk, he became a teacher in the Nigamiyya
College at Baghdad. This was in the year 1092 A.D.
While here he sunk into complete agnosticism. Philo-
sophy he studied but came to the conclusion that it was
a vain thing. He wrote books on canon law (fiqh)
and entered into controversy with the irreconcilable
Ta fimites, who were a political force to be reckoned
with. His restless mind and sceptical temperament,
associated with a deeply religious nature, could give
this man no rest. He seems to be trying to save
something from the ruins of his agnosticism. He tried
philosophy and found it wanting, and finally returned
to ufism.
He experienced a period of spiritual crisis and con-
version. The fear of God was upon him and the idea of
the coming judgement was ever present. In 1095 A.D.,

physically and nervously exhausted, he was converted.


He turned his back on the promises of the world and
the rich prizes which his intellect might have com-
manded and became a
wandering devotee, seeking in

the ascetic life peace of mind and heart, and striving all

the while for a new rationale of his religious experience.


The system which resulted was pragmatic. The ground
of his assurance was his experience, and to this all
speculation and philosophy must be considered sub-
ordinate. He might disdain philosophy as the ground
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 27

of belief and had to repudiate was taught by con-


it as it

temporary exponents, but he could yet use its methods


to clarify his thought and give a form to his intuitive
pragmatism. Indeed the influence of all the stages
through which he had passed can be seen in his mature
works, and he is himself a mirror of all the intellectual
activity of his age. On every page of the Ihyau
Ulumi 'd-Dln, the Revivification of the Religious Sci-
ences, thetraditionalist is exhibited. He employs
dialectic Cllmu 'l-Kaldm) against the dialecticians
(mutahallimun) .In answer to the esoteric doctrine of
the Isma 'ilis and kindred spirits, he too has his secret
teaching, hinted at but never fully elaborated in Mish-
kdtu 'I- Anwar, The Niche for Lights. But all is made
to serve the cause of Kashf, and bows to the sovereignty
of his all-commandingspiritual experience. Without
that mystic illumination his intellectual life would have
fallen intocomplete scepticism.
His great achievement is in giving the clearest and
highest expression to orthodox Muslim theology. He
isthe greatest theologian Islam has ever produced.
His work has given a place to ufism in orthodox
Islam. This he has done partly by modifying the
extreme pantheistic tendency of ufism. His work
shews evidence of Christian influence. Scriptural and
apocryphal sayings of Christ are ever on his lips. In
line with this influence we find that his view of the

eighth stage of the Unity with God, is no


ufi path,

longer conceived in the negative manner which would


regard the goal as absorption in God and identification
28 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
with Him. This, in his opinion, is sin. Ghazall's view is

much closer to the Christian conception of an ethical

unity which the beginning of a new life. So here we


is

find him breaking away from the abstruse and meta-

physical conception and maintaining the religiously and


Tawhid and Tawakkul, Unity and
spiritually valuable.
Trust, are inseparably bound up together. In the
Ihyaul-Ulum we also find a
complete spiritualising of
prayer, and insistence on prayer from the heart rather
than mere performance of ritual. Again and again he
stands out as the champion of the ethical and spiritual.
This was no mean service to perform and it is doubtful
whether Islam has ever really risen to the point of
realisation of all that Ghazall has done or would do for

it./
But while we can say all this it must still be said
that there are distinct weaknesses in Ghazali's view of
tawhid or unity, and some ufi interpreters would use
his words to establish tawhidu'l afal, unity of acts, in

such a way as to make it impossible to conceive that


there any actor or originator of action in the universe
is

but God. This is, of course, the extreme doctrine of


Qadr, or predestination, which results in a pantheism of
will which is hardly less pernicious than other forms

of pantheism. We give here a translation of part of


the fourth volume of the Ihya'ul-Ulum on this sub-
ject."
"There no actor other than God, and all things
is

which exist, creature and provision, giving and withhold-


Ihya'u'l-'Ulum, Vol. IV, 213.
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 29

ing, death and life, gain and loss, wealth and poverty
and everything for which a name can be found, the
Cause, Originator, and Initiator is God who has no
partner. When this dawns upon a man then he will
not look anywhere else but will be in fear and awe of
Him and put utter trust and confidence in Him only.
For He alone is the Doer. There is none else
A wayfarer who had
the Light of God as a
torch for his path saw a piece of paper the surface of
which had become black with ink. Said he: 'Your
face was white as wool; why have you made it black?'
The paper made answer: 'What justice is this that you
should ask me such a question. I didn't make myself
black. Ask the ink, for it was sitting in the ink-pot
which is its dwelling and it came out and made an
assault by force on my surface.' Said he, 'You are
right/ and then asked the ink, "What is the reason why

you blacken the face of the paper?' The ink said,


'Well, you ask me! I was sitting quietly in the ink-pot.
I never intended to leave that place but the pen forced

me by its wicked desire, exiled me from my home and


scattered my company over this page
all but why
labour the obvious? You
should ask the pen
The pen said: *I was a reed which stood among the
green trees on a river bank. The hand came with a
knife and pulling me up by the roots, stripped me of
bark, tore my clothes, cut me in pieces and then pared
me and split my head and fashioned my point for writ-
ing. Then it dipped me in the ink and exacts service
from me, moving me along on my head. Why then do
30 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

you question me and thus rub salt into my wound? Go


"
away; enquire from the hand.'
In this way the interrogation is carried back and
back through the power which moves the hand to the
willwhich uses the power and the reason and knowledge
which instruct the will. When knowledge is question-
ed it excuses itself on the ground that it is but a figure
drawn on the white surface of the heart and the ques-
tion then proceeds upwards through the transcendent
spheres till one Agent is reached to whom
at last the
must be ascribed all acts. The argument moves on with
force and humour but the implications with regard to
human responsibility are obscured by this tour de
force.
On the other hand, al-Ghazali appeals to man and
regards him and there can be
as responsible for his acts
no doubt that he did a great deal to counteract the
antinomian tendencies in ufism against which
Qushayri had protested.
Reference has been made above to the Mishkdtu'l
Anwar. In this we find an exposition of the Lighf*
Verse in the Quran (Sura 24 :35). The result is a sort
of philosophy of illumination. Antitheses of light and
darkness remind us of the traditional Persian philosophy,
but there are in this work of al-Ghazali suggestions of
Platonism and even Logos doctrine, The book pre-
sents many problems. It gives us another glimpse of a
many-sided nature. Shihabu'd-Dln Yahaya Suhrawardl
is said to have built his philosophy upon this doctrine
of illumination, and yet he considered it to be contrary
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 31

to Islam, and his uncompromising attitude brought him


to an early death.

(c) The Classic Period of ufism and its ufi Poets.

In the thirteenth century A. D. began the classic


period of ufism. This new epoch was marked by the
advent of three great mystical poets of Persia. These
were Faridu'd-Dln'Aftar, Jalalu'd-Dln Rumi and
Shaykh Sa'dl. The
writings of these poets have greatly
influenced the religious thought of Muslims in the
East and they are now very widely and eagerly studied.
No account of ufism would be complete without some
reference to them so we propose to give a brief sketch
of all three.

1. FARIDU'D-DIN ATTAR
4

Faridu'd-Dln Attar was born about 1119 A. D., eight


years after the death of al-GJiazali, in Nishapur. The
4

name A#ar signifies one who deals in 'itr, or otto of


roses, and other perfumes, but in its wider significance
means a druggist. He, like his father, kept a sort of
pharmacy where he was consulted by patients for whom
he prescribed, dispensing his own medicines. It was
while he was thus engaged in selling perfumes and
drugs that the call came to him to follow the reli-
gious Dawlat Shah, in his Memoirs of the Poets,
life.

relates that one day, as he was standing among his bales


surrounded by his clerks and servants, a holy anchorite
appeared before him at the door, and gazed around
with strange wild eyes, fast filling with tears. Faridu'd-
32 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Din sharply rebuked him for his seeming curiosity and
bade him go away. "That is easily done/' said the
darwish, "I have little to bear along with me: nothing
but this poor habit. But you? When the time comes
for you to go away with all this costly merchandise, how
will you set about it? You will do well to arrange
before that inevitable hour arrives, about the packing
'

up of your treasures." Attar was profoundly affected


by the words of the darwish and gave up his shop,
abandoning his profession and entirely renouncing all
his worldly affairs.

Entering the monastery of Shaykh Ruknu'd-Din,


who was then one of the most distinguished masters of
the contemplative life, he gave himself up wholly to the
things of God, so that at the close of his life he is said
to have attained "the most perfect degree of spiritual-
ity/' Finally he met his death at the hands of the

Mongol invaders under Chengiz Khan (1229-30 A. D.)


'Aftar must have spent the greater part of a very
long life in literary work, for the number of his works
is have been equal to the number of chapters
said to
Quran, one hundred and fourteen. But there is
in the
much that is legendary in what we read of him and this
statement must be an exaggeration, for the number of
his writings preserved or mentioned by name hardly
exceeds thirty. Of these Tadhkiratul-Awliya, the
Memoirs of the Saints, is the only one written in prose.
The best known of his poetical compositions are the
Pandndma, or the Book of Counsels, which is still widely
read in the East, and Mcwtiqut-Tayr, or the Discourses
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 33

of the Birds, which is to be found in various editions,


an early European edition being that of Garcin de
Tassy (Paris 1857, 1863) with a French translation.
The Pandnama is a rather tedious book of maxims but
l

generally speaking A#ar has a very clear style and


shews considerable ingenuity in choice of subject. He
is very fond of paradox. Take for example the way he
expresses the pantheistic theme of the Unity of all

existence.

The world is full of Thee and Thou art not in the world.
All are lost in Thee and Thou art not in the midst.

Thy silence is from Thy speech;


Thine hiding from Thine appearing.
I see the Thee by means of the smallest atom;
way to
Then I two worlds as the face of Allah.
see the
For dualism there is no way into Thy presence.
Thou and Thy power are the whole universe.
A man of eloquent speech has well said in respect to the
Essence
That Oneness is the dropping of all adjuncts.
There is no doubt as to the meaning of what I have said.

Thou art without eyes and there is no Universe ('A/am)


or Knower ('A Jim) but one.*

In this last stanza it is possible to read either word


given in brackets and the implication is that the Uni-
verse and the Knower (a name of God) are inter-
changeable terms.
The MantiqiCt-Tayr is a sort of Pilgrim's Progress
with birds for pilgrims. In it, in allegorical fashion, is

depicted the ascending stages of the Mystic's progress


Shibli, She'ru'l 'A jam Vol. 2, p. 15 ff, (Ma'arif Press, Azamgarh).
34 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
to Unity with God. The birds gather together under
the leadership of the Solomon of the Birds, the Hoopoe,
to seek the Slmurgh their mysterious King. The greater
part of the book is taken up with his counsel to the
assembled birds and anecdotes of pilgrims of the ufi
Path. Then the birds set out and after traversing the
seven valleys of Search. Love, Mystic Apprehension,
Detachment, Unity, Bewilderment and Annihilation
only thirty birds (st, thirty and murgh, bird) survived
the privations and perils of the way and came to the
threshold of the Simurgh's abode. Here there is a
fanciful etymology for the name Slmurgh, which lends
itself to the denouement in the identification of the
thirty birds with the Slmurgh. In reality the name
Slmurgh is a compound of the Pahlawi seen, the name
of a bird of prey, with murgh. The Slmurgh is asso-
ciated with early Persian mythology and stories of it
are told in the Shdhndma of Firdawsi.
The birds arrive at the threshold of the KiAg's
palace, and the chamberlain of Grace admits them into
the Royal Presence where they are presented with the
record of their deeds. Says 'Attar: "Seeing the record
of their deeds those thirty birds were so ashamed that
their very soulsand bodies sunk into utter annihilation.
But being thus purged and purified they emerged into
new life by the Light of the Divine Presence. But
now new sort of amazement seized upon them. What
a
they had done and left undone in the past was utterly
obliterated from their breasts. It was as though they
had changed identity. The Sun of the Near Presence
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 35

shone from them, and that life by its rays illuminated


them all. By their own reflection the thirty birds saw
the face of the Slmurgh. They were that and it was
they. Lost in astonishment they could not tell whether
they were this or that. Then they demanded of the

Simurgh what this great mystery might mean. He


t^lls them that his nature is like unto a mirror. Look-
ing on theA they perceive their true selves". Thus
the birds became lost in the Slmurgh and the shadows
of phenomenal existence faded but in the light of the
Sun of true existence.
Here we return to the older idea of Fand, or annihi-
lation. How far was A#ar indebted to his stay in
4

Hindustan for this picture of Maya and release? How


far also are we to see the influence of that conception
u 11
of the Veiled in Light who constitute the fourth
division of mankind Mishkat and
in al-Ghazali's who
have utterly attained to the end and goal?

2. JALALU'D-DIN RUMI
Jalalu'd-Dln Rumi, commonly known among Muslims
as Mawldnd, our Master, or simply Ruml, meaning one
who lived in Asia Minor, where the greater part of his
life was spent, was the most eminent ufi poet whom
Persia has ever produced. He was the author of the
most widely known poetical work on mysticism, the
Mathnaw-i-Manaun, Spiritual Couplets, frequently
referred to as the Mathnaw Sharif, the Holy Mathnawi.
It is also said to be the Quran in Pahlawl, (i. e. in the

Persian language). No other literature on mysticism


36 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
is so loved and studied, at least in India, as this great
work.
Jalalu'd-Din was born in Balkh in 1205 A. D. His
descent is traced to Abu Bakr, and his father was
BahaVd-Dln who was related to Khwarizm Shah. In
those days Fakhru'd-Din Razi, the philosopher, was
friendly with Khwarizm Shah and Baha'u'd-Dln was
opposed to philosophy. Khwarizm Shah was jealous of
the influence which Bah'u'd-Dm had and so was Razi
and the result of it was that Baha Vd-Dm found it
expedient to leave Balkh. This took place when
Jalalu'd-Dm Iwas five years old. They went off to
*

Nishapur where it is said the aged Attar met them and


blessed the young child. The family wandered from
city to city in Syria and Asia minor and at last came to
Quniya, the ancient Inconium, when the lad was eight-
een or nineteen years old. There they gained the
patronage of *AlVd-Dln the Seljuqi to whom the
family was related. Indeed on record that when
it is

'AlaVd-Din Kayqobad III died without issue, Jalalu'd-


Din might have had the kingdom but he resigned his
rights in favour of 'Uthman the founder of the
'Uthnianll dynasty. In Iconium Jalalu'd-Din's father
worked as a professor. He died in the year 1230 A. D.
There seem to be some discrepancies in the accounts
of the next few years. Apparently, Carra de Vaux
says that, Jalalu'd-Dln did not leave Quniya except for
a short journey after his father's death. Sipa Sslr t
a favourite disciple of JalSlu'd-Dln, says he met
Shamsu'd-Din TabrizI at Quniya when he was thirty-
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 37

In Munaqibu'l-'Arifin, the work of


eight years of age.
Shamsu'd-Din Afcmad Aflakl, it is said that he was in
Damascus till he was forty years of age. The generally
accepted view is that Jalalu'd-Din studied at the famous
schools of Aleppo and Damascus till 1240 A. D., or a
little earlier. If this is correct then there is a possibi-
lity that Jalalu'd-Din was nearly contemporary with
Ibn Arabl at Damascus and it is strange therefore, that
we find so little in the great poet which can be referred
back to that great metaphysician. The explanation
may be that up to this time he had no real interest in
ufism.
With regard to his education, it seems that first he
was taught by his father and that later when his
father was dead his old tutor Burhanu'd-Dln taught
him the mystic path. Afterwards he studied in the
schools of Syria. His real awakening is however due
to his meeting with Shamsu'd-Din Tabriz!.
But what do we know about that meeting or about
the personality of Shamsu'd-Dm? The puerilities of
the narratives which have come to us make it almost
impossible to believe that the conjuring tricks (such as
plunging books into water and bringing them out dry)
which were alleged to have initiated the friendship
between him and the poet really have been the influ-
ence at work in the master mind of Jalalu'd-Din. All
that we dare say is that through the enthusiasm of
Shamsu'd-Din the smouldering fires of Jalalu'd-Dln's
genius burst into flame and the doctor of law became
the great poet. Shamsu'd-Din must have been a much
38 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
greater man than the traditions of him would have
us believe. The friendship was short but potent.
Shamsu'd-Din disappeared after a riot raised about
him and in that riot one of the poet's sons was killed.

To commemorate the tragic end of his friend Jallu'd-


Din founded the Maulawi order, introducing those
peculiar gyrations which have earned for the members
of the order among Europeans the name of "Dancing
Derwishes."
The most famous works of Jalalu'd-Dln are
of the
the Mathnam and the Diwan which is dedicated to
Shams-i-Tabrlz. The former is found in many editions
in India but alas they contain many couplets which
!

cannot be considered genuine. In one edition in India


we have counted some four-hundred additional couplets
in the first book alone, taking the great edition edited

by Professor Nicholson as the standard text. Seeing that


there are some four thousand couplets in this first book
this is an extraordinary proportion. Professor Nichol-
son's edition of the text and translation is a great service
to students of the poet and they look forward eagerly to
hiscommentary. Professor Nicholson has also published
an edition of the Diwan but to this unfortunately
we have not had access. The Diwan has been published
by the Newal Kishore Press of Lucknow under the
name of the Kulliydt-i-Shams-i-Tabriz. This consists
of a thousand pages, foolscap size, with two couplets
to a line. It is from this that the translations given
later have been made. Some little time ago a prose
work called Flhi ma fihi was found in a manuscript
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 39

at Rampur. This has been published by the Ma'arif


Press at Azamgarh in the United Provinces.
We give some translations from the DiwSn to illust-

rate phases of ufi thought.

The Man of God.


"Drunk the Man of God, drunk without wine;
is

Sated theMan of God, full without meat.


Aghast is the Man of God in utter bewilderment
Knows not the Man of God slumber nor sustenance.
Sprung not from earth nor air, God's Man is not so born;
Nor is his origin, water nor flame of fire.

King is Man of God, wrapped in a beggar's robe;


the
Treasure the Man of God, hid in a ruin's heap.
Soul of devotion he - such is the Man of God-
Yet is the Man of God heedless of merit's gain.
Thus is the Man of God Faith and yet Unbelief;
What to the Man of God is sin then and righteousness?
Taught by Creative Truth God's Man is learned;
Not wise in legal lore culled from a book.
In the Abyss's void, God's Man on Chaos rode,
But here he suffered shame from his unbroken steed."*

The man of God is here considered to be the God-

intoxicated, lost in bewilderment in an unreal world.


His origin is spiritual and his true worth is disguised by
his life in the body. He is above the externalities of
formal religion and derives true knowledge by mystic
intuition.From his proud pre-existent state he suffered
abasement from this body of humiliation which is fre-

quently referred to as an untamed steed of the soul.

*Kulliyat-i-Sham3-i-Tabriz< P. 116 (The passage is the translation


made by the Rev. J. W. Sweet man.)
49 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
The following is an illustration of ufl ecstasy:
"We have lost our heart in the way of the Beloved:
We have sown dissension in the world.
We have struck fire within the hearts of the people:
And have thrown lovers into confusion.
I have washed my hands of all my belongings:
We have set fire to house and home.
Ihad a heavy load on my back
But thanks be to God we have thrown aside that heavy load.
What is the wealth of the world but carrion?
We have cast the carcase to the dogs.
We have extracted the kernel of the Quran:
And the husk we have cast to the dogs.
We have scattered the seed of eternal felicity and joy
From the earth to the sky.
The patched robe (of the derwish), the prayer carpet and
the rosary,
We have cast away in the Tavern of Souls.
The pious cloak and turban and the babbling of knowledge
about jot and tittle,
We have thrown it all into the flowing stream.
From the bow of desire, the arrow of Gnosis,

Taking straight aim, we have shot at the target.


Thou hast well said O Shams-i-Tabriz.
We have cast love glances at the Lord of the Soul. * '

Our next extract illustrates the idea of the pre-


existence of the soul.
From the depth I came to the height;
I was seeking that lovely Beloved.

I had friendship with that One in the world of Souls.


And I return whither I came.
I was an unthreaded pearl and suddenly
I came into a breast of flint.

*Kulhyat-i-Shams-i-Tabriz, P. 546. (The passage is translated


by the Rev. J. W. Sweetman.)
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 41

The Sun of His mercy warmed me


Back from that place I appeared in Time.
Once I had private converse with the Universal Reason
And again I wandered demented in the desert.
A hundred thousand years and centuries without number
Even before Adam and Eve I was.
Once I drew breath with the silent ones
From that silence I now have become a speaker.*

3. SA'DI.

The third of the great poets of this period was


Sa'di of Shiraz who was born in 1184 A. D. and died in
1291. He
enjoys to-day a great reputation not only in
Persia but in India where he is as well known as Shake-
speare in England in spite of the fact that his tongue is

Persian. His
Gulistdn, Rose Garden, and Bustdn.
Orchard, are most widely read and are generally the
classics to which students of Persian are first introduced.
His full name is commonly stated to be Muslihu'd-
Dln, but from the oldest manuscript of his works (India
Office No. 876, transcribed in A. D. 1328, only a few
years after his death) it appears to have been
Musharrafu'd-Dln 'Abdullah.
Sa'di was a great traveller though some of the
stories of his travels must be taken with a grain of salt.
He is have visited the Panjab, Somnath and
said to

Gujrat. Apparently he travelled in the fashion of a


mendicant, hobnobbing with all sorts and conditions of
men till he became a true citizen of the world.
Ibid, P. 546. (translated by the Rev. J. W. Swcetman "SUent
ones*' arc the dead or unborn.)
42 SUn SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
The earlier part of his life was spent in study but
about his thirtieth year he took to travel and writing.
Thus nearly thirty years passed and the latter part of
his life was spent in seclusion and probably in the

practice of the way of the mystic. That he was well


acquainted with the mystic path is made clear by his
receiving instruction from 'Abdu'l-Qadir Gilanl and
Shihgbu'd-Din 'Umaru's-Suhrawardi, the author of
'Awarifu'l-Maarif. But itexceedingly doubtful
is

whether he was a ufi by temperament. In him the


didactic subordinates the mystic.

The Bustdn book of verse on ethical subjects


is a
and the Gulistan has the same character but is in
prose, interspersed with verse. His RiscCil are prose
treatises on ufism. Among his many writings his
Qvubthiyot are a blot name, and his other works
on his
are not free from obscenities. His style is elegant.
He is pleasant, easy-going, opposed to extremes. He
frequently gives advice to his readers to be not
righteous overmuch. His attitude to mystics is some-
times one of reproach for their hypocrisy. His ethics
are based on expediency, for the most part. But he
is not really troubled about consistency, valuing far
more independence. Dr. Browne has well said that
his writings are a microgflSJELpf the East.

As early as the seventeenth century translations


of his works began to appear in French, Latin, Dutch,
and English. Later translations of the Gulistan into
English are by Eastwick and Platts. We give below
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 43

some few translations of passages from the Bustan which


the ufts sometimes quote.
"The way of reason is nothing but a maze;
In the opinion of the gnostics there is nothing else but God.
All that is, is less that He;
For by His being, they bear the name of being.
When the King of Glory raises His standard
The whole world bows its head in the bosom of Not-being."

"In self-hood there is no way to God


But of this point only the unconscious is conscious."*
"Come Thou empty of claim that thou mayst be full."

(d) LATER $UFI POETS


The last phase of the development of ufism with
which we are concerned in this chapter is that which
is associated with the Gulshan-i-Rdz and the poets
Hafig and Jami. These poets are particularly known
and loved in India. Their works are used as text-books
by every student of ufism throughout the country.
Many who learn Persian for no other
there are in India
purpose than to be able to read the Diwdn-i-Hafiz
and Jaml's Yusuf-o-Zulaykhd in the original.
1. GULSHAN-I-RAZ.
It is necessary to say something about this book. It
is a small Matknawi of little more than a thousand
couplets. It is the work of Mahmud Shabistari or Shab-
tari. We know very little about the life of the author.
He lived apparently in the latter part of the thirteenth
and the earlier part of the fourteenth century of the
Christian era. But his work is important out of all

'The "unconscious is the dead to self."


44 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
comparison with the importance of the author be-
cause it is a compendium of ufi terminology in the

form of question and answer.


It is a matter of frequent complaint by Eastern
writers that Europeans do not understand and are un-
able to interpret the mysticism of such writers as
Hfcfiz and are apt to regard their poems as undiluted
eroticism. There is no doubt that there is a very wide
divergence of view as to what is proper and fitting in
the emotional expression of religion and there would
probably be much difference among Europeans them-
selves about the propriety, say, of some expres-
sions used by Madame Guyon. Appreciation and
understanding of mystical poetry is not given to
all and there is a whole host of considerations,

preconceptions and associations which go to render


such poetry acceptable or unintelligible to the
reader. would not be a matter of surprise, for
It

example, if an Eastern reader were not able to under-


stand the mystical character and value of Francis
Thompson's Hound of Heaven. Anything, therefore,
which can help us to realize the atmosphere and
understand the metaphors acceptable to the various
groups of thought should be welcomed. In the Gulshan-
-i-J?az we find help in this direction. Thus the lip of
the Beloved trembles with compassion. His frown
lays waste the world; His kiss revives it. Gazing
on Him the soul is intoxicated. The mole on His
cheek is the centre of Unity. Locks are wide-spread
works of His hands, half hiding and half revealing
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 45

His beauty. Sometimes His locks are parted for a


momentary glimpse of the beauty of His face. In His
curls the longing soul entangled as man is caught
is

in the ephemeral beauty of the world. Wine is the

symbol of the loss of consciousness of self in the


rapture of union with Him. It is in this manner
that the sensuous symbolism of Muslim mysticism is
explained.

Gulshan-i-Rdzt 1 *
is divided into fifteen sections, each

beginning with a question to which the answer is


then given with illustrations and amplification. The
following will serve as an example. The question,
"What is Thought?" is propounded. Shabistari replies:
"Thought is to pass from falsehood to Truth,
To perceive the Absolute Whole in the part.
In the works of the wise who have studied this theme
You may find they aver it must thus be defined:
"When first an idea is formed in the heart.

The name which is apt is Recalling to mind* ".


The next stage of thought, as they commonly deem.
Is called a Transition (from known to unknown) .

O leave the long way of deductive proof!


Like Moses forsake for a moment your rod.
And enter the Valley of Peace that therein
Unto thee Moses' bush may declare: I am God.(2)

(1) Many editions and commentaries in India. The edition


used is Mashkad-i-Naz, pubd. Kachaucha, Fyzabad. Winfields
is the best English edition but we have not had access to it as it is
out of print.

(2) God's Word considered to be hyDoetasised in the burning


bush.
46 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
The Adept beatified, seeing the One,
His eye is first on the Light of Existence;
But he who by Light and Purity seeth,
Whatsoever he seeth, he first seeth God.
Detachment from all is pure .thought's condition;
Comes then God's confirming as lightning flashes.
To whom God Himself has been Teacher and Guide,
From the use of mere logic has profited naught.
How the wise in Philosophy stands at a lossl
For nothing except the Contingent he sees.
Unconditional Being he'd fain prove from that
But Necessity's nature perplexes him still.
At one time he travels a circle of causes
(From the hen to the egg and the egg to the hen.)
Again he's involved in a chain without end,
(A series of causes in endless regression).

Poor fool, he goes seeking the Sun in its glory

By the light of a lamp in the limitless desert. "(1)

Mahmud
Shabistarl loves to have a tilt at philoso-
phy or rather the type of philosophy represented by
the Muslim schoolmen, but at the same time he pre-
sents his replies in philosophical form
and his termi-
nology is often abstruse and difficult. This does not
lend itself to a very exalted form of verse but, in
general, his style is easy and smooth.

2. HAFIZ.

KbwSja Shamsu'd-Din liSfiz (d. 1389 A. D.) spent


most of his long life in Shiraz. His ancestors belonged
to Isfahan but his father, BahVd-Dln had taken up

(1) Translated by the Rev. J. W. Sweetman, Mashhad-i-Naz,


p. 50 if. Words in brackets are comment.
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 47

his abode Shlraz where he earned his living as a


in
merchant or, as some say, a baker. Just before he
died Baha'u'd-Dln failed in business and so his young
son and his wife were left in penury. The boy managed
to obtain some education and learned the Quran by
heart. It was for this achievement that he received
the title of Hdfiz. Later in his life when Shamsu'd-Dln
became a poet he adopted this title as his nom-
de -plume.
His collection of poems, the Diwdn-i-Hdfiz, would
appear on the surface to be "strongly tinged with
sensuality". Something has been said with regard to
this but it remains to say that there are many poems
for which it is extremely difficult to find any mystic

meaning. Shibli in his Sherul-Ajam gives no place


to mysticism at Hafiz. all in
says that the poet He
exhibits the philosophy of Epicurus. One cannot be
unaware of a current of hedonism throughout, but at
the same time, to deny the mysticism of Hafij would
be absurd. It is true that it not the mysticism
is

of a school and, so far as we know, he never pledged


himself to a pir, or recognised ufi
teacher, though
there is one tradition associating him with the Naqsh-
bandiyya.
His poetry is remarkable for its beauty and clarity.
There is a freshness and sweetness in much of it which
makes one regret the wilder accents of his songs. And
throughout there is sincerity. He rings true. It is
remarkable to notice his detachment when the passion-
ate clamour of strife and bloodshed must have been
48 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
constantly in his cars. The time might have made him
a cynic but he never lost the sense of wonder, i
The works of Hafiz are sometimes called
Tarju-
1

mdnul-Asrdr, the Interpreter of Mysteries, and Lisanw /-


Ghavb. The Tongue of the Invisible. The latter title
is be due to an incident which happened imme-
said to

diately after his death. Some orthodox Muslims, on


account of his antinomian habits, objected to the of-
fering of a funeral prayer. was agreed to
Finally it

decide the question by taking an augury from his poems.


The verse they lighted on was,
"Withdraw not your footsteps from the bier of Hafiz,
For though immersed in sin, he will go to Paradise."

Since that time Muslims have sought omens in just the


same way and various methods have been invented for
this purpose. The one commonly practised is to open
the book at random and to find the answer from the
first line on the right hand page. Professor Browne
in hisfamous Literary History of Persia gives a transla-
tion of a little book called Latlfa-i-Ghaybiyya which

contains instances of auguries taken by famous people.


We conclude this brief sketch with a few transla-
tions of odes with a mystical meaning.
"O heedless one, strive thou to heed;
Blind to the Path, how canst thou lead ?

A Sire wouldst be? Strive thou O Youth


Before Love's Tutor in the School of Truth.
Self's dross purge out, as saints of old,
And by Love's Alchemy become fine gold.
Eating and sleeping, still of Love bereft
Spurn sloth and feasting for the Love you left.
LATER DEVELOPMENTS 49

I vow the heavenly Sun is not so bright

As heart and soul indwelt by His Love-light.


Lost Thou in God, sans life and limb,
Art head to foot all Light of Him.*

3. JAM!
Mulla Nuru'd-Dm 'Abdu'r-Rahman Jami was born
at the town of Jam in Khurasan on November the

seventh, 1414 A. D. He was a great poet, a great


scholar and a great mystic.
Jam! was a prolific writer. His poetical works
consisted of three Diwans and seven
of lyrical poetry
romantic Maihnauns. In prose he wrote on the exegesis
of the Quran, the evidence of the prophethood of
Muhammad and the lives of the saints. Besides these
he was an author of several treatises on mysticism,
theology, Arabic grammar, prosody, music and other
matters.
The predominant passion of his life was mysticism
and, in the words of Professor Browne, "The mystical
and pantheistic thought of Persia may be said to find
its most complete and vivid expression" in him. His
ufi association was with the Naqshbandiyya. One
of the central and fundamental conceptions in his

mystical doctrine that of the Absolute as the Eternal


is
M
Beauty. Starting from the famous tradition, I was a
hidden treasure and I desired to become known; there-
fore I brought the creation into being in order that I

Translated by the Rev. J. W. Sweetman. Hafiz, Diwan,


Radif-i-Ya, ode Ho. 5.
50 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

might be known," his exposition was, that God is


Eternal Beauty and that in the nature of beauty
it lies

to desire to manifest Thus the purpose of crea-


itself.

tion is to manifest the Beauty of God. The passion for


beauty is a means to link the soul to God. This
thought is brought out in his comment on that favourite
proverb of the ufis, "The Phenomenal is the bridge to
the Real", in a beautiful passage in Yusuf-o-Zulay^ta,
from which we make the following translation :

"Be prisoner of Love; for so may'st thou be free.


Bear in thy breast its grief, so thou may'st blithesome be.

Thousands of learned men and wise have gone their

way
Have passed from ken, for strangers to Love were they.
But now no name or trace of them the world retains;
In the hand of Time nor tale nor fame of them remains.
How many birds there are of exquisite hue and mould 1

But never a lip moves their story to unfold.

Lo When the wise in heart, love -taught, take up


\ the tale
They tell the story of the moth and nightingale.
Triest thou in thy life a hundred tasks in vain;
Thou from thyself, by love alone canst freedom gain.
Scorn not that lower love, the symbol of the Real,
Since by its aid thou may'st achieve the ideal.

from the Tablet, thou hast conned the Alphabet,


Till

How canst thou from Quran, study the lesson set ?


A novice once before his Soul's Director stood,
Who shewed to him the Path of Mystic Brotherhood.
"If thou'st not lost thy footing in Love's way", said he,
"Go ! Be a lover Then return thou here to me.
!

For shouldst thou still disdain to drink Form's cup of


Wine.
To drain the Ideal to the dregs can not be thine.
LATER DVELOPMENTS 51

But yet beware, beware ! In Form make no delay,


And let that Bridge be crossed as quickly as it may.
If to the stage's end thy chattels thou wouldst bring,
Rapt at the Bridge's head, why standst thou lingering ?" (D

In the Law&ih of Jam! we have a theosophical treatise


of which we have an edition in English by Whinfield
with translation and notes. There are English transla-
tions of the Bahdristdn, by Rehatsek, of Sa/aman-o-
Absal by Edward Fitzgerald and of Yusuf-o-ZulavkhH
by Griffiths. Most of Jami's works can be procured in
the original in India and there is an edition of his
collected lyrics published in Lucknow. (2; ^

(1) Yusuf-o-Zulaykha, (Newal Kishore) p. 53 ff. This edition


isaccompanied by a commentary. The above is the translation of
Rev. J. W. Sweetman.
(2) Newal Kishore Press, Lucknow.
CHAPTER III.

The Sufi Gnostic System.

1. SUFI SPECULATIVE CONCERNING GOD.


In Muslim thought those who have speculated
concerning the Divine Being are generally divided into
three schools, viz. the Ijadiyya, which is definitely
theistic and subscribes to the belief that God created
the world out of nothing and' that His essence is
distinct from His creation; the Shuhudiyya, a moderate

pantheism, considers that the universe and all that it


contains is so far transcended by the majesty of God's

reality that all else counts for nothing. This school


conceives the universe as a mirror in which the Divine
attributes are reflected. The third school is the U?uju-
diyya, which is monistic. It holds that there is only one
essence and that is God's. Thus to this school every-
thing is God and of the Essence of God, and its creed
is Hama ost, "all is He". The Shuhudiyya and the
IVujudiyya form the two great divisions of the ufi in
respect to the doctrine of God. There are certain
fundamental conceptions which underlie all the ufi
speculations with regard to the Godhead and we must
give a brief outline of these for the better understand-
ing of the system.

(a) Tanazzuldt. The Descent of the Absolute.


11
Tanazzul (pi. tanazzulat) "the descent , is, in the
1

language of the Gfls equivalent to "individualisation '.


THE SUFI GNOSTIC SYSTEM 53

and indicates the process by which the Absolute, from


the state of bare existence, gradually became "quali-
fied". As Neo-Platonism started with a Triad in its
emanational system consisting of the One, the Divine
Mind and the All-Soul, so too we find a triad here
whereby we trace from step to step the "descent" of
the Absolute from what is in the initial stage almost

parely negative or supra-existential, through a stage


where the divine consciousness moves to the realisa-
tion of ItsThought, to the third stage of Oneness in
Multiplicity. In the first and highest plane the Abso-
lute Being (al-Wujudu'l-Mutlaq) is conceived as simple
Essence, (.adh-dhpit) devoid of all attributes and relations.
This is defined by some ufls on lines which may be
fairly represented by the words of Jill in his /ruan-i-
KcmiL "The Essence means Absolute being, dropping
all modes, adjuncts, relations and aspects. Not that they

are external to the Absolute Being but that all these


modes and what is ascribed to them are totally of
and in Absolute nor by
Being, not of themselves
virtue of their own modes, but essentially one with
the Absolute. And this Absolute Being is the Pure
Essence in which there is no manifestation, no name,
no quality, no relation, no adjunct or anything else.
So when anything else is manifested in it that mani-
festation is ascribed not to the Pure Essence but to
that which is manifested. Then the Essence in the

requirement of its own


nature comprises Universals,
Particulars, Relations and Adjuncts by the requirement
of their continuance. Nay, by the requirement of their
54 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

disappearance beneath the domination of the Oneness


"
of the Essence. (1) With this should be compared Ploti-
nus, "Since the Nature or Hypostasis of the One is
the engenderer of the All, it can be none of the
things in the All; that is, It is not a thing; It has
neither quality nor quantity It is essentially of a

unique form or rather no-form, since It is prior tc


form as It is also prior to movement and rest; afl
these categories apply only to the realm of existence
and constitute the multiplicity characteristic of that
lower realm. 11(2)
The inward aspect of this plane is called al-Amii,
"the dark mist/' and it is explained as a state of bare
potentiality. The outward aspect is called Ahdijyct,
the abstract notion of Oneness, in which the Essence
knows itself as transcendent Unity (3) .

The ufis quote two traditions in support of this


view. One is the Hadith-i-Qudsi (a special type of
tradition which is supposed to contain a Divine
revelation to Muhammad) which runs as follows, "I
Allah) was a hidden treasure: I desired to become
(i. e.

known and I brought Creation into being that I might


be known." The other is as follows: "The Prophet
was asked by Abl Dara, 'Where was God before
4

Creation?' Muhammad replied, He was in the state


of aZ-'Ama, a dark cloud or mist, above which there
1

was no air, and below which there was no air.


(1) Jili. Insan-i-Kamil (Cairo printed) Vol. 1. 43. Trans, by
(2) Plotinus: Ennead, Book VI. 9. 3. [J. W. Sweetman.

(3) Cf . Nicholson, Studies in Islamic Mysticism, pp. 94-95 and


Khwaja Khan: Studies in Tasawwuf, p. 41.
THE SUFI GNOSTIC SYSTEM 55

We next
come to another plane of this triad in
the scheme of devolution. This is Wdhdat and is also
known Haqlqatu'l-Mukammadiyya, *the Reality of
as
Muhammad/ The world is a manifestation of that
Reality. It is said that the realities or ideal prototypes
of the souls and bodies of the world are details of
the reality of Muhammad's soul and body.*

Here too we have an inward and outward aspect.


The inward is called Huunyyat, He-ness, and the out-
ward Anlyyat, I-ness. Humyyat represents the Thought
of the Divine Mind turned in to the One and Anlyyat
the Thought going out, as it were, to the realisation
or expression of itself in manifestation. The relations
of these two terms to each other are to some extent
shown by their derivation. Humyyat is the abstract
noun formed from the third person singular pronoun
"huwd". It is the Wahid, (singular) gha'ib, (hidden).
It is that which is specified or contemplated. But
this he-nessdoes not depend on a specifier outside
the Divine Unity. Thus the divine thought turned
inward in self-contemplation is the basis of the con-
ception. Anlyyat is from the first person singular. Here
the Divine Unity points to Itself, as it were, vis a vis
the world, or rather universe, of individuation. Anlyyat
corresponds to theAnal-Haqq of Hallaj and is appro-
priate to thesphere of manifestation, while Humyyat
corresponds more to the Hu of the dhikr, where the
aim is to put off the fetters of individuation and

*cf. Ibrahim Shattari: Haqa'iq Numa. p. 191.


56 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
to be lost in the Hidden Oneness. (I) But the use of
these two terms must not be taken any as implying
duality. "Everyone who does not harbour doubt is
aware that there is only one single existence". "But
there no duality for Creative Truth; In that there
is

is no Tand We' and Thouness'.


4

T and We\ Thou 4 1

and 'He' are all one thing; For there is no distinction


at all in Oneness". (2) .

The third plane is called Wdhidiyyat, Unity in


Plurality, or Singleness. It is in the use of this term
that we see the intention to preserve the Unity when
the plane of multiplicity has been reached. This also
is parallel with the Neo-Platonist system. "The All-
Soul includes and is All-the-Souls." (3) But in this there

is no sacrifice of the Unity. "All degrees and hier-


1

archies are but details of the Unity/ says Jam! when

treating of this subject in his Law&ih. By the use of


this term then, the many are represented as identical
in essence with the One.
In the stage of Wahidlyyat, when the Essence came
to possess the essential attributes, viz. Life, Know-
ledge, Power, Purpose, Hearing, Seeing and Speech,
it was called Ldhut, Divinity: when it became qualified
with active attributes such as, to create, to make
alive, to kill, etc, it was called Jabarut, Power. The

(1) An interesting parallel to this is the use of person in a

grammatical sense with reference to the Trinity by Tertullian. See


Adv. Praxean Chaps, xi & xii.
(2) Gulshan-i-Raz, couplets 445 ff.

(3) Mackenna: Plotinus Vo. 1. p. 120


THE SUFI GNOSTIC SYSTEM 57

Jabarut attributes were named according to their

different manifestations. When they were manifested


in the world of spirit and angels, they were called
'Alam-i-Malakut the angelic world, when they were
l
manifested in "similitudes" they were called A/am-i-
Mithdl, the world of Similitudes, and when manifested
in the material world, they were called 'Alam-i-N&sut*
the world of Humanity.
It is thus that "the Single Essence as to Its being

absolutely void of individualisations and limitations is


Creative Truth (Haqq) and in respect to multiplicity
and plurality by which It displays Its veiling in indi-

vidualisations It the created universe (Ma/cj).a) The


is

appearing of the Creator in the form of the creature


has a reference to the tradition recorded from Mu'adh
and in various forms from others that Muham-
b. Jabal

mad saw his Lord in a beautiful form, or as a hand-


*

some youth (2) The assertion that the creature is in the


form of the Creator is the converse and is considered
the complementary aspect of the former conception.
This is referred to that other tradition ultimately
derived from the story of Creation in the book of
Genesis, "God created Adam in His own image."
(fc) The Haqiqatu'l'Muhammadiyya
Reference has already been made to the Haqiqatul-
Muhammadiyya, but as it occupies an important place
in the doctrine of the ufls, we proceed to give an

(1) Jami: Lawa'ik (Newal Kishorc Press) p. 19


(2) Mishkatu'l-Masabih (Majidi Press, Cawnpur) p. 72, cf also
Ritter in Der Islam 1928 p. 257.
58 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
outline of their teaching concerning
it. Another name
for J^urul-Muhammadiyya, the Light of Muham-
it is

mad. The growth of the doctrine has a long history.


Ibn Slna (b. 980 A. D.) in Kitabu'l-Isharat identifies
the Aristotelian 'Aql, Primal Reason, with the Light
of Allah referred to in mysterious terms in the Quran
(Sura, 24:35). It is not exclusively a ufi conception.*
The saying, quite evidently borrowed from St. John
14: 19. is ascribed to Muhammad, "He that hath seen
11
me hath seen Allah. Thus Muhammad is regarded
by the as the final and complete revelation of
ufis

God but not only so, he is believed to have existed


before the creation of the world. From this it will
be apparent that the place of the Haqiqatu'l-Muham-
madiyya in the ufi cosmogony is the same as that
of the Logos in Christianity. The pre-existence of
Muhammad is described in words which strongly
remind us of the statements in the Gospel concerning
the Logos, viz. "All things were made by Him; and
without Him was not anything made that has been
made". (St. John 1 :3). Tradition puts in the mouth
of Muhammad saying such as the following: "The
firstthing which God created was the Light of the
"I was a prophet while Adam was bet-
1

Prophet/
ween water and clay." "I am the Light of God and
11
all from my Light.
things are Further, the verse of
the Quran which says, "Muhammad is not the father
of any of you, but he is a messenger of God and

*For Shi'a conception see Hayatu'l-Qulub (Newal Kishore


Press) Vol. 2 p. 3 etc.
THE SUFI GNOSTIC SYSTEM 59

Seal of the Prophets", is interpreted by Najmu'd-Din


Kubra to mean that he was not of our world. <

Jill (b. 1365 A. D.),the author of the famous treatise

on ufism, Insdnul-Kamil, describes the Haqiqat-u'l


Muhammadiyya in the following words: "One of his
names is Word of God (Amru'llah) and he is the
most sublime and exalted of all existences. In regard
to dignity and rank he is supreme. There is no
angel greater than he. He is the chief of all the
archangels and is superior to angels in all devices. God
made the millstone of all existences to turn on him
and made him the axis of the revolving sphere of all
creation. He has a special form with every creature
which is it and which preserves it in the
attached to
degree in which God created it. He has eight forms
which support the Most High Throne. He formed
the angels, all of them, the lofty and the elemental.
The relation of angels to him is as the relation of
drops of water to the sea."*
Jill also describes how this Light of Muhammad
has appeared in various forms in different ages. He

says: "He has different garbs and is manifested in


various habitations. A name is given to him in respect
to each His original name is Muhammad, his
*

patronymic is Abu'l-Qasim, his description is Abdu'Uah


and his title Shamsu'd-Dln. Then in respect to later
forms he is given names and in every age has a name
which is appropriate to the guise in which he appears
Insanu'l-Kamil, (ed. cited) Vol. II. et infra. P. 9. Cap. 51.
Trans, by Rev. J. W. Sweetman
60 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
in that age. I was associated with him (Muhammad)
in the form of my Shaykfa, Shaykh Sharfu'd-Din
Isma'll Jabarti, and I did not know that the Shaykh
was the Prophet but I knew
that he was the Shaykh

(guide in the ufl path) and this is one of the visions

I had of him in Zabld in the year 796 A. H. (1394 A.


D.) and the secret of this matter is that it is possible
for him to assume every form. When the one experi-
enced in spiritual knowledge has seen him in the form
of Muhammad, the form which was upon the Haqiqat-
u'1-M.uhamrnadiyya in his (Muhammad's) life-time,
then he is name Muhammad and when
called by his

he has seen him in some other form and has known


that he was Muhammad, he does not call him by any
name except the name of that form. Then this name
(Muhammad) will not be applied except to the Ha-
<fiqatul-Muhammadiyya. Sawest thou not that when
the prophet was manifest in the form of Shibll, Shibll
said to his disciple "Testify that I am the Apostle of
God" and the disciple had insight and recognised him
and said, "I testify that thou art the Apostle of
God."*
The story of how the world was created by the

Light of Muhammad is still widely used for the pur-


pose of devotional reading. It may be described in the
words of Jill. God, created the forms of Muhammad
from the light of His name al-Bach *u 'l-Qfldir (i. e,

the Almighty Maker) and contemplated them with


His name al-Manndnul-Qahir, (the Overwhelming
Vnjanw'J- Kami/ (ed. cited) Vol. II. p. 46 Cap. 60.
THE SUFI GNOSTIC SYSTEM 61

Giver). Then He shone upon them with His name


al-Ldftfu'l-Ghflfir (the Forgiving Indulgent One). On
this, because of this irradiation it broke into two parts,
so that was divided into two halves. From that half
it

on His right God made paradise and established it as


an abode of bliss and from that half on His left He
made the Fire, setting it up as a place of misery for the

erring.""
2. THE L ATA' IF, THE ORGANS OF SPIRITUAL
APPREHENSION,
According to ufi teaching the entire creation
belongs either to the 'A/am-i-Amr, the World of
Command, or to the *Alam-i-k]ialq, the World of
Creation. By the former is meant that world of exis-
tence which has been brought into existence by God
directly by His word of command "Be!", while the
latter is for that which is fashioned from something
already existing. The former is immaterial and cor-

responds in some sort to the pleroma, but the latter is


material. Taken together these two worlds form the
'Alam-i-Kdlnr, the Macrocosm. Man in contrast is

called 'Alam-i-$aghir the Microcosm and he possesses


within himself five elements of 'A/am-i-Amr and five
elements of 'Alam-i-Khalq. Those belonging to the
former are: Qalb, heart, Ruh, spirit, Sirr, the secret,
Kbafi, the hidden or mysterious, Afe/a, the deeply
hidden. Nicholson sometimes translates Sirr by tfye
word consciousness. One wonders whether the last
three might not be represented by intuition, deep
op. cit. Vol. H. p, 29.
62 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
intuition and deepest However, they are not
intuition.

simple psychological terms but partly names in a


gnostic mythology. The elements belonging to the
*Alam-i-fhalq are: Nafs, ego or soul, and the four ele-

ments earth, water, fire and air. In the language of


the ufls each of these elements is called a Latlfa

(pi. LatcCif} which is a word difficult to translate. It

might mean subtle substance. It is not exactly faculty,


for the same reason offered above with regard to Sirr.
'

The latdiif connected with Alam-i-khalq constitutes


the physical side of human
life, and the other five
1

which are connected with the 'Alam-i-Amr are the


organs of spiritual communication with God. These
belong in their true nature to the spiritual world,
in which their relative position is described in the

following way: The place of the Qalb is said to be on


the Throne of God and above it in ascending order
are Ruli, Sirr, Khafl and Afehfa. But somehow, they
are also connected with the inner life of man and as
such, are located in his body. Their exact location,

including Nafs, which of course belongs to the physi-


cal side of man, is: the Nafs under the navel, Qalb
on the left side, Ruh on the right side of the chest,
Sirr exactly between Qalb and Ru%. Khafl is said by
some to be in the forehead and Afakfa in the brain,
while others locate A&hfd in the middle of the chest,

Sirr between Qalb and A&fi/a, and Kbafi between


Ruh and
Shah Muhammad Ghawth, AsranCt-Tariqat, Urdu Tt. (Pubd.

Manzil-i-Naqshbandiyya, Lahore) P. 16.


THE SUFI GNOSTIC SYSTEM 63

It is further said that each lafifa in a mysterious way,


is related to a certain prophet. This relation, in the
language of the ufis, is expressed in the following
words: the degree of saintship attained through each
1 '

latlfa is "under the foot of a prophet. Qalb is under


the foot of Adam; Rub Sirr Khafl are under the feet
of Abraham, Moses Jesus and Muhammad respectively.
The aim of every ufl is to awaken these five
Lajaif into active remembrance of God, and through
them to receive Tajalll, the Divine Illumination.
These objects he seeks to accomplish by the constant
practice of dhikr or remembrance. Normally the goal
isattained gradually and, whichever of these latffif
becomes active and divinely illuminated, the uft
concerned is said to have attained to the degree of the

saintship of that particular latlfa and of the Prophet


associated with it.

QALB, THE HEART.


Jill says that the heart is the eternal light and sublime

mystery sent down into the essence of created beings


so that God may look on man by it.* Muhammad is
said to have received the revelation "My earth and

My heaven contain Me not, but the heart of My


faithful servant containeth me/' Rum! in the Mathr
u
naun The Prophet said that God said: I am not
says,
contained in High or Low, nor in Earth nor in Heaven,
nor even in the Heaven of the Throne; know this for
certain, I am treasured in the believer's heart. How
*Insanu'l-Kamil Vol. ii. p. 14.
64 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

wonderful! If thou seekest for me, search in such


and again he says, "That heart which is the
(1)
hearts,"
rising place of moonbeams (i. e. pale reflections of the
great Sun of Truth) is for the mystic the opening of
the gates (or chapters) of revelation." (2) Take also
these words of Hafig "Long years the heart was
searching for Jam's cup. What it had itself it desired

of the stranger. The pearl which is not in the shell of


the phenomenal world, it sought from benighted people
on the sea-shore." Here is a picture of mankind lost
on the shore of the boundless sea of divine knowledge.
Unaware as he is of his own identity, how can he pos-
sibly apprehend transcendent reality? Even though he
should spend long years, making diligent enquiry of the
sages (here symbolised by the Jdm-i-Jam, a fabulous
goblet or mirror supposed to have the property of
mirroring the whole world) he cannot achieve the
knowledge of God/ 3) Adam, says the ufl, left

Paradise to live in the world and it was as though he


had left that boundless ocean to dwell on the barren
shore. There he lost the knowledge of his real self
which was bound up with his mystic apprehension of
God. Nevertheless, in the heart of man, which is
vehicle of the Supreme Glory and the place of the
manifestation of Divine Light, there lingers still some
traces of the effulgence of divine knowledge and
therefrom some faint moon-beam gleams of mystic
(1) Jalalu'd-Din, Mathnawi. Bk. I. lines 26355.
(2) Ibid Bk. II, lines 163.

(3) Diwan-i-Hafiz* Radif-dal Ode 85.


THE SUFI GNOSTIC IN INDIA 65

apprehension of the Lord Most High. Hafig says the


heart longs to be comforted and blessed with the love
of the Beloved but as it turns hither and thither with
itsquestioning in the urgency of its longing, it vainly
disquiets itself and us, for it has itself all the secret
which is left to us. The treasury of Reality and Mystic
Apprehension is in the heart; we seek in vain from
others. We
may turn to them very wistfully but "not
by these, by these was healed my aching smart/' Why
seek the precious pearl from those who are themselves
lost? The rays of the eternal beauty are not without
but within. Thus is the ufi's thought about the
heart expressed. He sees in it the Throne of God and
the centre of intuition of the Divine.
*

By the position of the Qalb between the Alam-i-Amr


"
and the Alam-i-'ghalq, it is an "intermedium" (barzafeh)
between them, and a meeting place of physical
and spiritual forces. In the words of a ufi writer,
"It is compounded of the subtle rulfi and the coarse

body; and has thus established connection between


the two. It receives impressions from the external
world through the five External senses (viz. Thought,
Instinct, Memory, Reasoning and Fancy).* "Thus it
comes about that the heart is the centre of a warfare.
Al-Ghazall says, "There are two servants of the heart
which, when they serve it perfectly, are helpful. These
are wrath and appetite (or desire). Indeed the heart
considers these two excellent companions for its
journey to God. But sometimes these are disobedient
*Khwaja Khan, Studies in Tasawwuf. p. 195.
66 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
to the heart and rebel against it so that it comes to this,
that they enslave the heart and are the workers of its

destruction and thus it is kept back from that journey


by which eternal bliss is obtained/**
So through a mist of scholastic subtleties, the ufi
gropes his way to find that which will assuage the deep
hunger of his heart and so joins hands with his Chris-
tian brother who says, "I was seeking Thee without and
lo, Thou wast within/' "Our whole work in this life
is to heal the eye of the heart by which we see
God."< 2 >

V
.

(1) Ihya-ul-'Ulum. Vol. III. p. 5.

(2) St. Augustine.


CHAPTER IV.

The Path.

In the preceding chapter we have described the


general principles which underlie ufism, and now turn
to a consideration of the characteristic teachings at
the back of ufi practices, and of those experiences
through which ufis pass in their attempts to attain the
goal of Union with God. "ufism speaks of advance-
ment in the spiritual life as a "journey," and the
11
seeker after God as a sdlik, or "traveller
Its teaching .

is intended to guide the traveller to the attainment


11
of the perfect "knowledge (marifai) of God, the
only Reality diffused through all things. Subsequently,
the wandering soul is led onwards by slow 'stages*
(maqdmdt), and through the experience of certain
*
states' (akwdl), along a Path (at-Tariqat) to the t

desired goal of union with God, called fand fi'l-hacfiqat,


absorption (lit. 'extinction') in Reality".*

The very great gulf that separates man from God is

commonly described by ufi writers in symbolical


language. Such
the style of the following tradition
is

quoted by al-Qbazll: "Allah hath seventy thousand


Veils of Light and Darkness: were He to withdraw
their curtain, then would the splendours of His Aspect
(countenance) surely consume everyone who ap-

*
Be van Jones, The People of the Mosque, p. 157.
68 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
prehended Him with his sight."* These veils are
thus explained: The inner half of these are said to be
of light, and the other half of darkness. The soul in
its journey to union with Deity, passes through seven
stages and at every stage is stripped of ten thousand of
these veils, the dark ones first and then the bright. At
the final stage the soul stripped of all sensual and
material qualities stands face to face with the Absolute
Being.

THE STAGES OF THE PATH.


The journey or Path, have been
"stages" of the
variously described by the ufls. Such variation is
perhaps to be explained by the fact that ufis claim
that there are a myriad ways leading to God. Indeed
one of them is said to have declared, "The ways to
God are as many as the believes."
According to some authorities the Path consists of
the following seven 'stages':

(1) 'Ubicdiyyat, the stage of 'service' in which

the aspirant endeavours to purify his soul, and prepares


himself for the higher stages of the journey. At this
stage the first thing required of him is repentance,
which is described as "the awakening of the soul from
the slumber of indifference to awareness of his evil
ways, and a sense of contrition for past sins." The
aspirant is also exhorted to serve God and follow the
ordinances of the Law faithfully.

*C. W. H. T. Gairdener, Mishkatu'l- Anwar, pp. 88f.


THE PATH 69

(2) 'Ishq, that of love in which the Divine


influence inclines the soul towards the love of God.
'Allu'l-Hujwirl says: "Man's love towards God is a

quality which manifests itself in the heart of the pious


form of veneration and magnification,
believer, in the
so that he seeks to satisfy his Beloved and becomes

impatient and restless in his desire for vision of Him,


and canno: rest with anyone except Him, and grows
familiar with the remembrance (dhikr) of Him, and
abjures the remembrance of everything besides. Re-
pose becomes unlawful to him and rest flees from him.
He is cut off from all habits and associations, and re-
nounces sensual passion and turns towards the court
of love an! submits to the law of love and knows God
(1)
by His attributes of perfection."
At thL< the aspirant, urged by his intense
stage
longing for God, is le|J to observe poverty. In his
heart there is no room for any earthly desire but that
of God. Thus, his poverty is not merely the lack of
wealth, kit also the absence of any desire for it. A
ufi writes: "the poor are the richest of God's crea-
tion tiey dispense with the gift for the sake of the
Giver." ^
" "
(3) Zuhd, renunciation under the influ-
ence of tie Divine Love all worldly desires are expelled
"
from thd heart. The first stage of zuhd, to the

(1) tashf al~Mahjub, (Professor Nicholson's translation;


pp. 307,8.
(2) Al-Sarraj. Kitab-al-Luma\ p. 48, quoted, in Margaret
Smith, Kate, p. 74.
70 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
ufi, is and represents the Purgative Life,
initiatory
through which the novice must pass before setting
foot on the mystic Way. But when the soul has been
4

purified from all sensual desires, and the mystic pure


'

from self as flame from smoke sets forth upon his


journey towards God, then he passes beyond this early
degree of zuhd and aims at the last stage, renunciation
of all but God, attained only by the adept ," (1)
1
A
(4) Marifat, "knowledge" or "gnosis' in
which the aspirant contemplates the nature, attributes
4

and work of God Aliu'l-Hujwiri says: "Gnosis of God


is of two kinds cognitional ('i/wO and emotional (feafi).
:

Cognitional gnosis is the foundation of all blessings


in this world and in the next, for the most important
thing for a man at all times and in all circumitances is
knowledge of God, as God hath said: 'I onlt created

mankind that they might serve Me


1

the genii and


(Swra, 51:56), i.e. that they might know Me. But the
greater part of neglect this duty, except those whom
men
God hath chosen and whose hearts He hath vivified with
Himself. Gnosis is the God,
life of the heart throufh
and the turning away of one's inmost thoughts jrom all
that is not God."' 2) !

" "
(5) Wajd, ecstasy in which mental
excitement produced through contemplation of the
is

only existing Reality, God. At this stage the ftspirant


spends his time in contemplation, and practices much
as a means of inducing in him the ttate of

(1) Margaret Smith, Rabi'a, p. 76.

(2) Kaskf-al-Mahjub, p. 267.


THE PATH 71

ecstasy. Professor Nicholson says: "The whole of


ufism rests on the belief that when the individual self
is lost, the Universal Self is found, or, in religious
language, that ecstasy affords the only means by which
the soul can directly communicate and become united
with God.' 1(1)
" "
(6) Haqlqat, reality the heart is now
illumined with the true nature of God. The aspirant,
as he learns the true nature of
God, learns to exercise
tawakkul, dependence upon God. According to Al-
Ghazall tawhld and tawakkul are inseparably related.
To put one's trust in secondary causes is to associate
these with God as the object 01 devotion and this is
shirk. He Quran to establish this view and
uses the
quotes Sura 29: 65 to show that men call on God to
give them a safe passage when they take ship, but
when they arrive they attribute their safe arrival to a
fair wind. True trust is rather in Him who rules the
winds. "When He saves them to the shore, behold,
they associate others with Him/' This is contrary to
tawhld and therefore not true tawakkul. Al-Gliazali
says: "Know that tawakkul is a sort of faith (iman) and
faith is made up of knowledge Oi7m), state (hdl) and
practice (?amal)\ so too is tawakkul." Thus to
Al-Qbazall tawakkul is practically identical with the
ufi conception of tawhld.
(7) Wasl, "union" in which the mystic, as
it were, sees God face to face. This "stage" precedes
(1) Nicholson, The Mystics of Islam, p. 59.

(2) Ihya 'u 'I 'Vlum, Vol. IV., pp. 211-15, (Cairo, ed. 1346 A.H.)
72 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
the final experience of fand wa baqd. 'annihilation and
1
subsistence the ufl's ultima Thule.
, Waslis also the
stage of satisfaction, which
defined as "the acquies- is

cence of the heart in God's decision and the agree-


what He
1

ment of the heart with and chooses *,


wills
"
and again satisfaction is the acceptance of God's

4ecisions^with joy.
11(l)
Satisfaction has two sides, viz.,
human satisfaction with God and Divine satisfaction
with man. Abu Sa'id, a famous uf! writer, is reported
to have said: "That man is a ufl who is satisfiedwith
whatsoever God does or God will be satisfied with
11
(a>
whatsoever he does,
THE 'STATES OF THE MYSTIC. 1

1
The just described must be distinguished
'stages
from those experiences of the traveller which the
1 1

ufts call 'states .


They define a 'state as a condition
of feeling or disposition, which comes upon the mystic

without^ his intention or desire; such as sorrow, fear or


joy; 'Aliu'l-Hujwiri makes clear the distinction
" 1

between these as follows: 'Station (maqdm) (3) de-


1

notes anyone's 'standing in the Way of God, and his


fulfilment of the obligations appertaining to that
'station' and his keeping it until he comprehends its

perfection so far as lies in a man's power. It is not

(1) Al-Qushayri, Risala, p. 117, quoted in, Margaret Smith,


Rabi'a, p. 89.

(2) Asrar al-Tawhid, p. 381, quoted, in Margaret Smith, op. cit.

p. 88, note.

(3) The word 'station' is used by Professor Nicholson or rtuxqam


while we have translated it throughout by the word 'stagre'.
THE PATH 73

permissible that he should quit his 'station' without


fulfilling the obligations thereof. Thus, the first
1

'station repentance (tawbat), then comes conversion


is

(inabai), then renunciation (zuhd), then trust in God


(tawakkuV), and so on: it is not permissible that any-
one should pretend to conversion without repentance,
or to renunciation without conversion, or to trust in
God without renunciation.
"
'State' (hdl), on the other hand, is something that

descends from God into a man's heart, without his


being able to repel it when it comes or to attract it

when it goes, by his own effort. Accordingly, while


the term 'station' denotes the way of the seeker, and
his progress in the field of exertion, and his rank be-
fore God in proportion to his merit, the term 'state'
denotes the favour and grace which God bestows upon
the heart of His servant, and which are not connected
with any mortification on the latter's part. 'Station^
1

belongs to the category of acts, 'state to the category


of gift&L Hence the man that haiTa 'station' stands by
Els own self-mortification, whereas the man that has a
1

'state' is dead to 'self and stands by a 'state which God


creates in him."*

SIGNIFICANCE OF A SUFI'S JOURNEY.


In the previous chapter we have described how the
Absolute, in manifesting Itself, has passed through
several stages of 'devolution'. The progress of a ufi

from, the lowest to the highest stage of the Path,

*Kashf al-Mahjub, p. 181.


74 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
consists in traversing the stages of this Divine 'devolu-
tion* in obverse order. Professor Nicholson while ex-
pounding Jill's idea of the Perfect Man, speaks of
this ascent of the ufl as follows: "Man is the
microcosm in which all attributes are united, and in
him alone does the Absolute become conscious of
in all its diverse aspects.
itself To put it in another
way, the Absolute, having completely realised itself
in human nature, returns into Itself through the
medium of human nature; or, more intimately, God
and man become one in theJPerfect Man the enraptur-
ed prophet or saint whose religious function as a
mediator between man and God corresponds with his
metaphysical function as the unifying principle by
means of which the opposed terms of reality and
appearance are harmonised. Hence the upward move-
ment of the Absolute from the sphere of manifestation
back to the unmanifest^d Essence takes place in and
* 11

through the unitive ex2cricncej>f the soul.


Thus the in the
journey along the
soul's progress
Path is really the upward movement of the Absolute
from the sphere of manifestation back to the unmani-
festated state.
The downward path, consisting of the 'stages' of
1

'devolution traversed by 'the Absolute, is designated


by the ufis as safaru'l-Haqq 'the journey of Reality*
and the corresponding upward path followed by the
mystics is designated as safaru'l-abd, 'the journey of
the creature*.
*
Studies in Islamic Mysticism pp. 84, 85
THE PATH 75

The gradual ascent of the soul is further described

by ufis to be related to 'four main states', through


which the traveller must pass.
1. Ndsut, humanity, the natural state of every
human being, in which the disciple must observe
shariat.
2. Malakut, nature of angels, in which he takes
(l)
the Path of spiritual journey, at-'tariqat.
3. Jabarut, possession of power, for which there is

Marifat.
4. Ldhut, Divinity, the state of absorption into the
Deity, in which he attains Reality, Haqlqat

THE THREE GREAT JOURNEYS OF THE


SUFIS.
There are certain ufis who speak of the Path as
consisting of three journeys:
1

(1)Sayr ilalldh, Journey to God the aspirant ,

travels from the World of Creation' to the 'World


of Command'. In this he traverses the 'stages' of
Wdhidiyyat and Wahdat, i. e. the last two stages of the
r2 '
This journey ends at Haqlqat-
Divine 'devolution'.
i-Muhammadi.
(2) Sayr fi'lldh. Journey in God', in this the

aspirant is absorbed into the Essence of God. It is


1 1

the 'stage of Ahdiyyat. It was at this 'stage that


Hallaj cried out, Ana'l-Haqq 'I am the Reality', and

said;

(1) Shah Muhammad Ghawth. Asraru't-Tariqat, Urdu Tr.


(Naqshbandiyya Manzil, Lahore), pp. 27-28.
-(2) Cp. pp. 55. 56.
76 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
I am He whom I love, and He whom I love is I:

We are two spirits in one body.


If thou seest me, thou seest Him.
And if thou seest Him, thou seest us both.

(3) Sayr 'Journey from God'.


"ani "llah, This
is the journey back to the world of manifestation
1
invested with the attributes of God. It is the 'stage
1

of baqd "subsistence after fand 'annihilation . The


author of Gulshan-i-Rdz thus discribes it:
,

"He obtains baqd, subsistence, after fand, annihilat-


ion. He returns to the Source from the end of his

journey by another way. He puts on the Law as a


garment and then wraps about it the robe of the Mystic
Path. But know that Truth itself is the Station of
his nature, the connecting link between unbelief (kufr)
and Belief (/man).''*

HAFS, OR THE SOUL.


The ufis distinguish between Ruh, the spirit, and
Nafs, the self or the appetitive soul. Nafs is consi-
dered to be the element of man, the seat of
evil in

passion and lust, and mortification of this nafs is the


chief work of the aspirant. There are among ufis

many outward methods of mortification, such as fast-


ing, silence and solitude. The aim in all such practices
11
may be said to be "dying to self .
By this the ufis

do not mean to assert that the lower self can be


essentially destroyed, but that it is to be purged of all

its evil qualities. The word death is, in fact, employed


Guhhan-i-Raz, lines 249-251.
THE PATH 77

in a figurative sense to indicate the various methods


of self -mortification. The methods so described are
three in number:

1. Al-Mawtu'l-Abyad, 'the white death'; this is

held to mean abstinence from food, or such control


of the feeling of hunger as gradually purifies the Nafs
from appetitive cravings. A person who frequently
abstains from food is said to have entered the state
1

of the 'white death .

2. Al-Mawtu'l-Akhdar, 'the green death'; this is


the wearing of old clothes in a state of voluntary
poverty. When a person gives up wearing purple and
fine linen, and has chosen the garment of poverty,
he is said to have entered this state of death.
3. Al-Maivtul-Aswad, 'the black death'; this is

applied to the voluntary taking of troubles, and submit-


ting to be evil spoken of for the truth's sake. When
an aspirant has learnt to submit to such troubles and
persecutions, he is said to have entered into this state
of death.
The Nafs, in such a process of mortification and
purgation of all its evil qualities, is variously described

according to the degree of purity it has attained:

1. Nafs-i-Ammard, 'the soul depraved'.


4

2. Nafs-i-Lawwdma, the soul accusatory'.


3. Nafs-i-Mulhama, 'the soul inspired'.
4

4. Nafs-i-Mutma'inna, the soul tranquil'.


5. Nafs-i-Rddiyya, 'the soul satisfied'.

6. Nafs-i-Mardiyya, 'the soul satisfying'.


78 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
7. Nafs-i-$dfiyya iva Kdmila, 'the soul clarified and
perfect*. x
TAJALLL THE DIVINE EFFULGENCE AND
MYSTIC ILLUMINATION.
Muslim theologians are wont to speak of Tawhidu
'dh-dhat, Unity of the Essence, Tawhidu'$-sfifdt,
Unity
of the Attributes,and Tawhidul-Afal, Unity of Acts,
when speaking of the Deity in monistic terms. There
is only one Essence and all manifestations of that
One Essence, whether in attributes or acts, though
apparently diverse and manifold, are in reality one.
All existence is the sphere of this manifestation.
When men act it is really God acting; when they
display certain attributes these are really attributes
of the Divine. This manifestation is effected through
the Divine Effulgence. But while all men display the
effects of this Effulgence, only the mystic is able to
apprehend it. The ordinary man will attribute his

actions but the mystic seeks to become


to himself
aware that his actions are acts of the Divine. Thus
in the mystic experience there is illumination which

corresponds to the Divine Effulgence. Tajalli then


on the Divine side represents the outgoing Effulgence
of the Divine towards the creature, and on the creat-
urely side the illumination which draws the creature
back to the Divine. Corresponding to the Divine
"descent" is the mystic "ascent".
The traveller on the mystic path journeying on the
ascent to God, receives illumination in varying degrees
through the self-manifestation of the Deity, in the
THE PATH 79

following ascending order: Tajalli-i-afal, the mystic


,

illumination of the Divine_acts, Tajalli-i-shukudi, the


mystic illumination of the Divine names, JTajalll-i-
$ifdti, the mystic illumination of the Divine attributes,
and Tajalll-i-$hatii the mystic illumination of the
Divine Essence^" 'We now proceed to a brief descrip-
tion of these.

(1) THE MYSTIC ILLUMINATION OF THE


DIVINE ACTS.
In the Effulgence of Creative Truth in His acts,
in so far as this relates to the locus in which it is made
manifest, the creature sees the flow of power in all
things. Thus God, the Mover of these and the One who
brings them to rest, makes Himself evident by negating
the act of the creature and establishing His own. The
creature in this sphere in which the divine manifes-
tation is witnessed is deprived of strength, power and
will. Men in this stage may be of different sorts. To
one God shews His will first and then His act. Such
a creature is then deprived of strength, act and will

and the highest of the stages of the illumination


this is

of the divine acts. To another God shews His will


but shews being put into operation by creaturely
it

agents and flow under the dominance of His power.


its

Some see the command at the time an act proceeds


from the created and trace it back to God. To another
God makes that evident after the procession of the act
from the created. There is another who does not
shew forth any act of his own but only the act of God.
Such an one does not attribute any act to himself.
80 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
He docs not say in obedience that he is obedient
nor in sinfulness that he is a sinner. Such a person
may eat with you and then swear he has never eaten
and then swear again that he has never sworn and in
spite of this be honest in the sight of God.*
Jill, speaking of those to whom the will is made
known before the act, says: 'Though we expect such
a person to follow the outward Law, yet he may dis-
obey it in obedience to the Divine will. In this case
we do not condemn him, but leave the matter between
him and God."
(2) THE MYSTIC ILLUMINATION OF THE
DIVINE NAMES.
When God manifests Himself to a servant in one
of His names, then that one is so completely drowned
in the radiance of that name, that if you should invoke
God by that name, his servant will answer you because
the name applicable to him. It is thus that
is Jill opens
his discussion of this stage of illumination. He then
proceeds to describe the gradual revelation of different
names to the Mystic. The name first manifested to
him is Existence. This is followed by the name One.
The more the name particularises the higher in the
scale it is. Under the effulgence of the name Allah,
the intensity of the illumination is such as to overbear
the mystic and overwhelm him as though he were
crushed under a mountain. Here the name of the

mystic is obliterated and there is established in its place


the name of Allah. Thus the mystic receives the
'See Jili, Insanu 'l-kbmil Vol. 1. p. 34.
THE PATH 81

illumination of the names one by one, through the


effulgence of the names, till finally the name Qayyum
is manifested to him and in him and he reaches the
highest stage of the Illumination of the Divine Names.
Thence he proceeds to the apprehension of the efful-
gence of the Divine attributes. >

(3) THE MYSTIC ILLUMINATION OF THE


DIVINE ATTRIBUTES.
By the effulgence of the Divine attributes, the
essence of the Mystic is invested one by one with the
attributes of God, really, actually and absolutely, just
as any object receiving an attribute becomes qualified
by it. When a man is the object of illumination of
any attribute, he may be likened to one embarking on
a boat and launching out on a sea which he is to explore
to its uttermost reaches. Thus he is to explore the
whole range of the attribute till he attains perfection
in it and becomes completely invested with it. Then
he receives the illumination of further attributes until
he has exhausted the whole range of them.
When a man is the recipient of the effulgence of the
attributes his own existence is obliterated and when the
light of servile existence is extinguished and the spirit
of his creatureliness annihilated, then God sets up in the

temple of the human body but this without interpenet-


ration or permeation (hulul) from His essence, a subtle
substance not detached from Himself nor joined to
the creature as a substitute for that of which he was
deprived or that which was lost in annihilation (/ana).
82 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

(4) THE MYSTIC ILLUMINATION OF THE


DIVINE ESSENCE.
When "Essence" is used of the Absolute it implies
the dropping of all modes, adjuncts, relations and as-
pects. Thus the Effulgence of the Divine Essence is
without any reference at all to any name or attribute.
It is the Effulgence of the Absolute Being on the
highest plane when He is conceived as pure essence.
When the mystic receives illumination on this plane,
he becomes the Perfect Unit (al-fardul-kdmil), or the
Universal Succour (al-ghau>thu V-jamO, to whom all
resort for aid whom obeisance is made in
and to
prayer. Through him God succours the whole uni-
verse. As al-Mahdi he is the rightly guided. He is
the Seal of Sainthood and the Vicar of God as narrated
in the story of Adam. The ultimate constituents of
all existences aredrawn towards him to obey his
command drawn
as iron to a magnet.
is The world of
sense is subdued by his might and he does what he wills
by his power. Nothing is veiled from him for when
the subtle substance of the Divine is in this saint as

pure essence unconditioned by any degree of what is


appropriate to divinity or creatureliness, then he gives
to every degree of existence, whether Divine or crea-
and nothing can hinder him from doing
turely, its due,
so; for what hinders the Essence is its conditioning
by name, quality or degree, but here all hindrance

*Microcosmic Pole, seej Nicholson; Studies in Islamic Mys-


ticism, p. 130.
THE PATH 83

disappears because there is nothing but pure essence.


Therefore with
things are actual for there is
it all

nothing to hinder whereas in other essences things arc

sometimes actual and sometimes potential. (* )

FA3VA, 'ANNIHILATION;
Fana or 'annihilation', is the state which precedes
that of 'subsistence' (or baqa). There has been much
speculation as to the true significance of the term. Said
Kharraz, who according to 'Allu'l-Hujwiri was the
author of this doctrine, says,"Annihilation is annihila-
tion of consciousness of manhood Cubudiyyai), and
subsistence is subsistence in the contemplation of
Godhead (ildhiyyat)." This
explained by the author
is

of the Kashfu 'l-Mahjub to mean, that "It is an


imperfection to be conscious in one's actions that
one is a man, and one attains to real manhood
(bandagf) when one is not conscious of them, but is

annihilated so as not to see them, and becomes sub-


sistent through beholding the actions of God. Hence
all one's actions are referred to God, not to one's self,
and whereas a man's actions that are connected with
himself are imperfect, those which are attached to
him by God are perfect. Therefore, when anyone
becomes annihilated from things that depend on himself,
he becomes subsistent through the beauty of God-
2
head."( )

Some have gone


further than this and have explained
fana to mean, "the non-cognizance of the traveller's
(1) Insdnu 'l-kdmil vol. 1. cap. 15.

(2) Kashf ul-Mahj&b. p. 245.


84 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
11
attributes as his own. Others say that "fana is the
disappearance of the Anlyyat, the I-ness of the traveller
11
in the I-ness of God. Again there are those who
assert that "in fand, the essence, the attributes and
actions of the traveller become the essence, attributes,
(1)
and actions of God." opinion which is It is this last

commonly accepted by the majority of the ufls in

India.

According to some exponents of the doctrine, there


are three degrees in fand, viz., Qurb-i-FarcCid, proxi-
mity of obligations, Qurb-i-Nawdfil, proximity of

supererogations, and Jama' baynu'l-Qurbayn, the union


of two proximities. (2) In the first the ufi has no
1

'actions of his own, he becomes an instrument in the


hand God, who acts through him. In the second,
of
the order is reversed and the ufl becomes an agent

and God his instrument. In the third degree the

mystic finds himself neither as an agent nor as an ins-


trument; but he is one with the Essence of God.

no T or 'We or 'Thou
1 1

"In that glory is


1 1 1 11

T, 'We , Thou ,and 'He are all one thing.

Professor Nicholson says, "The enraptured ufl who


has passed beyond the illusion of subject and object
and broken through to the Oneness can either deny
11
that he anything or affirm that he is all things.
is
1 1

The former is the 'negative and the latter the 'positive

(1) Khaja Khan, Studies in Tasawwuf, p, 73.


(2) Najmu'l-Ghani. Tadhkiratus Suluk, (Pub. Muradabad),
p. 365.
THE PATH 85

aspects of cosmic consciousness. Both these aspects


of fana may be illustrated by the two following poems
of Jalalu'd Din Ruml.
The following illustrates the 'negative' way.

"O Muslim what can I do? For I do not know myself,


I am not a Christian nor a Jew, a fireworshipper nor a Muslim.

I am not oi the East or the West, nor of Land nor of Sea.

I am not o: the Elemental nor of the Circling Spheres.

I am not of earth nor of air, of water nor of fire.

I am not of the Empyrean nor of the outspread carpet of the

world, indeed I am not in the category of creation at all.


I am not of Hindustan nor of China nor from near-by Bulgaria.

I am not of the land of Iraq nor of the dust of Khurasan.

I am not of the Faith (or the present obligations of religion) nor

of the hereafter, nor of Heaven nor of Hell.

I am not from Adam nor from the garden of Paradise.


My dwelling is without location, my trail without trace.
There is neither body nor soul for I am the Soul of Souls.

I have expelled duality from myself. I have seen the two worlds
as one.

Let me seek One, say One, know One and desire One.

He He the Last, He the Manifest, He the Hidden.


the First,
Without Him and other than Him nothing else I know.
I am drunk with the Soul of Love and the two worlds have
passed from my hand.
Except drinking and revelry I have no other aim.
If in my life some day I should draw but one breath without Him,

From that time, yes! from that very hour, I would repent me of
my life.

If in private some day just for a moment my hand might be given


to the Friend,
I would tread underfoot the two worlds and wave the other hand
(dancing in exultation).
86 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
How wounderful, my friends! what bird am I that I strike wing in
the egg?
Within this body of water and clay, all is Love and all is Soul.

The 'positive aspect may be illustrated in the fol-

lowing poem:
O Mussulmans!
Is there lover in the world? Then I am he!
Muslim, Pagan, Christian monk? Lo, I am he!

Shibli, Karkhi, Bayazid and Junayd,

Bu-Hanila, Shaf i, Malik, I am he!

Throne and Carpet, Tablet, Footstool, Height and Depth,


Whether one with God or sundered all you see!
I, "Two bowshots off," "above", and "nigher still",

Yea, I am Injil, Psalter, Koran, utterly!


Cup-boy and lees, minstrel and cup, lute-string and song.
Sweetheart and lamp, wine and carouse, all these I be!

Sects and creeds seventy-and-two in the world?


Not one that remain; but all of them see thcu in me!
Four elements in the World, Soul and Bod> too,
Earth, Air, Water, and Fire, what are they all but me?
Truth, falsehood, evil and good, easy and hard, I am;
Knowledge, virtue, temperance, faith and piety!

Blazing fire of Hell, fierce-flaming am I;

Yea! Garden of Paradise and Houri heavenly!


Wearer of coat of skin, with quiver and lariat I;

Yet crown and diadem of both worlds' majesty!


Celestials and fairies. Jinn and Man I am;
This Earth and Heaven, and in them what'er there be!
"O Shams-i-Tabriz, what is the end of your claim?"
Hear then the gist: The Soul of the Soul, I am He.*

'Translated by the Rev. J, W. Sweetman, Diwan-i-S hams-Tabriz,


(Newal Kishore Press, p. 532).
CHAPTER V.

The Path (continued.)

i. DEVOTION TO THE PIR.

The order to attain to his goal and reach


ufi, in

the end of his journey, is obliged to follow the direc-


tions of a leader who lays down for him certain rules
of practice, and otherwise guides him in every detail of
his life. A
person who attempts to traverse the 'Path'
without the aid of such a counsellor is said to have
Satan for his guide and is compared to a tree that for
want of a gardener's care brings forth "none or bitter
1 *
fruit.'

Thus the requirement for one desiring to fol-


first

low the life of a ufi is to place himself under a guide


who is called a shayhh or pir, both words mean an
'elder', or a murshid, i.e., 'leader'. Next he has to take
the vow of obedience (bay at) to his pir. Thus, he
becomes a murid, *aspirant' or disciple. A pir is to be

followed blindly, and, in actual practice, is obeyed as


much the prophet Muhammad. The least word of a
pir is absolute law to his disciple. "All the pir's wishes,

even though they contravene the letter of the shanat,


must be fulfilled. The saying of a famous mystic poet
"If the tavern-keeper (i. e. ptr) orders
illustrates this:
thee to colour thy prayer-mat with wine, do it: for

*Cp. Nicholson, The Mystics of Islam, P. 32.


88 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
the traveller is not unaware of the customs and manners
of the stages of love's path."
The pir is believed to be able to 'transmit' spiritual
power to his murid. This he does by the exercise
tawajjuh 'concentration.' When a pir desires to exer-
cise tawajjuh, on one of his disciples, he seats himself
near him and proceeds, imagination, to picture his
in

own heart as in close proximity to that of his murid, at


the same time concentrating his mind upon the idea
that his power is now being transmitted from his own
heart to that of the other. At the same time the murid
is required to concentrate his mind on the idea that he
is receiving the power from his pir. This rite is generally
performed at the time when the pir, after the perform-
ance of dhikr, is in an abnormal state of mind.
Tawajjuh is regarded as the one great means of
producing a spiritual change in the life of another. A
powerful saint is often believed to be able to work a

very great transformation in the life of his disciple by


this process." At times he is thought to be able to
exercise such tawajjuh by a mere look so that any one
on whom his glance may fall is believed to attain the
degree of saintship.
Further, it is the pir alone who can lead his disciple
from the beginning of his journey to its end, guiding
1

him at every 'stage' and helping him in every 'state .

The hypnotic process (implied in the practice of tawaj-


juk) by which a pir helps his murid to reach the stage
*Itmust not be supposed that such transformation is neces-
sarily moral transformation.
THE PATH 89

of 'annihilation' is described by J. P. Brown in the

following words: "The murid must, mystically, always


bear his murshid in mind, and become mentally absorb-
ed in him, through a constant meditation and contemp-
lation of him. The teacher must be his shield against
all evil thoughts. The spirit of the teacher follows him
in all his efforts, and accompanies him wherever he

may be, quite as a guardian spirit. To such a degree


is this carried that he sees the master in all men and in
all things, just as a willing subject is under the influence
of the magnetiser. This condition is called 'self-annihila-
tion' into the murshid or shaykh. The latter finds, in
his ownvisionary dreams, the degree at which the
murld has reached, and whether or not his soul or spirit
has become bound to his own.
"At this state of the disciple, the shaykh passes him
over to the spiritual influence of the pzr, or original
founder of the particular tariqa or 'path' to which they
belong, long since deceased, and he sees the latter
only by the spiritual aid of the former. This is called
'self-annihilation' into the plr. He now becomes so
much a part of the pir as to possess all his spiritual

powers, and may perform even all of his supernatural


acts.
"The grade also leads him, through the
third

spiritual aid of the shaykh, up to the Prophet him-


self, whom he now sees in all things. This state
1
is called, like the preceding, 'self-annihilation into the
Prophet.
"The fourth degree leads him even to God. He
90 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
becomes a part of the Divinity, and sees Him in all

things."*
This exposition shows that the final stage of the
1

journey, 'absorption in the Deity, is not attained un-


til the aspirant has annihilated himself in his plr.

n. SUFI DEVOTIONS.
The the course of his journey, performs
ufi, in

which are either of a general


certain acts of devotion,
or special nature. The former class consists of the
following:
(a) T^amaz, the ritual prayer, or worship.
(fc) Tildwat, the recitation of the Quran.
(c) Awrdd, set forms of prayer.
The 'special' acts are as follow:
(a) Mujdhada, acts of self-mortification.
(fr) Qbikr, remembering God, through particular
exercises of the breath.

(c) Murdqaba, contemplation.


GENERAL ACTS OF DEVOTION.
(<z) Namdz ( soldi) is one of the prescribed rites of

Islam. The ufis notwithstanding the fact thatthey


lay the chief emphasis on the regulation of the in-
ward life of the soul, attach importance also to the ri-
tual practices of Islam, such as, tahdrat, ceremoial puri-
fication,namdz ceremonial worship, haj pilgrimage to
Mecca, etc. 'Aliu'l-Hujwirl says, "The most impor-
tant act of mortification is to observe the external

Rose, The Danishes, p. 330,


THE PATH 91

rules of discipline (addb-i-zdhir) assiduously in all cir-

cumstances." (1)
Certain of his anecdotes illustrate the
stress laid upon external practices by the teachers of
ufism "It is related that Ibrahim Khawwas said: 1
desire God to give me an everlasting life in this world,
in order that, while mankind are engrossed in the
pleasures of the world and forget God, I may

observe the rules of religion amidst the affliction of


the world and remember God/ And it is related that
Abu Tahir Harami lived forty years at Mecca, and
went outside of the sacred territory whenever he
purified himself, because he would not pour the water
which he had used for that purpose on the ground
that God had called His. When Ibrahim Khawwas
was ill of dysentery in the congregational mosque at

Rayy, he performed sixty complete ablutions in the


1 '

course of a day and night, and he died in the water. (2)


In ufism, however, a spiritual significance is at-
tached to every external duty; for instance, 'Allu'l-
Hujwiri writing about the ceremonial purification
which precedes prayer, says, "Outward and inward
purification must go together; e. g., when a man
washes his hands he must wash his heart clean of
worldliness, and when he puts water in his mouth he
must purify his mouth from the mention of other than
God, and when he washes his face he must turn away
from all familiar objects and turn towards God, and
when he wipes his head he must resign his affairs to
(1) Kashf al-Mahjub, p. 292.
(2) Kashf al-Mahjub, pp. 292-293.
92 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
God, and when he washes his feet he must not form
the intention of taking his stand on anything except
according to the command of God." (1)
Similarly a spiritual significance has been attached
to every movement in the performance of namdz.
"One of the Shaykhs says: 'Four things are necessary to
him who prays: annihilation of the lower soul (nafs\
loss of the natural powers, purity of the inmost heart,
and perfect contemplation.' 'Allu'l-Hujwiri explain-
ing this saying writes: "Annihilation of the lower
soul is to be attained only by the concentration of
thought; loss of natural powers only by affirmation of
the Divine Majesty, which involves the destruction of
all that is other than God; purity of the inmost heart
only by love; and perfect contemplation only by purity
of the inmost heart." (2) Imam Q}azli has devoted an
entire section of his famous work on ufism, called
Ihya*ul-Ulum to tahdrat and namdz, in which he seeks
to give a spiritual interpretation to these acts and to
attach an inward significance to every movement
made in connection with their performance. For
instance, speaking of the worshipper's turning his face
towards Mecca, he says: "It is a turning of the out-
ward face from other directions to the direction of
the House of God. Do you suppose that turning the
heart from other things to the matter of Allah is not
desired of you? Away with you! For there is nothing
else desired but this. These external activities are

(1) Kashf al-Mahjub, p. 292.

(2) Kashf al-Majub, p. 302.


THE PATH 93

only the setting in motion of the inward activities." >


1

Sometimes the ufis, following this spirit of namdz and


not the rigid rules which regulate every movement of
the worshipper, modify the outward modes of its
observance so as to make it more expressive of their
inward feeling. For instance, sometimes in the midst
of his worship a uft will take off his cap and cast it
on the ground as an expression of his humility before
God. Now, to take off one's cap and place it at the
feet of another is an extreme form of humility.
A further modification may be observed in a special
form of namdz called alatu'l-ma'kus (obverse prayer)
which has been offered by certain saints as an act of
austerity. This kind of prayer is performed by hanging
oneself upside down in a solitary place, preferably in
a and there repeating the prescribed prayers,
well,
accompanied by signs in the place of bodily move-
ments.
(b) Tildwat* i. e. the practice of reciting the Quran.
In tildwat the ufi, as an orthodox Muslim, believes that
he is pronouncing the very words of Allah and so it

seems to him that he is hearing the sound of the Be-


loved of his soul. consequence of such an impres-
In
sion he is often thrown into a state of ecstasy in
course of his devotional reading. Thus for ufis of
certain Religious Orders, who are forbidden the use
of music as a means of inducing the state of ecstasy,
the reading or chanting of the Quran supplies its place.

(1) Al-Ghazaii. Ihya ul- Ulum, Book Worship. English Trans-


of
lation by Rev. E.L. Calvcrly. Pubd. C. L.S. Madras. P. 107.
94 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
But even in the case of those ufis who, like the
Chishtis, freely indulge in music, there is something in
the mere reading of the Quran which makes them go
into rapture. It is related that Khwaja Qufbu'd-Din

Bakhtiyar Kaki, a famous saint of the Chishtl Order,


on coming across a verse in the Quran containing some
Divine threat of punishment used to strike his chest
and become unconscious; but whenever he read a verse
containing God's promise of His grace and reward, he
would pass into a state of 'bewilderment' (hayrat) (l \
or ecstasy, and would remain in that state for a quite
a long time.
Baba Farid, another Chishti saint, is reported to
have said "Tildivat is the best of all forms of devotion;
to read the Quran is to converse with God."
"Every day God speaks seventy times to the heart of
His seeker; saying, 'If thou art my seeker, then leave
all the acts of thy austerity and occupy thyself solely
"
with the reading of the Quran.' (2) And Nizmu'd-Din
of Delhi said, "Reading of the Quran bestows two
benefits upon its readers, first it guards the eyes from
all ailments, and second for every reading the merit of
(3)
a thousand years is recorded for its reciters."

(c) Awrad (Sing, ivird, lit, exercise, practice or


task) set forms of prayers for daily recitation. There
are many awrad, which are believed to be of great

(1) Badru'd-Din Ishaq Israrul-Awliya Urdu Tr. (Manzil-i-


Naqshbandiyya, Lahore) P. 35.

(2) Ibid. 35.


'

(3) Khwaja Muhibbu Ullak. Miftahul-' Ashiqin (Manzil-i-


Naqshbandiyya, Lahore) P. 13.
THE PATH 95
1

efficacy in helping a 'traveller to attain nearness to


God. The most popular of all is durud, prayer for
Muhammad. There are several forms of it, the shor-
test one which the Muslims repeat whenever they utter
the name of their Prophet or hear
being pronunced, it

is "Mercy and peace be upon him/ An


as follows:
extended form of it, always used in namdz, runs as
follows: "O God, have mercy upon Muhammad, and on
his descendants, as thou didst have mercy on Abraham
and on his descendants. Thou art to be praised and
thou art great. O God, bless Muhammad and his descen-
dants as thou didst bless Abraham and his desendants.
Thou art to be praised and thou art great."

Other forms of prayer used for the purpose of


daily repetition are called Dud-i-Mdthura, 'recorded
prayers'. These are said to have been used by Muhammad
and are handed down in the Traditions. Sometimes,
in addition to these, the Ninety-nine names of Allah,
and the Ninety-nine names of Muhammad, together
with the titles of some saint or other are repeated every
day. Besides these prayers every ufl repeats the
shajara (lit. a tree, a table tracing the line of succes-
sion in a particular Religious Order to Muhammad)
of his Order as a pious practice. Further, every Order
has its special set of prayers, called feiatm (lit. seal-

ing) which briefly consists of repeating certain chapters


of the Quran, the Ninety-nine names of Allah, the
Ninety-nine names of Muhammad and the names of
the saints of the order.
The following forms of ejaculatory prayers are also
% SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

used for daily recitation chiefly with the help of a


rosary (tastih):
(1) Tasbih viz., Subhdn Allah, "Holiness to God".
(2) Tahmld viz., Al-hamdu li'llah, "Praise be to

God."
(3) Takfar viz., Alldhu Akbar. "God is great.'

THE SPECIAL ACTS OF DEVOTION.


(a) Mujahada, self-mortification. The term is derived
from the root ]ahad< 'striving' from which comes also
the word jihad, "waging war against the unbelievers.'
Sometimes the Sufis treat this word jihad as inter-
changeable with mujdhada* and then they translate it
as 'striving against one's own self. Thus, for instance,
the verse of the Quran, "Those who fight strenuously
(jdhadu) for Us We will surely guide them into Our
1

ways/ is translated by the ufls to mean: "Those,


who strive to the utmost (jdhadu) for Our sake, We
will guide them in Our way." (Sura. 29: 69). Further,
Sufis quote a tradition which makes Muhammad to

say: "The Mujdind (literally, one who fights in jihad,

holy war) is he who struggles with all his might


against himself (jdhadu nafsahu) for God's sake*'. Ac-
cording to another tradition Muhammad after the
battle of Badr is reported to have said, "We have
returned from the lesser war (al-jihddul-a$ghar) to the
greater war (al-jihddul-akbar)" On being asked, "What
1

is the greater war?' he replied, "It is the struggle


against one's self (mujdhadatu'n-nafs). The 0fts infer

from this tradition that Muhammad 'adjudged the


THE PATH 97

mortification of the lower soul to be superior to the


Holy War against unbelievers, because the former is
more painful/ The term mujdhada is in fact, however,
applied to acts of penance and austerity. The traveller
observes prolonged fasts, repeats some names of God
night and day, and denies to himself the ordinary
comforts of life.

(b) Qhikr, 'remembering', is a term applied to


special acts of devotion by means of certain breathing
exercises and also by controlling respiration. There
aremany ways of performing dhikr\ some of the more
important ones may be noted here.
(1) Qhikr-i-jall.
The worshipper sits in the usual posture and
i.

shouts the word Allah, drawing his voice as from his


left side and then from his throat.

ii. Sitting as at prayers he repeats the word Allah


still louder than before, first from his right knee,
and then from his left side.

Folding his legs under him he repeats the word


ni.

Allah first from his right knee, and then from his left
side, still louder.

iv. remaining in the same position he shouts


Still

the word Allah first from the left knee, then from
the right knee, then from the left side, and lastly, in
front, still louder.
v. Sitting as at prayer, with face towards Mecca,
he closes his eyes, says La, drawing the sound as from
his navel up to his left shoulder; then he says ildha,

drawing out the sound as from his brain; and lastly,


98 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
illa'llah, repeated from his left side with great
(1)
energy.
Every act of drawing the sound of Allah or the
syllables of the creed (viz., La, ildha, and ilia V/a/i),
from sides, front, navel, and brain, as described above,
is called a darfe,, lit, 'striking'. It will be noticed that
the practice (i) contains only one such act, and is

called dhikr-i-yak darfa., the dhikr of one darb: and


similarly the dhikr (ii) contains two such acts, and is

therefore called dhikr-i-do darbl. the dhikr of two


darbs. The rest of the dhikrs for the same reasons
are named, sih darlri, of three darbs\ chahdr darbi, of four
darbs\ panch darbi, of five darbs and shash darbi, of six
darbs.

(2) Uhikr-i-khafi.

Closing his eyes and his lips, the worshipper


i.

says, "with the tongue of his heart, Alldhu sami'un,


1

i. e. "God hears*'; Alldhu baslrun, i, e,, "God sees ';


Alldhu 'allmun,i, e. "God the knower." The first being
drawn, were,
as from
it the navel to the breast; the
second, from the breast to the brain; the third, from
the brain up to the heavens; and then again repeated
stage by stage backwards and forwards.
ii. He then says in a low voice, Allah, from the
right knee, and then from the left side.

iii. With each exhalation of the breath he says


Id ildha, with each inhalation, ilia 7/d/t. (2)

(1) Bevan Jones, The People of the Mosque, p. 161.

(2) Bevan Jones, op, tit. pp. 161-62.


THE PATH 99

Sultdnul-Adhkdr, the dhikr of all dhikrs.


(3)
Occasionally, of set purpose the worshipper centres
his mind on the exact position in the body of the various

latcCif, as described in a previous chapter; and, by

concentrated thinking he endeavours to make them


1

'active with remembrance of God. In this effort he


is greatly helped by the tawajjuh of his plr (see pp. 87,88).
When at length he realises that all his lataif are active
with the remembrance of God he is said to have
accomplished the Sultdnul-Adhkdr.
(4) Habs-i-dam, restraining breathing.
In this case the devotee holds his breath and con-
ceives of his qalb repeating the first part of the creed
Ld many times as possible in one breath.
ildha ilia 'lldh as

Gradually his powers of control are so increased that


he is able to repeat the creed, in one breath, several
thousand times.
(5) Pds-i-anfds, guarding the respirations.
In this particular exercise the worshipper summons
before his mind a picture of his heart situated within
his left breast, and imagines that he sees the word
Allah engraved on it in luminous Arabic characters.

At the same time he brings himself to believe that


while inhaling his breath he is producing the sound
Allah, and that while exhaling he makes the sound ku.*
*
Hu, the last syllable of the word Allahu is another form
of Auuw, the pronoun of the third person singular. In Sufi lang-
uage it indicates, Sirr Allah, the inmost consciousness of God.
Prof. Nicholson says, "Jili demonstrates this by analysing die
name Allah, which in Arabic is written ALLH: take away tic A,
and there remains LLH-/t/faA-"to God": then take away the first
L, and you are left with LH-lahu-"to Him": remove the second L,
and you have Huwa-"He". Studies in Islamic mysticism, p. 96 note.
100 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
This practice may be developed to such an extent
that the ufi imagines that the syllables Allah and
hu accompany every act of inhalation and exhalation,

(6) Mahmuda and nasira.


In the former of these two the eyes are made to

converge on the tip of the nose, and in the latter


towards the middle of the forehead. While doing so
the worshipper meditates on the thought that God is
present and sees him.

(7) Nafi-athbdt, negation and affirmation.

The worshipper sits in the posture of namaz and


faces Mecca. He so breathes as to imagine that he is
bringing up the phrase La ildha from his navel, and
then expels it by a jerk in the direction of his right

shoulder. He then utters ilia V/a/i and jerks


head his

towards his heart as though to imprint these words on


it.

Murdqaba, watching,
(c) is a term used for medi-
tation and contemplation.

It is thus practised:
"At the outset the worshipper performs dhihr by
repeating the phrases: Alldhu hddirl, e. "God who is i.

present" (with me); Alldhu ndziri, "God who sees


me '; Alldhu shdhidl, "God who witnesses me"; Alldhu
1

mal "God who is with me."


"Having recited this dhlkr, either aloud or mentally,
the worshipper proceeds to meditate upon some verse
or verses of the Quran.
THE PATH 101

The following give some idea of the line of thought


considered by Muslim mystics to be the most devo-
tional and spiritual.
"He <
v God) is first, He is last. The manifest, the
hidden, and who knoweth all things" (57:3)
4<
He is with you wheresoever ye be" (57:4).
"We (God) are closer to him (man) than his neck-
vein" (50: 15).
"Whichever way ye turn there is the face of God"
(2: 109).

"God compasseth all things" (4: 125).


"All on earth shall pass away, but the face of the
Lord shall abide resplendent with majesty and glory"
(55:26,27).
f

*
Be van Jones, The People of the Mosque. P. 162
CHAPTER VI.

Notable Features of Sufi Practice.

i. VENERATION OF THE SAINTS.


The belief in Awliya (sing, wall, lit, a friend),
saints, is common among Muslims, and is a direct out-
come of ufl teaching. While the ufls, in virtue of

being God's chosen people, are looked upon as elect


of the Muslims, the saints, in virtue of being God's
1

'friends , are regarded as the elect of the uf!s. The


biographies of these saints, their miracles, their teach-
ing, and legends concerning them are not merely
sought out and eagerly studied but their names and
more popular sayings are on the lips of about seventy
per cent of the followers of Islam. People of every
classamong the Muslims invoke their names in hours
and pilgrimages are constantly made to
of distress,
their tombs and shrines. In fact, there are many
Muslims who pay more attention to the saints than to
the obligatory duties of their religion.
God is believed to have exalted some of the saints
upon them the title of Beloved;
so highly as to bestow
to others He has granted such mysterious power as
makes them the very cause of the world's subsistence.
According to the prevailing view it is of these that, God
has established in the Quran, "Verily on the friends
(Awliya) of God no fear shall come, and they shall not
NOTABLE FEATURES OF SUFI PRACTICE 103
11

grieve (10: 63); and again "God is the friend (wall)


11
of those who believe (2: 258). Yet another saying,
ascribed to Muhammad, reveals their dignity: viz: "He
who hurts a saint (wall) has allowed himself to make
11
war on me.
'Aliu'l-Hujwiri, expressing the common view of the
ufls about the saints, declares that God has marked
out the saints to manifest His actions and has purged
them of their natural corruptions, and that it is among
them that visible proof of the religion of Islam is to be
found. Thus he writes, "God, then, has caused the
prophetic evidence (burhdn-i-nabaun) to remain down
to the present day; and hasmade the Saints the means
whereby it is manifested, in order that the signs of the
Truth and the proof of Muhammad's veracity may
continue to be clearly seen. He has made the Saints
the governors of the universe; they have become
entirely devoted to His business, and have ceased to
follow their sensual affections. Through the blessing
of their advent the rain falls from heaven, and through
the purity of their lives the plants spring up from the
earth, and through their spiritual influence the Mus-
1

lims gain victories over the unbelievers' .*

There is a class of saints known as pir-i-ghd'ibt in-


visible saints,who are worshipped in some parts of
India. Rose speaks of them as follows: "The pir-i-
ghaib or ghaib plr appears to be a name given to a
class of saints whose names are not known or whose

*Kashf al-Mahjub< p. 213.


104 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
miracle it was to hide themselves from the people at
some particular period of their life, or it might be that
the body of the saint disappeared after his death". (1)
This popular belief, however, is allied to the ufl view
about whom 'Aliu'l-Hujwiri
of the 'concealed' saints,

says: "There are four thousand who are concealed and


do not know one another and are not aware of the
excellence of their state, but in all circumstances are
hidden from themselves and from mankind". (2)
II. THE HIERARCHY OF THE SAINTS.
The saints, as a class, form an invisible hierarchy at
the head of which is a Qutb, Axis or Pole. He is the
most eminent of them all, and on him the government
of the world is believed to depend. He is also called
Ghawth. 'Succourer' of the world. When a saint at-
tains to the dignity of Qutb, he is given the name of
'Abdullah and is granted two attendants, called
Imdmayn, The one on his right hand is named
leaders.
'Abdu'r-Rabb, and he watches the 'Alam-i-Malakut.
the angelic world; the one on his left is called 'Abdul-
'

Malik, and he keeps watch on the Alam-i-Wdsut, the


physical world. Some
claim that besides having
ufls

an invisible dominion over the universe, the Qutb is


also endowed, at times, with temporal powers. Each
of the following is said to have been the Qutb of his,
time, viz. the first four successors of Muhammad, called
Rightly-guided $ialifas, Hasan and Husayn (the

(1) Rose, A Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab.


Vol. I, p. 525.

(2) Kashf al-Mahjub> p. 213.


NOTABLE FEATURES OF SUFI PRACTICE 105

grandsons of Muhammad), and the khalifas Mu'awlya,


* 4
(1)
'Umar b. Abdul- Aziz, and Mutawakkil
It is further believed that the Qutb sometimes con-
venes a council meeting of all the saints, over which
he himself presides. The members, though scattered
all over the world, on being supernaturally informed

of the meeting are in no way impeded by barriers of


time and space, but crossing seas; mountains and de-
serts, arrive at their destination in the twinkling of an
(2)
eye.
Next in dignity to the Qutb are four Aivtad, (sing.
witd, a pillar) supports, who are appointed to the four
corners of the world. The one in the east is called
4 4

Abdu'l-Haqq, the one in the west, 'Abdul- Allm; the


others in the north and south are called 'Abdu'l-Murid
and 'Abdu'l-Qadir respectively. (2) They receive these
names on appointment to the office. According
their
to 'Allul-Hujwirl, "the Aivtdd must go round the
whole universe, and if there should be any place on
which their eyes have not fallen, next day some im-
perfection will appear in that place: and they must in-
form the Qutb, in order that he may fix his attention
on the weak spot, that by his blessing the imperfec-
(3)
tion may be removed."
Next come Abdal (pi. of badl, "substitute") so
called, because, according to some, their natures un-

(1) Najmul-Ghani, Tadhkiratus-Suluk^Nayyar-i-A^z^m Press,


Muradabad.) pp. 188-9.
(2) ..

(3) Koshf-al-Mahjub, p.
106 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

dergo a complete change spiritually. Others, however,


explain that they are named "changing ones/' because
their cadre is always fixed; as soon as one dies
another takes his place. The Abddl are commonly
number, but some say they are only
said to be forty in
seven and that to each of these is entrusted the care
of a continent. After these are five 'Amd, or "pillars",
the support of the universe. Some authorities
represent the Abddl, to be of lower grade than the
*Amd. Next come seventy Nujubd (pi. of najib, a
11
"noble ), and three hundred Nuqubd (pi. of naqlb, a
11
"chief ). Then, besides these special ranks, there
are a vast number of aivliya, or the more ordinary
1

'saints .

Hi. ZIYARAT, VISITATION TO A SHRINE.


The visitation of shrines is a very common practice
in Islam, and has its origin in the ufl belief that "the
saints of God die not, they merely depart from one
11
habitation to another. In consequence the excessive
honour paid to saints and plrs in their life-time is
continued to them after their death. As a rule shrines

are erected over their graves, and, usually on Thursday


evenings, small earthenware lamps are lit and placed
on the tombs. Flowers are also offered.
Pilgrimage to a shrine is called ziydrat, a visitation,
vhile the shrine itself is called a mazdr, a place of

visitation; sometimes called dargdh, a royal court.


it is

Such a shrine may, at times, not contain the remains of


a saint at all, but is merely a place dedicated to some
NOTABLE FEATURES OF SUFI PRACTICE 107

saint. An
example of such a shrine is that of Shaykh
'Abdu'l-Qadir Gllanl in Srinagar, Kashmir. Another
may be seen in Chittagong, which is dedicated to Baba
Farld, and
popular language is called, Chashm-i-Nahar
in
"
(Nahr-i-chashm) the fountain of the eye". The story
goes that Baba Farid at this spot suspended himself,
upside down, from a tree for thirty years He took no !

food, but shed copious tears, and for this reason the
place came to be called by the name of Chashm-i-
Nahar. But as a matter of fact, as we shall see,
the saint died and was buried at Pakpatan in the

Punjab.
A shrine is generally visited on the occasion of the
'urs of the saint, and at such time special ceremonies are
performed. Devotees of the saints attending the

celebrations are believed to acquire merit. It would


be an endless task to attempt to describe the particular
rites attached to the 'urs of individual saints, but "the

form the worship generally takes on the occasion of


such visits combine such features as these: Suras
1; 112; 113; and 114 are recited; these are followed by
the repetition of certain prayers for the soul of the
departed; finally, the worshipper makes some personal
requests. As a rule, a vow is made at the time, which
must be paid at the tomb when the favour is granted.
It is a common practice thread or pieces
to tie bits of
of cloth, etc. on gratings near the tomb, by way of
(1)
reminding the saint of the favour asked."

(1) Sevan Jones, The people of the Mosque, pp. 169-170.


108 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
iv. KARAMAT, MIRACLE.
A miraculous event by the 'ulamd, to belong
is said,

to one of the following four classes, which are called


1

Khiraul-dddt, Violation of customs !

"(1) mujiza, lit. "miracle," which is the sign of


prophethood, and is a gift bestowed by God on prophets
only;
(2) kardmat, lit. "favour" (from God) to work
wonders;
(3) maunat, lit. "help", a term used for describ-
ing wonderful works performed by an ordinary person
by mere accident;
(4) istidrdj, lit. "stealth" or "deception", by which
" (1)
is meant the amazing deeds of the magician.
The term kardmat is only used for a work of wonder
performed by a saint. Mujiza differs from kardmat
in this respect only, that the former is exhibited by a

prophet as a sign of his prophethood, while the latter


manifests the divine power which a saint has acquired
through his union with God.
A saint,
however, is expected to hide his kardmat,
while a prophet must exhibit his power of performing
miracles in demonstration of his prophetic office. Abu
Yazld BistamI isquoted to have said: "The saints do not
rejoice at the answers to prayers which are the essence
of miracles, such as walking on water, and moving in the
air and traversing the earth and riding on the heavens,
since the prayers of unbelievers receive an answer and
~~
(1) Ibid p. 168.
NOTABLE FEATURES OF SUFI PRACTICE 109

the earth contains both Satans and men, and the air is

the abode of the birds and the water of the fish. Let
not anyone who is perplexed by such things, put any
faith in this trickery." (1)
As an illustration of the ufl
teaching concerning
the attitude that a saint should have towards his
kardmat the following will suffice: Zulfa, a companion
of Rabi'a, reported to have said: "I said toRabi'a, "O
is

my aunt, why do you not allow people to visit you?"


Rabi'a replied, "I fear lest when I am dead people will
relate of me what I did not say or do, what if I had
seen, I should have feared or mistrusted. I am told
that they say that I find money under my place of
prayer, and that I cook (food) in the pot without fire".

I said to her, "They relate of you that you find food


and drink your house", and she said, "O daughter of
in

my brother, if I had found such things in my house I


would not have touched them, or laid hands upon
them, but I tell you that I buy my things and am
'

( J)
blessed".
A close examination of ufism shows that the
thaumaturgic element in it belongs to the period of its
later development, and that it has been introduced by
the followers of different religious orders in their
attempts to vie with one another in proving the
superiority of the saints of their respective orders.

(1) Munawi, Al-Kawakibu-d-Durnya, p. 123, quoted by


Margaret Smith, in Rabija the Mystic, p. 31.

(2) Sibt b. al-Jawzi, Miratit'z-Zaman, p. 257, quoted by Mar-


garet Smith, in op. at. p. 37.
110 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Kardmdt (plural) are of endless variety: a few of
the more interesting may be noted here.

(1) moment of time.


Traversing long distances in a
For instance, it is related that Shaykh 'Abdu'l-Qadir
Gllani once went from Iraq to Rum in the course of
half an hour to say the funeral prayer over the body of
a saint who had died. Dara Shikoh records in his
work, Satenatul-Awliya, that Miyao Mir used occa-
sionally to go to the Hijaz from Lahore to spend a
night in the cave of Hira, returning before dawn.
(2) Walking on water. An instance of such a
kardmat is found in a story told by Khwaja Husayn of
Nagore (in Rajputana). It is said that once, while

attending a musical festival at the shrine of Khwaia


Mulnu'd-Dln Chishtl, he passed into a state of ecstasy.
Still in this state he the shrine followed by a bhangl
left

(sweeper), who had previously accepted Islam at his


hands, and by one of the musicians. Proceeding
towards the jungle he came at length to a large pond,
and walked over the water followed by the bhangl.
a)
though the musician remained standing on the bank.
(3) Flying in the air. There is a story to the effect
that once Shaykh 'Abdu'l-Qadir Gllanl was preaching
to an audience when he suddenly rose up in the air,
shouting "O
Israelite, stop and listen to the teaching
1 '

of Islam! After flying to some distance he then


returned to his place and resumed his sermon. At
the conclusion when questioned about his strange

(1) Najmu'l-Ghani, Tadhkiratu's-Suluk p. 53.


NOTABLE FEATURES OF SUFI PRACTICE 111

benaviour, he merely said, "I saw Khidr passing the


mosque, and so I flew up to him and invited him to
listen to my sermon.'' (p

(4) Conversing with inanimate objects. (2) An


instance of such a miracle will be found in connection
with the story of Natthe Miyan, a disciple of Miyao
Mir.
(5) To be provided supernaturally with food, clothing
and the other necessities of life. Several instances of
such are to be found in the lives of most of the saints
3>
of Islam. <

(6) Prediction of future events. Every saint is

believed to have knowledge not only of things now


happening at a distance from him but of coming events.
Yet according to ufl teaching there are five things
which no one can predict, and even the Prophet
Muhammad is said to have declared that he had no
knowledge of them. These are:

(i) The hour of the day of judgment.


v ii) The time when it will rain,
(iii) One's own actions in advance,
(iv) The place where one will die.
(v) Whether a woman with child will have a boy
orgirl, and whether that child will be fair or dark, of
good or bad character. (4)

(1) Najmu'l-Ghani, op. cit. p, 53, 4.

(2) Najmu'l-Ghani, op. cit. p. 54.

(3) See Attar, Tadhkiratul-Awliya, and Ghulam Sarwar,


'

Khazinatu l-Asfiya.
(4) Najmu'l-Ghani, op. cit. p. 70.
112 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
v. SAMA\ MUSICAL FESTIVAL.
Sama (lit. 'hearing'), or music, is the term especially
applied to a form of musical festival which is organised
with a view to induce a state of ecstasy in ufls. In
India it is popularly called qawwall, and the singers,
qawwdl.
According to the 'ulama, music is forbidden to
Muslims, though in some of the religious orders it is
not merely permitted but actually encouraged. To
the early mystics of Islam the formal recitation of the
Quran took the place of music, and that was enough
to move their hearts and arouse their emotions. At a
later stage, recitations of poetry
rendering of and a
musical composititions were also permitted on the basis
of some tradition attributed to Muhammed and his com-

panions. At some yet later date in the development


of ufism certain mystics adopted music as a means of
inducing ecstasy, thereby giving rise to sharp differences
of opinion. 'Allu'l-Hujwirl says: 'Those who prohibit
music do so in order that they may keep the divine
commandment, but theologians are agreed that it is
permissible to hear musical instruments if they are used
for diversion, and if the mind is not led to wickedness
11

through them. The principle to be followed by the


ufis in the use of music is thus enunciated by 'Allu'l-
Hujwiri, "In practising audition, however, the ufl
Shaykhs nor permissibility as the vulgar do, but
desire,

spiritual advantages. Licence is proper for beasts, but


men who are subject to the obligations of religion
ought to seek spiritual benefit from their actions.
NOTABLE FEATURES OF SUFI PRACTICE 113

Once, when was at Merv, one of the leaders of the


I

Ahl-i-hadlth and the most celebrated of them all said


to me: 'I have composed a work on the permissibility
of audition/ I replied. It is a great calamity to
religion that the Imam should have made lawful an
1

amusement which is the root of all immorality. 'If

you do not hold it to be lawful/ 'why do you


said he,
1

practise it? I answered: 'Its lawfulness depends on


circumstances and cannot be asserted absolutely: if

audition produces a lawful effect on the mind, then it

is lawful; it is unlawful if the effect is unlawful, and


1 " (1)
permissible if the effect is permissible.

Musical festivals are chiefly celebrated by the ufis


of the Chishtl Order. We shall see how the saints of
this order came into conflict with the 'ulamd on the
subject of music. At the present time, however, it

forms a popular feature of this Order; almost all

over India where the Chishtis are found, such


musical festivals are held, lasting till the hour of
the early morning prayer. According to Brown it was
introduced in the Qadiri Order in 1170 A.D. by Sa'd
Shamsu'd-Din, the immediate successor of 'Abdu'l-
3)
Qadir Gilani.'
The object of such music is to induce a state of

ecstasy. Arrived at such a stage, the ufis (or dar-


wishes), either individually or collectively, begin to
perform raq$, or dancing. Concerning such performance,

(1) Kashf al-Mahjub< pp, 401, 2.

(2) Rose, The Darvishcs, p. 286.


114 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Nizamu'd-Din Awliya, of Delhi, once said: "When a
darwish claps his hands in a state of ecstasy, all the
sins of his hands are removed, and when he shouts all

his evil desires are destroyed. There are cases on


record where ufis, listening to such music, have
(1)
actually died in a state of excessive ecstasy:"

Sama is chiefly practised on the occasion of 'urs,

i.e. the anniversary of the death of a saint. The word


'wrs, however, literally means ''wedding-festivity", so
that, as applied to the anniversary of a saint's death, it

probably has a subtle reference to the umtive stage


attained by him in his life time and consummated at
the time of his death. This idea is expressed by the
famous poet, Ibnu'l-Farid:
"My passed the gate which barred my going
spirit

beyond union (with the Beloved) and soared to where


no barrier of union remained." (2)
Thus Sama, music, is thought to be a fitting means
whereby to celebrate the death of a saint, who is looked
upon as having gone to his Beloved, the one whom his
soul desired.
The practice of Sama at many of the shrines in
India has, in these days, degenerated into a musical
festival ot a merely secular type. Indeed, these festi-
vals are often attended by common dancing-girls,
who perform their ndch (nautch) in honour of the
saint, so that no vestige of the uft ideal of music

(1) Muhammad Mubarak, Siru I- Awliya, p. 463.


(2) Sec Nicholson, Studies in Islamic Mysticism, p. 237.
NOTABLE FEATURES OF SUFI PRACTICE 115

remains. Such degenerate performances are of course


deplored by the better type of ufis and non-ufis
alike.

There are certain shrines where, at the time of 'urs,


instead of music, the Quran and some devotional
prayers are recited throughout the night. Occa-
sionally, sermons are also delivered for the benefit of
the crowds. When 'urs is celebrated in this way it is

called sharl "urs, for the reason that music is disallowed.


4

At the shrine of Aliu'l-Hujwiri otherwise known as


Data Ganj Bakhsh in Lahore, strictly speaking music

is not allowed; nevertheless, while the more orthodox


devotees assemble within the shrine (not only at the
4

wr5, but every Friday) to spend the night in prayer

and in reciting the Quran, there are always to be found


outside the shrine, others who celebrate the saint's
honour with musical festival. w
KHIDR AND ILYAS
Belief in the famous saint, Khidr, is one of the
outstanding characteristics of ufism, and his cult forms
a popular feature of saint-worship among Muslims.
The name Khidr literally means 'sea-green\ and is

given to this saint because of the common notion that


wherever he sits the place turns green. His real name
is said to be Abu'l-' Abbas Malkan.
There is a legend
which makes him to be great-great-grandson of Shem,
the son of Noah, and from the same source we learn
that by virtue of the water of immortality which he
succeeded in drinking, he will live till the end of the
116 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
world. It is believed that his physical body used to be
renewed supernaturally after every five hundred years,
but from the time of Muhammad it has been renewed
after every one hundred and twenty years. The story
goes that in 1322 A.D. during a fight between camel
drivers, he was struck by a stone, and he received an
injury in his head which caused a swelling for three
months. (1)
According to the popular story, Khidr and his
brother Ilyas were the attendants of Alexander the
Great, and when the latter set forth to discover 'the
water of life', they accompanied him. At a certain
place Khidr and Ilyas were separated from the king
and succeeded in reaching the fountain of life. After
themselves drinking of it they returned to tell the king
of their discovery. When Alexander reached the
fountain he noticed that the birds on its banks were
featherless and without any physical strength. He
asked Khidr the cause. The latter replied that, in
consequence of the fact that they had drunk of 'the

living water', they would not die till the Judgment


Day, but having partaken of all they were destined to
consume both of food and water, they were now
doomed to live on in this condition. Whereupon the
king refrained from drinking of the fountain lest the
same fate should befall him! On the other hand, Khidr
and Ilyas, who had already drunk of the water, prayed
to God for a special concession to enable them to live
on in comfort till the last day.

(1) cp. Najmu 1-Ghani, op. cit. 194, 5.


NOTABLE FEATURES OF SUFI PRACTICE 117
In the biographies of the saints Khidr is depicted as
the patron of learning. Again and again we read of
how, Khidr changed an ignorant person in one moment
into a great scholar. The following story of Khidr's
patronage of learning is given by Rose, It is said "that

Hadrat Imam Ghazall was devoted to learning but


being very poor could not devote his whole time to it.
Once Khidr appeard to him in a dream and bade him
open his mouth so that ihidr might put his saliva in it
and so enable him to imbibe all the sciences at once.
But Imam Ghazall said that knowledge so won would
be useless because it would have cost him nothing and
so he would not appreciate it. Khidr gave him some
"
casks of oil to enable him prosecute his studies. (1)
Khidr is also believed to know the secret name of
God, called by Muslims Ismul-A^zam. 'the Great Name',
knowledge of which bestows upon the knower the gift
of miracle. It is one of the Khidr 's tasks to teach this

name to the saints of God.


(1) Rose, Glossary of Punjab Tribes and Castes. Vol I. p, 563
CHAPTER VII.

The Introduction of Sufism into India.

The early history of the ufls in India is most obscure

but we may safely assume that Muslims with strong


leanings towards mysticism were at work in this country
from the time of Islam's earliest contact with it. His-
torians tell us that it was by way of three open doors
the sea, the land route leading through Persia into Sind,
(1)
and the Khyber Pass that Islam entered India.
Through these same doors there also must have come
Sufis and wandering Darwishes, following in the steps
of peaceful Arab traders and military commanders.
The writings of Muslim historians and Arab
travellers show that Islam first appeared early in South

India, on the Malabar coast, chiefly through the influence


of Arab traders, who
most cases were also preachers
in
of their new faith. Other channels of influence in
those early days were saints, who, as ever, were noted
for their wandering life. Tradition points out the
tomb of Wahab, a companion of the Prophet, at Canton
in China; and that of 'Akasha, another companion, at

port Mahmuda; and yet another tomb, again of a


companion, named Tamlm Ansari, at Mylapur, twelve
miles south of Madras. (2)

(1) C. P. Titus, Indian Islam, pp. 3-5.


(2) Akbar Shah Khan, A'ina-i-Ha^qiqatNuma (Ibrat Press,

Naiifcabad) pp. 46, 47.


INTRODUCTION OF SUFISM INTO INDIA 119

During the period in which it reached the coast of


Malabar, the faith was being preached also in Ceylon,
whence it found its way to the Laccadive and Maldive
islands. Ibn Batuta reports that during his visit to
Ceylon he found the tombs of several preachers and
saints,including those of Shaykh 'Abdullah Hanlf,
Shaykh 'Uthman, and Baba Tahir.
Through India's second gateway which leads from
Mesopotamia and south Persia through Baluchistan,
south of the mountains of Makran into Sind Islam made
very early contact with India.But no Muslim colony
resulted through the made by this gateway-
entrances
until 712 A. D. in which year Sind was invaded by
Muhammad b. Qasim. As early as thirty years after
Muhammad's death Mu'awiya stationed a large" army
at the frontier town of Kankan, and thus
brought
Islam to the very gate of India.
The third the Khyber Passthrough which Turk,
Mongol and Afghan forces were led into India, proved
to be the main entrance for Muslim ascetics and

wandering Darwishes.
Thus, long before the Muslim occupation of any
part of this country, Islam came into contact with
Indian thought, and was, to some extent, definitely
influenced by it, especially in its ufi doctrines and

practices. On the other hand, at a later date, wl


India was being subjugated by Muslim conquel
Islam itself exerted a powerful influence on HinSu
thought and life. Of the extent of the influence on
Indian thought on Islam we shall have occasion to
120 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
speak later. Regarding the subject of Islam's reaction
to Hinduism, however, though this is strictly beyond
the scope of the present treatise, yet it can be said in
passing, that this was so great that it resulted in the
rise of several Hindu sects in which the influence of
the new very conspicuous. Dr. Titus mentions
faith is
no less than eleven of these by name, and gives in
addition a brief description of several others, such as,
the Plrzadas, the Chhajju panthls, the Husaynl
Brahmins and the Shamsis, in which a "definite mixture
of Hindu and Muslim notions and practices prevail." (T)
In spite of the fact that little is known of the early
not wanting extraordinary legends which
ufis there are

purport to give detailed accounts of some of them. One


such saint was Baba Ratan, a Hindu, who is said to
nave visited Mecca twice, and on both occasions to
have met Muhammad himself, first in his early life
and then again after he had set himself up as a Prophet.
Baba Ratan on the latter occasion, accepted Islam and
then returned to India, where he lived on to the
incredulously great age of seven hundred years! His
4

name is mentioned by Ibn Hajar Asqalanl in his Asaba


fl marifati s-Sahdba and also by a'dh-Qhahabi in his
Tajrid. The former ranks him as one of the companions
of Muhammad. He is said to have died in 1234-5 A. D.
and to have been buried in a place called Tabar Hind, of
which nothing is now known. (2) Equally fabulous legends

(1) See Titus, Indian Islam, pp. 172-177.


(2) Asraru-t-Tasawwuf, Manzil-i-Naqshbandiyya, Lahore*

April, 1925, pp. 10-11.


INTRODUCTION OF SUFISM INTO INDIA 121

concerning other early saints attach to a shrine which


still exists, called Bibi Pakdamanao (the chaste ladies),
in a famous and very ancient graveyard in Lahore.
In it are seven graves said to be those of seven women
saints belonging to the first century after Hijra. Six of
these, tradition tells us, were of the household of
'All. Their names were:
1. Ruqiya, known as Bibi Haj, a daughter of 'All.

2. Blbl Hur. 3. Blbl Nur. 4. Blbl Gawhar, 5.

Bibi Taj. 6. Bibi Shahbaz. The last five are believed


to have been the daughters of 'Aqil, 'All's brother.
These names are Persian, a fact which need not surprise
us, because after the Muslim conquest of Persia most
of the ladies belonging to the Persian royal family were
given in marriage to 'All's sons and relatives.

The seventh tomb in the group in Bibi Pakdamanao


is that of Bibi Tannur (iandur), the lady of the furnace,
who was kitchen maid to the above mentioned six
ladies. The story runs that when Husayn was besieged
on the plain of Karbala by Yazid's army in the month
of Muharram, 680-1 A.D., he asked these women, on
the day before the final tragedy, to leave the camp and
proceed to India. After much wandering they are
said to have reached Lahore. Here the Hindu Raja,
on being informed of their presence, sent his son to
conduct them into his palace. The women refused to
go, but when
the Prince insisted that they should
accompany him, Taj Bibi gave him such a look of
indignation that he fell unconscious to the ground. On
recovering his senses he apologised for his rudeness
122 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
and accepted Islam. For some time they were allowed
to live in peace under the protection of the prince, but
afterwards Hindus began to annoy them. At last,
vexed beyond endurance, the ladies prayed that the
earth might shield them from the sight of these
unbelievers, answer to their prayer, the earth
and in

opened her mouth and mercifully swallowed them!


The prince on witnessing this miraculous deliverance,
turned hermit and built seven tombs over the spot,
'
himself becoming the Mujdwir (guardian). -
At the time of accepting Islam the prince had taken
the name of 'Abdullah, and later on came to be known
asBaba Khaki. He is said to have died in 719-20 A. D.
and his tomb also is in Pakdamanan cemetery. The
present guardian of the shrine claims to be one of his
descendants. Blbi Tannur is now regarded as the
patron saint of Indian bakers (NanbcCf). When Sultan
Mahmud Ghaznawl invaded Lahore and heard of Blbl
Pakdamanan he built an enclosure round the shrine and
added a porch to it. Later on Akbar also added some
more structures to it.
The saint next of whom we shall give a brief account
belonged to the early part of the eleventh century A. D.
This is Sayyid Salar Mas'ud Ghazi Miyan or Bale
Miyan, who is still revered all over India as a saint
and martyr. We have no really trustworthy account
of his life, but are dependent for our knowledge

concerning him on certain legends current among his


(1) Nur Ahmad Chishti, Tahqiqat-i-Chishti, (Pubd. Watan,
Lahore) pp. 312 ff.
INTRODUCTION OF SUFISM INTO INDIA 123

devotees, and on a book, Mira't-i-Mas'udl, an English


translation of which in an abridged form is to be
found in Elliot's History of India (Vol. ii, pp. 513-49).
This work in the words of Elliot is an "historical
romance. In it fact and fiction are freely mingled."

From such sources we learn a story that runs somewhat


as follows. Ghazi Miyan's father was named Salar
Sahu, and his mother Sitr-i-Mu'alla (the dignified
veiled one), she being a sister of Mahmud Ghaznawi.
Ghazi Miyao is said to have fought from a very
early age under his uncle, the Sultan, in his many
invasions of India. He have led several
is also said to

independent expeditions against the Hindus, and finally


to have met a martyr's death at Bahraich on 14th, June
in 1033 A. D., while still only nineteen years of age!
His reputed tomb in Bahraich, in the United
Provinces, is the scene of a great annual fair held on
the occasion of his which, strange to say,
'urs in

large numbers of Hindus join with great enthuiasm.


The main feature of his 'urs is the celebration of his
marriage with Zuhra Bib!. The popular explanation of
this custom is given as follows. It is said that once a
blind girl, Zuhra Bibl, of Radauli in the district
Barabanki, had her eye-sight restored on making a
pilgrimage to the tomb of Ghazi Miyan. Out of
gratitude she erected a shrine over the saint's tomb
and had a grave dug for herself near his. At the age
of 18, while yet unmarried she died and was buried
in the grave she had prepared. Subsequently her
parents and relatives used to go to her tomb every
124 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

year to celebrate her 'marriage' with the saint. It was


not long before the custom became a popular annual
event and people began to come from different parts
of India to celebrate this mythical 'marriage'. During
its celebration decorated poles, mounted with tufts of

hair, are carried in procession,with music and dancing,


to the shrine. Such a pole is said to represent the head
of the martyred saint. Another feature in the celebra-
tion of his 'urs that calls for notice is the varied forms
in which the devotees make their nadjiar (offering).
One is called 'Zuhra Bibi's dowry\ and is presented to
the shrine in the form of certain articles such as are
generally given in dowry, e. g., pieces of furniture and
utensils. Another gift is called thai, which is presented
in the form of certain articles and coins, chiefly by
merchants and traders. Yet another form of offering is
called qalandan, made by throwing coins over the dome
of the tomb. If any votary's coin strikes the spire on the
summit of the dome it is thought to be a good omen
for him.

Qhazl Miyan's 'urs is also celebrated in other parts


of India, where similar poles mounted with tufts of hair

are taken out in processions. Further, there is a class


of wandering faqlrs, devotees of GbazI Miyan, who go
by the name of dafdll faqlr. They derive their name
from daf, a tambourine, which they play when begging.
Occasionally the saint's tomb is washed, and at such times
the dirty water runs off into a tank attached to the
shrine. This is, for the most part, crowded with lepers
who believe that by bathing in it they can be cured.
INTRODUCTION OF SUFISM INTO INDIA 125

In Eastern Bengal, where the fair itself is not held, it


is common to find a mud platform dedicated to his
name (Ghdzi Miydn hd which is an object of
than),
veneration for Muslims and Hindus alike.
In the same century in which Qhazl Miyan was

carrying on his 'holy war' against the Hindus there


arose another saint of far greater historical value for
India than any of his predecessors. This was 'Aliu'l-
Hujwiri, still venerated in India by the name of Data
Ganj Bakhsh. He was a native of Ghazna in Afghanis-
tan, and was born some time during the last decade of
the tenth or the first decade of the eleventh century,
A. D. As a scholar and a writer of several books on
ufism, but more especially as the author of Kashf
al-Mahjub, (the first book ever written on this subject

of mysticism in the Persian language) he has justly


earned a place of prime importance among the earliest
ufls who came to this country.
'Aliu 1-Hujwiri was a disciple of Muhammad
b. al-Hasan al-Khuttall, a pupil of al-Husrl who, through
Shibli, was spiritually connected with Junayd of

Baghdad. He himself speaks of al-IQjuttall in the


following terms: 'He isthe teacher whom I follow in
fjufism. He was versed in the science of Quranic
exegesis and in traditions (riwdydt). In ufism he held
the doctrine of Junayd. He was and a
a pupil of Htasri

companion and was contemporary with


of Sirawani,
Abu Amr Qazwim and Abu'l-Hasan b. Saliba. He
was sixty years in sincere retirement from the world,
for the most part on Mount Lukam. He displayed
126 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

many signs and proofs (of saintship), but he did not


wear the garb or adopt the external fashions of the
ufls and he treated the formalists with severity. I

never saw any man who inspired me with greater awe


than he did. 11(1)

also studied under Abu'l-Qasim


'Allu'l-Hujwiri
Gurgam and Khwaja Muzaffar. The former was a
forerunner of the Naqshbandi order. The latter at one
time held some civil office, but then, "God opened to
him the door of this mystery (ufism) and bestowed
on him the crown of miracles. He spoke eloquently
and discoursed with sublimity on annihilation and
(2)
subsistence (fana-u-baqa) ."

'Aliu'l-Hujwirl was a great advocate of celibacy


for ufis, and himself never married. From a passage
in Kashf al-Majhub it has sometimes been inferred that
he had a short and unpleasant experience of married
life, but the words in question may be taken to
11
refer to his experience of "falling in love without
going to the length of entering the matrimonial state.
The passage runs as follows: "After God had preserved
me for eleven years from the dangers of matrimony, it
was my destiny to love with the description of a
fall in

woman whom I had never seen, and during a whole


year my passion so absorbed me that my religion was
near being ruined, until at last God in His bounty gave

protection to my wretched heart and mercifully deli-

(1) Kashf al-Mahjub, p. 166.

(2) Ibid, p. 170.


INTRODUCTION OF SUFISM INTO INDIA 127

vered me." (1) It is in this connection that he speaks of


women disparagingly. Thus, "A woman was the cause
of the calamity that overtook Adam in Paradise,
first

and also of the first quarrel that happened in this world,


i. e., the quarrel of Abel and Cain. A woman was the
cause of the punishment inflicted on two angels
(Harut and MSrut): and down to the present day all
wordly and religious have been caused by
mischiefs,
" U)
women.
Like most of the Qfls be was a great wanderer.
He greater part of the Muslim
travelled through the
empire of his time; from Syria to Turkistan and from
the Indus to the Caspian sea. In all the places he
visited he sought out the ufisand saints and conversed
with them. Speaking of his experience in *Irq, where
he seems to have settled for a time and contracted
debts, he says: "Once, in the territories of 'Ir&q, I was
restlessly occupied in seeking wealth and squandering
it, and I had run largely into debt. Everyone who
wanted anything, turned to me, and I was troubled
and at a loss to know how I could accomplish their
desires. An eminent person wrote to me as follows:
"Beware you
lest mind from God by
distract your
satisfying the wishes of those whose minds are en-
grossed in vanity. If you find anyone whose mind
is nobler than your own, you may justly distract
your mind in order to give peace to his. Otherwise,
do not distract yourself, since God is sufficient for
(1) Ibid, p. 364.

(2) Ibid, p. 364.


128 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
His servants. These words brought me instant

Finally 'tyiu '1-Hujwirl came to Lahore, where he


lived till he died in 1063 or 1071 A. D. In Fuwffidul-
Fuwad, which is a compilation of the sayings of
Nizamu d-Din Awliya of Delhi (tf. 1325 A. D.), an
account of 'Aliu '1-Hujwirf s coming to Lahore is given.
4

According to the statement of this book, Allu '1-

Hujwirl was asked by his pir to go to Lahore and settle


there. At first he was unwilling and tried to excuse
himself on the ground that Shaykh Hasan Zanjani, a
fellow disciple of his was already there. But when his
plr insisted on his going to Lahore he obeyed the order.
When at length he reached the city, he discovered to
his surprise that Hasan Zanjani had just died and the
people, at the moment, were conveying his body away
(2)
for burial. It is said that the saint chose for his

place of residence in the city the spot on which his


shrine now stands.
Certain ufls believe that, though dead, 'Aliul-
Hujwiri continued to hold supreme authority over the
saints of India, and that no new saint entered the

country without first obtaining permission from his


spirit. Thus it was that saints who subsequently came
to India from outside first paid a visit to his shrine.
It was not until five hundred years after his death
the saint came to be known by the title of Data Ganj
Bakhsh. This is said to have been bestowed upon him
(1) Kashf al-Mahjub, p. 345.

(2) Fuwtfidu 'l-Fuwad, p.


INTRODUCTION OF SUFISM INTO INDIA 129

by Khwaja Mu'inu'd-Dm of Ajmer. The story runs


that Khwaja Mu'lnu'd-Dln on his arrival in India
spent some time in meditation at the tomb of 'Aliu'l-
Hujwirl. At the conclusion of his vigil and before
proceeding to Ajmer, he stood facing the tomb and
gave expression to the gratitude he felt for benefits he
received from the spirit of the saint. It was then that
he repeated the following lines, in which the title was
used for the first time:
Thou Ganj Bakhsh (the munificent one) of
art the
both worlds,
Thou art the perfect plr for perfect saints
And the guide for those yet imperfect.
The word data a common title for mendicants in
India is a Hindi equivalent of Ganj Bakhsh, and was
later added to his name by Indian Muslims.
The chief characteristics of 'Allu l-Hujwirl's teach-

ing on ufism have been set out in the following


manner by Professor Nicholson:
"Although he was a Sunn! and a Hanafite, al-

Hujwiri, like many ufis before and after him, managed


to reconcile with an advanced type of
his theology

mysticism which the


in theory of 'annihilation' (fana)
holds a dominant place, but he scarcely goes to such
extreme lengths as would justify us in calling him a
pantheist. He strenuously resists and pronounces
human personality can be
heretical the doctrine that

merged and extinguished in the being of God. He


compares annihilation to burning by fire, which
transmutes the quality of all things to its own quality,
130 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
but leaves their essence unchanged. He agrees
with his spiritual director, al~|huttall, in adopting
the theory of Junayd that Sobriety' in the mystical
acceptance of the term is preferable to 'intoxication.'
He warns his readers often and emphatically that no
ufis, not even those who attained the highest degree

of holiness, are exempt from the obligation of obeying


the religious law. In other points^, such as the excita-
tion of ecstasy by music and singing, and the use of
judgment is more or less
erotic symbolism in poetry, his
cautious. He defends al-Hallaj from the charge of
being a magician, and asserts that his sayings are
pantheistic only in appearance but condemns his
docrtines as unsound. It is clear that he is anxious to
represent ufism as the true interpretation of Islam,
and it is equally certain that the interpretation is
incompatible with the text." (1)
'Allu 1-Hujwiri's tomb may still be seen in Lahore
near the Bhati gate. It has been an object of veneration

and a place of pilgrimage for the best part of 900 years.


All sorts and conditions of men, kings and beggars,
have resorted to it through the centuries seeking
and tempdral blessings. Most of the Muslim
spiritual
invaders and wandering Darwishes on entering the
land made a point of paying their homage at his shrine.
At one end of the shrine is a large corridor, where
pious men, sometimes women also; recite Quran
the
daily. Copies of the sacred volume are always at hand
for those who care to use them. Every Thursday

(1) Kashf al-Mahjub, Introduction, pp. xz, xxi.


'HOTO. DR. L. E. BROWNE.

Dargah Hadrat 'Aliu'l-Hujwirl (d. 1063


A.D.) Known as Data Ganj Bakhsh,
Lahore.
INTRODUCTION OF SUFISM INTO INDIA 131

night a vigil is kept by his devotees, who gather round


the tomb, many of them spending the night in reading
the Quran and offering ptajters. Attached to the
shrine is a small library containing various editions of
the Quran. Some of these were evidently written by
expert Indian caligraphers. The volumes vary greatly
in size, the largest being three feet in length.
CHAPTER VIII

The Relation of Sufism to Indian Thought.

The ufis claim that their doctrines are derived


solelyfrom the Quran and the Traditions, but a closer
examination of uflsm reveals the fact that several
extraneous influences have been at work in its
development. For instance, in its earlier forms of
asceticism it undoubtedly followed the mode of life of
Christian ascetics; and again in its speculative reasoning
it bears traces of the influence of the teaching of

Plotinus, whom the Arabs called


a'sh-Shaykhu '1-
Yunanl, 'the Greek Master'. it will be noticed
Further,
that in some of its doctrinal features and more practical
teaching it bears a close resemblance to Indian thought.
It is with the last named element that we are more

particularly concerned at present.


Probably no one will deny that Indian thought has
influenced uflsm to some extent, but when we seek to
determine what those elements are which have entered
into it from this source we find considerable diversity
of opinion. For ourselves, we will endeavour, first, to

demonstrate that it was reasonable for Hinduism to


exert such influence and then content ourselves by
giving certain parallel doctrines in uflsm and Hindu-
ism.
In speaking of the early contact of Islam with India,
reference has been made to the occupation of the terri-
RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 133
tory between Makran and Kankan by the Arab army in

672 A.D. This brought Islam to the very gate of India.


Much closer contact, however, was made in the eighth

century when Sind was conquered by the Abbasid


Khalifas and formed an outlying province of the Muslim
empire. During the Caliphate of Mansur, Harun and
M'amun, definite steps were taken to understand
Indian thought. Mansur embassies of
In the reign of
the pandits came from Sind and presented to him
Brahmasiddhanta and Khandakhadyaka, the famous
treatises on astronomy by Brahma Gupta which were

promptly translated into Arabic and widely used by the


Arabs. Later, during the reign of Khalifa Harunu'r-
Rashld, elements of Indian thought found their way
more definitely and on a wider scale into Arabic
literature. At this period the great patron of Hindu
learning at the court of the Khalifa was the ministerial
family, Barmak. This name is believed to be but the
Arabic form of the Indian title Paramak. which itself

means the 'superior* of Vihara (i.e. Buddhist monastery)


The family had come from Balkh, where an ancestor
of theirs official in a Buddhist temple, Nava
was an
Vihara. The
(1)
influence of the Barmak family in the
court of Harun is well-known. Under its patronage
Arab scholars were sent to India to study Indian
thought; and Indian pandits were invited to the court
at Baghdad to expound Hindu learning. Sanskrit
books on a variety of subjects, such as medicine,
astrology, philosophy, etc. were translated into Arabic.
(1) cp. Alberuni's India, edited by E. Sachan, p. xxxi.
134 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
The contact thus established with India continued for
centuries at last the Muslims succeeded in founding
till

an empire "not only of kings and rulers but an


empire of the heart reared upon the foundations of a
new religious faith".
(1)

In the eleventh century, before the founding of the


Muslim empire in India, we find Al-Muwaffiq and
Al-Beruni coming to India for the purposes of studying
Indian thought. (2) The latter's work on India, gives
an account of the religion, philosophy, literature,
geography, chronology, astronomy, customs, laws and
astrology of the country in about 1030 A. D. It was
Al-Berunl who made the first reliable translation from
Sanskrit into Arabic of the Sdnkhya by Kapila and the
Yoga Sutra by Patanjali, and who introduced his fellow
Muslims to the Bhagvadgita.
Later still, when Muslims had at length established
their power in the country, we find clear instances of

attempts on the part of ufls to study Hindu idolatry


and polytheism with calm minds, free from racial
prejudice. In view of the fact that the political rela-
tions between polytheist Hindus and monotheist
Muslims have not always been happy it is amazing to
come across such instances. Akbar's conciliatory
policy towards Hindus and his attempts to persuade his
Muslim subjects to act towards them in like manner,
are well-known. His great grandson Dara Shikoh,
about whom more will be said later, made earnest

(1) Titus, Indian Islam, p. 3.

(2) Alberum's India, Introduction, p. xxxii.


RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 135
attempts to reconcile Islam and Hinduism. He gave
himself up, to the task of acquiring knowledge about
the religion and philosophy of the Hindus, and for this
purpose, he not only read and translated Sanskrit books
into Persian but also sought the company of Hindu
ascetics. The books which he translated include the
Rdmayana, the Upanishads and Yogavashista.
Gita, the
The Upanishads were translated under the title of 5zrr-
i-Akbar, or the Great Mystery, and for this he wrote a
preface, which commences with the conventional
Hindu formula, Om Shri Ganesha Namoh.' He calls
4

the opening chapter of the Quran Omu'l-Quran', (1) to


4

make it correspond with the Hindu formula Om'.


Dara Shikoh in the preface to his translation of the
Upanishads confesses that he has an intense thirst for
knowledge, and that as he studied the Quran and the
other books on uflsm there arose doubts in his mind
which he failed to satisfy even by having recourse to
gnostics and pious men. He studied the Torah, Zabur,
Injil and other sacred books, but their meaning was
unintelligible to him. At last he discovered that the
monotheism was very plainly explained in the
subject of
Vedas and the Upanishads. The latter he found to be
a "mine of monotheism. n(2) He collected all the
Upanishads which he could find and "Translated them

(1) The title of the Chapter of the Quran is Sura Fatiha, but it

is also called Ummu' l-Quran, the mother of the Quran.

(2) Maulvi Abdu 1-Wali, Khan Sahib; Hinduism according to


Muslim Sufis, in Journal and Proceedings of the Asiatic Society of

Bengal Vol xix, 1923, No. 7. p. 243.


136 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
without subtraction or addition, or selfish motive, faith-
" (1)
fully and word for word. In them he found fully
explained all the secrets for which he had searched so
long. He calls the collection of the Upanishads the
''earliest of the heavenly books" and "the spring of
11
monotheistic streams . He found that it has been
mentioned in the Quran in the following verse. "This
isthe honourable Quran, in the preserved book, let
none touch it but the purified. It is a revelation from
1 '

the Lord of the worlds. According to Dara Shikoh


1

'thehonourable Quran which was hidden and which


none but the clean could comprehend was no other
than Upanishadsl He said that as the Upanishads
4 1

meant the was certain that


secret to be concealed it

by the secret book, this ancient book was meant. "He


knew from it what he had not known, and understood
11
from it what he had not understood. v/2)
Dara Shikoh also wrote Majmaul-Bahrayn, the
1

'meeting of the two seas, to show that between Hindu


and Muslim mysticism there exist only verbal differ-
ences. This treatise has recently been published by
the Asiatic Society of Bengal The translator in his
preface says, "It is the last original work of Dara
Shikoh and according to one authority it was this very
work which brought about his death. It is said that
this tract was laid before the ecclesiasts who declared
its author a heretic and sentenced him to death, which

(1) Ibid, p. 243.

(2) Ibid, p. 244.


RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 137
was faithfully carried out by his over-zealous brother,
Aurangzeb/V
Such a liberal attitude towards Hinduism was not
confined to Akbar and Prince Dara Shikoh, nor was it

limited to their age. Among the ufis of India generally


it has been common to find such an extreme liberality
of attitude towards Hinduism as would shock orthodox
Muslims. For example, we come across a further
instance of such liberal attitude in the teaching of Mirza
Jan-i-Janao Mazhar, a saint of great reputation. This
man was born in 1701 A. D, of a family that had had
intimate connection with the Moghal emperor. His
father, Mirza Jan passed his -days in the service ot

Aurangzeb, and at length forsook the world and joined


the Qadiri order. His son, Mirza Jan-i-Janao, is said
to have been a great scholar in his day, and had
1

received the 'robe of permission (to make disciples) in


three of the religious orders, viz., Qadiriyya, Chishtiyya,
and Naqshbandiyya.
Mirza Jan-i-Janao's opinion concerning Hinduism,
which is found in some of his letters, is given by Maulvi
4

Abdu l-Wall Khan Sahib, in his article, Hinduism


1

according to Muslim Sufis, from which we have already


quoted in reference to Dara Shikoh's attitude towards
Hinduism. Mirza Jan-i-Janao in one of his letters
addressed to a certain disciple, writes about Hinduism
as follows: "You should know that it appears from the
ancient book of the Indians that the divine Mercy, in
the beginning of the creation of human species, sent a
Book, named the Bed (Veda) which is in four parts, in
138 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
order to reguktf^be duties of this as well as the next
world, contaminate- news of the past and future,
through an angel or divine spirit by the name of Bramha
(Brahman), who omnipotent and outside the creation
is

of the universe." Continuing his letter he writes


further, "It ought to benoted that according to the
holy verse (of the Quran): 'And there is not a people
but a warner has gone among them/ and also: 'And
every nation had an apostle/ and other verses, there
were prophets also in the countries of Hindustan, on
whom be peace, and their account is contained in the
books of the Hindus. From their signs, it is apparent
that they had attained high and perfect position. The
Universal Divine Mercy did not leave out, for the good
of His creatures, even this extensive country."

The following anecdote, which occurs in the


biography of Mirza Jan-i-Janao, is yet another remark-
able illustration of the attitude of some 3ufis towards
Hinduism. "A man mentioned a dream which he had
dreamed of to Haji Muhammad Afdal, a teacher of the
Mirza Sahib. He said: 1 dreamed a field full of fire.
Kishan (Krishna) was in the fire, and Ram Chandar
(Rama Chandra), on the border of the fire. A man
1

who was present gave his opinion that as Krishna and


Rama Chandra were the leaders of the infidels, they
were being punished in Hell-fire. Mirza Jan-i-Janaa
Maghar, who was present, said: 'This dream has another
interpretation.
1

He said: 'It is improper to charge


particular persons with being infidel, unless their
kufr or infidelity were proved by the canon of Islamic
RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 139
Law. The Book and Sunnat (the Qu*|kii and Islamic
"E&tj,
Law) two periitis. It is evident
are silent about these
from the Quranic verse: There is no village where
there was no warner, that there were bashir and na$kir
( warner and giver of good news) among those people.
Under the circumstance it is probable that they
(Krishna and Rma) were saints or prophets. Ram
Chandar having been m the beginning of the creation
of the genii when people lived long and were powerful
used to train the men of his time to the doctrine of
the right path (msbat*i~suluk); while Kishan, who was
the last of their eminent men when compared with
the past, men's ages were shorter, and strength less
used to preach to his people the (advanced) doctrine
of passion nisbat-i-jadhabi. The mention of song and
music, in which he indulged greatly, is a proof of his
excessive (Divine) love, and ecstasy for passion. The
fire of his excessive love and ecstasy appeared as a
field of fire. Kishan who was immersed in the state of

love appeared in the centre of that fire, and Ram


Chandar, who was in the path of suluk (as a beginner)
was seen at the end of it. And God knows best.*
Hadrat Hsjl Afdal liked the interpretation very much
and was greatly impressed by it.' 1(1)
We now proceed to give a few illustrations of such
features in 0fism as bear a close resemblance to the
teaching of Hinduism. It must be understood that the
following comparison of the Hindu philosophy and the
0fi teaching is offered just to suggest parallels between

(1) Ibid, p. 241.


140 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

their doctrines. The problem of sources is a very


intricate one and it cannot be even stated within the
compass of a short chapter, nor it is the purpose of
this book.

1. THE $UFI PIR AND THE HINDU GURU.


Starting with the practical life of a ufl, at the very
outset the devotion of murld (disciple) to his pir

(spiritualpreceptor) presents a striking similarity to


the devotions of a chela to his guru. As no one can
become a ufl without the help of a pir so it has been
the custom among the Hindus from time immemorial
that a person desirous of leading a religious life must
seek a guru for himself. For instance, the Hindu
Scriptures say "The supreme mystery in the Vedanta
should be given to one who has the highest
devotion (bhaktf) for God, and for his spiritual teacher
(guru) even as for God"
(1)
"For the sake of this
knowledge (of Brahman) let him go, fuel in hand to a

spiritual teacher (guru) who is learned in the scriptures


" (2)
and established on Brahman.
The similar devotion to a guru is advocated in the

latter development of Hinduism, for instance in Tulsi


Das's Ramdyana (written about 1574 A. D.) we read
4
The guru can save from the Brahmana's anger, but if
the guru himself be wroth, there is no one in the world
that can save.' 1(3)

(1) Svetasvatara UpanishacK 6; 23.

(2) Mundaka Upanishad, 1, 2, 12.

(3) I. Doha, 169.


RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 141
Dr. Urquhart makes the following observation on
u
the place of a guru in Hinduism: The dramatic setting
of the Upanishads is largely constituted by the search
for a teacher who will reveal the deepest mysteries;
and, when he has been found, unbounded devotion and
the most minute practical service is demanded of the
f(1)
pupil.'
Further, the following statement of Venkataramana,
a recent Hindu writer, in reference to the highest
knowledge corresponds to what is held concerning the
authority of a Shaykh as a spiritual authority in ufism;
"The sole source of this knowledge is a clear and
accurate understanding of the Vedic text, That thou
art'; however much one may analyse its meaning
but,
by means of his own reason or with the aid of
commentaries, the realization of the self cannot take
place unless the Vedic text in question reaches the
student through the mouth of a spiritual teacher. 1t(2)
Dr. Urquhart expounding this authority of a guru
writes: "And in course of the development and as
a result of it, devotion to truth and devotion to the
guru become almost synonymous.
(3)
The latter comes
to be regarded as well advanced on the way to deifica-
tion; his personal authority is thus enhanced, and the

principle of authority becomes more and more deeply


engrained in the mental attitude of the Indian seeker
after truth/'

(1) Urquhart, The Vedanta and Modern Thought, p. 80.

(2) Urquhart, op. cit. pp. 80, 81.

(3) cp. fana fi'sh-Shaykh.


142 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

It will be noticed that these statements are in close

agreement with what we have already said about the


relation of the murid to his

2. $UFI SPECULATION CONCERNING GOD


COMPARED WITH THE TEACHING
OF HINDU PHILOSOPHY
ABOUT BRAHMAN
Similarity between the Sufi conception of God and
Hindu teaching about Brahman very striking. It not
is

only exists in the general trend of the pantheistic

thought in both but also, as we shall see, in some of


the details of the exposition of their respective
doctrines. We have seen that the ufis in their con-
ception of God are divided into Wujudl (monistic) and
Shuhudl (moderate type of pantheistic) schools of
thought.
These correspond to the doctrine of Hindu teachers
in their speculation concerning Brahman, who, likewise,
are either upholders of Advaita (non-dualism) or
Visishadvaita (modified non-dualism).

i. 'WAHDATUL-WUJUDIYYA AND THE


ADVAITA PHILOSOPHY OF
HINDUISM
Several passages may be cited from ufi authorities
and the Hindu Scriptures to demonstrate the similarity
in their doctrines. For instance some passages of
Insdnu'l-Kdmil will be found in close agreement
Jill's

with the teaching of Hindu sacred writings. Thus,


"His manifestation interpenetrates all existences and
RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 143
he manifests his perfection in each atom and particle
of the Universe. He
not multiple by the multiplicity
is

of the manifestations but he is one in the totality of


manifestations, solely by what his noble Essence
necessitates in its very nature, and so on, from the
attributes of perfection to his manifestation in every
atom of existence; (he is one in them all). The whole
group is distinguished by the permeating (one) Exist-
ence in the aggregate of all existences. And the
mystery of this permeation is that he created the
Universe out of himself. And he is not divided into
parts but everything in the Universe is by reason of
his perfection and has the name of creatureliness as a
loan. Not, some suppose, that it is the divine
as
attributes which are lent to the creature for
that which is lent is nothing but the relation of
creaturely existence to the attributes and verily Creative
Existence is the source of this relation. Creative Truth
lent his Ideal Prototypes Oiaqtiiq) the name of
creatureliness in order that the mysteries of Divinity
and their necessary counterparts might be made
manifest. And Creative Truth is the substance (liayula)
Universe. And God said We have not created
4

of the
the Heaven and the Earth except by Creative
Truth (Haqq The Universe
.' is like ice, and God, the

Magnified and Exalted, is the water which is the origin


1

of this ice. The name 'ice is lent to that frozen thing


and the name 'water' is the right name for it." (1) In
one of the Upanishads similar ideas may be noted
(1) Insanul-Kamil Vol., I. p. 28.
144 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

"Just as by one piece of clay everything made of clay


may be known the modification is merely a verbal
distinction, a name; the reality is just clay. Just as by
one copper ornament everything made of copper may
be known the modification is merely a verbal distinc-
tion, a name; the reality is just copper. Just as by one
pair of nail scissors everything made of iron may be
known the modification is merely a verbal distinction,
a name; the reality is just iron so is this teaching. 11(1)
The whole of this section of the Upamshad is in
form of a dialogue between father and son. The father,
Uddalaka, explains to his son, Svetaketu, how every-
thing that exists has sprung from the primary unitary
Being.

ii. THE $UFI DOCTRINE OF SHUHUDIYYA


COMPARED WITH THE VISHISTA-
ADVAITA OF RAMANUJA AND
HISHPRAPANCA IDEAL.
Like the Shuhudi doctrine of the ufis, the Vishistad-
vaita of Ramanuja is a modified non-dualism. Ramunuja
in contradistinction to the favourite assertion of the
monists that "there no diversity" cognises Brahman
is

as carrying "multiplicity within himself", and also


admits His attributes to be real. Further he acknow-
ledges the reality of creation as well as that of the
pluralistic universe. To him God is not a mere totality
of the universe or of persons, but a person who must
not be confused with individual souls and non-intelligent

(1) Chhandogya Upamshad, VI. 1. 4-6.


RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 145
matter. God, on the one hand, is the transcendental
Absolute existing before and beyond the universe, and
on the other, He is the immanent ground of the world.
Ramanuja's view of the relation of the soul to God
will alsobe found to bear an interesting resemblance
to the teaching of ufism on the subject. The following
passage has often been quoted as summing up the
former: 'The soul is created by Brahman, is controlled

by it, is its body, is


it, subservient to
supposed by it, is

is reduced to the subtle condition by it (i. e. in the


world's state of dissolution) is a worshipper of it, and
" (l)
depends on its grace for its welfare.

The goal of the individual soul, according to the

teaching Ramanuja is to release itself from the


of

bondage karma and then to reach the "abode of


Brahman" and to exist eternally having permanent
consciousness of the highest Brahman, This is not
much different from the fund fil-ldh wa baqd
ufi goal of
4

bi'l-ldh, the annihilation and the subsistence in God'.


The means toend according to Hindu
attain this

teaching are Bhakti and Vidya, the former is sometimes


translated technically as "remembrance" and the latter
as "meditation". Both of these may be compared with
the ufl dhikr and murdqaba.

Striking similarity may also be noticed when the


Shuhudl doctrine compared with the Upanishadic
is

conception of God called ^iishprapanca Ideal, which is


(1) Sukhtankar's Teaching of Vedanta according to Ramanuja;
quoted in Macnicol: Indian Theism p. 104.
146 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
the source of the Vishistadvaita doctrine. The Nish-
prapanca doctrine is described by Professor Hiryana in
the following words: "It aims at unity and yet clings to
the double notion of God and nature. To arrive at
true unity, one only of these two should be retained.
If it is the notion of nature that is retained, there will
be no God apart from the world. This outcome of the
pantheistic tendency, viz., viewing the unity of the
world as itself the Absolute, does not figure very much
in the Upanishads, probably because it tends towards
naturalism, which, though not wholly unfamiliar to
them, is widely removed from their prevailing spirit.
If, on the other hand, it is the notion of God that is

selected for retention in preference to that of nature,


the world of common experience with all its variety
will cease to exist apart from God. That is precisely
the acosmic conception; only the theistic term is here
replaced by the philosophic one of Brahman."
(1)

3. THE DOCTRINE OF TANAZZULAT


SUFI
AND THE HINDU PHILOSOPHY OF
'MODIFICATIONS' OF BRAHMAN
The ufl statement about God's existence in the
state of al-'Ama, as a mere Essence devoid of all

qualities and relations


corresponds to the Hindu
conception of Brahman in the state of nirguna, devoid
of all gunas, attributes. The Hindu theologians have
described this nirguna Brahman as void without
consciousness, without activity, a characterless noth-

(1) Hiryana. Outlines of Indian Philosophy, P. 61,


RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 147
ing." This word, nirguna, is used as an attribute of
God in Svetasvatra Upanishad:
The one God, hidden in all things,

All-prevailing, the Inner Soul of all things,

The overseer of deeds (barman) in all things


abiding.
The witness, the sole thinker, devoid of qualities
(l>
(nirguna). Svetakata admits the existence of a Supreme
Brahman, who is undefinable, above the changing world

and free from change, becoming and causality, but who


is the ground of the existence of the whole universe.
He is described as "without part, without activity,

tranquil, irreproachable, spotless, the highest bridge of


" (2)
immortality, like a fire with fuel burned.

The Hindu teaching concerning Brahman in relation


to the creation of the universe, as interpreted by
certain schools, is in close correspondence to the ufi

teaching on the subject and bears a close resemblance


to the doctrine of tanazzuldt. According to the Hindu
doctrine, "individualisation" is the principle of creation.
It is this cosmic principle which gives namarupa, rise to

"name-and-form," In the Upanishads the term namarupa


is used to indicate individuality. For instance we read
in the Brihad Aranyaka Upanishda: "In the beginning
of this world was Soul alone in the form of a Person.
Looking around he saw nothing else than himself

(1) 6:12.
(2) 6: 19.
148 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
At that time the world was undifferentiated. It

became by name and form."


differentiated just (1)

According to the teaching pf Shankara "The crea-


tion is the gradual manifestations of -diverse samanyas
with the visheshas produced from them." The term
vsamanyas stands for the causal reality; and the term
visheshas stands for its effects or qualities. Further
"
Shankara says There are in the world diverse
:

samanyas with their visheshas, both sentient and


insentient. All these samanyas. in their graduated
series, are included and comprehended in one great
samanyas. Brahma's nature or swarupa" (2}
i.e., in

Professor Kokileswar Sastri explaining Shankara's


teaching on creation says: "The created elements have
been evolved from the 'nature' of Brahma for its own
realisation. Brahma has not sundered itself into these
elements; it has not actually passed into or been
converted into, these elements and thereby has
become something other than its own nature. It

expresses itself through these. We have therefore no


right to separate these from it and take them as 'some-
thing' distinct and complete in themselves The
evolving changes the diversities of emerging ndmarupa
are not something other than Brahma's nature, but

they are really the further and further revelations of


" (3)
this nature. /

(1) I. 4: l, 7.

(2) Vedanta Bhasya, quoted in, Kokileswar Sastri, Advaita


Philosophy, p. 35.

(3) Kokileswar Sastri, op cit. p. 23,


RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 149
4. THE LATA'IF OF $UFI DOCTRINE AND
THE CHAKRAS OF HINDU YOGA
9

The theory of latcCif and their position as described


in the human body resemble, to some extent, the
Chakras as detailed in the Yoga system of physiology.
The latter system speaks of the human organism
consisting of the physical body, the vital dynamism,
the psychic principles and the purusa. The purusa is
said to be hidden behind the veils of corruptible flesh
and restless mind.

The system of physiology as developed by the Yoga


philosophy relates to nadls, infinitely small nerves,
which traverse the body. "The spinal column contains
three yognddis of special significance, namely, ida,
pinguid, and susumna. The last is the chief of them.
To the right of it is pingald and to its left idd. This
nddl (i. e. susumna} has six subtle centres called padmas
or chakras, invisible to our senses, that could be
(1)
experienced through the eyes of Yoga."
The chakras are as follows.

1. Sahasrara, lies within the cerebral region,


2. Ajna, situated in pineal gland,
3. Visuddhi, is situated in larynx,
4. Anahata, is located in the heart,
5. Manipura, is situated in the stomach
6. Muladhdra, is said to be located in the navel.

(1) Sir Radha Krishnan, The History of Indian Philosophy, Vol


II, p. 352 (note.)
150 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
4

Besides theseis also a Kundalmi, a curled-up one'

lying dormant at the base of the spine. The Kundallnl


symbolises mystic illumination. When she is asleep
the devotee's mind is in an unawakened condition.
When she has darted upwards and reached the Sahasra
chakra, the mystic has reached full consciousness and
has merged it in the Divine.

5. THE $UFI FANA COMPARED WITH THE


BUDDHISTIC NIRVANA AND THE
UPANISHADIC MOKSA.
The doctrine of nirvana has been variously inter
preted, but as at the present moment we are concerned
not as much with the doctrine itself as with a compara-
tive study of some of its feaures with those of fana, we
proceed to give a brief account of its leading charac-
teristics.

The word nirvana, or its form nibbana, literally


Pali
means 'blowing out' or 'cooling' and is commonly
translated as 'annihilation'. According to Professor
Das Gupta it is the final extinction of sorrow which
takes place as the natural result of the destruction of
desires. The following passages are often quoted from
the Buddhist Scriptures to describe nirvana:
"He whose senses have become tranquil, like a
horse well broken-in by the driver; who is free from
pride and the lust of the flesh, and the lust of existence,
and the defilement of ignorance him even the gods
envy. Such a one whose conduct is right, remains like
the broad earth, unvexed; like the pillar of the city
RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 151
gate; like a pellucid lake, unruffled. For such there are
no more births. Tranquil is the mind, tranquil the
words and deeds of him who is thus tranquilized and
made free by wisdom. " (1) 'They who by steadfast mind
have become except from evil desire, and well-trained
in the teachings of Gautama; they having obtained
the fruit of the fourth Path, and immersed themselves
in that ambrosia, have received without price, and are
in the enjoyment of nirvana. Their old karma is
exhausted, no new karma is being produced; their
hearts are free from the longing after future life; the
ckuse of their existence being destroyed, and no new
yearnings springing up within them, they the wise, are
(2)
extinguished like this lamp." "That mendicant
conducts himself well, who has conquered error by
means of insight, from whose eyes the veil of error
has been removed, who is well-trained in religion; and,
who free from yearning, and skilled in the knowledge
" (3)
of, has attained unto, nirvana.
From such passages Professor Rhys Davids infers
that the nirvana, which means simply going out, extinc-
tion, cannot be the extinction of a soul. He says:
*7t is the extinction of that sinful grasping condition of
mind and heart, which would otherwise, according to the

great mystery of karma, be the cause of renewed individual


existence. That extinction is to be brought about by,
and runs parallel with, the growth of the opposite
(1) Dhammapada, 90, 94-96.

(2) Ratana Sutta, 7, 14.

(3) Sammaparibbajaniya Sutta, 14.


152 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
condition of mind and heart; and it is complete when
that opposite condition is reached. Nirvana is there-
fore the same thing as a sinless, calm state of mind\ and
if translated at all, may best, perhaps, be rendered
'holiness' holiness, that is, in the Buddhist sense,
perfect peace, goodness, and wisdom.
<M(1)

Professor De la Vallee Poussin and Mr. Schrader,


as pointed by Professor Das Gupta, hold nirvana to be
positive. In the opinion of the former it has been
represented sometime in the Pali text as a happy state,
as pure annihilaiton, as an inconceivable existence or
" (2)
as a changeless state. Mr. Schrader says that: "The
Buddha held that those who sought to become
identified after death with the soul of the world as
infinite space (akasa) or consciousness (vinnana)
attained to a state in which they had a corresponding
feeling of infiniteness without having really lost their
" (3)
individuality.
This interpretation, as Professor Das Gupta observes,
is 'Very new and quite against the spirit of the
Buddhistic text." He writes, "Whether we exist in
some form eternally or do not existnot a proper
is

Buddhistic question, for it is a heresy to think of a

Tathagata as existing eternally (sasvatd) or not-existing

(1) Buddhism, pp. Ill, 112.


(2) Professor De la Vallee Poussm's article in the E. R. E. on
Nirvana.
(3) Mr. Schrader's article in Pali Text Society Journal, 1905 on
Nibbana, quoted in Professor Das Gupta, A History of Indian
Philosophy Vol. I, p. 109.
RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 153
(asasvata) or whether he is existing as well as not
existing or whether he is neither existing nor non-
existing. Any one who seeks to discuss whether
Nibbana is either positive and eternal state or mere
state of non-existence or annihilation, takes a view
"
which has been discarded in Buddhism as heretical. (1)
Thus described, nirvana with negative implications
only, can hardly be akin to the ufi doctrine of fana wa
11
baqd. "annihilation and subsistence ./

FANA AND MOKSA


Moksa literally means release, and is used in the
Upanishads to denote the release of the individual soul
from bondage to the sensuous, selfish and finite

existence. It runs almost parallel to the ufl doctrine

of fana wa and subsistence*. Many


baqd, 'annihilation
passages can be quoted to demonstrate the truth of
this statement. For instance Mundaka Upanishad
says:
"As the flowing rivers in the ocean
Disappear, quitting name and form,
So the knower, being liberated from name and form,
Goes unto the Heavenly Person, higher than the

The same Upanishad contains the following passage:


"The mystic syllable Om (pravana) is the bow. The
arrow is the soul (atman).

(1) Professor Das Gupta, A History of Indian Philosophy*


Vol. I, p. 109.

(2) iii, 2:8.


154 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

By the undistracted man It is to be penetrated.


One should come to be in It, as the arrow in the
" (1)
mark (i. e. Brahma). In the same Upanishad we
read: "All these become one in the highest imperishable

Brahma." (2) In the Brihadarnyaka Upanishad we come


across the following simile of the union with the
Divine. Yajanavalkya, the greatest thinker of the
age of the Upanishads, expounding the state of Moksa,
says; "As a man, when in the embrace of the beloved
wife, knows nothing within or without, so this person,
when in the embrace of the intelligent Soul, knows
(3)
nothing within or without. Verily, that is his (true)
form in which his desire is which the Soul
satisfied, in
is his desire, in which he is without desire and without
sorrow." (4)
This state is described in Mundaka to be companion-
ship with God.
They who have ascertained the meaning of the
Vedanta knowledge,
Ascetics, with natures purified through the applica-
tion of renunciation.

They in the Brahma-worlds at the end of time


"
Are all liberated beyond death. (5)

(1) ri, 2:3.

(2) iii, 2, 7.

(3) Professor Macnicol says: "This symbol of union is the hall-


mark of mysticism in every country and every age." Indian Theism,
p. 58.

(4) iv, 3, 21.

(5) iii, 2:6.


RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 155
The same Upanishad teaches that liberated soul
attains to absolute likeness with God;
When a seer sees the brilliant
Maker, Lord, Person, the Brahma-source
Then, being a knower shaking off good and evil
(1)
Stainless, he attains supreme identity with him."

From these passages it appears that absorption in


Brahma is not complete annihilation, but that it indicates
"the preservation at the same time in a subtle sense of
conscious personality."' 2 On the other hand it cannot
'

be denied that there are many passages in the


Upanishads which teach the complete absorption in
Brahma with such absoluteness that self is "completely
merged and indistinguishably lost." (3)

These two phases of the doctrine of liberation as


taught Upanishads may be compared with the
in the

negative and positive aspects of fana. For instance,


1

the following sayings express the 'negative aspect of


the absorption in Brahman:
"He becomes merged in the supreme imperishable
Soul/
"As a lump of salt which is thrown into the water
dissolves and cannot be gathered up again, but wher-
ever water is drawn, it is salty, so truly is it with this

great being, the endless, the unlimited, the fulness of

(1) ii, 1:3.

(2) Macnicol, Indian Theism, p. 58.

(3) Thibaut, in Sacred Book of the East, XXXIV. p. cxxi,

quoted in Macnicol. op. at. p. 57.

(4) Mundaka, iii 2: 7.


156 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

knowledge. Arising out of these elements, into them


also one vanishes away. There is no consciousness
after death." (1)
"Brahma-knowers become merged in Brahman. " (2)
Other passages illustrating the Positive aspect -of
liberation have already been quoted. The following
shows that the liberated soul in union with the
Universal Soul attains unhampered desire.
"He who knows this, on departing from this world,

proceeding on to that self which consists of food,

proceeding on to that self which consists of breath,


proceeding on to that self which consists of mind,
proceeding on to that self which consists of under-
standing, proceeding on to that self which consists of
bliss, goes up and down these worlds, eating what he
desires, assuming what form he desires. He sits singing
this chant:

*Oh, wonderful! Oh, wonderful! Oh, wonderful!


I am food! I am food! I am food!
I am food-eater! I am food-eater! I am food-eater!
I am fame-maker! I am fame-maker! I am fame-
maker!
I am the first-born of the world-order (nta)
Earlier than the gods, in the navel of immortality!
Who gives me away, he indeed has aided me!
I, who am food, eat the eater of food!
I have overcome the whole world!" (3)

(1) Bnhadaranyaka, iv, 5: 13. cp. n, 4- 13.


(2) Svetastra, 1: 7.

(3) Taittmya,iii, 10: 5,6.


RELATION OF SUFISM TO INDIAN THOUGHT 157
This song of the liberated soul is remarkable as it
indicates that it has an active existence. It should be

compared with Jalalu 'd-Din's poem quoted on p. 86^


Before we conclude
chapter the opinions of two
this

famous exponents of Indian Philosophy, Sir Radha


Krishnan and Professor Das Gupta, may profitably be
quoted on the nature of Moksa. This will bring out
more clearly the points of difference and resemblance
between it and the ufl doctrine of fana.
Sir Radha Krishnan summarising the doctrine of
Moksa says: "Whatever differences there might be
about the exact nature of the highest condition, one
thing is clear, that it is a state of activity, full of
freedom and perfection. Strictly speaking, we cannot
describe that state, but if a description is wanted, it is

best to consider it to be a state of divine life. The


not annihilated any more than the ray of the sun
self is

is wave of the sea in the ocean, the


lost in the sun, the

notes of music in one harmony. The song of the


individual is not lost in the music of the world march.
It is the same for ever and yet not the same. It is said

that the liberated soul becomes one with all and lives a

life in unity with God. The positive description seems


to suggest a sense of individuality which helps him to
act in this world, though this individuality is not based
on any self-feeling. This individualisation of life seems
to be necessary for the fulfilment of the joy of the one
supreme. Even though for a purpose of self-expression
there is this possession of a centre of individuality, we
are told that the soul is conscious of its glory and the
158 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

greatness of immortality. It feels that God is at work


in the cosmic drama, where the divine consciousness

plays and acts. The liberated individual also plays in


the same drama with full possession of the truth. There
"
nothing which does not bend to his purpose.
(1)
is

Professor Das Gupta who calls it Aiuktl, emancipa-


tion, describing it says "Emancipation or Muktl means
in the Upanishads the state of infinitencss that a man
attains when he knows his own self and thus becomes
Brahman. The ceaseless course of transmigration is

only for those who are ignorant. The wise man


however who has divested himself of all passions and
knows himself to be Brahman and no bondage of any
kind can ever affect him The knowledge of the self
reveals the fact that all our passions and antipathies, all

our limitations of experience, all that is ignoble and small


in us, all that is transient and finite m us is false. We
do not know but are "pure knowledge" ourselves.
We are not limited by anything, for we are infinite;
we do not suffer death, for we are immortal. Emancip-
ation thus is not a new acquisition, product, an effect,
or result of any action, but it always exists as the Truth
of our Then concluding his illuminating
nature."
**
summary he says: The true self manifests itself in
all the processes of our phenomenal existences, but ulti-

mately when it retires back to itself, it can no longer


be found in them. It is a state of absolute infinitude
of pure intelligence, pure being, and pure blessing. V (2)

(1) Indian Philosophy. Vol I, P. 241.

(2) A History of Indian Philosophy, Voi I. p. 58.


CHAPTER IX.

The Origin of Religious Orders.


In the preceding chapters we have traced the origin
and development of ufism, and have noticed how from
time to time certain new elements and modifications
were introduced into its teaching. But such doctrinal
development forms only one aspect of the study of
ufism. Another, and no less interesting one, is that
which concerns the origin and growth of its fraternities
or Religious Orders, through which the various forms
of its teaching were disseminated to the different parts
of the Muslim world.
The origin of these Religious Orders is said, by
certain western scholars, to date from the 12th century
A. D. Such a statement may be accepted as correct in
the sense that at that period these Orders were fully
organized, and that each was marked by distinguishing
features in teaching and practice. Otherwise the
its

ufi-fraternities ought to be traced back to a much


earlier date. As Professor D. B. Macdonald himself
says. "The earliest Muslims were burdened, as we
have seen, (cp. pp. 11, 12) with fear of the terrors of
an avenging God. The world was evil and fleeting; the
only abiding good was in the other world; so their
religion became an ascetic other-worldliness. They
fled into the wilderness from the wrath to come.
Wandering, either solitary or in companies, was the
160 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

special sign of the uft. The young men gave


true
themselves over to the guidance of the older men;
little circles of disciples gathered round a venerated
Shaykh; fraternities began to form. So we find it in the
case of al-Junayd, so in that of Sari as-Saqafl. Next
would come a monastery, rather a rest-house; for only
in the winter and for rest did they remain fixed in a
place for any time. Of such a monastery there is a
trace at Damascus in 150 (767 A. D.) and in Khurasan
about 200 (815-16 A. D.),"*
These wandering companies in course of time came
to be called at-Tarlqa, the path, (pi. al-furq) or
fihdnivada, a family, but through the influence of
western writers they are commonly spoken of as
1

'Religious Orders. The teachings imparted in these


Orders are supposed to have been handed down
through more or less continous chains of succession
originating with the founders. Such a chain is called
silsila, (pi. saldsil)*/

The centre of every order at any given time is a


murshid (a guide) or plr (an elder), who is considered
to be a spiritual heir of the original founder, and as
such received his authority through his immediate
predecessor.
We have already seen that to a Muslim, ufism is not
a late development of Islam, but is as old as Islam
itself. As a matter of fact all the orders trace their
chains of succession back to Muhammad, and thus it is

*Macdonald, Theology, p. 177.


THE ORIGIN OF RELIGIOUS ORDERS 161

that the founder of Islam is regarded by the ufls as


also the fountain head of ufism. Next to Muhammad
in the chains of succession comes, in most cases, the
4

name of All, but in a few there stands second the


name of Abu Bakr. The importance of 'All in $ufism
is thus very great. Further, inasmuch as Muhammad
isreported to have said. "I am the house of knowledge
4 1 '

and All is its gate, most ufls regard 'All as the one
medium between Muhammad and
of divine knowledge
his followers. He is revered by them as the heir to all
Muhammad's esoteric and exoteric knowledge. All
this is emphasized by the fact that while hundreds of

religious orders are traced to 'All, only three, viz. the


Bistamiyya, Bakhtashiyya, and Naqshbandiyya regard
Abu Bakr as their head, and of these, only the last
named is current in India. But so important is the
place of 'Ali in ufism, that the Naqshbandi order also
is traced by a different line of succession to him. This
has been done to invest with the peculiar dignity
it

which attaches to the other religious Orders already


privileged to be associated with his name. It is true
that according to the decision of Sunnl cannon lawyers
'All ranks as fourth in dignity when compared with the
other three khalifas, Abu Bakr, 'Umar and 'Uthman,
but in ufism the first and highest place after
Muhammad is accorded to him.
Shaykh 'Aliu'l-Hujwiri writes concerning 'All.
"His renown and rank in this Path (of ufism) were
very high. He explained the principles (u^ul) of
Divine truth with exceeding subtlety, so that Junayd
162 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
said 'All is our Shaykh as regards the endurance of
affliction, i.e. in the theory and practice of ufism; for
4

ufis call the theory of this Path 'principles" (usul),


and its practice consists entirely in the endurance of
*
affliction."

HASAN OF BASRA.
Hasan of Basra holds, next to 'All, the most pro-
minent place in the 'chains' of the Religious Orders. It
4

is Ali had seventy disciples and that, after


said that
his death, these appointed four persons from themselves

to be plrs or elders. The ufls differ as to the persons


who were chosen to be these four plrs. Some mention
Hasan and Husayn, the grandsons of Muhammad,
together with Khwaja Kumayl, and Hasan of Basra;
others, retaining the last two names, either substitute
Uwaysu '1-Qaram and Sarlu 's-Saqati, or 'Abdullah
Bahri.
It will be seen, however, that this difference of

opinion does not affect the position of Hasan of Basra.


His name follows 'All's at the head of most of the
Religious Orders, and, as we shall see, he is recognised
as the spiritual head of those lines of succession which
gave rise to three famous orders, viz. the Qadiriyya,
the Chishtiyya, and the Suhrawardiyya, His mother
was a maid servant of Umm Salma, one ot Muhammad's
wives, and he himself was a contemporary of the
renowned woman Rbi*a of Basra. At
saint of Islam,
the death of Muhammad, Hasan was very young, and

*Kashf al-Mahjub. p. 74.


THE ORIGIN OF RELIGIOUS ORDERS 163

though not honoured as one of the leading Tdbiun, the


followers of the companions of the Prophet. He is
said to have visited one hundred and thirty companions
4

of Muhammad. Ali appointed him as one of his chief


successors to carry on the esoteric^ teaching of Islam.
The names of two of Hasan's disciples, viz. Khwaja
Abdu'l- Wahid b. Zayd and Habibu'l-'Ajami, stand at

the head of two main lines of the Religious Orders.


From the first of these sprang four further sub-divisions,
from the second, eight. These are called chawda
Qhhanwade or fourteen families. Most of the remaining
orders are subsequent divisions and sub-divisions of
these fourteen. We
shall proceed to give a brief
account of the two main lines with their sub-divisions.

i. ZAYDIYYA.
This was the order founded by Khwaja 'Abdu '1-
Wahid b. Zayd, though the records tell us next to

nothing about it. The four Orders which sprang from


it are the following:
1. 'lyddiyya. This Order was founded by Khwaja
Fudayl b. 'lyad. An account of his life has already
been given in a
previous chapter, (see pp. 13-14.)
His outstanding virtue is said to have been the love
of God in perfect conformity with His holy will. It
is related that on one occasion the famous Khalifa
Harunu 'r-Rashid asked him: "Have you ever met
with any one of greater detachment than yourself?"
He made answer, "Yes, O Khalifa! your detachment
exceeds mine, for I have detached myself from this
164 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
world doomed to perdition, while you seem to have
detached yourself from the world which is infinite and
shallendure for ever.'/
2. Adhamiyya. This Order was founded by Abu
Ishaq Ibrahim b. Adham, a successor of Khwaia
4

Fudayl b. Iyad. Reference has already been made to


this Ibrahim as one of the earliest ascetics of Islam.
The author of Kashfu 'l-Mahjub writes about him: "In
the earlier part of his life he was prince of Balkh.
One day he went to the chase, and having become
separated from his suite was pursuing an antelope.
God caused the antelope to address him in elegant
language and say "Wast thou created for this; or
:

wast thou commanded to do this ?" He repented, aban-


doned everything, and entered on the path of ascetic-
ism and abstinence. He made the acquaintance of
Fudayl b. lyad and Sufyan Thawri, and consorted
with them. After his conversion he never ate any
food except what he had earned by his own labour.
His sayings on the verities of ufism are original and
and exquisite. Junayd said: Ibrahim is the key of the
(Mystical) sciences/"
The following are the comments made by Rose upon
the ufi account of Ibrahim: "The ufi legend con-
cerning him is evidently modelled upon the story of
Buddha, he appears as a prince who while
for in it

hunting, was warned by an unseen voice that he was


not created for such pursuits. Thereupon he aban-
doned the path of worldly pomp for the path of

Kashf al-awib. pl03


THE ORIGIN OF RELIGIOUS ORDERS 165

asceticism and piety. He became a quietist of a

practical type, and did not carry the doctrine of


tawahkul to the point of refusing to earn his livelihood;
on the contrary, he supported himself by gardening
and so on. He
approved of begging in so far as it
incites men and thereby increase their
to give alms
chance of salvation, but he condemned it as a means of
livelihood. So he distinguished two kinds of begging.
C. van Arendonk says that a trait far more characteristic
of Indian and Syrian than of Muslim ascetism appears
in the story that one of the three occasions on which
Ibrahim felt joy was when he looked at the fur garment
he was wearing, and could not distinguish the fur from
the lice (E. I. ii. p. 432). 'But this story is poor
evidence of Buddhist or Indian influence on Ibrahim,
because a very similar episode is told of the Breton
saint, Le Petit St. Jean. A notable legend says that
angels ministered to Ibrahim on the banks of the
Tigris after he had resigned his kingdom, bringing him
ten dishes of food. This roused the envy of a darwish
who had been a poor man before he assumed the habit
of a beggar, and to whom only one plate was vouch-
safed. The incident is a common place topic of Indo-
Persian or Mughal painting (J. R. A. S., 1909, p. 751
and 1910, p. 167) There can, however, be no doubt
that Ibrfihim was a great figure in his day, and his
memory still survives in Islam as far as India. The
tale that he married a princess is even more persistent
than the tradition that he was of royal birth." *
*Rose, The Danishes, p. 83.
166 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
3. Hubayriyya. This Order is ascribed to Khwaia
Hubayra of Basra, a successor
KhwSja Mar'ashi, of
a vice-gerent of Ibrahim b. Adham. Hubayra is
known to have lived in company with Junayd of
Baghdad, but otherwise we are told little concerning
him.
4. Chishtiyya. This was founded by Khwaja Abu
Ishaq Sham! Chishtl, a disciple of Mimshad Dinwari, a
vice-gerent of Hubayra of Basra. Mimshad was also a
disciple of Junayd of Baghdad.
A more detailed account of the Chishti Order will
be given in the next chapter.

11. HABIBIYYA.
'

Habib Ajaml, the founder of this Order, was at first

a usurer but, being touched with the suffering of his


debtors, he renounced his profession and granted
remission to all who owed him money. Finally he
became a disciple of Hasan of Basra.

The story one day Hasan came to Habib


is told that
who some loaves. In the meantime a
offered him

beggar came and Habib quickly picked up the loaves


and gave them away. Hasan, annoyed at his behaviour,
reprovingly said to him, "Had you known the law you
would not have acted in this way. Do you not know
that it is forbidden to take away a meal when once
1 '

offered to
a guest? While he spoke a stranger
brought some food which Habib placed before Hasan
and said to him: "Master, you know the law, but
1

how good it is to have faith also/


THE ORIGIN OF RELIGIOUS ORDERS 167

We find the following narrative concerning him in

Kashfu'l-Mahjub: "His native tongue was Persian


Cajaml), and he could not speak Arabic correctly.
One evening Hasan of Basra passed by the door of his
cell. Hablb had uttered the call to prayer and was
standing, engaged in devotion. Hasan came in, but
would not pray under his leadership, because Hablb
was unable to speak Arabic fluently or recite the
Quran correctly. The same night, Hasan dreamed that
he saw God and said to Him; "O Lord, wherein does
'

Thy good pleasure consist? and that God answered;


"O Hasan, you found My
good pleasure but did not
know its value: if yesternight you had said your prayer
after Hablb, and if the Tightness of his intention had
restrained you from taking offence at his pronouncia-
H1)
tion, I should have been well pleased with you.'
He died in 772-3 A.D.
The eight Orders which have originated from him
are as follows:
1. Karkhiyya. This was founded by Ma'rufu 1-
Karkjn (Karkh is a district of Baghdad), to whose
teaching brief reference has already been made
(sec pp. 18-19).Through his plr Da'ud T**X he is con-
nected with Hablb 'Ajaml. He died in 815-16 A. D.,
and his tomb, "saved by popular reverence, is one of
the few ancient sites in modern Baghdad. "^
2. Saqatiyya. This Order owes its origin to
4

Kbwja Hasan Sariu s-Saqatl, a vice-gerent of Ma'rufu

(2) Macdonald, Muslim Theology, p. 175.


168 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
*l-Karkhl. He was called saqatl because he used to
carry on the business of a huckster (saqat farosh) in the
bazar at Baghdad. He was the first to give systematic
1 *

teaching about "'stations (maqdmdt) in the Path, as


well as concerning spiritual "states" (ahwdl). To him is
ascribed, "but dubiously, the first use of the word
tawhld to signify the union of the soul with God." (1>
One of his sayings runs as follows: "If God were
revealed in hell to the people of hell, sinful believers
would never think of Paradise, since the sight of God
would so fill them with joy that they would not feel
bodily pain/' He died in 870-71 A. D.
3. Tayfuriyya. This Order was founded by Abu
Yazld Tayfuru'l-Bistami, also known as Byazldu'l-
Bistami. Reference has already been made to him as
the one chiefly responsible for the introduction into
ufism of pantheism and the conception of self-annihila-
tion. He is said to have received his spiritual authority
from Imam Ja'far adiq and also from Habib 'Ajaml,
but he could not have had any contact with them in
their life-time, since both had died before he was born.
The author of the Shaqaiqun-Numdniyya {2} endeav-
ours to minimise the break in the continuity between
him and his predecessor by saying that Bayazldu'l-
Bistami, though born after the decease of the Imam

(1) Macdonald, op. cit. p. 175.

(2) Sec Rose. The Danishes, p. 140. The full title of the book
is the Shaqaiqu n-nu'maniyya
ffulamau'd-dawlatu'l-Uthmamyya,
*Blood-red wild anemones touching the learned of the Ottoman
Empire' by the Mulla Tashkopruzada, who died in 1560 A.D.
THE ORIGIN OF RELIGIOUS ORDERS 169

Ja'far adiq, yet received spiritual instruction from him


by the force of the will of the latter. A somewhat
similar explanation is given to connect him in the
*

spiritual succession with Hablb Ajami. ufis in general

accept these explanations.


The feature of the Tayfur! Order is its
distinctive

teaching about sukr, 'intoxication' of the love of God


and wajd, 'rapture'. The following is the explanation
of this as given by 'Allu'l-Hujwirl; "You must know
1

that and 'rapture are terms used by


'intoxication'
spiritualists to denote the rapture of love for God,
while the term 'sobriety' expresses the attainment of
that which is desired. Some place the former above
the latter, and some hold the latter to be superior.
Abu Yazld and followers prefer intoxication to
his

sobriety. They say that sobriety involves the fixity


and equilibrium of human attributes, which are the
greatest veil between God and Man, whereas intoxica-
tion involves the destruction of human attributes,
like foresight and choice, and the annihilation of a
man's self control in God, so that only those faculties
survive in him that do not belong to the human genus;
and they are the most complete and perfect. Thus
David was in the state of sobriety; an act proceeded
from him which God attributed to him and said,
"David killed Goliath" (Quran 2:252): but our Apostle
was in the state of intoxication; an act proceeded from
him which God attributed to Himself and said, "Thou
didst not throw when thou threwest but God threw" (Quran
8:17). How great is the difference between these two
170 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
men! The attribution of a man's act to God is better
than the attribution of God's to a man, for in the latter
case the man stands by himself, while in the former
case he stands through God." (1)

In further explanation of Bayazld's doctrine of


1

'sobriety' and "intoxication 'Aliu'l-Hujwirl writes:


"There are two kinds of intoxication: (1) with the
wine of affection (mawaddat) and (2) with the cup of
love (mahabbat). The former is 'caused' (m<2 '//),
since it arises from regarding the benefit (niamat)\ but
the latter has no cause, since it arises from regarding
the benefactor (munim). He who regards the benefit
and therefore sees himself, but he
sees through himself
who regards the benefactor sees through Him and
therefore does not see himself, so that, although he
is intoxicated, his intoxication is sobriety.
"Sobriety also is of two kinds; sobriety in heed-
lessnesss (ghaflat) and sobriety in love (mahabbat).
The former is the greatest of veils, but the latter is the
clearest of revelations. The sobriety that is connected
with heedlessness is really intoxication, while that
which is linked with love, although it be intoxication,
" (2)
is really sobriety.
It is on the basis of this theory of 'sobriety' and
'intoxication', that the pantheistic utterances of the
ufis are justified by the orthodox, they being uttered
not while in the state of the sobriety but in that of
intoxication.

(1) Kashf al-Mahjub. pp. 184-5.

(2) Ibid. pp. 187-8.


THE ORIGIN OF RELIGIOUS ORDERS 171

4. The Junaydiyya. This had its origin in Abul-


Qasimu'l Junayd who is Sayyidut-TcCifa, 'Lord of the
sect', and Ta'usul-Ulama, 'peacock of the learned'.

He was a successor of his maternal uncle, Sarius-Saqatl.


Professor Macdonald says about him: "Perhaps the
greatest name in early ufism is that of al-Junayd
(d. 909-10 A. D.); on it no shadow of heresy has ever
fallen. He was a master in theology and law, reveren-
ced as one of the greatest of the early doctors.
Questions of tawhid he is said to have discussed before
his pupils with shut doors. But this was probably
tawhid in the theological and not in the mystical sense
against the mu'tazilites and not on the union of the
soul with God. Yet he, too, knew the ecstatic life and
fell fainting at verses which struck into his soul." (1)

'Allu'l-Hujwiri writes thus about his doctrine: "His


doctrine is based on sobriety and is opposed to that of
the Tayfurls, It is the best known and most
celebrated of all doctrines, and all the Shaykhs have
adopted it, is much differ-
notwithstanding that there
ence in their sayings on the ethics of ufism." (2) The
following conversation between Husayn b. Mansuru'l-
Hallaj and al-Junayd illustrates differences between
'sobriety' and 'intoxication' as viewed by the latter.
Husayn b. Mansur, after he had broken his relation
with his teacher, Amr 'Uthmanu'l-Makki, came to
b.

al-Junayd. "Junayd asked him for what purpose he


had come to him. Husayn said :
'For the purpose of
(1) Macdonald Muslim Theology, p. 176.

(2) Kashf al-M ahjub. p. 189.


172 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

associating with the Shaykh., Junayd replied: 1 do


not associate with madmen. Association demands
sanity; ifwanting, the result is such behaviour
that is

as yours in regard to Sahl b. 'Abdallah Tustari and


*Amr.' Husayn said
4

O
Shaykh, sobriety and intoxica-
tion are two attributes of Man, and Man is veiled from
his Lord until his attributes are annihilated.
1 4

O son
of Mansur,' said Junayd, 'you are in error concerning
sobriety and intoxication. The former denotes sound-
ness of one's spiritual state in relation to God, while
the latter denotes excess of longing and extremity of
love, and neither of them can be acquired by human
effort. O son of Mansur, in your words I see much
" (1)
foolishness and nonsense.

The remaining four Orders of the fourteen Khan-


wadas have descended from the Junaydiyya Order.
5. GcLzruniyya Order. This was founded by Khwaja
Abu Ishaq Gazrum. He is the fourth in the line of
succession from al-Junayd. Abu Ishaq died in 1037-38
A. D.
6. Tartawsiyya. This Order is ascribed to Abu'l-
Farah T artawsi, who is the fourth in the line of
succession from al-Junayd. The famous Shaykh
'Abdu'l-Qadir Gllanl, who founded the Qadiri Order,
was fourth in spiritual succession from this Abu'l-
Farah. Abu'l-Farah died in 1055 A. D.
7. Suhrawardiyya. This Order had its rise with
Abu'n-Najib, who died in 1234-35 A. D. A full

(1) Kashf al-Mahjub. p. 189.


THE ORIGIN OF RELIGIOUS ORDERS 173

account of this Order will be given in the following


chapter.
8. Firdawsiyya, or Kubramyya. This was founded
by Abu'l-Jannab Ahmad b. 'Umaru'l-Khlwaqi (of
(Khiwa), commonly known as Najmu'd-dm Kubra. He
was a disciple of Abu'n-Najib, just mentioned. His
4

plr called him the Shaykh of Paradise', hence he came


to be known as Firdawsl (of Paradise). Najmu'd-Dm
was seventh in the line of succession from al-Junayd.
He died in 1221 A. D.
CHAPTER X.

The Four Main Orders


Of all Orders which are directly or indirectly related
to the fourteen Khdnwddas mentioned in the preceding
chapter only four, viz. the Chishtiyya, the Qadiriyya,
the Suhrawardiyya and the Naqshbandiyya, exist in
India as Orders of sufficient importance to merit
detailed treatment here. Of these, as we have seen,
the Chishtiyya and the Suhrawardiyya belong to the
Hablbiyya, while the Qadiriyya is an offshoot of the
Tartawsiyya. In the case of the Naqshbandiyya,
though it sprang from the line of Junaydiyya, yet it is

traced back, from Junayd, through a different line of


succession to Abu Bakr. We
now proceed to give a
brief description of these four.

i. THE CHISHTI ORDER.


Khwaja Abu Ishaq Sham! Chishtl, ninth in spiritual
succession from 'All, is regarded as the founder of this

Order. He migrated from Asia Minor and settled at


Chisht in Khurasan, and in consequence was called
Chishtl. He was a disciple and a vice-gerent of
Mimshad 'All Dinwari.
4

Mimshad All Dinwari appears to have been


connected with two main lines of succession, already
mentioned, the one traceable to 'Abdul- Wahab b.
4

Zayd, and the other to Hablb Ajaml. . In the former he


was a disciple of Hubayratu'l-BasrI and in the latter of
THE FOUR MAIN ORDERS 175

Junayd. As a vice-gerent of Hubayra he belonged to


the line which gave rise to the Chishti Order, but as
a disciple of Junayd he stood head of the line
at the
which subdivided itself into the Qadiri and Suhrawardi
Orders. Prince Dara Shikoh, however, in his book,
Saflnatul-Awliya, holds to the opinion that Ihwaja 'All
Dinwarl and Mimshad Dinwarl were different persons.
The one, he says, was a disciple of Hubayra and the
other of Junayd. But the majority of the hagiogra-
phers consider that these were the names of one and
the same person, explaining that he had received his
spiritual authority from both the saints.
The following four, who were spiritually descended
from Abu Ishaq Chishti, are regarded by ufis to have
been the great pillars of the religion of Islam:
1. Khwaja Abu Ahmad, (d. 966 A. D.). He was
a vice-gerent of Abu Ishaq, and became an Abdal.
2. Khwaja Abu Muhammad, (d. 1020 A. D.). He
was the son and successor of Abu Ahmad.
3. Khwaja Abu Yusuf. (d. 1067 A. D.). He was
a vice-gerent of Abu Muhammad.
4. ghwaja Mawdud. (d. 1133 A. D ). He was
the son and successor of Abu Yusuf.
Fourth in the line of succession from Khwaja
Mawdud Chishti appeared Khwaja Mu*inu'd-Din of
Ajmer, the sponsor of the Order in India. He has
been the most renowned saint in the history of the
Order, in fact, by several writers, he, and not Khwaja
Abu Ishaq, has been regarded as the founder of the
Chishti Order.
176 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
The devotees of this Order practise chilla, i. e. they
shut themselves up for forty days in some room or
pass the time in a mosque. During this period they
eat little food and spend the greater part of the night
and day in prayer and meditation, nor do they talk
with others more than is absolutely necessary. Another
characteristic of the followers of this Order is their
fondness for music. They hold musical festivals, and
pass into ecstasy while listening to singing.
The Order is now indigenous to India, and hence a
detailed account of it will be given in connection with
its Indian History.

(ii) THE QADIRI ORDER.


This Order, as we have seen, sprung from the
4

Kbanwada Tartawsiyya, and traces its origin to Abdu'l-


Qdir Gilfini or Jilam.
'Abdu'l-Qadir is also called
Hasanu'l-Husaym, on account of his descent, on his
mother's side from Husayn and on his father's side from
Hasan, Muhammad's grandsons. His father's name was
Ali alih, nicknamed Jangi a Persian phrase which
dost,
means "warlike friend." How the father came to
acquire this name
not definitely known. That the
is

father was given this Persian name and he himself was


known as Gilani seems to indicate that this Arab family
must have been long settled in Persia. Gllan or Jilan
was a district south of the Caspian Sea, where Abdu 1- l

Qdir was born. The date of his birth is given as 1077


A. D. At the age of 18 he went to Baghdad and be-
came a disciple of Abu Sa'ld Mubarak MukjiarramL
THE FOUR MAIN ORDERS 177

is corrupted to Makhzumi.
In several texts Mukharrami
but as Mukharram was a place in Baghdad, Mubarak's
name must have been derived from it. Abu Sa'id
Mubarak was the head of the a Hanball school which
4

he handed Abdu'l-Qadir. It was in this


over to
Madrasa that the saint began to lecture, and it became
so crowded that it was necessary to have it enlarged.
In 1134 A. D. a huge new building was completed, and
it was from this centre of instruction that his disciples

carried his teaching all over Iraq. 'Abdu'l-Qadir lived


in Baghdad till he died in 1166 A. D.
He has more than 99 titles, the chief and the best
known are; Plr-i-Pirdn or Chief of the saints; Pir-j-
Dastglr or the Saint my helper, Ghawthul-A'zam or the
Great Refuge, Mahbub-i-Subhdni or the Beloved of
God, and Muhi'ud-Din, The Reviver of Religion.
The following anecdote, ascribed to 'Abdu'l-Qadir,
purports to give his explanation as to how he came to
have his last designation. It is related that the saint
said, "In 1117 A. D. when I returned from one of my
periodic wanderings to Baghdad I met a person who
was very sick, in fact his entire body was emaciated
and his face a ghastly yellow. Saluting me he sought
my him to sit up. When I stretched
help to enable
out my hand to raise him he was at once restored to
perfect health and became again a strong and handsome
man. I was surprised at the sudden change that came
over him, but the man said, 'Do you not know me? I
am the religion of Islam, and was at the point of death,
but God has revived me through your help/ When,
178 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

having left him, I arrived at the mosque to say prayer


every one greeted me as "Muhlu'd-Dln, and kissed my
hand. Hitherto no one had ever called me by this
name."
With a view to enhance his dignity many traditions

foretelling 'Abdu'l-Qadir's advent and glory have been


ascribed to Muhammad. For instance, there is the fol-
lowing anecdote quoted by J. P. Brown. It is related
that once the daughter of the Prophet of God, Fatima,
saw in a dream, that a man came out of her father's
apartment, holding a large candle in his hand, the light
of which extended from the East to the West. She
mentioned this to the Prophet, in thepresence of his
nephew, 'All, her husband, and the former interpreted
it, that one would come after him ('All), whose sanc-
tity would resemble the candle, and be the chief of all
4

saints. AlI exclaimed against this, on the ground that


he himself was the chief. "No," said the Prophet; "the
one I allude to will have his foot on the neck of all the
saints, and all will come under his rule; those who do
not bear his feet on their shoulders and bend before
4

him, will bear bags on their shoulders." All would not


admit this, and declared that for one he would refuse
to bear him. Just then, the Prophet miraculously
created a child; and as there was some fruit on a high
shelf of the room, he asked 'All to reach it down for
the child.'All attempted to do it, but was not high

enough, and the Prophet placed the child on his


4

('All's) neck, so as to reach the fruit. Ali having sub-


mitted to this, "See, see!" exclaimed the Prophet, "you
THE FOUR MAIN ORDERS 179

already bear the person I allude to on your neck/'


This child was 'Abdu'l-Qadir himself. (1)
This alleged prediction of Muhammad concerning
him is said to have been fulfilled when, in his Baghdad
Guest House, before a large audience of scholars and
saints of Iraq, he uttered in the course of a lecture the
words, "This my foot rests on the neck of all the saints
of God." At this all the saints there present bowed
their necks. It is further asserted that, at that very
instant, three hundred and thirteen saint in other parts
of the world received the impression of 'Abdu'l-Qadir's
assertion and forthwith bowed their necks in obedience.
His 'urs is celebrated on the llth. of the month
Rabl'u 'th-Tham. On the evening of the 10th. a special
ceremony is performed in some parts of India in the

following way. A
large green flag, with impressions of
the out-spread hand (panja) made on it with sandal-
wood paste, is carried in procession. With this is
carried sandalwood-paste, powdered sugar-bread
(mallda), flowers, sweets, and aloes and thus with
lighted torches and music the people go to an appointed
place and up the standard. Then, offering the
set
Fdtiha in the name of the plr, the sweets and powdered
sugar-bread are distributed to the people. Because
the 'urs itself is celebrated on the llth, that day is
called Gydrahwin sharif, the Holy Eleventh, the day of
the saint's death, but as a matter of fact, there is dif-
ference of opinion as to the actual date on which he
died. According to some his death took place on the
(1) Rose, The Danishes, pp. 52, 53.
180 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
8th. and according to others on the 10th, of Rabfu
th-Thanl. But as he himself was in the habit of recit-
ing the Patina in the name of the Prophet on the llth
day of every month, therefore, by common consent,
1

the llth, of Rabi'u th-Thanl is kept for reciting the


Fdtiha in his name. On this day his devotees recite the
chapters 1, 111, 113 and 114 of the Quran, repeat his
99 names on food specially prepared, and feed their
and beggars. Others recite the Fdtiha, not on
friends
food, but on some sweets, which are then distributed.
The saint is invoked when cholera or any other
also

epidemic is raging. At such times people take out the


flag of the saint in procession, singing an invocation to
the saint. Both Hindus and Muslims make gifts of
money and put them in a plate in which incense is
burnt. Herklots says, "Some people vow that if, by
the mercy of the saint, they are blessed with a son or
daughter, they will make him, or her, his slave. Should
their wishes be accomplished, on the 10th. or llth, of
this month they fix on this child a large anklet (A.
halqa, fcefO on which year by year they pass a smaller
ring. They cook cakes, place on them eleven small lamps
made of flour paste, and light them with red cotton wicks
soaked in butter. They burn aloes and put the ring on
the child, if it be an anklet, on the right ankle, if it be
a collarette (tauq), round the child's neck." (l)
The followers of the Qadiri Order wear an em-
broidered rose in their caps, the origin of which is
traced to the following legend. "The ShaykhuVSa'id
(1) Herklots, Islam in India, pp. 193, 4.
THE FOUR MAIN ORDERS 181

'Abdu'l-Qsdir JilanI was directed by Khwaja Kbidr to


proceed to Baghdad. On his arrival there, the Shaykh
sent him a cup filled with water, the meaning of which
was that the city of Baghdad was full of holy people,
and that it contained no place for him. This occurred
during the winter season, and no flower was in bloom.
The Shaykh ('Abdu'l-Qadir Jilanl) put a rose in the
cup, Baghdad would hold a place for
signifying that
him. Seeing this, all present exclaimed, 'The Shaykh
is our rose', and going to meet him they conducted

him to the city, and showed him marked respect." (1)


The form of the rose of Baghdad is as follows: "It
has two outside and two inside rings, and three circles,
and is made of green cloth. The first circle signifies
shari'at, 'God's law as revealed by His Prophet'; the
1

second signifies ^tan^at^ or 'Path of the Order; the third


1

signifies the marifat, or 'knowledge of God. The


three together are sign that their acquisition has
bestowed the hdl, or condition, known as the haqiqat,
1

or 'Truth'. The holy word Hay, or 'The Living God ,

manifested to the Shaykh, has for its colour green, and


for this reason the rose is made on cloth of that colour.
The circles are white, and the reason is that this same
is a sign of perfect submission to the Shaykh, according
to the traditional words of the Prophet, The Divine
law is my word; the path is my acts (practices); the
knowledge is and the truth is
the chief of all things;
1

my condition Whoever knows these secrets must


.

assume the disposition of the moral laws of God, and


(1) Rose, The Danishes, p. 101.
182 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
the character of the Divine nature. The blessings
which will accompany him in eternal life are those of
(1)
everlasting felicity and never-ending aid."

iii. THE SUHRAWARDI ORDER.


This order originated from the Junaydl Khanwada
and was founded by piyaVd-Din Najlb Suhrawardi,
the author of the Adabul-Muridln, Manners of the
Disciples. The latter died in 1167 A. D., but not much
is known about his life.
It was through some of his leading disciples that the

Order gained in reputation and influence. Special


reference has already been made to one of his vice-
gerents, Abu'l-Jannab Ahmad Kfaiwaql (of Khiva or
Khwarazm), commonly known as Shaykh Najmu'd-Dm
Kubra, as the founder of the Firdawsl or Kubrawl
Khanwada. His title Kubrd is an abbreviation of his
1

nickname at-tammatul-kubra, "the Greatest Scourge.'


which in the days of his student life was given to him
by his friends on account of his trenchant and dexter-
ous style in debate which rendered him always victor-
ious over his adversaries.He is also called by the title of
wall tarash, "Fashioner of Saints/' which was bestowed
upon him because it was believed that the one on
whom his glance fell in moments of divine ecstasy
attained to the degree of saintship. Many strange
anecdotes illustrating the transforming power of his
glance are found in Muslim hagiography which go to
show that this influence was not limited to human
(1) Rose, The Danishes, pp. 103,4.
THE FOUR MAIN ORDERS 183

beings but extended to birds and animals. One such


story says that once during one of the moments of his
ecstasy, Shaykh Najmu'd-Dln was standing at the door
of his khanaqah, his glance fell on a passing dog. In-

stantly the condition of the dog was changed and it


showed such behaviour as corresponded to that of a
man who had lost himself (i. e., in the mystic sense.)
Wherever it went dogs gathered round it who would
put their paws into his (in token of allegiance) and then
withdraw themselves and stand at a respectful distance
surrounding it. A few days after, the dog died, and
by the order of the Shaykh Najmu'd-Dm its carcass
was buried and a structure was raised over its grave.
Najmu'd-Dln was one of the 600,000 who perished
in the sack of Khwarazm by the Mongols in 1221 A, D.
The story is related that the fame of his character and
spiritual leadership reached Chengiz Khan who sent a
message to say that he intended to sack Khwarazm and
massacre its inhabitants and as the moment had arrived
for the accomplishment ofthis catastrophe therefore

Najmu'd-Dln should leave the city and join him. The


Shaykh refused to avail himself of this opportunity to
save his life and replied: "For me to come out from
among the inhabitants of Khwarazm would be an action
"
far from the way of magnanimity and virtue. Then
addressing his disciples he said: "A great fire is kin-
dled in the east which will burn unto the west, therefore
arise and return to your own countries." When the
Mongols invaded IQjwarazm, he went out to fight and
was found amongst the slain.
184 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Shihabu'd-Dln Suhrawardi was another eminent
disciple of the founder of this Order. He was born in
1145 A. D. and died in 1234-5 A. D. He received his
instruction in Mysticism from Diya Vd-Din, his paternal
uncle, who appointed him his vice-gerent. In the early
days of his life he remained also in the company with
Shaykh Abdu'l-Qadir Gilanl and was highly spoken of
by him.
Shihadu'd-Dm was a great exponent of uflsm. Of
his various works, the most famous is 'Awdrifu'l-
11

Madrif, "Gifts of Divine Knowledge which has been ,

used as a manual for the study of uflsm by ufis of


all Orders. Its Urdu translation is commonly available
in India. In the original Arabic was printed on the
it

margin of an edition of al-Ghazalfs Ihyaul- Ulum, pub-


lished at Cairo in 1888. The famous Sa'dl of Shiraz, one
of his more notable disciples, has a short anecdote about
him in the Bustdn. The there represented as
saint is

praying that hell might be filled with himself if perchance


others might thereby obtain salvation. In his days he
was the chief of the Shaykhs of the ufls at Baghdad
and mystics from different parts of the Muslim world
sought his advice in spiritual matters. One such ufl
wrote to him: "Master, if I cease from deeds I am
perpetually in idleness and if I perform deeds I am filled

with presumption, which of these is the better?' He 1

replied: "Perform deeds and ask God's pardon for the


" (1)
presumption.

(1) Md. Husain: Anwaru I'Arifin, p. 332.


THE FOUR MAIN ORDERS 185

Others of Shihabu'd-Dln's disciples introduced the


Order to different parts of the East. Sayyid Nuru'd-
Dln Mubarak Ghaznawl, one of his vice-gerents, came
to Delhi, and was appointed Shaykhu'l Islam of that
city by King Altamash. Another of his vice-gerents,
Baha Vd-Dln Zakariya, to whom we shall have occasion
to refer again, came to India and settled in Multan,
and is recognized as the pioneer saint of the Order in
this country.

The political influence of the Suhrawardl Order is

well illustrated by the achievement of one of its saints,


1

Amir Sultan Shamsu d-Dm Muhammad b. 'Aliu'l-

Husayniu'l-Bukharl, born in 1369 A. D. It is said that


once, when he visited Medina, the Sharif of Haramayn
refused to recognize him as a Sayyid. Whereupon a
voice from the tomb of the Prophet acknowledged him
as a descendant of Muhammad. Later he settled at
Bursa where he made 400,000 disciples. He married
Nilufar Khanum, a daughter of the Sultan Bayazld I.

It is true that such alliances between saints and


daughters of ruling princes are commonplace legends
in ufi traditions, but this union is a historical fact. (1>

It is, an admitted fact that he played an important


too,

part as a mediator in the invasion of Timur. He is


recognised also as a saint of the Naqshbandl Order,
and till the abolition of the Monastic Orders in Turkey
three takias known by his name were held by the
(2)
Naqshbandis.
(1) The Danishes* p. 161.

(2) The Danishes, pp. 470, 71, 72.


186 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
The late Canon Sell says about this Order. "The
majority of its followers are still in Persia, but its

influence has been felt elsewhere. The teaching of as-


Suhrawardl was highly mystical and dealt with the
deeper aspect of uflsm. It is not so much now an
Order as a school of mystic philosophy, which has had
a great influence on the teaching of many of the
African Orders and fosters the growth of fatalism
(1)
amongst them."

iv. The NAQSHBANDI ORDER.


The origin of this Order is generally ascribed to
Khwaja Baha'u'd-Dm Naqshband, who died in Persia
in 1389A. D. The word naqshband literally means an
embroiderer or printer on cloth, and, as applied to
Baha Vd-Dln, probably refers to his ancestral profession.
Another explanation, however, is given by a Muslim
writer whom Rose quotes: 'This people (taifa) polish
the exterior of their minds and intellects with pictures,
and being free from the rust and wiles of life are not
of those who are captivated by vain colourings of the
world as varied as those of the changeful chameleon;
and as Naqshband drew incomparable pictures of the
Divine Science, and painted figures of Eternal Inven-
tion, which are not imperceptible, his followers became
celebrated by the title of the Naqshbandls, The
Painters'. (2)

(1) The Religious Orders of Islam, p. 44.

(2) Rose, op. cit. p. 142.


THE FOUR MAIN ORDERS 187

Rose further observes, that, "The History of the


Naqshbandi Order would be of some interest if it could
be recovered, not merely because it has played an
important Muslim thought, but also because it
part in
had not a little influence on the political vicissitudes
of India,Mesopotamia, and, to a less extent, Turkey.
In order to unravel some pieces of the tangled skein it
is essential to set forth the spiritual pedigree of the
Order." For this reason and also because its study is

of more interest than of those of other Religious


Orders we proceed to indicate the 'chain of succession'
of i-his Order as given by Rose a with some alterations
-

and adaptations to bring it in line with the Indian


tradition of its history.
1. Muhammad
2. Abu Bakr
3. Salmanu '1-Farsi; the Persian companion of
Muhammad.
4. Qasim, a son of Abu Bakr.
5. Ja'far adiq, a grandson of Qasim from his

mother's side, and the seventh Shi'a Imam


6. Bayazid of Bistam, (d. 875 A. D.)the founder of
the Tayfurl Khanwada. As he was born after the
death of Ja'far adiq he is believed to have been
spiritually instructed by him. The living medium
is said to have been an Indian, one Abu 'All of
Sind.
7. Abu'l-Hasan Kharqan! (d. 1033-34 A. $>). He
was born after the death of Bayazid and hence is said
(1) Ibid Appendix I. p. 435.
188 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
to have been spiritually instructed by him. Some
writers give as an alternative to Abu'l-Hasan, the
name of
Abu'l-Qasim Gurganl.
4

Shaykh All Farmadl (d. 1078 A. D.). He was


8.

a contemporary of 'Allu'l-Hujwiri, who has spoken

highly of him in his Kashful-Mahjub.


9. Khwaja Abu Yusuf Hamadam (d. 1140 A. D.).
One of his disciples was Ahmad Yasawl, a saint of great
importance. He takes his title from Yasl, or Hadrat-i-
Yasl, as it was commonly called, a place on the north
of Tashkand on the road to Orenburg. Ahmad Yasawi
founded a school of mystic, to which in the fourth
generation belonged Hakim 'Ata, the founder of the
Bakhtashiyya and patron saint of Janissaries.
Khwaja 'Abdu'l-Khaliq GhujdawanI (d. 1179-80
10.

A. D.). He was born at Ghujdawan, six farsakh from


Bukhara. MSS. of his works still exist, but little really
is known about him, except that he studied under the
above-mentioned Shaykh Abu Yusuf. It was he who
formulated the first eight of the eleven rules, to be des-
cribed below, which constitute the tariqa of the
Khwajas. According to Hartman, 'Abdu'l-Khaliq was
taught the habs-i-dam or restraining of the breath by
Khidr, a practice common to one of the forms of the
Yoga.
11. Khwaja *Arif Rewgari. The saint took his
title from Rewgar a place in the neighbourhood of
Bukhara. His death is assigned to the year 1315-16
A. D. but as his pir died in 1179-80 A. D. he must have
either lived to a very old age or like other saints of
THE FOUR MAIN ORDERS 189

this Order, received his instruction spiritually from the


departed plr.

12. Khwaja Mahmud Anjir Faghnawi. The last


name is derived from Faghna a place in the neighbour-
hood of Bukhara, where he was born. There is much
uncertainty about the date of his death, which is
assigned to any year between 1272 and 1316 A. D.
13. Khwaja 'Azizan Shaykh 'All Ramitam (d. 1306
or 1321 A. D.). Ramitan is also a place near Bukhara.
14. Khwaja Muhammad Baba Samasi (d. 1340 or
1354 A. D.). He was born in Samasi a dependency
of Ramitan, lying three farsakh from Bukhara.
15. Khwaja Amir Sayyid Kulal Sokhari (d. 1371
A. D.). Sokhar, two farsakhs from Bukhara, was the
place where he was born and buried. He worked as
a potter (kulal).
16. Khwaja BahaVd-Dm Naqshband. The founder
of theOrder was born in 1318 A. D. in Qasr-i-Arifdn,
two miles from Bukhara, where he also died and
was buried in 1389 A. D. at the age of 73. (1)
Prior to the time BahaVd-Dln the school of
of
Mystics, with which, as we have shown, his name is
closely linked, was known by the name of Tariqa-i-
Khivdjagdn, but since his days it has been called
Tariqa-i-Naqshbandiyya.
In the above pedigree we have shown that the most
of its saints lived in the neighbourhood of Bukhara. It

(1) Sec Rose, The Danishes, Appendix I, pp. 435-6 and also
Khazinatu'l-Asfiya, (Nawalkishor, Cawnpore; Vol II pp. 517-548
Hadratu'l-Quds (Manzil-i-Naqshbandiyya, Lahore).
190 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
is were several breaks in the
also noticeable that there
continuity of its line of succession. But it is held th^t,
since there is vital communion between all the saints,
dead or alive, a Shaykh and his predecessor need not
be contemporaries. One may receive as real an autho-
rityfrom a saint who died several centuries ago, as
from one who may be living in one's life-time. In
other words, the succession consists rather in confor-
mity to the spirit of the mere formal
Shaykh than in
adherence to one's pir. Further, in this Order there
appears a progressive development of its doctrine, and
that, for the most part, in keeping with the teaching
of orthodox Islam. In consequence, of all the ufi

Orders, this one is the most orthodox in its practice.


As has been mentioned more than once, this is

one of the very few Orders which traces its line of


succession to Abu Bakr. This has been done perhaps,
to safeguard it against the intrusion of the idea that
Islam has an esoteric aspect. Such a notion has been
the fruitful source of many 'innovations' in Islam, and
is a common
feature of most of the religious sects and
Darwish Orders which claim 'All as their head.
The orthodoxy of the followers Order does
of this
not permit them practise Qhikr-i-jali, which is
to
recited aloud, but Qhikr-t-khafi, repeated in a low
voice.
There are eleven rules which a Naqshbandl is
required to observe. The first eight, as stated, were
divised by 'Abdu'l-gjialiq and the last three by
Baha'u'd-Dln. They are as follows:
THE FOUR MAIN ORDERS 191

1. Hoshdardam. 'Awareness while breathing/ Not


a breath may be inhaled or exhaled in the state of

forget-fulness of the Divine Presence.


2. Nazar bar qadam.
4

Watching the steps/ A


ufl in walking should always have his eyes on his
footsteps. This he is directed to do in order to
restrain his mind from wandering, and to be able
to concentrate his attention on the Divine Presence.
3. Safar dar watan. 'Journey within one's own
land." A ufl should always keep in mind that
he is making a 'journey' from human to angelic
stages.
4. dar anjuman. 'Ability to enjoy
Jfchilwat soli-

tude even while in an assembly/ Here the aim is to


achieve such power of concentration that, while busy
in the affairs of the world, one may be able to meditate

upon God.
5. Ydd karo. 'Remember/ Never forget the aim
which a ufl has chosen in his life. Sometimes it is
said to mean remembering the dhikr which one has
learnt from the pir.

6. Bdz gasht, 'Restraint/ While practising the


dhikr, the ufi should stop at short intervals and say
some extemporary prayers or repeat the following
words: 'O Lord, Thou only art my goal. I renounce
the benefits of this world and of the world to come
for Thine own sake; bestow upon me Thy blessings and
grant me Thy vision/
7. Nigah ddsht. 'Be watchful/ The ufi is asked
to shut out the affections of the mind. It also means
192 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
that the mind is to guard against the intrusions of evil
thought.
8. Yad dasht. 'Recollect/ To concentrate upon
the Divine Presence without the aid of words or
ideas.
9. IVuquf-i-Zamanl. 'Temporal Pause'. To exa-
mine how one has spent one's time.
4

10. Wuquf-i-Adadl. Numbering Pause'. To know


whether the formula of dhikr has been repeated
as many times as directed by the plr.
11. Wuquf-i-Qalln. 'Heart Pause'. To form in
the mind a picture of one's heart with the word Allah
engraved upon it in Arabic characters.
CHAPTER XI
The Chishti Order.

KHWAJA MU'INU'D-DIN CHISHTI


The Chishti Order was the first important religious
Order to be established in India. It was founded by
KhwSja Abu Ishaq Shim! Chishti, a brief description of
whose life has already been given in the preceding chap-
ter, and was introduced into this country by Khwaja
Mu'inu'd-Din Chishti Sanjari Ajmeri, who was eighth
in the line ot successionfrom the founder of the Order.
He was born in the town
of San jar in Sistan 1142-43
A. D., or according other authorities, in 1136 A. D. He
traced his descent on his mother's side from Hasan, and
on his father's side from Husayn, the grandsons of Mu-
hammad. His ancestors for several generations were
reputed to be mystics, for this reason his own inclina-
tion to mysticism, signs of which appeared in his early
youth, might be said to be hereditary. At the death of
his father, whom he lost when he was only fourteen
years old, he received as his portion of the inheritance a
garden and a mill-stone, and these were his only means
of subsistence.
When he was young, his native place Sanjar
still

was sacked by Tartars, and the sight of the massacre


and awful atrocities committed by the invaders probably
intensified his feeling that the world was a place of
vanity. Thi^impression was the more deeply engraved
194 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

upon his mind by his contact with a certain Shavkh


Ibrahim Qandozl, who was held in high esteem for the
sanctity of his life and because he was subject to state
of ecstasy. It was to him that Mu'inu'd-Dln owed his
violent experience of 'conversion', whereby he . finally

broke away from the world and adopted the of a life

recluse. It is stated that once when Mu'inu'd Din was

watering the plants of his gardeiy Shaykh Ibrahim


Qandozi happened to pass by. On seeing him, Mu'lnu'd-
Dm ran out and with great respect conducted him into
his garden and presented to him some of its choicest
fruits. Shaykh Ibrahim, pleased at his warm hospitality,
is said to have transmitted to him his own deep spiritual

vitality. There was thus effected, in one instant by a


symbolic operation, a complete and lasting transforma-
tion in Mu'inu'd-Dm's life. This sacramental act of
1

'transmission was performed by an outward sign


connected with a piece of bread, which Ibrahim, taking
out of his wallet first chewed and then handed to
Mu'inu'd-Dm for him to eat. This bread having been
in close contact with the holy man was believed to
possess supernatural power, and is said to have acted
like magic, imparting to him, in an instant, all spiritual

knowledge, with the result that he at once resolved to


renounce whatever worldly possessions he had. He
therefore sold all that belonged to him and whatever
he realized thereby he distributed among the poor.
This is the only occassion when Shaykh Ibrahim's
name is mentioned in connection with Mu'lnu'd-Dm,
butwe shall not be far wrong if we surmise that the
THE CHISTI ORDER 195

young boy of Sanjar, with his inborn religious dis-


position, must have met his fellow-townsman more
than once, for the man had a great reputation as a
very spiritually-minded person. What passed in the
mind of Mulnu'd-Dln in that hour of his deep spiri-
tual experience when he met the holy man in his
garden must remain a secret shrouded in mystery, such
as veils the experience of many lives as being too
sacred to disclose. The incident, however, illustrates
the fact that contact with a saintly person increases
the fervour of one's spiritual life, and in this way
stimulates one's love towards God. The story of a
great change in Mu'inu'd-Din's life, as described by
his biographers, also illustrates incidently the striking
belief of Muslim mystics that spiritual vitality can be
transmitted through some material substance, which
has been in intimate contact with the person of a holy
man. Thus saliva, or any portion of food that has
been chewed by such persons, is regarded as surcharg-
ed with spiritual power that has emanated from them-
selves.

However that may be, Khwaja Mu inu'd-Dm


4

after his complete renunciation of the world, entered


upon the life of a wandering hermit in search of a
spiritual guide. First he spent a couple of years in

Samarqand to complete his religious education, and


then he went to Bukhara for further study of the
Quran under the guidance of Mawlana Hisamu'd-Din
Bukharl, a mystic and renowned exponent of the
Muslim scriptures. Eventually be came to Harun, a
196 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

town in the province of NlshSpur, where he was


4

formally initiated as a disciple of Khwaja Uthman


Harunl, a famous saint of the Christ! Order. After he
had served his master for a long time how long the
authorities differ, though some make it a period of

twenty years he was appointed as his vice-gerent and


directed to go to India. Some biographers mention
that was the Prophet Muhammad himself who, in a
it

vision, asked him to go to India as his representa-


tive and convert the idolaters to the faith of Islam.
In any case Khwaja Mu'mu'd-Din taking leave of his
spiritual master, started out on his long journey which
was to end finally at Ajmer in India.
To appreciate the spiritual merit said to have been
acquired by Mu'mu'd-Dm on his journey, it is neces-
sary to remember that, according to ufi doctrine,
mysticism does not merely consist of knowledge to be
acquired but includes power and illumination that may
be gained through personal contact with living saints.

Such power and illumination may also be


spiritual
sought and received at the tomb of a departed saint.
4

The ufi in other words, believes literally in the


1

That 'Friends of God do not


1

communion of saints .

die, is a part of his creed. To him this means com-


munion with all saints, whether still alive and waiting

for the call of their Beloved, or departed to enjoy that


eternal union with God for which, while alive, they
had denied themselves the riches of this world and
despised the rewards of paradise and the torments of
hell. Consequently the degree of the spiritual sanctity
THE CHISTI ORDER 197

of a mystic is often determined by the number of


saints with whom
he has actually come in contact, and
the number of shrines he has visited.
The hagiographers of Islam, anxious to enhance the
sanctity and degree power of Mu'lnu'd-
of .spiritual
Dln, describe at length how he met all the famous
saints of that period and visited all the shrines, in the
course of his long journey from Nishapur to Ajmer.
First he came to Baghdad, where he is said to have
4

met the great Ghawth Abdu' 1-Qadir Gilani, the


founder of the Qadiri Order. There he also met
Abu'n-Najib Suhrawardl and his son and successor
Shihabu'd-Dln the most renowned saints of the Suh-
rawardl Order. Thus Mu'mu'd-Dln, though belonging to
the Chishtl Order, was also endowed with the spiritual
gifts of these other two famous religious Orders.
Qadiriyya and Suhrawardiyya. Then passing through
Hamadan and Tabriz he met in turn Shaykh Abu Yusuf
4

Hamadani, and Abu Sa ld Tabriz!. The former was a


mystic of great fame, and the latter was the spiritual
teacher of the renowned saint Mawlana Jalalu'd-Dln
Ruml, author of Mathnaun. Again, in Isfahan he met
KJjwaja Qutbu'd-Dln Bakjjtiyar Kakl, then in search
of a spiritual guide. This man was destined to be his
own famous disciple and spiritual successor in India.

Passing through Mehna, he visited the tomb of the


saint Abu Sa'ld Abu'l-Kbayr, and in Khirqan he visited
the tomb of Abu'l-Hasan JjChirqanL Then, when he
came to Astrabad he met Shayl^bl Nasiru'd-Dm, an-
other saint with a great reputation. In Herat he
198 SUn SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

stopped for some time at the tomb of ImSm 'Abdullah


AnsSri, who had been a companion of the Prophet.

Leaving Herat he came to a place known as Sabzwar,


where the first incident in demonstration of his spiri-
tual power is said to have taken place. This was
connected with the miraculous conversion of Muham-
mad Yadgar, the Governor of that place. This man
was notorious for his bad conduct, and had acquired
great wealth by extortion. As Mu'lnu'd-Dln passed
through his territory he happened to enter his garden,
and there spread out his carpet by the tank to rest.
Yadgar's servants requested him to quit the place and to
take somewhere else, explaining that their
shelter
master, the owner, was shortly expected, and if he found
him in his garden he would deal severely with them-
selves,and might possibly drive him out with insult.
Mu'Inu'd-Din, however, would not be persuaded to
leave the garden, either by entreaties or threats. In the
meantime the Governor appeared on the scene and
advanced towards Mu'inu'd-Dln in a threatening atti-
tude, but as soon as he met the steady gaze of his serious
eyes, fear and trembling seized hold of him, and he saw so
clearly the evil state of his own sinful soul, that he
was filled with dread of eternal punishment. The
narrative goes on to say that in the silence that
followed a battle went on in the Governor's soul, the
issue of which wrought a tremendous change in him.
The once haughty man, now repentant for hispast
sins and resolved to make amends for the future,
threw himself at the feet of Mu'inu'd-Din, and in
THE CHISTI ORDER 199

words Zacchaeus said: "Master, I repent


like those of
of all my evil deeds, and promise that whatever I
have acquired by unjust method, I will return with
compensation; and in expiation of my past iniquities
I will bestow the rest of my goods on the poor. And
do thou accept me as one of thy disciples." Then
Mu'lnu'd-Din shared with him a cup of water, drinking
half himself and giving the rest to him. In the perfor-
mance of this sacramental act he is said to have
transmitted some of his own spiritual power to the
new disciple. The effect of the water thus drunk was
instantaneous, for we are told that a radical change
came over the man, his heart was illuminated and
the former notorious sinner was changed into a saint.
In accordance with his declaration he sold all that he
had, compensated those he had injured, and distributed
what was left to the poor. Finally, he set at liberty
all his slaves. The proud Governor, now a humble
disciple divested of all worldly encumbrances,
his

accompanied his new master as far as Hisar Shadman


where, after receiving his final instructions, he remain-
ed as his vice-gerent, seeking to lead others into the
mystic path.
Leaving Balkh, Mu'Inu'd-Din passed on his way
through numerous towns and cities, visiting shrines,
meeting the leading saints and scholars of his time,
working miracles, turning sinners into saints, and
converting into Islam here a group of Magi and there
a village of idolaters. Advancing thus like a victor
who subdues his opponents and receives homage from
200 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
his adherents, Mu lnu'd-Dln
k
entered India and march-
ing over the frontier came to the Punjab, which had
already been conquered and subdued by invaders
from the North. In Lahore he spent some time in
meditation at the tomb of Data Ganj Bakhsh. At
the distance of a yard from the grave of this saint
a small structureis pointed out as the site of the
hut occupied by Mu'lnu'd-Dln during his residence at
the tomb. From Lahore he went to Delhi, where
through his miracles he is said to have converted many
Hindus to the faith Eventually in 1165-66
of Islam.
A.D he reached Ajmer which was destined to be his
last resting place, and the Mecca of the members of
the Chishti Order throughout the world, f
The narrative of his early residence in Ajmer is

embellished with stories of supernatural events, such as


miracles performed by himself, but these have not the
slightest historical value. Nevertheless we give a brief
description of some of these here, so as to acquaint the
reader with Muslim ideas of this renowned saint.
In Ajmer he came into conflict with the ruling
prince, Raja Prithvl Raj, who resented his entrance
into his dominion, and a struggle followed between the
saint and the court magicians. The discomfiture of
the Raja's magicians before the miraculous power of
Mu'lnu'd-Din is described in terms no less striking
and impressive than those used of the men who
opposed Moses in the court of Pharaoh.
On first entering the city the spot selected by
Mu'lnu'd-Din as a resting place happened to be the
THE CHISTI ORDER 201

place reserved for the Raja's camels, and he was not


allowed to stay there. The saint, after pronouncing a
curse on the camels, which deprived them of the power
to rise from the ground, took shelter under a tree on
the banks of lake Anasagar. The following morning
the drivers found that the camels could not be made to
stand up. Concluding that this mishap was the result
of the discourtesywhich they had shown to the saint,
they sought him out and apologised for their rudeness,
and begged him to restore the camels to their normal
state. Instantly from Mu^lnu'd-Dln, the
at a sign
camels recovered their power and stood up. News
of this soon spread throughout the city, so
miracle
that everybody was talking about it. The Raja thus

hearing of the intrusion of a Muslim mendicant into


his territory became exceedingly angry and ordered
his expulsion. When a body of soldiers approached
the with a view to carrying out their master's
saint
orders, he, like Muhammad on the occasion of his
memorable flight to Medina, took up a handful of dust
and threw it over them. This imitation of the
Prophet's act resulted in similar disastrous conse-
quences, some of the soldiers being struck with blind-
ness, others with paralysis. Rendered powerless by
the miraculous act of Mu'lnu'd-Din, they invoked his
help and were quickly restored to their normal condi-
tion,on accepting Islam. Physical force having failed
to expel him from his territory, the Raja strove to
overthrow this champion of Islam in intellectual
combat, hoping that by this means Mu'inu'd-Din
202 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
would acknowledge his defeat and leave the country
crestfallen. Consequently on the following morning
Ram Dev, the royal mahant, together with hundreds
of leading pandits, was ordered to meet Mu'lnu'd-Din
in religious debate. glance from the saint was
One
sufficient to disclose to the mahant the falsity of his
own polytheistic beliefs, and to reveal to him the truth
and beauty of Islam. Thus conquered and subdued
he became a Muslim. Thereupon Mu'inu'd-Dm drank
some water from a cup and passed it on to the mahant
for him to finish. When he had done so a miraculous

change came over him, his heart was illuminated, and


he sought to be admitted into the saint's discipleship.
Mu'inu'd-Din performed the usual rites of initiation
and changed his name from Ram Dev to Shadi Dev.
According to some biographers, his former name was
not Dev but Deo, the latter meaning an evil spirit.
Thus it came about that he is believed by some to be

still alive as a supernatural being, and persons sup-


posed to be possessed of evil spirits invoke his name
during the annual 'urs of the saint at Ajmer. In
writing these two names in Persian character there
isof course no difference between Dev and Deo, and
it is most probable that this peculiar belief about Ram
Dev first arose through a confusion in the reading of
his name.
The was now complete. He
Raja's discomfiture
had failed to
vanquish the saint through the help of
his soldiers, who indeed had proved traitors to his

cause; the royal mahant had not only ignominously


THE CHISTI ORDER 203

failed him but had himself fallen a victim to the power


of this Muslim beggar. Alarmed at Mu'mu'd-Din's
supernatural power, the Raja next sought the assistance
of Jaypal Jogi, the chief magician of the court. Muslim
narrators at this point give the most extraordinary
account of the conflict which is supposed to have
taken place between Mu'lnu'd-Din and this magician;
in fact the story of the display of supernatural power
on both sides surpasses even the wonders of Egypt
during the time of Moses.

Jaypal,accompanied by a thousand of his disciples,


advanced meet Mu'mu'd-Dln in a combat which
to
was to be conducted by invisible forces, and as his first
precautionary measure, he took control of lake Ana-
sagar, and so cut off the water supply of the saint and
his followers. His object in doing this was not merely to

deprive the Muslims of water to drink, but more


especially to prevent them from performing their legal
ablutions, without which, Jaypal evidently was aware,

prayers offered as a protection against the evil influence


of the black art would be ineffective. Shadi Dev, the new
convert to Islam, acting under the orders of Mu'lnu'd-
Din, somehow managed to get a bucketful of water
from the lake. He had no sooner carried out the order,
than the water of the entire lake, and of all the wells
and water-reservoirs in Ajmer became absolutely dry.
When the distress of the people through lack of water
became very great, Jaypal approached Mu'lnu'd-Dm
and thus addressed him. "You pretend to be a holy
man, and yet you deliberately permit men, women and
204 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
children to suffer the torments of thirst; such callous-
ness is not in keeping with your pretensions."
Mu'mu'd-Din, moved by his rebuke, ordered the con-

tents of the bucket to be poured back into the lake,


and instantly the water supply of Ajmer was restored
to its normal proportions. Then ensued a series of
magical attacks initiated by Jaypal, but these were all
repelled by the efficacy of the saint's prayers. To
mention only a few by way of illustration: hundreds
of ferocious animals and reptiles, such as lions, tigers,
snakes, scorpions, etc. would appear from all directions
at the command of the royal magician, and dart towards
Mu'mu'd-Din, but they disappeared as soon as they
touched the magic circle which the saint had drawn
round himself and his disciples. Then fire would
descend from above, reducing all the neighbouring trees
to ashes, but not a spark would enter in the protective
circle. Failing in such displays of his magical art,
Jaypal then spread out his carpet of deer skin, and
seating himself thereon, flew high into the air, but
Mu'inu'd-Din despatched his wooden clog after him,
which beat him and drove him down to earth again.
Thus defeated and humiliated, Jaypal accepted Islam,
and was re-named 'Abdullah He then requested
1
.

Mu'lnu'd-Din to pray for him that he might remain


alive till the day of judgment. The saint assured him
that the favour would be granted, but informed him
that on the expiration of the natural length of life, he
would become invisible. This story accounts for the
which is current among the devotees of Mu'inu'd-
belief
THE CHISTI ORDER 205

Din that Jaypal, or 'Abdu'llSh is still alive in Ajmer,


and that when pilgrims to the shrine lose their path
it is who guides them, and when they are in distress
he
it is he who helps them. In consequence, it is a
common practice among the pilgrims at Ajmer to
invoke him by the name of 'Abdu'llah Baybanl i. e.,
'Abdu'llah of the wilderness, it being supposed that
he haunts the wilderness in the neighbourhood of
Ajmer.
Mu'Inu'd-Dm, thus triumphant over all the devices
of the Raja, was now permitted to reside in Ajmer
peacefully and even to start making disciples. Neverthe-
less biographers state that, after some time, the Raja

began to persecute his disciples, and, in particular, to


oppose plans for the conversion of Hindus to Islam.
Mu'lnu'd-Dln exasperated at the behaviour of the Raja,
is said to have ejaculated words that were meant to
in

indicate the supreme authority granted to him by God


over India: "I herewith hand over Prithvi Raj alive
into the hands of king Shihbu'd-Dln!" It is said that
a few days later this fate actually befell him for it was
in 1192 A. D. the year in question, that Sultan Shihabu'd-
Dln Muhammad Gborl marched from Ghor with a
large army to fight against the Raja. A decisive battle
was fought at Sirhind in which the Raja was defeated
and taken prisoner. Shihabu'd-Din attributing his
victory to the blessing of the saint, came to Ajmer to
pay him his respects, and while there he transformed
the great temple into a mosque in the brief space of
two and a half days. It is for this reason that the
206 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
building, as it stands to-day, is called Dhd'i Din kd
Jhonprd, the two-and-a-half-day structure.
Shihabu'd-Din at the conclusion of his campaign
appointed one of his slaves named, Qutbu'd-Dln, to be
his viceroy in Delhi, and this man, on the death of his

master, founded the Slave Dynasty.


It appears that Mu'mu'd-Din remained a celibate

even to old age, but eventually he married, though his


age at the time cannot be stated with certainty. The
Muslim narrators make him out to have been eighty-
nine years old, and say that he took two wives by whom
he had four children. There is undoubtedly some
discrepancy about his age, and in any case chronology
is not a strong point with these biographers. It seems
clear, however, that his wedded life began after the

conquest of Ajmer by Shihabu'd-Din. His first wife


was Ummatu'llah, who, according to some, was the
daughter of the Muslim Governor of the fort in Ajmer.
Others, however, say that she was the daughter of
some Hindu prince, and that she was taken captive at
the conquest of Ajmer and presented to Mu'mu'd-Din
who first converted her to the faith of Islam and then
4

married her. His second wife, Asmatu'llah, was the


daughter of a leading Muslim of that time. His first wife
gave birth to a daughter only, Bibi Hafis Jamal, who
became renowned for her piety and austerity. She
was appointed as one of the successors to Mu inu'd-Din,
4

and was by him authorised to make disciples of women.


She is one of the very few women saints of Islam to
whom this privilege is said to have been granted. She
THE CHISTI ORDER 207

was married to one Shaykh Riyadu'd-Dln, by whom


she had two children, both of whom died in infancy.
Bib! Hafiz Jamal lies buried near the tomb of Mu'inu'd-
Din. By his second wife, 'Asmatu'llah, he had three
children. His first-born, Hisamu'd-Din, mysteriously
disappeared in infancy. Some Muslims say that he
was a great favourite with the Abdals, and that he
joined them when a child and so was never seen again.
His second son, Fakhru'd-Din, took to farming, and
passed his life in a village some thirty miles from Ajmer,
and died twenty years afterhis father. His third son,
Abu Sa
4

dwelt in Ajmer where he died and was


ld,
buried within the shrine of Mu'in'ud-Din, in a porch
under a marble dome known as Karnatakl Dalan,
(Karnatak porch). Mu'lnud-Dln's two wives lie buried
near a mosque called Masjid-i-Sandal. ,

Khwaja Mu mu'd-Din
k

himself died in 1236 A. D.


His tomb in Ajmer is the most celebrated of all shrines
in India. On the occasion of his 'urs, which celebrates
the anniversary of his death, Muslims from every part
of India make pilgrimage to it. A remarkable feature
of the celebrations at this time is that of cooking rice
with several other ingredients in two huge cauldrons
and then the distribution of it in portions to pilgrims
and visitors. This is the only shrine, so far as we know,
where no Christian is permitted to enter. This re-
was imposed not very long ago owing to the
striction
careless behaviour of certain European visitors.
There are several mosques connected with the
dargdh, one of these was built by Akbar. In it there is
208 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
a Madrasa, largely supported by grants from H. E. H.
the Nizam of Hyderabad. The Emperor Akbar became
greatly devoled to the Khwaja from the time that he
had a son in answer to the prayer of a Chishtl saint,

Shaykh Sallm, a descendant of Baba Farld. This saint


had taken up his abode in a cave some 23 miles from
Agra. When that son, afterwards to rule as Jehaoglr,
was born to Akbar, he was named Sallm after the
saint, and that area in which v/as the cave of the saint,
became transformed into the famous capital city of
Akbar, Fatehpur Sikri. Akbar also made annual pilgri-
mage toAjmer every year and distributed large gifts
in honour of Khwaja Mu'in ud-Dln.
CHAPTER XII
The Chishti Order after the death of
Mu'inu'd-Din.
1. KHWAJA QUTBU'D-DIN
Two of the lesser known
vice-gerents of Mu'inu'd-
founded minor sub-divisions in the Chishti Orders.
Very little isknown about these men beyond their
names. One was Shah 'Abdullah Karmani of Bengal,
who founded the Karmanl Order, the other was Hadrat
PirKarim of Ceylon, who founded the Karimi Order.
Muslim Hagiographers are for the most part silent
about their activities. We do not know that the fame
of Mu'inu'd-Din had, in hislife-time, extended as far
as Bengal So that we cannot say whether
and Ceylon.
these men came of set purpose to Ajmer, or whether
they were merely adventurers and by chance met with
Mu'inu'd-Din and became his disciples. The presence,
however, of large numbers of devotees of Mu'inu'd-
Din in Bengal to-day, is clear indication of that
country's early contact with the saint of Ajmer.
But the chief successor and heir to all the spiritual
gifts of was Qu^bu'd-Din Kki. In
Mu'inu'd-Din
Islamic hagiography he is portrayed as one of the few
saints who, from their very birth exhibited tokens of

special divine favour, and whose subsequent spiritual


dignity was foreshadowed by portents accompanying
the natural development of their physical and mental
210 SUFI SAINT AND SHRINES IN INDIA
life. Records of saints of this type indicate the uft
belief in the doctrine of election. Just as according to
Muslim theologians God chooses the Prophets without
any regard to their merits, as an especially privileged
body of people to be His messengers and His friends,
so, according to certain ufis, He elects some of His
saints even before their birth to be His favourites, His
lovers or Beloved. Although belief in such "predes-
tinated-saints" forms no part of early Tasawwuf, they
occupy a prominent place in Indian hagiography.
There can be no doubt, however, that miracles
ascribed to their infancy, and this belief in their "pre-
1

ordained spiritual dignity/ must have been invented


by their devotees long after their death, for these
saints do not seem to have claimed such high privileges
for themselves.

Qutbu'd-Dln is described as one of the favourite


saints of God. He was born 1186 A. D. at Farghana
in

in Isfahan. '
Many miraculous events are said to have
occurred at his birth. His biographers, describing the
events of the night in which he was born, say that the
whole house was illuminated with a dazzling light, and
that as soon as he was born, he bowed his head in
adoration to God, and continued in loud Qhikr till the
morning. It is also related that his mother knew half
the Quran by heart, and that the child, hearing her
recite it had himself learnt that portion while still an
infant.
We are told that he came of noble lineage though
his home was not a wealthy one. He himself claimed
CHISTI ORDER AFTER MU'INU'DIN 211

to be a descendant of the Prophet, and his genealogical


tree in line from Husayn,
shows him to be the sixteenth
the grandson of Muhammad, and ninth from the eighth
Imam directly descended from 'All. It further appears
that almost all his ancestors were mystics, so that the
very blood of ufis ran in his veins. Indeed, if we are
to believe our sources, he began, in early life, to show

signs of the mystic's temperament. His father died


when he was a little child and he was brought up

solely by his mother, a pious and God-fearing woman.


There can be little doubt that he owed much of his
religious discipline to the early training of his devoted
mother.
1
He received his instruction in Tasawwuf from
several teachers, in his time Baghdad was not only a
centre of secular and religious learning but also of
mysticism, and it was there that he studied it under
its most renowned teachers, chief of whom was
Shihabu'd-Din Suhrawardi, the founder of the order
of that name. The fame of Baghdad as the scene of
the activities of such noted saints as Shihabu'd-Dln
Suhrawardi and 'Abdu'l-Qadir Gilani, had drawn
Mu'inu'd-Dln there while on his way to India and it
was while young Qutbu'd-Din was there studying that
(

he met Mu'inu'd-Dm in the mosque of Abu'l-Laytfa,


and accepted his discipleship.
j

Soon after Mu'lnu'd-Din had settled down in


Ajmer Qutbu'd-Din Baghdd, and following the
left

footsteps of his master, made his way towards India.


As he journeyed he paid the customary visits to the
212 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

tombs and shrines of the saints, and met the living


ufis of his day. In Multan he stayed for some time
with Baha'u'd-Dln Zakariya and Jalalu'd-Din TabrizI,
both pioneer saints of the Suhrawardi Order. His
fame as a saint had already preceded
his appearance

in India, so that when at length he reached the Muslim


capital of Delhi, having followed the routes taken by
his master before him he was hailed with every token
of honour and respect. The king and the populace
conducted him into the city and prevailed upon him to
take up his abode there. Mu inu'd-Din hearing the
l

news of his arrival in Delhi, appointed him his vice-

gevent and permitted him to stay there.


It was during this period that the pioneer saints of

the Suhrawardi order were trying to establish them-


selves For instance, Baha'u'd-Din Zakariya
in India.
had made Multan a centre of the Order. Again,
had on the request of
Jalalu'd-Din, his fellow-disciple
King Altamash, taken up his abode temporarily in
Delhi, nevertheless marked preference was shown for
the Chishti Order. King Altamash himself, successor
of SultanQutbu'd-Din, the founder of the slave
dynasty, by professing his allegiance to this order had
given it his royal patronage, holding Qutbu'd-Din his
spiritual master in the highest esteem.
When
the office of the chief Qadi in Delhi fell
vacant, the king, anxious to show his regard for
Qutbu'd-Din offered it to him, but he declined it. Sub-
sequently Najmu'd-Dln Sughra, a notable scholar and
close friend ofMu'inu'd-Din, was appointed to the
CHISTI ORDER AFTER MU'INU'DIN 213

office. Even so these saints who enjoyed such royal


support, were from time to time victims of the
intrigues and jealousy of high officials.
f

Thefollowing incident serves to illustrate the state


of things that existed. Najmu'd-Din Sughra was at
first on being promoted,
a friend of Qutbu'd-Dln, but
from the office the chief Qadi to the dignity of
of

Shaykhu'l-Islam, he became very jealous of him. In


particular he was jealous of his increasing popularity
with the people, and exceedingly vexed at the honour in
which he was held by the king. He tried every means
he knew to bring discredit upon him, but failed. During
a brief visit of Mu'mu'd-Dln to Delhi he found an
opportunity to complain to him against Qutbu'd-Dln in
words that clearly revealed his hatred. The master be-
coming thus apprehensive for the safety of his beloved
disciple, spoke to him before leaving for Ajmer, in the

following affectionate manner: "My son Qutbu'd-Din!


Idesire that you should come along with me to Ajmer
and that there, as my successor, you should exercise
authority as spiritual guide/' Thus Qutbu'd-Din,
always obedient to his master's instructions, left Delhi
in the company of his master after bidding farewell, to
his friends and It is said, however, that when
disciples.
they reached the gate of the city, the king and almost
the whole population, stricken with grief followed
them with loud lamentation, and urged Qutbu'd-Din to
return to the city. Mu'inu'd-Din was deeply moved
by the touching scene, and commending Qutbu'd-Din
to the protection of God, allowed him to return.
214 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
QUTBU'D-DIN'S TITLES.
Qutbu'd-Din is known by the two titles of "Bakhti-
yar" and "Kaki", which mean respectively "a friend of
1

fortune," and a "man of cakes '. The name Bakhtivar


was given to him by his master Mu'inu'd-Din but how
he acquired the other is variously explained. The
following is the account of its origin as given by

Nizamu'd-Din of Delhi who was second in the line of


succession from Qutbu'd-Din. He relates how that
once when Qutbu'd-Din was sitting near the tank
known as Shamsiya in Delhi, some friends of his drew
near and expressed a desire to eat hot cakes. The
saint at once plunged his hand into the water of the
tank and drew forth just such cakes as his friends
desired, and from that day he came to be spoken of by
this name of Kaki.

HIS DEATH.

Early biographers of Qutbu'd-Din have left us a


vivid account of the last days of this remarkable man.
They describe how he himself selected the very spot
where he desired to be buried and the stipulation he
made concerning the person who alone should be
allowed to wash his corpse. Towards the close of his
life he named Faridu'd-Din, his disciple, as his successor,

though the latter was not present when the end came.
One of Qufbu'd-Din's last acts was to bid his disciples
to make over to Faridu'd-Din his robe, prayer-carpet,
shoes and staff, properties which since the commence-
CHISTI ORDER AFTER MU'INU'DIN 215

ment had been passed on from master to


of the order
successor, and were thus regarded as holy relics.

MUSIC IN THE CHISHTI ORDER.


A characteristic feature
of the mystics of this Order
is use of music, and, although according to the
their
orthodox teaching of Islam such is forbidden to Muslims,
they attach great importance to it. They call it
1

Sama literally 'hearing , but it is described by one of


the saints of the Order as "the hearing of harmonious
sounds which move the heart, and kindle the fire of
love for God/' appears that through the influence
It

of Qutbu'd-Dln the custom of holding musical festivals


became very popular. The orthodox leaders were
alarmed at the frequency of such assemblies. In Delhi
music became the subject of fierce controversy between
the guardians of the shari'at and the ufls of this Order.
Thus the orthodox 'Ulama petitioned King Altamash
to put a stop to the use of music by exercising his
royal authority, but he, embarrassed on the one hand
by his loyalty to Qutbu'd-Dln and on the other by his
regard for the law of Islam, adopted a strictly neutral
attitude in the matter. But popular feeling triumphed
over orthodox opposition, and it is reported that festi-

vals of song, prolonged at times for several days, were


frequently held in Delhi.
2. BABA FARID SHAKARGANJ.
The Faridi section of the Chishti Order.
, Farldu'd-Din Mas'ud Shakarganj, who is popularly
spoken of as Bba Farid, was the chief successor of
216 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Qufbu'd-Din, and the section of the Chishti Order
founded by him is known as Faridiyya. It is said that
he belonged to a noble and ancient family of Kabul.
During the invasion of Chengiz Khan his grandfather
Shu'ayb with his family fled from their ancestoral
home and took refuge in the Punjab, where he was
appointed Qadi of Kathwal, a town in the district
of Multan. It was here that Farldu'd-Din was
born.
From his childhood he was deeply religious, and it
is probable that in early life he was much influenced

by Baha'u'dJDin Zakariya of the Suhrawardi Order, to


whom he owed all his education, though he did not
accept him as his guide in the mystic way. When
seventeen years' old he came in contact with Qutbu'd-
Dln during the latter's short stay in Multan and became
his disciple, receiving his initiation at his hands in the
Chishti Order. Soon
having completed his reli-
after,

gious and secular studies under Baha'u'd-Dln Zakariya,


he followed Qutbu'd-Din to Delhi. There he served
his master with great zeal and fervour, and led a life

of severe and piety. Consequently his


austerity
fame spread and wide, and soon crowds of people
far

began to come to him with urgent requests that he


would intercede with God for them. But disliking
popularity and prefering solitude, he left Delhi with
his master's permission and went to reside at Hansi.

Even here he was not allowed to pass his time in quiet-


ness and so fled to Ajodhya where he stayed for a
considerable time. The last sixteen years of his life,
CHISTI ORDER AFTER MU'INU'DIN 217

however, were spent at Kathwil in Multan, the scene


of his early life.

Many stories are current concerning his austerity


and self-mortification. He is said to be one of the
few saints of Islam who have performed their prayers
continuously for forty nights, and he did this hanging
head downwards, suspended by the feet in a well. We
are told that he used to take great care to conceal
his austerities. On
the occasion of the prolonged
prayer just referred to, having searched diligently for
some place where he could remain unnoticed, he
sought the help of a friend who would tie him every
night in the required position, and at the same time
guard his secret closely. He found such a place
in a
mosque in Uchh, the muadhdhin of which
agreed to hang him by his feet every night and
release him before the congregational prayer at
dawn.

THE ORIGIN OF HIS TITLE 'SHAKARGANJ\


A simple story is related in explanation of his title
'Shakarganf. It is mother, in order to
said that his
inculcate in the child the habit of performing the
regular daily prayers, used to place a few sweets under
his prayer-carpet as an inducement. Once she neg-
lected to do so, but Farid, having rolled up his carpet
was not disappointed, because instead of the few sweets
he expected to find there was under the carpet an
abundant supply. His nickname Heaps of Sweets is
said to rest on this story!
218 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
OTHER TITLES.
Baba Farid is believed to be still a wonder-working
saint, and he is invoked by his devotees in time of
trouble. So high indeed is the esteem in which he is
held that he has been given no less than 101 titles, and
these are often repeated as a charm to heal the sick,
to escape affliction and to obtain one's desires. A few
The Present, The Praised,
of these titles are as follows;
The Perfect, The Truthful, The Patient, The Great,
The Majestic, The First, The Last, The Outward, The
Inward, The Land, The Ocean, The Light of God, The
Sight of God, The Grace of God, The Liberality of God,
The Secret of God, The Spirit of God.
It will be noticed that some of these titles are to
be found in the famous Ninety-nine Beautiful Names
of God, e.
g., The Truth, The Great. Moreover,
the titles, The First, The Last, The Outward and The

Inward, are the four names especially used by Muslim


mystics as attributes of God.

MARRIED LIFE AND DEATH.


He passed the greater part of his life as a celibate,
but married in his old age. His first wife is said to
have been Princess Huzaira, the daughter of Balban,
King of Delhi. Shortly afterwards he took two more
wives, who were the maid-servants presented by the
king to his daughter on the occasion of her marriage
to the saint. We are told that the king gave a handsome
dowry and a palace to his daughter, in order that she
might escape the sufferings of poverty as the wife of
CHISTI ORDER AFTER MUINU'DIN 219

a hermit, but she very soon decided to share the ascetic


life of her husband and consequently distributed her
entire wealth to the According to certain
poor.
biographers Farid had six sons and four daughters.
The eldest son Shaykh Badru'd-Dln Sulayman, later
became one of his vice-gerents, while the youngest
daughter married 'All Ahmad abir, of Piran Kaliar, his
own nephew and one of his chief successors.
Baba Farid died at the age of 93, in 1265-6 A. D.
and was buried at Pak Patan in the Punjab, where his
'urs is celebrated every year on the 5th, Muharram.
His mausoleum contains a door, called "Bihishti Dar-
waza\ the Door of Paradise, which is opened only on
4

the day of his wr5, on which occasion his devotees


make a point of passing through it. In explanation of
this name andpractice it is said that once, when
Nizamu'd-Dln, the successor of Farldu'd-Dln, was
present at the shrine, he had a vision of Mahammad
standing at this door, and saying: "O Nijamu'd-Din
whosoever shall enter this door will be saved." Since
then the door has been known by the name of the Door
of Paradise.
CHAPTER XIII

The Nizami and Sabiri Sections of the


Chishti Order.
The Faridi section of the Chishti Order gave rise to
two streams of mystical teaching associated with two
famous disciples of Baba Farld, namely Nigamu'd-Din
4

Mahbub-i-Ilahl of Delhi, and Alau'd-Dln 'All Ahmad


abir of Piran Kaliar. These two sub-divisions are
known respectively as the Nizamiyya and the abiriyya,
and no section of the Chishti order enjoys so great
popularity as these two, whose adherents exceed those
of any other branch.

1. THE NIZAMI SECTION OF THE CHISTI


ORDER.
Nizamu'd-Dln was himself born in Budaun in 1236-7
A.D. but his grandparents had come from Bukhara
and settled down in India. His father died when he
was a child of five and so he was indebted to his mother
Zulaykha for his early training. From the various
accounts left to us we gather that she was a very pious
woman, who exhibited extraordinary trust in God, and
there can be little doubt that it was owinr* to her early
influence that her son grew up to be spiritually-minded
and in consequence became one of the renowned
saints of Islam. Nizamu'd-Din proved himself to be an
obedient son and showed great affection for his mother.
Indeed, so strong was his attachment to her, and so
NIZAMI AND SABIRI OF CHISTI ORDER 221

great his reverence for her, that even after her death
he made it a habit to visit her tomb frequently.
When twenty years old he heard of the fame of
Baba Farld and went to Ajodhya, where the saint was
residing, and in due course he became his disciple.
After he had satisfied his master with his progress in
the mystic path, he was appointed his vice-gerent and
sent to Delhi. Here, however, his relations with suc-
cessive emperors were not happy. This was in part
due to the fact that he had made it a rule never to pay
a purely ceremonial visit to the royal court, and this
rule he observed so strictly that even when pressure
was brought to bear upon him by the emperors them-
selves he would not break it. Nevertheless the hostile
attitude of the rulers did not prevent leading personal-
ities of the court from becoming his disciples.
royal
Moreover, so great was the esteem in which he was
held by the people that hundreds would come every
day from far and near to seek his blessing. The defiant
attitude of a person of such influence was considered
by the emperors to be dangerous, and the following
incident will illustrate the strained relations that were
apt to exist between the king and this saint.
In pursuance of an old custom of Muslim rulers, the

king, Mubarak Khiljl, at the appearance of a new moon


used to give audience to the courtiers and the leading
citizens of Delhi, and they in turn wished him happiness
and prosperity for the month. Nizamu'd-Din persistent-
ly refused on these occasions to visit the king and offer
the customary greeting. This was looked upon as an
222 SUFI
4
SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

affront to the king, who, in consequence, threatened


to take severe measures against Nisamu'd-Dln if he
absented himself at the next new moon. The saint on
being informed of the threat, visted his mother's tomb,
and after offering the usual prayers, he is reported tc
have said, "Dear mother, if the king not dead by the
i*

appearance of the next moon, I shall never come to

your tomb again.


11
Now the fact is that by a strange
coincidence, at the time of the appearance of the new
moon, the king was put to death by a minion of his
court, a low caste Hindu, who styled himself Khusru
Khan. This slave inaugurated a reign of terror, but
Ghiyathu'd-Dln Taghlak having removed him, restored
order and founded a new dynasty. Even so the rela-
tion between the new king of Delhi and the saint con-
tinued to be strained. The latter's presence in Delhi
was in fact as intolerable to the new Sultan as it had
been to his predecessor. In 1325 A.D. when Sutaln
was returning from a successful expedition in Bengal,
he sent word to Nizamu'd-Dln to quit Delhi. The
saint on receiving the royal command gave expression
to the words: "Hanoz Delhi dur ast." "Delhi is still
11
far off a Persian phrase which has since become
popular in the sense of the English proverb, "It is a far
cry to London", The king, however, was not destined
to enter Delhi, and so could not summon the saint to
his court, forhe met an unexpected death at Taghlaka-
bad through the fall of a pavillion erected in his honour.
This tragic incident is generally believed to have been
planned by Prince Jawna, who then ascended the
NIZAMI AND SABIRI OP CHISTI QRDER 223

throne as Sultan Muhammad Taghlak. It has, how-


ever, been suggested that the cause of the tragedy is to
be sought not in Prince Jawna, but in the hostility
that existed between the king and the saint. And
indeed the pavilion in question was erected by Ahmad
son of Malikzada Ayyaz, the Inspector of Buildings, a
man who was known to be an over-zealous disciple of
Nizamu'd-Dln. It was he who was responsible for
the faulty construction, whereby the building suddenly
collapsed when one of the army elephants, whose
mahawt was a relative of his, stampeded and crashed
into it.

Nizamu'd-Dln is known also by the titles of


Mahbiib-i-Ildhl, the Beloved of God, and Sulfanu'l-
Awliya the king of the Saints. He died at the age of
91 and was buried at Qhiyathpur in the neighbourhood
of Delhi. His tomb, which is well known in that dis-
trict, has recently been raised to the dignity of a
monastery by Kbwaja Hasan Nizami who has made it
a centre of Muslim propaganda.
One of the saint's famous disciples was Aml^
Khusru, well known as one of India's great Persian
poets and regarded as the Chaucer of Hindustani
literature, "He was the first to employ the indigenous
Urdu for literary purposes and also to compose songs
and write verse* in it. He was the inventor of many
riddles, rhymes, enigmas, and punning verses, which are
still popular. He was born in the thirteenth century
in the district of Etah, and led a chequered life through
the reigns of Balban, Kaikubad and other sovereigns
224 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
of Delhi. He became a distinguished disciple of
Nij&amu'd-Dln. He was deeply attached to him and
died in grief in 1325 A.D. at the death of his pir."(1)
In course of time the Nizami section of the Chishti
order itself became sub-divided into two further
groups to which we shall refer briefly.

(i) HISAMIYYA.
The Hisami was founded by Hisamu'd-Din
section
of Manikpur (d. 1477-8 A.D.) This man was a suc-
cessor of Shaykh Nuru'd-Din otherwise know as Qutb-
4
i- Alam, the son and successor of 'Ala'u'd-Din of

Bengal. This 'Ala Vd-Dln was a successor of Siraju'd-


Din, one of the pioneer saints of the Chishti order in
Bengal, and a vice-gerent of Nigamu'd-Dln.

(ii) HAMZASHAHI.
The Hamza Shahl section was founded by Shaykh
Hamza, one of the descendants of Baha Vd-Din Zakari-
ya of Multan, a famous saint of the Suhrawardi Order.
Before he became a ufi, Hamza was in the service of
the royal guard. One night while on duty the thought
suddenly occurred to him. "How shameful it is for
me to forget Him who is protecting me every moment
of my merely to serve one who rather needs to be
life

protected by me". In consequence he resigned his post


on the following day and adopted the life of a hermit.
Hamza's line is traced back through several saints of
the order and especially through Gesu Daraz and
(1) Ram Babu Saksena, A History of Urdu Literature, p. 10.
NIZAMI AND SABIRI OF CHISTI ORDER 225

Naslru'd-Dm, to Nizamu'd-Din Awliya of Delhi. Very


brief reference may be made to these two saints.

Nasiru'd-Din, also known as Chirdgh-i-Dihlt, the


Lamp of Delhi, belonged to a Sayyid family and was
born Oudh.
in He was forty when he came to Delhi
and became a disciple of Nigamu'd-Din. He died in
1356 A.D. and his tomb, famous as Chirdgh-i-Dihll,
is to be seen near Shahjahanabad in Delhi.
Sayyid Mir Gesu Daraz, was a sucessor of Shavkh.
Nasiru'd-Din and was born in Delhi in 1320 A.D. His
father, Yusuf Chishtl was himself a ufi and also one
of the successors of Shaykh Nasiru'd-Dm. Mir Sayyid
Gesu Daraz consequently had an early opportunity of
acquiring the knowledge of mysticism. On the death
of Nasiru'd-Din, his master, he left Delhi and went to
the Deccan where he died in 1422 A.D. His tomb in
Gulbarga is a famous resort of pilgrims.

2. THE SABIRI SECTION OF THE CHISHTI


ORDER.
Makhdum Ala Vd-Dm 'All Ahmad
4

abir of Piran-i-
Kaliar was born in Herat in 1197-8 A. D. His father
died when he was only seven years old, and his mother,
because of their extreme poverty, took him to her own
brother Baba Farid, with whom she left him. When
he grew to manhood Baba Farid appointed him to
supervise his langar khdnd or public kitchen. Subse-
quently his mother came again from Hert to see her
son,and was very grieved to find him so much reduced.
She accordingly complained to Baba Farid about his
226 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

neglect of her son. When Baba Farid made inquiry as


4

to the cause of his starved appearance, AlaVd-Dln


replied, "I was asked to supervise the kitchen but I was
not told if I myself might eat from it." On receiving
this explanation the saint was overjoyed at the scruplous-
ness of his nephew, and forthwith bestowed on him the
title of abir, or the Patient one, in recognition of his

power of endurance. Later Baba Farid appointed him


as his successor, and sent him to Kaliar. There he was
ill-treatedby the people, and on a particular Friday
when he went to the mosque to take part in the

congregational prayer, he was forced out of the main


building into the courtyard. His biographers would
have us believe that, as a direct consequence of their
rudeness to the saint, the entire mosque suddenly
collapsed, crushing to death many hundreds of worship-

pers assembled within it. A yet further punishment,


in theform of an epidemic of plague, destroyed vast
numbers of the population of Kaliar, with the result that
the survivors fled from the city in terror. The city
thus depopulated was changed in course of time into a
forest, and the abandoned houses falling into ruins
became the dens of wild animals. It was in this desolate
place that 'AlaVd-Dln abir spent his days in a small
hut beneath a fig tree, with his disciple Shamsu'd-Din
Turk as his sole companion. It was this disciple who
succeeded him after his death.
'AlaVd-Dln is have possessed so terrifying
said to
a disposition that no one dared come near him; even his
disciple would serve his meals from behind, never
NIZAMI AND SABIRI OF CHISTI ORDER 227

venturing to confront him. Like other saints of the


*

Chishti Order, Ala'u'd-Din was fond of music, but the


musicians whom Shamsu'd-Dm was in the habit of
employing, took care to seat themselves at a consider-
able distance from the saint while they sang. After
twenty years of such solitary existence the saint died
in 1291 A. D. His 'urs is celebrated on 13th. RablVl-

Awwal, coming to Kaliar from different parts


pilgrims
of India. The extreme loneliness of his life accounts
for our lack of some contemporary account of himself
and his teaching. Such biographical narratives as we
have abound with stories of supernatural events, many
of which border on the absurd.
'Ala Vd-Din's gloomy disposition and irascible tem-
perament stand out in bold contrast to Nigamu'd-Din's
amiable nature and wide popularity. Indeed, it is these
characteristic features in their respective dispositions
that have led some formulate the theory that the
ufis to

two saints represented two different aspects of the attri-


butes of Allah. Nizamu'd-Din's life exhibited the Jamdft
4

i. the Glorious Attributes, while Ala'u'd-Din gave


e.,

expression to the Jaldli, or the terrible Attributes, of


God. The former, by his sympathy and generosity drew
thousands to himself, whereas the latter, largely owing
to his terrifying personality, so isolated himself from
the human society that he lived and died in the company
of on lone disciple. Nigamu'd-Din may be looked
upon as the archetype of that class of ufisknown as
Ahl-i-$uhbat> Associates', and 'Ala'u'd-Din may as that
of Ahl-i-JZhilwat, 'recluses'.
CHAPTER XIV.

The Suhrawardi Order.


The history of the Suhrawarti Order in Indiajbegins
with the advent of some of the disciples of Shihabu'd-
Din Suhrawardi from Baghdad. They were contem-
poraries of Qutbu'd-Din Bakhtiyar Kakl, whose influence
at the time was so strong that certain of them transferred
their allegiance to him, and in course of time their
names were formally admitted to the calendar of the
saints of the Chishtl Order. One of these men was
I-Iamidu'd-Din of Nagore (d. 1279 A. D.), concerning
whom Shihabu'd-Din has recorded that he was the
chief of his vice-gerents in India; nevertheless, in Delhi
he so came under the influence of Qutbu'd-Din as to
become his disciple. There by the Qufub Minar his
tomb is to be seen at the foot of the grave of his new
master. Another disciple to join the Chishtl Order was
Shaykh Jalalu'd-Din Tabrizl, who for seven years was
the disciple of Shihabu'd-Din in Baghdad. This man
alsowhen he came to India accepted the discipleship
of Qutbu'd-Din who later on appointed him his vice-
gerent and sent him to Bengal, where he died in 1225
A. D. Among other pioneers of this Order in India
were Sayyid Nuru'd-Dln and Shah Turkoman, both of
whom cultivated the friendship of Qutbu'd-Din but did
not join his Order. They were buried in Delhi, and the
shrine of the latter is even now believed to possess
THE SUHRAWARDI ORDER 229

aling properties. It is a common custom for people,


to leave a vessel full of water over night at the tomb of
this saint, and in the morning to give a drink from it to
the sick as an aid to their recovery.

BAHA'U'D-DIN ZAKARIY&.
The man who undoubtedly did most to spread the
influence of this Order in India was Baha'u'd-Din
Zakariya. His ancestors were of the Quraysh tribe,
and on his father's side had come to
his grandparents
India from Mecca and had settled down in Multan,
where he himself was born in 1182 A. D. The author
of the ghuldjatu'l-Arifin, states on the authority of
Baha'u'd-Dm's disciple, Sayyid Jalalu'd-EHn Bukhari
that the saint was, through his mother, a grandson of
4

Abdu'l-Qadir Gllanl, the founder of the Qadiri Order.


Early in life Baha'u'd-Din made the journey to
Mecca and thence, after some years, he proceeded to
Baghdad, where he became a disciple of Shihbu'd-Dln
Suhrawardl. Under the latter's guidance he soon
attained perfection in the mystic way and was appointed
vice-gerent by his master and sent to India.
The stories that describe this saint's spiritual dignity
are many and varied. He is said to have been the
recipient of three mantles, symbols which served to
indicate that he held the highest authority among his

contemporaries in the Order. It is said that he


received one of these in a dream, from the very throne
of God, and that, on waking from sleep, he actually
found it on himself . That same night he received the
230 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
other two at the hands of his master Shihabu'd-Dln.
Of these, one was that which had come down through
successive generations of saints from the Prophet
himself; the other was the master's own mantle. Shaykh
Jalalu'd-Din Bukhari and Baba Farld are both recorded
to have stated that once in their presence Shaykh
Baha'u'd-Dln, in a state of ecstasy, exclaimed: "Lord
grant me Thy highest favour in this world and the
next.
1 '

A voice was heard saying in reply: "Thou art


1

the Qutb of both worlds/ The saint prayed again,


1

"Lord, confer yet more than this.' The voice replied,


"
"Thou art the Ghawth of my whole creation. Yet again
the saint cried out for more, and this time the voice was
heard to say: "Beyond this remains the stage of prophet-
hood, and there ariseth no prophet after Muhammad;
nevertheless I bestow upon thee two of my own names;
thou artXafeiz: (the great) and_Munlr (the Enlightener)".
Continuing their narrative the authors tell us that
Baha'u'd-Din, when the ecstatic experience was over,
declared, "Any needy person who recites the follow-
ing invocation, which contains all the titles which I have
received from God; will have all his needs supplied,
and God will forgive his sins and increase the light of
his faith; and
if a person recites this prayer every day

of his promise to stand as surety for him in order


life, I

to obtain for him the rewards of paradise in the day of


judgment." The words of the invocation are as follows,
M
O my God, for the honour and dignity of the 'Chief
of Islam and Muslims' the 'Qwffe' of both worlds and
the 'Gftau>/i' of the whole creation, the Shaykh 'Kater
THE SUHRAWARDI ORDER 231
1
and 'Mumr\ the 'Glory (Baha) of the Truth, of the
Law and of Religion (Din) Muhammad Zakariya fulfil
thou my desires/*
BahaVd-Din died in 1267-68 A. D. and was buried
at Multan, where his tomb is still greatly revered by
Muslims. He had appointed several vice-gerents, and
of these he sent some to places outside India such as

Baghdad and Damascus. /

SADRITD-DIN.
His eldest son adru'd-Dm, who is regarded as one
of the leading saints of this order, succeeded his father
as vice-gerent in Multan. Baha Vd-Dln had left vast
wealth, including a large castle, and this was duly
divided among his seven sons. adr'u'd-Din received
as his share seven lakhs of gold mohars, besides a

portion of the landed property nevertheless he distri-


buted his entire share of the patrimony to the poor.
When a friend remonstrated with him for having so
readily thrown away the wealth which his father had
carefully collected, he replied, "But my father had
complete control over all wordly desires, and so could
afford to hoard such wealth, whereas 1 am weak,
and therefore fear lest wordly possession should make
me forget God." The following incident, which is
recorded by the historian Farishta, has often been
quoted by Muslim writers as one of the saint's miracles.
Muhammad Shah, eldest son of the reigning king Balban,
was Governor of Multan, and had married the grand-
daughter of the late king Altamash. She was a very
beautiful woman and her husband was
deeply in love
232 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
with her. Once, however, in the state of intoxication
he divorced her irrevocably' i. e., by thrice uttering
the words signifying separation. On recovering his
senses he was deeply grieved to learn what he had
done, according to the Muslim law, the only way
for,

whereby he could take her back as his wife, was for her
to be regularly married to another and then once
more be divorced. The Qddl of Multan suggested to
the Governor that adru'd-Dln, who stood in high
repute as a saint, be asked to act as an intermediate
husband by marrying her for one night only. As the
Governor was most anxious to receive her back as his
wife he agreed to the proposal. The records state,
however, that on the following morning adru'd-Dln,
at the request of the bride herself, Irefused to give her
up. The Governor was so enraged at this that he made
the plans to put the saint to death on the next day.
But it so happened that in the night Mongols besieged
the city of Multan, and during the course of the day,
the Governor fell in the fight with the invaders. This
incident is regarded by the saint's biographers as the
direct intervention of God thereby justifying his
retention of the Governor's wife.
$adru'd-Dm died in 1285 A.D. and was buried in
MultSn near the tomb of his father.

SHAYKH AHMAD MA'SHUQ.


Shaykh Ahmad Ma'shuq one of the vicegerents of
adru'd-Din, is an example of a peculiar type of saint
in Muslim Hagiology. A merchant by profession he
THE SUHRAWARDI ORDER 233

was, before he became a mystic, a notorious drunkard.


He was a native of Qandhar where he kept a shop.
Business often brought him into Multan, where he once
happened to meet adru'd-Dln and in a moment his
whole was changed. In due course he became his
life

disciple and rose to be one of the prominent saints of


the order. It is related of him that once while bath-
ing in a river, he prayed thus, "O God, not go up
I will

out of the water, till Thou hast revealed to me the


dignity thatI have in Thy sight." In reply he heard a
voice'lsaying to him, "So great thy dignity in my
is

sight that on the day of judgment a large number of


sinners will receive pardon through thy intercession."
He prayed again, "O Lord this is not enough further
increase my Thy bounteous mercy/'
dignity out of
Then the voice replied. am"I thy lover and thou art
my Beloved (mashuq); go now and make others my
seekers." From that time he came to be known by the
title of mashuq, the beloved.
This saint was frequently the subject of ecstatic
experiences, and consequence neglected the rites and
in

practices of Islam. On one occasion the 'Ulama urged


him to say his prayers, but he pleaded to be left alone,
the fact being that he could not bring himself to recite
the Fdtiha, which forms a necessary part of all Muslim
prayer. When further pressed, he reluctantly con-
sented, making a condition that he omitted the verse,
"Thee we serve and Thee we ask for aid." The 'Ulama
replied that such prayer would be invalid, and they
compelled him to proceed to say his prayer in the pro-
234 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
per manner. It is said, however, that when he came to
the middle of the chapter and began to recite the above-
mentioned verse, blood was seen to ooze from every
part of his body; he therefore stopped abruptly and
exclaimed, "You see I am ceremonially unclean, and
thus excused from further prayer/* The incident is
*

said to have convinced the Ulamd of his extraordinary

sancity,and of the fact that he stood in a peculiar rela-

tionship to God.

SUB-SECTIONS OF THE SUHRAWARDI ORDER.


We gather from the history of the religious Orders
in India that in the process of their break-up into
sub-divisions there appeared a marked tendency on the
part of some individuals to ignore not only the original
teachings of the early saints but the practices of Islam
also. The chief stress came to be laid on the worship
of saints and on ecstatic experiences. As we proceed
we shall observe that some of the leaders of these sub-
divisions resorted to hypnosis and the use of intoxi-
cants. Those imbued with these ideas came to be
spoken of by the followers of the more regular orders
as Maldmatls (lit. 'blame- worthy'). They are some-
times referred to as belonging to be-shara (without the
law) orders. In contrast to the bd-shara, i. e. those
who observe Islamic rites and practices, (cp. Dr.
Titus, Indian Islam, p. 125). The Suhrawardi Order in
particular has given rise to a large number of such
maldmatl sections.
It will be seen that this order thus falls into two
groups, viz: the bd-shara and the be-shara , and in our
THE SUHRAWARDI ORDER 235

treatment of them we propose to follow this classifica-


tion. It must, however, be borne in mind, that it is not
possible to draw a line of demarcation between the two
classes. As a matter of fact saints who were really
be-shara are to be found in the ba-shara sections, e. g.
Ahmad Ma'shuq, who has already been mentioned as
one of the early saints of this order. Moreover, we
find a proneness in saints of the ba-shara section to
degenerate and in course of time to become be-shara .

For instance, some of the saints of the Jaldll Order


degenerated in course of time and become founders of
azdd (or free) orders.
CHAPTER XV.

THE SUB-DIVISIONS OF THE SUHRAWARDI


ORDER.
1. Ba-shara* Section.

i. THE JALALI SECTION.


The Jalall section is ascribed to Sayyid Jalalu'd-Din
Shah Mir Surkh-posh of Bukhara (1192 -1291 A.D.),
who was a vice-gerent of Baha'u'd-Din Zakariya of
Multan. This saint was born in Bukhara, but when he
grew to manhood he came to India and settled down in
Uchh. His descendants are known as Sayyid
still

Bukhari. Jalalu'd-Din is said to have possessed miracu-


lous power even from his childhood, T. W. Arnold
says of him: "Sayyid Jalalu'd-Din is the ancestor of

generations of saints, some of whom were active and


successful propagandists of Islam. His khalifa was his

grandson Jalal b. Ahmad


Kabir, commonly known as
Makhdum-i-Jahaniyan (d. 1384 A. D.) who is said to
have made the pilgrimage to Mecca thirty-six times and
to have performed innumerable miracles. One of
Makhdum-i-Jahaniyao's grandsons, Abu Muhammad
'Abdullah, known as Burhanu'd-Din Qufb-i-'Alam
(d. 1453 A.D.), went to Gujrat, where his tomb is still
a place of pilgrimage at Batawa. His son, Sayyid
Muhammad ShSh 'Alam (d. 1475 A.D.), became still

more famous and played an important part in the poll-


SUB-DIVISIONS OF SUHRAWARDI ORDER 237

tical and religious life of his time; his tomb is at Rasul-


abad, near Ahmadabad." 1
The followers of the Jalall Order, known as Jalalf
faqirs, wear black threads round their heads, and also
wear an amulet tied round their arms which is said
to be made in the form of the Seal of the Prophet
Muhammad. They also carry a horn which they blow
when they are in a state of ecstasy.
These faqirs have their chief seat in the Deccan at
a place called Penukondah, a town in the Anantpur
district, where each year on the first day of Jamadi'th-

Tbanl, they congregate with the faqirs of other Orders,


and select their representatives to go on a two-years'
pilgrimage to the tombs of the saints in the Pre-
2
sidency.

ii. THE MAKHDUMI SECTION.


This section was founded by Mir Sayyid Jalalu'd-
Din Mukhdum-i-Jahaniyao Jahao-gasht Bukhari, who
has already been mentioned as a grandson and khalifa
of Sayyid Jalalu'd-Din Surkhposh. As his august titles
indicate he is held in high honour among the ufis as

the Master of the universe and as one who traversed


the globe. He is said to have met all the saints and to
have been initiated into all the chief religious Orders
of his time. Not only so, he is said to have received
the authority to make disciples in each of these Orders.
Moreover it is asserted that he travelled round the
1. Quoted by Dr. Titus in Indian Islam, P. 122,

2. See Khwaja Khan, Studies in Tasawwuf, P. 155.


238 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
world several times, and a work is still obtainable in
the book-shops which is alleged to be a true record of
his journeys. This, however, contains such fantastic
stories, particularly of cities in Persia and Afghanistan,
as to make it impossible for us to accept it as an
authentic journal.
A story which throws light on Jalalu'd-Dln's charac-
ter,speaks of how Khan-i-Jahan, minister of ulfan
Firoz Shah of Delhi, once imprisoned a boy and

punished him severely. It is said that the saint, at the

request of the boy's father went to plead with the


minister for the boy, but the minister having no respect
for him, refused to see him. Jalalu'd-Dln, however,
persisted and visited him as many as ten times, until at

last the minister, in great irritation exclaimed: "How


long will you continue to pester me, O shameless
Sayyid?" The
meekly replied, "Till you have
saint

ceased to oppress the boy, and gained the pleasure of


Allah/* The minister greatly pleased with this reply,
at once released the boy and became a disciple of
Jalalu'd-Din. The saint died in 1383 A.D. and was
buried in Uchh.

lii. THE MIRAN SHAHI SECTION.


This is attributed to Mlran Muhammad Shh
Mawj-i-Darya Bukharl, a descendant of Jalalu'd-Dln
Surkh-posh. Originally he belonged to Uchh, the
home of his ancestors, but later on settled in Lahore,
where he passed the rest of his life. He lived during the
reign of Akbar, who held him in high esteem, and the
SUB-DIVISIONS OF SUHRAWARDI ORDER 239

Emperor's ultimate conquest of Chitor is attributed,


by the saint's biographers, to his prayer. The story is
told of how the Emperor when he found it impossible
to conquest the impregnable fortress by force of arms,
resorted to certain holy persons one of whom advised
him to seek the aid of Mlran Shah. Acting on this
advice he sent some of his noblemen to the saint, and
invited him to the royal camp to offer prayer for his
victory. Mlran Shah dismissed the royal messngers
u
with the following words. Go back to your Emperor,
and tell him to wait for a tempest at night, which will
follow shortly after your return to camp. During the
storm no one will be able to keep his lamp alight, but
at a distance from the military quarters, there will be

seen one solitary light unaffected by the wind. Tell


the Emperor, that he will find me there."
This prediction was duly fulfilled soon after the
messengers reached the camp. That night, while a
very strong wind was blowing, the Emperor, sighted a
distant solitary light and proceeded towards it bare-
footed. Having requested the saint to pray for him, he
was dismissed with the assurance of the desired victory.
The biographers assert that the fortress of Chitor was
subdued on the following morning direct
in answer to
the saint's prayer. Akbar, overwhelmed with joy,
besought Miran Shah to take up his residence in a city
near to his capital. The saint, acceding to the Emperor's
entreaty chose Lahore for his new home, was granted
there, and in Batala, certain freeholds, together with
an annuity of Rs. 9 lakhs.
240 SUn SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

He died in 1604 A. D. and his 'urs is celebrated on


17th. Ratfu'l-Awival each year in Lahore. Though
he died while in Batala his body was brought to Lahore,
where he was buried near Anarkali. In Batala a shrine
was built at the spot where his body was washed for
burial. Ranjit Singh, the Sikh ruler of the Punjab,

made a grant of Rs. 40 per month for the upkeep of his

tomb in Lahore. [

iv. ISMAIL SHAHI SECTION.


This section was founded by Hafiz Muhammad
Ismail, generally known
Miyan Wadda, the four-
as
teenth in the line of succession from BahaVd-Dln
Zakariya of Multan. He was born in 1586 A. D., and
while still young, was sent by his father, himself a
mystic, to Makhdum *Abdu'l-KarIm, a famous pir of
those days who had his khdnaqah at Langar-i-Makhdum
on the Chenab. When he reached the age of twelve
he was given the task of grinding corn for the }&anaqatis
kitchen. The story is told of how once his master paid
him a surprise visit and was astonished to find the lad
lost in meditation, the hand-mill, meanwhile, grinding
4

the corn automatically, without his aid. Abdu'l-Karim


on witnessing the miracle at once released his disciple
from this duty. Ismail, however, insisted upon work
of some kind being given to him, accordingly he was
set to milk the cows. It soon came to be noticed that

the cows he tended yielded unusually large quantities


of milk, and so the people of the neighbourhood began
to bring their cows to him to be milked. This was to
SUB-DIVISIONS OF SUHRAWARDI ORDER 241
4

Abdu'l-KarIm yet further evidence of his disciple's


and led him to pronounce him a saint,
saintly character,
and no longer in need of his instruction. Taking leave
of his master he retired to the banks of the Chenab
and seated himself under a shisham tree, where, within
a short time, he is said to have made perfect as many
as one hundred and fifty disciples. Finally he came to
Lahore and took up his residence in the part of the
city known as Telpura. There he started a maktab for
the purpose of instructing his pupils in the art of read-
ing the Quran. It is believed that he possessed such
a power as a teacher that each of his disciples became

hdfiz in a remarkably short period of time. He is re-


ported to have declared that this virtue would continue
to be potent at his tomb even after his death. It was

this notion that led to the establishment of the maktab

atJjis tomb, which at one time drew large numbers of


students filled with the desire to acquire the art of
reading of the Quran. It is also believed that by eating

the herbs and leaves of plants which grow in close


proximity to the tomb, the intellect is quickened so
that the Quran is memorized more easily.

Ismail died in 1683 A. D. His strict orthodoxy is

indicated by the fact he desired that no dome should


be erected over his grave, but the present sajjada-
nishin, i. e., successor, has built a shrine and a separate
room in which he sits daily, reading the Quran.
He had three brothers who like him passed their
life in retirement, living in a state of celibacy. Two
of them, viz. Khalil and Ibrfihim have their tombs in
242 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
a place called Chhani Wachak in Sialkot, while the
tomb of the third, Husayn, is in Lahore, in a graveyard
known as Bibi Goristan.
Ismail's successor was his disciple Sayyid JSn
Muhammad Hudurl, whose grand-father, Sayyid
ShamsuV Arifin Ghawrl, came from Ghawr and settled
in Lahore. His tomb was built by one of his ciplides,
*Abdu's-amad, a merchant, who alsoadded a mosque
to it. The tomb is to be seen in Lahore on the west
of Shahu Garhi, and south of the road leading to Miyan
Mir.

v. THE DAWLA SHAHI SECTION.


Dawla Shah, the founder of this section, was eighth
in the line of succession from BahaVd-Dln Zakariya
of Multari. He "was born in 1581 A. D. during the
reign of Akbar. His father was 'Abdu'r-Rahim Khan
Lodi, a descendant of Sultan Ibrahim Lodi, grandson
of Bhalul Shah Lodi who died in 1488. This would
make him a Pathan by descent, but he is nevertheless
claimed by the Gujars of Gujarat as belonging to their
tribe. His mother was Ni'mat Khatun, .great-grand
daughter of Sultan Sarang Ghakhar.
"In the reign of Sultan Sallm, son, of Sultan Sher
Shah, (1545-1553 A. D.) a large force was sent to sub-
due ghwas Khan, who had rebelled in support of 'Adil
Khan, Sallra Shah's elder brother. Kljwas Khan met
with a crushing defeat and sought refuge with the
Ghakhars, who
supported him, and a battle was fought
near Rhotas, in the Jhelum district, in which Sultan
SUB-DIVISIONS OF SUHRAWARDI ORDER 243

Sprang Ghakhar was killed, and all his family were


afterwards made
captives. A
daughter of Ghazi Khan,
son of Sul^Sn SSrang, was among the captured, and she
had at the time an infant daughter at her breast. This
was Ni'mat Khatun, who was taken with her brother
to Dilhi and in the first year of Akbar's reign (A. D.
1556), shortly after Humayun's death, she was married
to 'Abdu'r-Rahlm Lodi, then an officer of the Imperial
household. But Shah Dawla was not born of this
marriage the 25th year of Akbar's reign (A. D. 1581)
till

which was also the year of his father's death.


"Where Shah Dawla was born is not known, but
his widowed mother returned to her native country,

Pathas, now represented by the Jhelum and Rawalpindi


districts. On her arrival, however, she found that,
though she was the great-granddaughter of Sultan

Sarang, she was as much a stranger there as in Hindus-


tan and no one had any regard for herself or her fallen
family. For five years she had to earn her living by
grinding corn in the village of Sabhala in the pargana
of Phirhalat, whence she removed to Kalh, where she
died in 1590 A. D. after four more years of toil."2

Shah Dawla, now left an orphan and friendless,


was sold to a Hindu as a slave. At his master's house
he exhibited great piety, and on account of his faithful
services, he soon obtained his freedom. Once set at
liberty he decided to lead the life of a hermit, and

1 Rose, Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North-
West Frontier Province. Vol. I. P. 631.
244 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES. IN INDIA
therefore he bacame a disciple of Sayyid Nasir Mast of
Sialkot, who had the reputation of being a saint.
The author of the Tadhkiratu'l-Asfiyd, says that
Nasir Mast had another disciple, also called Dawla,
whom he specially favoured and intended to appoint as
his successor. The story is told of how, one night
when Sayyid Nasir Mast lay dying on his bed, he called
three times for Dawla, this favourite disciple, but each
time he was absent and the response was mads by
Shah Dawla, who, however, was sent away as not being
the person he wanted. But towards morning, before
he breathed his last, he exclaimed:
"To whom God (Mawld) grants favour
'Tis he becomes Shah Dawla" (king i.e. saint)

and then afterwards appointed Shah Dawla his suc-


cessor, and bestowed on him his mantle.
For ten years after the death of Shah Nasir Mast,
Dawla "remained in the neihbourhood, growing yearly
in reputation and power. He built many buildings,
mosques, tanks, bridges and wells, the most notable of
which was the bridge over the Aik. After this Shah
Dawla moved to Gujrat and settled there permanently in
obedience to divine instructions It is said that

he never asked for money and that he paid his labourers


promptly. He was also most successful in finding the
sites of the old ruins, whence he dug up all the materi-
als he required for his buildings. He was liberal to
the poor, irrespective of creed, and had a peculiar
attraction for wild animals, keeping a large menagerie

Rose, op. cit. pp. 633, 34.


SUB-DIVISIONS OF SUHRAWARDI ORDER 245

of all sorts of beasts and birds. His tolerance made


him beloved of all classes and there were both Hindus
and Musalmans among his disciples. He became very
famous for his miracles and received large gifts. The
attraction towards him felt by wild animals largely
contributed to the general belief in him."
He died in 1676 A.D. and his tomb and shrine lie

on the eastern side of the town of Gujrat. He was


succeeded by one Bhawan Shah, concerning whom
there is some doubt as to whether he was a real or an
adopted son of the saint. In any case the present pirs
of this section are descended from him.
"Many tales of his miracles are told of Shah Dawla,
but that which is chiefly associated with his name is

the miracle of the Chuhds, or 'Rat children/ said to


be born through his agency with minute heads, large
ears, rat-like faces, and without the understanding or
the power of speech."
"The popular idea is that these unfortunate beings
have been blessed by the saint, Shah Dawla of Gujrat
in thePunjab, and though they are repulsive objects, no
contempt of them must be shown, or the saint will
make a chuhd of the next child born to one who despises
one of his proteges. It is this fear which has brought

about the prosperity of Shah Dawla's shrine at Gujrat.


"The common superstition as to origin of the chuhds
is this: Shah Dawla, like other saints, could procure
a child for a couple desiring one, but the first child
born in response to his intercession would be a chuha
brainless, small-headed, long-eared and rat-faced.
246 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
The custom used to be to leave the child as soon as it

was weaned, at Shh Dawla 's Khdnaqdh and as an


offering to him. After the saint's death the miracle
continued, but in a modified form. Persons desiring
children would go to the saint's shrine to pray for a
child,and would make a vow either to present the
child when born or to make an offering to the shrine.
In some cases when the child was duly born in response
to the prayer, the parents neglected to make the pro-
mised gift. Upon this the spirit of the offended saint
so worked on the parents that the next child born was
a ckuhd, and all subsequent children as well, until the
original vow was fulfilled.
"The cult of Shh Dawla offers few unusual fea-
tures. No lands are attached to the shrine and its pirs
are wholly dependent on the alms and offerings of the
faithful. Three annual fairs are held at the shrine,
one at each 7d and the third at the 'urs, on the 10th,
of Muharram. A weekly fair used to be held on
Fridays, attended by dancing girls; but this has fallen
into abeyance. There are no regular rules of succession
to the shrine, and each member of the saint's family has
a share in it. Three of them, however, have a special
influence and one of these three is generallyknown as
the sajjdda-nishln, or successor of the saint. The
general income of the sect is divided into three main
shares, each of which is divided into minor shares a
division per stripes and per capita. The shareholders
also each take in turn a week's income of the shrine.
M
There is a notable off-shoot of the Shfih Dawla
SUB-DIVISIONS OF SUHRAWARDI ORDER 247

fa<ftrs in an order of facfirs who properly own allegiance


to the Arkhund of Swat. A disciple of ArkhOnd,
named Ghazi Sultan Muhammad, a native of Awan, a
village in Gujrat district on the Jammu border, has
established a considerable following. He lives now at

Shah Dawla's shrine, but has built himself a large stone


house at Awan/' 1

2. Be-Shara Sections of the Order.

i. LAL SHAHBAZIYYA.
This section of the Suhrawardi Order was founded
by Sayyid Lai Shahbaz, a vice-gerent of Baha'u'd-Din
Zakariya. Very little is known about him and about
the section of the Order which takes his name. As he
was in the habit of wearing red garments, the epithet
Lai was added to his name.
He is described by the hagiographers as having led
the life of a libertine. He not only disregarded the
precepts of Islam, but never said even the obligatory
prayers nor observed the month of fasting On the
other hand, he is said to have been addicted all his life

to the use of wine and other intoxicants.


His devotees ascribe his antinomian mode of life to
his desire to conceal his spiritual dignity from people;
and in justification of his use of intoxicants they say,
that his holy touch changed the wine hito water! He
died in 1324 A.D. and was buried in Sindh, where his
tomb is regarded as a place of pilgrimage.
1. Rose, op. cit. pp. 630, 31.
248 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
The ufis of this Order, now few in number, dress
in red and use intoxicants, in imitation of their leader.

ii. THE SUHAGIYYA SECTION.


Musa Shahl Suhag, vicegerent of Sayyid JalSlVd-
a
Din Surkh-posh founded a new section of the Suhra-
wardl Order, which is called after his name. He is
described to have bten one of the hidden saints of his
time. He concealed his spiritual dignity by living
among eunuchs, who were dancers by profession. The
epithet Suhdg, affixed to his name, indicates that he
used to dress and adorn himself like a woman. The
story is told that once in Ahmedabad, his native place,
there occured a great scarcity of rain. The qddl of the
city, who himself was a saint, told the people that if
Shah Musa could be prevailed upon to pray, God would
surely answer his prayer. On a search being made
for the saint he was discovered among the eunuchs,
and was entreated to offer prayer. Raising his eyes
towards heaven, he prayed thus: "O my husband, if
you are not going to send rain at once, I am going to
11
deprive myself of these bridal ornaments. He was
about to break his bangles, when lo! the clouds appear-
ed on the horizon, and soon it began to rain heavily,
continuing for several days.
This incident brought him into prominence, and
he soon gathered around him a large number of dis-
ciples. He, too, did not observe the precepts of Islam
regarding prayers and fastings. We
are told that the
orthodox 'Ulamd of the city once persuaded him to
SUB-DIVISIONS OF SUHRAWARDI ORDER 249

join him in prayer, and for


purpose they put off
this
his female attire of red cloth, and dressed him in white

garments. When he began to say his prayer, these


garments turned red, and when the prayer was over
he said, "My husband desires me to remain a bride
(suhdg) but these wretches would reduce me to a
widow!"
Amazed by this strange incident they apologised
to him for their presumption. He died in 1449 A.D.
*

and after his death the Ulamd and other saints of the

neighbourhood appointed one of his disciples to be his


successor whom they adorned like his master in the
dress and ornaments of a bride.
The followers of this Order, who are now rare,
always call themselves sadd suhdgin, a married woman
whose husband is alive.

iii. THE RASUL SHAHI SECTION.


The origin of this sect according to the statement
of its faqlrs, is described to be as follows.
In a place
called Bahadurpur, situated at a distance of 20 miles
from Alwar, there lived during the reign of the im-
mediate successors of Aurangzeb, a wealthy jeweller
1

named Ni'matu llah. Once on business he went to


Egypt where he heard of Da'ud, a man who had the
fame of being a great saint but who led the life of a
libertine. When Ni'matu 'Hah paid his visit to this

reputed saint, he was offered a drink of some intoxicant


and though he was a pious Muslim and would not
touch such thing he drank it off in deference to
250 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Dfi'dd's authority as a man of Allah. It is said that

the instant he finished drinking he fell into a state of


ecstasy, tore off his clothes and taking the dust from
the feet of Da'ud rubbed it all over his body. Finally
after distributing he had with him he accepted
all

his discipleship. One day Da'ud said to Ni'matu 'llah,


"It is now time that my soul should leave this body
and enter yours. So when I die you go to Alwar
where you will find Sayyid Rasul Shah, make him your
disciple and guide him to the experience which you
have gone through under my direction; he will be the
founder of a new sect of the ufis." Da'ud, when he
had finished speaking, died, and according to the belief
of the faqlrs of this Order his soul entered the body of
Ni'matu 'Hah.
The upon the last advice of his late
latter, acting

ptr, went to Alwar and sent for Sayyid Rasul Shah.


When he came he was offered a drink. As soon as he
drank it up, his life was changed; he shaved off his
head, moustaches and eye brows, and became a disciple
4

of Ni matu 'llah. Rasul Shah lived for many years


in company with his pir, and served him by preparing
the drink of hemp for him. Then one day Ni'matu llah,
in words similar to those of his
predecessor, said to

him, "Rasul! My soul is now about to leave this


mortal frame and enter yours, you then shall be
the founder of a new sect of ufls which will be
known after your name." Shortly after Ni'matu llth
expired, and, in course of time, he came to be regarded
by certain Muslim jewellers and merchants as their
SUB-DIVISIONS OF SUHRAWARDI ORDER 251

patron saint. Rasul Shah, in spite of his antinomian


habits,gained the reputation of being a saint. He
soon gathered round himself a large number of fol-
lowers who used to pay him divine honour. He was
recognised, as foretold by his plr, to be the founder of
a new sect called Rasul Shahl after his name. It is

customary among the faqlrs of this sect to worship


their pir by falling before him in adoration. 1

The is an account of them as given by


following
Rose, "They wear a white or red handkerchief on the
head tied in the shape of a peaked cap: they also keep
a handkerchief containing ashes which they rub on
their bodies and faces; they shave the head, moustaches
and eye brows, wear wooden clogs, and in the hot
weather carry hand fans. They not only see no harm
in drinking spirits, but look on it as a virtue, and it is
said that they have, or had till lately, a special license
to manufacture their own liquor. Their taste for
drink drew them into close sympathy with the Sikh
Sirdars pre-annexation times and Ranjit Singh is
of
stated to have allowed them a monthly grant of
Rs. 200 for spirits. They are a small sect and not
celibate. As a rule men well-to-do, they are never
seen begging and many of them are men of literary
tastes, popularly credited with a knowledge of alchemy.
Their chief centre in the Punjab is a building near
Landa Bazar in Lahore, and they have also a building

(1) The faqirs or this order believe that when their pir dies
his soul enters in one of his disciples who becomes his successor.
252 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

Khu-i-Mlran, but are


in the environs of that city near
also returnedfrom Jhelum." 1
Sayyid Rasul Shah was seventeenth in order in
the line of succession from Baha'u'd-Dln Zakariya of
Multan.

(1) Rose: A Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Pun-


jab and Northwest Frontier Province. Vol. Ill, p. 324.

Rose's above account of the faqirs of this sect is in full agree-

ment with the statement of the author of the Tahqiqat-i-Chishti<


The Investigations of a Chishti, a book written after thorough
inquiry about the Sufis and their Orders and shrines in Lahore.
CHAPTER XVI.

The Qadiri Order.


i. SOME EARLY SAINTS OF THE ORDER.
This Order was established in India as late as three
hundred years after the death of its original founder,
Shaykh 'Abdu'l-Qadir Jilanl or Gllani, by Sayyid
Muhammad Qhawth, tenth in the line of succession.
He was born at Aleppo, and in his youth he travelled
as far as India, and after spending some time in Lahore,
he went back to his home, eventually returning in 1428
A. D. He settled in Uch, which has already been
described as the centre of the activities of the saints of
Suhrawardi Order. The fame of the founder of the
Qadiri Order had previously reached India, and he was
already honoured as Plr-i-piran, "the saint of saints."
When therefore Muhammad
Gljawth arrived, he soon
became popular, and in a remarkably short space of
time gathered around him a large number of adherents.
Sultan Sikandar Lodl, the Afghan ruler of Delhi, not
only became his disciple, but also gave his daughter to
him in marriage. He is said to have done this in
obedience to the command of Shaykh *Abdu'l-Qadir
who appeared to him in a dream and ordered him to
give his dauhgter to Muhammad Qhawth in marriage.
No child, however, was born of this union.
Ma^iammad
then took a second wife, Efifima, a daughter
254 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
of Abul Fatah, fourth in the line of descent from
aflu'd-Dm, who regarded as the founder of a
is

colony of Sayyids in Uch. This afiu'd-Dln was a


nephew of Abu Ishaq Gazrunl, a Governor of Lahore.
It is said that the latter had bestowed upon him a robe

of honour and then bidden him go on his way, with


permission to choose as his future home the place
where his camel should happen to stop. When there-
fore, on reaching the site in Uch now known as
Muhalla Gllaniyan, his camel sat down, that spot was
selected by afiu'd-Din as the quarter to be occupied

by himself and his descendants This part of Uch, now


inhabited by the descendants of Muhammad Ghawth, is
called Gllaniyan, with reference to the district Gllan or

Jilan, the home of their illustrious ancestor, Shaykh


'Abdu'l-Qadir. The other part of Uch is occupied by
the desendants of Sayyid Jalalu'd-Dm Bukharl, the
famous saint of the Suhrawardi Order, and is called
Muhalla Bukhariyan,
Muhammad Ghawth had four children born to him
by his marriage with Fatima. He died in 1517 A. D.
and was buried in Uch. Sayyid Mahammad Ghawth
4

was succeeded by his son Abdu'l-Qadir II who in his


early lite indulged in various luxuries. On his father's

death, however, when succeeding him as Khalifa, his


lifeunderwent a complete change. He renounced the
world and returned to the Government all the royal
credentials for freeholds and annuities which had been
granted to his father by the king. He passed the rest
of his days in a life of absolute poverty, in which he was
THE QADIRI ORDER 255

not spared various persecutions and troubles. These,


however, he bore with complete resignation and faith
in God. Meanwhile his brothers held high offices
under the Government, but he himself steadily refused
to take advantage of any opportunity that came his
way of gaining favours at the royal court. Indeed, his
contempt for the world was so pronounced that he
scrupled to visit the ruling princes, even when specially
invited by them. The story is told, how once, when a
prince sent him a persuasive invitation, he replied in a
stanza which may be rendered as follows:

I have nojdoor to which to go


From this one door of Allah.
While seated here, come weal or woe,
I am content with either.
Whoso, in this world, wears the cloak
Provided by the King of Love,
Feels a delight he could not have
Though robed in light in heaven above.

The hagiographersjrecord many miracles said to have


been performed by him, chiefly works of healing. He
died in 1533-34 A. D. and was buried in Uch.

ii. Sub-sections of the Order.

i. THE QUME$IYYA.
Shah Qumes, the founder of this section was seven-
teenth in the line of descent from
Qdir GilanL He and his father, Abul-HaySt, are
counted among the pioneers of the Qadiri order in
India. He lived in Bengal.
256 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
"Shah Qumes most probably flourished in the 16th,
century, as tradition connects him with Akbar and
Humayun's war against Sher Shah Sur, though even so
his birth cannot be carried back to 1425 His cult
is said to be connected with Bihar and three large
fairs are held, one in that Province, one at Ludhiana
1 '

and a third at Sadhaura itself. (l)


/

2. THE BAHLLJL SHAHI


This section was founded by Bahlul Shah Darya'i,
a disciple of Shah Latlf Barri. The latter 's plr Hayatu'l-
Mlr, is said to have become a disciple of 'Abdu'l-

Qadir, some three hundred years before the time of


which we are writing! Further, he is supposed to have
been endowed with life immortal, and in consequence
isknown as Zinda plr, i. e, a plr who is still alive. It
thus comes about that Bahlul Shah, notwithstanding
the gap of some three centuries between him and the
original founder, is accounted fourth in the line of
succession.
We do not possess any details concerning the life

of Bahlul Shah himself, but around his pir Shah Laflf


Barri and the pir of his ptr, Hayatu'1-Mlr, there have
grown up certain legends and they now rank among the
more popular saints. Rose describing the cult connected
with La^lf Barri writes: "About 10 miles north of
Rawalpindi is a famous Ramkund or Rama's pool, with

a Hanuman Kund, a Lachhman Kund, a Suraj Kund and


(1) Rose, A Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and
North- West Frontier Province. Vol. i. p. 542.
THE QADIRI ORDER 257

a Sita Kund, but in the last-named no Hindu will bathe


though bathing in all the others is meritorious on any
holy day and more especially on the first of Baisakh at
iheSankrant Two miles to the south of Ramkund
is Nurpur Shahan (in Tehsil Rawalpini); where a
Mohammadan fair is held on the first Thursday after
Baisakh 15th. Ecstasy and frenzy (haT) are not unknown
on this occasion. The fair begins on the arrival of an
offering of every kind of fruit in season from Peshawar,
and cannot commence without it. It is held in honour
of Shah-i-Latif Barri or Barri Sultan, said to have been
a pupil of Sayyid Hayatu'n-Nur Qadiri. Barri Sultan
used to be supplied daily with milk by a Gujar, but the
buffalo which gave the milk always used to die on the
day it was milked for the saint. At last the Gujar was
reduced to a bull, but the saints bade him milk it too.
It also died, the Gujar only recovered his cattle from

the spring to see them all turned into stones, where


they stand to this day, because he disobeyed the saint's
behest not to look back, when he called out their
names one by one at the spring." (1)
4

The ziyarat of Hayatu'1-Mir, 24 miles north-east of


Manshara at Balakot on the bank of the Kunhar Ndla,
is Mohammadan belief the sitting place of Sakhi
in

Hayatul-Mir, who is said to have been endowed with


life according to Hindus it is the
everlasting, while
sitting place of Bha'i Bala.At the 'Id one day men
and the next day women assemble there. It has a
spring known as Sharbat, which has medical properties
(I) Rose, op. cit. vol. I. P. 130.
258 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

being believed to cure leprosy and other diseases and


twenty and thirty sufferers are generally to be found
there." cl)

THE MUQIM SHAHL


This section is ascribed to Sayyid Muqlm Muhkam-
'ud-Dln, who was a vice-gerent of Hayatu'1-Mlr, the
saint alluded to above as the plr of the pir of Bahawal
1

Shah Darya !. Of Muqlm Shah himself we know little,

but Bahawal Shah


his great-great-grandfather, Sayyid
is held in high esteem as a very famous saint of the

Qadiri Order. The latter's tomb is to be seen at


Muzang in Lahore, and in connection with it the story
is current that in the day of Bahawal Shah a river ran

past this spot and that he used to seat himself on its


banks, and pass his days in meditation. But the women
of the neighbourhood complained to their husbands that
when they came to the river to draw water they were
exposed to the gaze of the faqir. Driven away from
one place he eventually settled himself at another
further along the bank, but when here also he began to
meet with opposition, he angrily smote the river and
ordered it to change its course. The river, we are told,
now began to flow at a distance of four miles from its

original position, and meanwhile in the bed of the old


stream there appeared a hillock which the saint chose
as the place in which to pass his days.
It it said that he drove three wooden pegs into the

ground near him, each of which immediately sprouted


(1) Rose, op. cit. vol. I. P. 594.
THE QADIRI ORDERS 259

into a tree. Two of them are said to be still green,


but one, a neem tree, is now dried up. The attendant at
his shrine on receiving an offering of Rs. l/4/-will give
the visitor a bit of this neem wood, which is valued as a
relic, and is generally made into beads for a rosary.
The hagiographers depict this Bahawal Shah riding on
a lion and carrying a snake in his hands in place of a
whip.
Muqlm Shah spent his early days at this shrine of
Bahawal Shah in meditation, and it was here, while
sleeping one night that his pious ancestor is said to have
appeared to him in a dream and directed him to the place
now known as Miyanl Muqim Shah, rousing himself
from sleep, obeyed the order and preceding thither
met Hayatu'l Mir, who admitted him in the Qadiri
Order.

THE NAWSHAHI SECTION.


The Nawshahl Order owes its origin to Shah Ma ruf
4

Chishtl-Qadirl, a descendant of Baba Farld Chishti and


a vice-gerent of Sayyid Mubarak Haqqani. The latter
was a son of the famous Sayyid Muhammad Gbawth.
already mentioned as the pioneer of the Qadiri Order
in India. So that, in the person of Shah Ma'ruf the
two lines of succession united, but it was the Qadariyya
which took precedence and his spiritual descendants
are counted in the line of that Order. Though the
Nawshahl section is traced back to Shah Ma'ruf, yet
the distinctive titleNawshah (bride-groom) was actual-
ly given for the first time to Hajl Muhammad, a dis-
260 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
ciple of Shah Ma'ruf s vicegerent, Sulayman Shah. In
fact, the records say very little about the originator of
this section, beyond mentioning him as its titular
saint.

Shah Haji Muhammadregarded as having been


is

endowed with the dignity of sainthood from his very


birth. The story goes that once, when he was an in-
fant of six months, a woman of the neighbourhood
approached his cradle intending to take him in her lap,
but she became greatly alarmed on removing the
coverlet to find a snake coiled round his body. Her
loud shriek brought the mother to the cradle, but she
failed to find any cause of fear, as in reality no snake
was to be seen. While still wondering at what she
was told about the snake, the mother heard a voice
saying, "Fear not, the woman is ceremonially unclean
and was thus stopped from taking the holy child into
11
her arms.
When
Haji Muhammad reached the age of 17 he
retiredfrom the world and lived in the desert. His
parents eventually sought him out and took him to
Naushahra, in the Punjab, where they prevailed upon
him to get married to the daughter of a religious man.
Henceforth Naushahra became the home of Haji
Muhammad and his parents. The saint, however,
continued to live as a recluse night in
spending his

meditation on the banks of the river and his days in a


mosque, reading the Quran. Six years after he had
settled at Naushahra he heard the fame of Sulayman
Shah Qadirl and became his disciple. Within a short
THE QADIRI ORDER 261

space of time he became perfect in the mystic path


and received from his pir the title of Naushah Ganj
Bakhsh.
Hajl Muhammad had the reputation of being a very
hospitable man, for he was always ready to feed beg-
gars, and when his own resources failed he would go
out and beg from door to door till he had collected
sufficient for all his guests. The story is told of how
once when he went to beg for some flour at a neigh-
bour's door, the woman of the house was in the act of
kneading some flour, but on seeing the saint at a
distance she hid quickly under her thigh, and then
it it

apologised to him saying that she had non. When


the saint had departed she discovered to her horror
that the flour had stuck to her body, and no amount
of effort could detach it from her thigh, until her hus-
band went to the saint and, confessing her fault,
besought him to pray on her behalf.
Hajl Muhammad died in 1604-5 A. D. and was
buriedlat Chani Sahnpal at the Chenab, opposite Ram-
nagar in Wazirabad tahsil.
Some of the disciples of Hajl Muhammad have
become famous saints of the Qadiri order. One such
person was Muhammad Fudayl, a native of Kabul.
In search of a pir he came to India and became a
disciple of Hajl Muhammad. After he had acquired
perfection in the mystic path he was appointed a vice-
gerent and sent back to his home. Being given to
he neglected the obligatory prayers.
ecstatic experiences
*

The Ulamd of Kabul then came to him and threatened


262 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
to punish him if he would not say his prayers. Fudayl
argued that prayer could not be offered without the
customary ablution and that in his case he was unable
to perform it. The 'Ulamd desiring to test the truth
of his assertion, brought some water and proceeded to
pour it on his arms so as to help him to perform his
ablutions, but to their great surprise they noticed that
itdid not even wet his hands. He died in 1699-1700
A. D. and was buried in Kabul.
The Naushahi section was further sub-divided by
Ilajl Muhammad's two disciples, Pak 'Abdu'r-Rahman
and Pir Muhammad Sachyar. The followers of the
former are known as Pak Rahmanis and those of the
latter as Sachyaris. When Abdu'r-Rahman was 5 years'
4

old Hajl Muhammad once happened to fix his gaze


upon him with the result that the child turned insane,
and came to be spoken of as Mad Rahman. His
parents, abandoning all hope of the
recovery,child's

presented him to Hajl Muhammad. The child was no


sooner received by the saint than he recovered his
sanity. When he grew up the saint allotted to him
the duty of carrying bread to those who were appointed
to till the ground attached to the monastery. It is
said that each time he carried out the bread he would
receive two portions as his daily ration, but instead of
eating them himself he used to give them away to some
beggar. Many days were passed in this manner so that
he became much reduced in health. At last the matter
was brought to the notice of Hajl Muhammad who
ordered him to eat his meal in future in his presence.
THE QADIRI ORDER 263

The other disciple, Plr Muhammad Sachyar, was


one day about to get married, but instead turned faqlr,
and for this reason some have been led, though
wrongly, to consider him the founder of the Naushahl
section.
The following story explains how he came to be
known by the title of Sachyar. Hajl Muhammad on
the occasion of the wedding of his son Hashim, accom-
panied the marriage procession to the house of the
bride. While there, according to the custom of the
country, the bride's relatives demanded of him a
present in cash of Rs. 100. But, as the saint had nothing,
he turned to his disciples asking them to lend him the
amount, but none of them were able to help him out.
Plr Muhammad, however, unhesitatingly replied,
11
"Never fear. I will get you the amount, and saying
thishe went out and began to pray. While still^pray-
ing a man came to him and besought prayer for his
wife who was lying ill. After offering prayer on her
behalf Plr Muhammad followed the man to his house,
and there healed the woman. Her husband was so
delighted that he thereupon made him an offering of
Rs. 100 and a horse. The saint duly returned with
these and presented them to Haji Muhammad as gifts,
4

and since then he received the title of Sachyar, true


1

friend .

The faqlrs of Naushahi and of its two sub-divisions,


contrary to the rules of the Qadiri Order, hold musical
festivals and on such occasions shake their heads

violently to and fro. The faqlrs of Pak Rahman! are


264 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
said to exceed those of SachySr in their frenzied be-
haviour. Rose, who writes concerning the Pak
Rahmanl faqlrs, says that, "when subject to religious

frenzy they hang themselves on trees with head down-


wards and sway their bodies violently backward and
Ilia lldh till they faint from exhaus-
forwards shouting
tion. They explain this custom by a story about Pak
Rahman ascending to heaven, and on being recalled by
Naushah, thinking it respectful to his tutor to descend
with his head foremost." (1)
/
(1) Rose, op cit. Vol. Ill, P. 199. See also, Nur Ahmad Chishti,
Tahqiqat-i-Chishti, Lahore, P. 428.
CHAPTER XVII
The Qadiri Order (continued)

The Husayn Shahl and Miyan Khel Sections

The Husayn Shahi


This section is ascribed to Hadrat Shah Lai Husayn
Shah Darya 'i. His mother
of Lahore, a disciple of Bahlul
was a Rajput woman of the Dhadha tribe, and his
paternal ancestors were known as Kalsaral. Thus
Lai Husayn's own name was originally Dhadha Husayn
Kalsara'l. The first of his ancestors to accept Islam
was a man named, Kalsara'l, who became a Muslim
during the reign of Firoz Shah Tughlag, and was
appointed by him to be Shaykhu'l-Islam. The family
name, Kalsara'l, dates from that time, Lai Husayn
showed, even as a child, a marked preference for
clothes of saffron and red colour, hence the epithet
Lai added to his name. Very early in life it became
clear that he possessed a religious disposition, and
while only ten years' old he was initiated into the
still
1

Qadiri Order by Bahlul Shah Darya !. For twenty-six


years he strictly followed the rites and practices of
Islam, and led a life of real austerity. But on reaching
the age of thirty-six, it is said that while studying a
commentary on the Quran under a certain Shaykh
Sa'du'llah in Lahore, he came one day to the verse;
"The life of this world is nothing but a game and
266 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

sport." (vi. 32). He asked his master to explain this


to him, but when the usual meaning was given he
refused to accept it, saying that the words must be
taken literally, and that henceforth he himself would
pass his life in sport and dancing. This incident proved
to be a turning point in his career and from that time
he sought to express in life the extraordinary views he
held. he abruptly left the madrasah
In consequence
and went about shouting and dancing in public. He never
returned to his student life and religious practices. We
are told that one of his first acts on leaving his studies
was to throw his book. Maddrik, a commentary on the
Quran, into a His fellow-students, grieved at the
well.
loss of so valuable a work began to chide him, where-

upon he turned and addressed the well as follows: "O


water, return my book, for my friends are anxious to
have it;" on saying this he drew it out unsoiled!
He now gave himself up to the life of a libertine
and spent so much of his time in drinking, dancing and
music that he became, in the language of the ufis,

malamati, blameworthy. It is said that his plr Bahlul


Shah Daryai, hearing of the change in his disciple came
to see him and, strange to relate, in spite of the freedom
from restraint which he himself witnessed in Lai
Husayn's manner he expressed himself satisfied
of life

with the hidden sanctity of his disciple, and thereupon


confirmed him in his position as his vicegerent in
Lahore.
IJassu Tell, famous as the saint of oilmen, was a
contemporary of Lai Wusayn. He kept a shop at Chawk
THE QADIRI ORDER 267

Jhhanda near the Mori gate. At first he used to sell

corn, but later at the direction of his plr, Shah Jamal


(whose tomb is in Ichhra), he started selling oil. Lai
Husayn, who
was in the habit of visiting the
tomb of Data Ganj Bakhsh, would stop on his
way at the shop and spend some time in dancing
and shouting. One day Hassu Tell, teasing him said,
"O, Husayn, why this dancing and shouting? You have
no cause for such ecstasy, for I have never seen you in
the court of the Prophet." But on the following day,
when Muhamad held his court in the spirit world, with
all prophets and saints in attendance including
the
Hassu Tell as one of the representatives of the living
saints on earth, a child appeared, who first went to the
lap of the Prophet, and was then passed from one to
the other, finally coming to Hassu Tell. While playing
on the latter's knee he plucked out some hairs from
his beard. When
next Lai Husayn stopped at the
oilman's shopHassu repeated his taunt that the man
was not worthy of being admitted into the Prophet's
court. For reply Lai Husayn quietly produced the hairs
which he had plucked from Hussu's beard The oilman !

was at first thrown into great consternation, but re-


covering his equilibrium retorted after a moment's
silence: "So it was you, was it ? Ah well, it was as a
child that you got the better of me !"

Lai Husayn's name is popularly associated with that


of another person called Madhu, and in fact, the two
are so constantly thought of together that the saint
commonly goes by the name of Madhu Lai Husayn as
268 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

though the master and this disciple of his were one


person. Madhu was a young Hindu boy, a Brahmin by
caste, to whom Lai Husayn was, one day, irresistibly
attracted as he saw him pass by. So strong indeed was
the fascination he felt for the boy, that he would rise
in themiddle of the night and, going to his house,
would walk round it. In time Madhu himself felt the
attraction of Lai Husayn and, coming under the spell of
his fervent love,began to frequent his house, and even
joined him in drinking wine. Such intimate connection
between a Hindu boy and a Muslim faqlr ot question-
able character very soon become the talk of the place.
Madhu's parents feelingit to be a disgrace to their

family, tried their utmost to dissuade the boy from


going to Lai Husayn, but in vain.
So far Madhu, though the bosom friend of Lai Hu-
sayn, had not yet renounced Hinduism. It was, we are
told, wrought by Lai Husayn that finally led
a miracle
him and his parents to the conviction of the truth of
Islam. The story goes that once when Madhu's parents
were going to Hardwar to perform the bathing ceremony
they desired to take their son with them. Lai Husayn,
however, would not let him go, though he promised to
send him later. When the parents had reached Hardwar,
Lai Husayn made Madhu shut his eyes and then, after
striking his feet upon the ground, to open them again.
Madhu did as he was told and was greatly astonished
on looking round to find himself in Hardwar! His
surprise was shared by his parents, who marvelled at
his arrival from such a distance within so short a space
THE QADIRI ORDER 269

of time. Impressed by this miracle, Madhu and his

parents on their return to Lahore accepted Islam at the


hands of Lai Husayn.
The died in 1599 A. D. at the age of 63 and
latter
Madhu who survived him for forty-eight years was
buried in a tomb next to that of his plr, in Baghbanpura,
inLahore. The shrine containing their tombs continues
even to this day to attract dense crowds of people of
all classes. The 'ursused formerly to be celebrated on
1

22nd. Jamadi th-tham, i. e. the anniversary of Lai


Husayn's death; but later, in order to avoid any incon-
venience through the date for the celebration falling
in the heat of summer, it was agreed to make the festival

coincide with the advent of spring so now the 14th.


Baisakh and the last Sunday in March are the recognised
dates for its celebration.
Lai Husayn had sixteen Khalifas, four of them were
called Khaki, four Gharlb, four Dlwan, and four Bilawal.
After his death four of them, viz. Khaki Shah, Shah
Gharlb, Diwan Madhu, and Shah Bilawal took up their
abode at his shrine, and were eventually buried within
its precincts. (1)

The Miyan Khel Section.

This section was founded by Mir Muhammad, com-


monly known as Miyao Mir. His original home was
Siwastan, where he was born in 1550 A.D. He received

(1) A full account of Lai Husayn and Madhu, and of their


shrines may be found in, Nur Ahmad Chishti, Tahqiqat-i-Chishti*
p. 31 ff.
270 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
his early training in mysticism from his mother who
was herself initiated in the Qadirl Order. When he
grew up into manhood he became a disciple of Khidr
Siwastanl, a saint of cynical disposition who lived the-
life of a hermit the solitude of a desert, wearing
in

nothing but a loin-cloth throughout the year. In winter


this Khidr would pass the night time in a furnace that
had been heated during the day. The story is told how
one day in summer, when he was sitting in the blazing
sun, the ruler of Siwastan visited him, and standing
close by cast his shadow upon his body so as to protect
him from the sun. The saint raising his head asked him
what he wanted. The ruler said "I desire to be permit-
ted to do you some service." The saint replied. "The
one service that I would have you perform is that you
get away from here and do not cast your shadow upon
me." The ruler, retreating a short distance, then re-
quested the saint to pray for him during the hour of his
worship. But the saint rebuked him, saying, "God for-
bid, that in the hour of worship
I should think of any

one else beside Him/'


After spending some time under the discipline of
Kbidr Siwastanl, Miyaa Mir eventually went to Lahore
for the purpose of study. Within a short period he
completed his studies and settled permanently there.
He had arrived in Lahore during the latter part of
Akbar's rule, and**lived on through the successive
reigns of Jahaogir and Shahjahan.
Prince Dara Shikoh, son of the
Emperor Shahjahan,
held Miyan Mir in high esteem and wrote a biography
THE QADIRI ORDER 271

of him, under the title of the SakinatiCl-Aivliyd which


has come down to us. Though the prince knew the
saint intimately and paid him frequent visits, yet for
some reason or other he became a disciple of Mullah
Shah, one of Miyan Mir's vicegerents. Dara Shikoh
has depicted the saint as a man of high principles,
one who scorned material possessions, shunned cheap
popularity, and exibited at all times the utmost con-
tempt for wordly pleasures. To him the true renuncia-
tion was that wherein a ufl, in his search after God,
becomes so absorbed that he grows unconcerned about
the ordinary necessities of
life, and is anxious only to
live incontinuous meditation upon God. His biogra-
pher tells us that he had a habit of saying that the
purging of one's self from every love except that of
God is the first step towards the mystic Path. He

would enjoin upon his disciples the cultivation of


humility, and urged them to avoid the company of the
rich and of men of high dignity. In this connection he
often used to quote the saying of Muhammad. ''The
last thing that goes out of the head of the righteous is

love of dignity." He himself is described in words


which indicate that he endeavoured to live up to the
standard of austerity which he set before others. He
remained a celibate all his life.
Miyan Mir's favourite disciple was Miyan Nattha, a
native of Sirhind, who also waited upon him. The
saint liyed in the upper story of his house while Miyao
(1) Our information concerning the life of Miyan Mir and his
associates are chiefly derived from this book. See also, Nur Ahmad,
op- cit. p. 250 ff.
272 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Nattha occupied the lower. Every night it was his
custom to carry water to his master for the ablutions
before prayer. One night, according to Dara Shikoh,
he was late in taking the water and on reaching the
room he failed in spite of a thorough search, to find
his master. Astonished at the saint's sudden dis-
appearance, he spent the whole night seated outside
the door, awaiting his return. Great was his surprise
when, early in the morning, he heard his master shout-
ing from within the room to bring the water. Miyan
Nattha, curious to know where he had been during the
night and how he managed to get inside the room,
naturally asked for an explanation. The saint at first
would not reply, but when Miyao Nattha persisted in
his enquiry;he answered, "I generally spend my night
in Mt. Hira, in the vicinity of Mecca, where Prophet
11
Muhammad used to meditate in his early life.
Miyo Nattha was very much subject to states of
ecstasy and would often pass whole day in some desert
place, lost in profound meditation. Dara Shikoh
speaks of him as one who could understand the langu-
age of birds, trees, plants, etc., and tells the story of
how Miyao Mir once asked him where he resorted for
meditation. The disciple replied. "At first I used to
meditate in Ichra, but there the noise of the trees and
plants praising God disturbed me, and so now I retire
1'
to the corner of a shrine in Mohalla Junayd Khalifa.
Miyfin Mir jokingly retorted: "Aha! listen to all the
1 *
talks of this oilman! (This probably was an allusion to
his previous occupation).
THE QADIRI ORDER 273

Another story of similar type is told on the autho-


rity of Miyan Nattha himself. Once a jinn, the owner
of vast wealth, pressed him to take as much of it as he
desired, but he refused saying that it was of no use to
him. A little
further he heard a tree calling out to
him, and as he drew near to it, the tree thus addressed
him. "You did not listen to the jinn, well now take a
little my root. When desired you just put a bit of
of
it some molten metal and it will turn it into pure
into
silver." Nattha still paying no attention, passed on, and
heard a plant which called out to him from some dis-
tance ahead, saying: "Take me along; a little bit of
me if put into some metal will turn it into gold."
Whereupon Miyan Nattha turned to God in prayer
and cried: "O Lord of the Universe, these Thy
creatures distract me from contemplation of Thy-
self! Command them never again to address me
thus."
Miyao Mir died in 1635-36 A. D., and was buried in
Lahore at the place now known by his name, Prince
Dara Shikoh sent to Siwastan for the saint's cousin,
Muhammad Sharif, to come to take charge of the
shrine, and his descendants still serve there as its

attendants. The Prince commenced to build the shrine


and planned to make a road of red stone all the
also
way from the saint's tomb to the Fort, but before the
work was completed he was put to death by his brother
Aurangzeb. The edifice remained unfinished for a
whole year, and then, when Aurangzeb himself visited
the place, he gave orders for its completion.
274 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Within the precincts of the shrine, but outside the
area enclosing the saint's tomb, there are many graves.
Chief of these is that of Miyan Nattha who had died
before his master in 1618 A. D. Others are the tombs
of the descendants of Muhammad Sharif the first guar-
dian of the shrine. Attached to the shrine is a Baradari,

which contains the tomb of Princess Nadirah, sister of


Dara Shikoh. The story goes that the Princess from
the time she was nine years' old, used to come to the
saint and assist him to make his ablutions for the

midday prayer. After two years of such service the


one day, "Daughter! You are now
saint said to her,

growing up, do not trouble to come any more." The


following morning she was found dead in her apart-
ment, being surmised that she died of grief, so dis-
it

tressed was she that the privilege of serving the saint


had been taken away.
The 'urs of Miyan Mir is held on the 7th. of
RabiVfh-thani, and is celebrated for a night and a day
during which a continuous stream of people visit the
tomb. Hundreds of temporary shops are set up in
booths on both sides of the road leading to the shrine.
The anniversary celebrations are also, unfortunately,
attended by women of ill-fame, as well as by singers
and musicians who throughout the night give free

performances of their dancing and singing. A fair is


also held there on every Wednesday in the months of
Savan and Bhadun, and on these days people throng to
the shrine and take part in celebrations of a type
similar to the 'urs.
CHAPTER XVIII.

The Naqshbandi Order.


The first saint of this order to enter India was
Khwaja Baql Billah Berang, seventh in the line of
succession from Khwaja BahaVd-Din Naqshband, the
founder. Baqi Bi'llah acting on the instruction of his
pir, came to India and settled in Delhi, where he died
after three years.
He may be considered to have merely introduced
the Order into this country, for it was his disciple and
vicegerent, Ahmad Faruql, who really established it

here. This man, in fact, exerted so great an influence


upon the people that for a time it seemed as if the
Naqshbandi Order would supersede the rest of the
Orders in India. The importance that came to be
attached in course of time to this one may be judged
by the following remarks made by Rose, /The history
of the Naqshbandi Order would be of some interest if
it could be recovered, not merely because it has played

an important part in Muslim thought, but also because


it has had no little influence on the political vicissitudes
of India, Mesopotamia, and, to a less extent, Turkey."*
Since these words were written much material relating
to the Indian history of theOrder has been recovered,
and as a result of the keen interest recently shown in
the Order by the Muslims of the Punjab, a consider-

*Rose, The Danishes, P. 435.


276 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
able literature on the subject is now available in both
Urdu and Persian. This history, however, so far as
India is concerned begins with Ahmad Faruqi of
Sirhind.
Ahmad Faruqi was born in 1563-64 A.D. in Sirhind.
It is asserted by the ufls of this Order that his coming
was known to the saints centuries ahead, and that
Sirhind, long before his birth was regarded as the
place in which he would appear. Khwaja Ahmad
Amkangi is stated to have sent Baqi Bi'llah, his dis-
ciple, to India for no other purpose but to initiate the

long-expected saint into the Order.


Baqi Billah
himself, on reaching Delhi, was informed by divine
revelation concerning every detail in the personal
appearance of this chosen saint of God and was
instructed to look out for him. But we are told that as
*

early as five years hundred before his birth Abdu'l-Qadir


Gllani had foretold Ahmad's coming and had announc-
l

ed that he would be a great reformer of Islam. Abdu'l-


Qadir went so far as to entrust his i^hirqa or, patched

garment to his son 'Abdu'r-Razzaq, to be passed on


from generation to generation till the appearance of
Ahmad, when it should be bestowed upon him. It is
said that his duty was eventually performed, in 1604
A. D., by Sayyid Sikandar Qadirl, a descendant of
(1
'Abdu'l-Qadir GilanL >

A number of supernatural events are said to have


taken place at his coming, such as that all the saints

(1) Abul-Fayd Khwaja Kamalud-Din. Rawdatu l-Qayyumiya-


Part I p. 108.
THE NAQSHBANDI ORDER 277

who were dead appeared to his mother and congratu-


lated her upon his birth. His father saw Muhammad,
in company with all the prophets, come near the
infant and repeat the adhdn in hij ears and enumerate
his virtues. Further, we are told that for a whole
week from the day he was born no musician could
use his instrument. Many of them took this to be a
sign of God's disapproval of their profession and
relinquished it. Like Muhammad he too was born
circumcised.
Ahmad's father, Shaykh 'Abdul-Ahad, was a very
distinguished ufl who held authority to make disciples
in fifteen different religious orders and when Ahmad
reached the age of discretion his father initiated him in-
to all of them. But so far neither 'Abdu'1-Ahad nor his
son had come into touch with the Naqshbandl Order.
In 1598-99 A. D. when his father died, Ahmad
left his home with the intention of making the
pilgrimage to Mecca. His route lay through Delhi
where a friend introduced him to Baqi Bi'llah, who
constrained him to stay with him for a week. It did
not take long for Ahmad to come under the influence
of his host, and before the week was over it was
agreed to prolong his stay there. Eventually he gave
up the idea of making the pilgrimage and became a
disciple of Baqi BHlah. At the end of two months
he was appointed a vicegerent by his new pir and sent
back to Sirhind.
Four years after he paid another visit to Baqi

Billah, and, contrary to all custom, the disciple was


278 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
received with every token of respect by his ptr. He
was alloted an eminent place in the monastery where
even his pirwould sometimes sit along with his own
disciples and listen to the mystical expositions of
Ahmad. The extraordinary treatment that Ahmad
received from his plr roused the jealousy of some of
the other disciples, nevertheless his fame rapidly grew
and he soon outshone all contemporary ufl teachers.

Shortly afterwards he returned to Sirhind, and it


was on this occasion that he received the Khirqa of
the Qadiri order, to which reference has been made
above. Ahmad
has left it on record that when he
assumed ghirqa the spirit of 'Abdu'l-Qadir with
this
that of *All. and the spirit of BahaVd-Dm with that
of Abu Bakr (in company with all the departed saints
of their respective orders) came to him, each claim-
ing him to be the representative of his Order. While
the contention was still in progress, the spirits of the
founders of the Chishti and Suhrawardi Orders, attend-
ed by companies of departed saints, also appeared
to him, and each put forward his argument in support
of his claim that Ahmad should represent his Order.
The dispute is said to have been continued from morn-
At last appeal was a made to Muhammad,
ing till noon.
who decided the matter by saying, "Let there be
united in Ahmad the spiritual power of all the religi-
ous orders, and each of you bestow upon him the
let

right of supreme authority in your orders. But the


Naqshbandiyya should take the precedence of all orders
with him, since it is traced to my friend Abu Bakr,
THE NAQSHBANDI ORDER 279

and because it keeping with the Law of Islam,


is in
for he is to be the reformer of my religion." (1)
The above story is often quoted by the ufls of the
Naqshbandi Order not only to show the superiority
of this Order over all the rest, but in justification of
their claim that its plrs have authority to make disciples
in all the others. As a matter of fact the Khalifas of
Ahmad did, for a time, initiate disciples into all the
religicus orders, but later on the practice was restrict-
ed to the Naqshbandi and Qadirl Orders only. This
restriction arose through indulgence by others in such

practices as music which are contrary to the law of


Islam.
Ahmad paid his third visit to his
In 1603-4 A. D.
pir. On occasion Baqi Bfllah eulogised him,
this

enumerating the points of distinction in his character.


For instance, he said, "Ahmad has guided us to the
true interpretation of ufi pantheism. In the know-
ledge of mysticism he is like a sun while we are like
planets revolving round him. Indeed, after Muhammad
there have never been a saint in dignity equal to
him."
Soon after his return from Delhi he went to Lahore,
where he was welcomed by the ufis and the 'Ulmd
as a saint and reformer of Islam. While he was still
there, news reached him of the death of his pir, so he
hastened to Delhi where he was acknowledged as the
head of the Naqshbandi Order. He was soon acclaim-
ed as the much-needed Mujaddid, or reformer of Islam,
(1) Md. Part I. pp. 109,10.
280 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
and in consequence the order itself came to be known
as the "Naqshbandiyya-Mujaddadiyya."
The fame of Ahmad
soon spread far and wide in
India, and he began to exercise great influence over
all classes of the people. He not only acted as a pir
but, in keeping with his title, he also exerted himself
to purge Islam of numerous heretical teachings which
were current among Muslims, much of it due to the
influence of Akbar's eclectic religion, Din-i-Hahi. He
further set himself up in opposition to the Shi'as who
were gaining much influence at the time, and wrote
several treatises in refutation of their tenets. In a
word, he endeavoured to restore Sunn! Islam to its
pristine condition. The result was that from all quarters
of the country the orthodox enthusiastically hailed
him as the saviour of their religion. He is said to
have tried to convert even Faydl and Abu'l-Fadal,
Akbar's chief religious advisers, from their heretical
beliefs. His success, however, was most marked in the
reign of Jahaoglr, when many of the leading officers
of the court became his followers. Moreover he tried
to effect certain religious reforms among the Emperor's
soldiers, for whose spiritual instruction he appointed
Badf u'd-Din, one of his own disciples. These activities,
but more especially his effort to combat Shi'a influence
4

in the state, roused the temper of Asaf Jah, the Shi a

prime minister of Jahangir. As he had the Emperor's


ear he prevailed upon him to exercise his royal authority
to curb the progress of the new movement, arguing that
it might prove to be dangerous to the state. Acting
THE NAQSHBANDI ORDER 281

upon his advice, the Emperor promptly transferred


to distant provinces such of his leading officers as
were Ahmad's disciples; for instance, jChan-i-Khanan
was sent to the Deccan; Sayyid adar Jahao to Bengal;
Khan-i-Jahao to Malwa; and Mahabat Khan to Kabul.
When the more influential friends of the saint had
been scattered, Ahmad himself was summoned to
appear at court. Foreseeing the danger of persecution,
he sent his family away to Afghanistan, and came,
attended only by his immediate followers, into the
presence of Jahanglr. On being brought before the
king he refused to make the customary obeisance to
him, and when urged to observe the usual court
etiquette, he replied, "I have never bowed my head
to any of God's creatures, and I never will!" This
gave an opportunity to his enemies to whisper to the
Emperor of the grave danger he ran in granting liberty
to a person of such marked independence of character.
The saint and his companions were, thereupon, ordered
to be imprisoned in the fort of Gwalior. News of this
aroused the most indignant feelings among his followers,
and for a time an insurrection seemed imminent. In
particular, Mahabat Khan, shocked at the news of his
ptr's imprisonment, was on the point of returning from
Kabul head of an army. Fortunately, however,
at the
the saint intervened and issued orders from the prison,
that no one was to rise in revolt on his behalf,
adding that any one who gave way would
to violence
incur his greatest displeasure. Thus tranquility was
restored among his followers.
282 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Ahmad remained a prisoner for three
years, by
which time Jahaogir became convinced of his innocent
character, and not only granted him his freedom, but,
impressed with his saintly life, actually became his
disciple. The Emperor, following the advice of his
pir, proceeded to make several changes in matters of
state. For instance, the custom of falling prostrate
before the king, which had been in force from the
time of Akbar, was discontinued; the use of beef,
which had hitherto been prohibited was made permissi-
ble, a new mosque was built close to the Diwan-i-'Am
in the fort, for the special convenience of the king
and his courtiers, and the Sunn! code was adopted
as the law of the state. Ahmad's triumph over the
Shi'as at court was also complete. Their influence
indeed declined to so great an extent that their

Mujtahid, Sayyid Nuru'llah, was trampled to death


by an elephant at the order of the king. In short,
from the time of Ahmad the influence of the plrs of
the Naqshbandi-Mujaddadl Order continued to be an
(1)
important factor in the courts of the Moghal Emperors
Aurangzeb, the bigotted Muslim, who was a disciple
of Ahmad's son Ma* sum, was himself a product of this
Order. Ahmad died in 1625 A. D. at the age of 63,
and was buried in Sirhind.
We shall not attempt to describe any of the 700
miracles which are said to have been performed by
him, but shall content ourselves instead with a brief
account of his teaching and achievements as a ufl

(1) Ibid. 124-130; 186-195


THE NAQSHBANDI ORDER 283

and a reformer Undoubtedly the chief service that


he rendered to Islam was through his reforms. He
extirpated the heresies introduced by Akbar, drove
out the Shi'a beliefs and practices which had found
their way into the court of Jahangir through the
influence of his wife Nur
Jahao, and purged ufism
of many of those extraneous elements which had
become attached to it through its long history. It was
because of his efforts to harmonise the doctrines of
mysticism with the teachings of the Quran and Sunnat,
that he came to be looked upon as the person foretold
by Muhammad in the following tradition, "Among
my people will arise a man who will be called Sila"
This word is interpreted by the ufls to mean, one

who shall reconcile his followers to God and also


harmonise the teaching of the mystics with the law of
Islam. Another tradition which is quoted as having
reference to him, runs as follows, "Muhammad said: At
the beginning of the tenth century, during the period
intervening the reigns of two powerful monarchs,
there will arise a man who shall be my namesake;
he be a great light, and shall carry many thou-
shall
sands with him into paradise," Ahmad forbad his
disciples to make use of the following practices, though
they are still considered permissible in certain of the
other religious Orders: the use of music; dancing
while in the state of ecstasy; prostration before one's

pir; the worship of the saints and shrines, and illuminat-


ing the tombs of saints.
He also revised to theology of the uf!s. For
284 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

instance,in the matter of their belief about God the


ufiswere divided into Wujudiyya and Shuhudiyya,
The one holding an extreme pantheistic view, the
other a modified view of it. Ahmad reconciled the
two by asserting that a ufl in the early stage of

mysticism fails to see any distinction between the


Creator and the creatures and he is a Wujuch, a mynist;
but in the higher stages he gains the knowledge of
"

the two as existing separately and is thus a Shuhudi,


a modified pantheist,
Ahmad is credited with as many as 644 treatises on
different religious subjects. His teachings are mainly
embodied in a series of letters which were collected
in his lifetime and are now published in three large
volumes.
We shallspeak again of Ahmad in the following
chapter in connection with the peculiar dignity which
he claimed for himself and for his three immediate
successors.
CHAPTER XIX
The Naqshbandi Order.
THE FOUR QAYYUMS.
The
doctrine of Qayyumiyat, to be explained in the
present chapter, is peculiar to the teachings of the
Naqshbandi-Mujaddadi Order and requires separate
treatment.
Ahmad Sirhindl was the first of the saints of Islam
who claimed for himself and for his three immediate
successors the title of Qayyum. It would seem that
the Qayyum is to be considered higher in rank and
dignity than the Perfect man. (1) He is described as
follows: The Qayyum is the dignitary on whom the
whole order of existence depends, and under whose
control are all Names, Attributes, and things actual

and potential. All things, whether they belong to the


past, the present or the future men, animals, birds and
plants in fact every animate and inanimate object
the throne of God, the Preserved Tablet, the Pen, the
Planets, the fixed stars, the sun, the moon, and the
heavens with all their signs of the Zodiacs, are "under
11
his shadow, i. e. (government).

It is through his command that the heavens and


1
their 'Zodiacs move in their courses, that the waves

(1) The doctrine of the Perfect Man has been expounded by


Ibnu'l-'Arabi and Jili, also see, Nicholson, Studies in Islamic
Mysticism.
286 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

rise and fall in seas and oceans, that the leaves in the
trees shake and rustle, that the rains fall from heaven,
that fruits ripen, that birds open their beaks (to receive
food), and that day succeeds night. Every event, small
or great, takes place according to his command. No
a drop of rain falls without his knowledge. The earth
remains motionless or quakes in accordance with his
will, and every one of its inhabitants receives joy or

sorrow, pleasure or pain according to his discretion.


Not a single moment or day, week, month, or year can
prove auspicious or inauspicious to the world without
his order. There can be no harvest, no growth of any
plant unless he wills. In fact, every conceivable event
takes place as he desires and directs.
Moreover, all ascetics, worshippers, pious people
and saints occupied with God's praise, remembrance
and meditation, in huts and cells, on mountains and by
the banks of rivers or seas, either with their tongues
or with other organs of spiritual communication
(/ata'i/) all such are engaged by the will of the Qayyum,
and unless their worship is first accepted by him it

does not reach unto God.


The Qayyum is 'the substance' of all that exists
actually or potentially, and
beings, except God, are
all

to him what 'accidents' are to 'substance'. He is the


Vicar of God on earth. The Absolute bestows upon
him a special essence, calledmawhub. (1) on which de-
pends the subsistance of the universe, yet though he
is the 'Substance' of all, the application of this term is

(1) Lit; given.


THE NAQSHBANDI ORDER 287

not commensurate with his dignity. Even so, since


the universe stands to him in the relation of 'accidents',
1

we call him 'substance for there is no substance with-


,

out accidents, and no accidents without substance.


Every Qhawth, Qutb, Abdal etc. is a representative of
the Qayyum and is his servant. Verily, he is the Vicar
of God, and all the Afrdda} of the world turn to him.
He moreover the qibla of the universe and of all its
is

inhabitants, whether they know it or not. Such is


the dignity of the office of Qayyum as bestowed upon
Ahmad Sirhindi and his three immediate successors.
But this office was strictly limited to these four and
no other can receive this high dignity in future.
Ahmad further asserted that God fashioned his
body with the substance that was left over after the
creationof the body of Muhammad. The second

Qayyum, Ma'sum, a son of Ahmad, states in one of


his letters that, "Ahmad said that God used the resi-
due of the substance of the body of Muhammad to
form his body and those of his three successors. **In
this connection a story is told of how one night after
his prayer Ahmad's whole body became so luminous
that it dazzled the eyes, and at that moment he receiv-
ed the following 'revelation' from God: "O, Ahmad!
this thy body, is made of the residue of the substance
of Muhammad's body, which I had reserved for thy
" (2)
sake, for thou wast to be my beloved.

(1) A frad<
are those saints who are not under the Qutb, the
head of the invisible hierarchy of the saints.

(2) Abul-Fayd Khwaja Kamalu d-Din op. cat. Part I. pp. 93>97.
288 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
It is said that when God bestowed upon Ahmad
the dignity of the Qayyum, the spirit of Muhammad
appeared to him and said: "You are indeed my son,
likeIbrahim and Qasim. (1) The honour and privilege
which God has given to you, no other saint has ever
received from Him. You have been raised a thousand
years after me, at a time when God might raise up an-
other Prophet to reform religion, but as there can
ariseno Prophet after me, you are sent forth into the
world endowed with the dignity of those exalted
messengers of God who were known as Ulul-azam^
"Possessors of constancy/' and all the acts of such
prophets will proceed from you, and through you my
religion will be reformed. Muhammad then turned to
"
the spirit of Khadlja and said, Ahmad is your son
also, for God has given him to us both, and he is
11
brother of Qasim and Ibrahim, Whereupon Khadija
affectionately embraced him and said, "You are the
best of all my sons." (3)
Another illustrating his dignity in virtue of
story,
hisQayyumiyat (the office of Qayyum), runs as follows.

Once Ahmad saw the angels, jinn, human beings and


the entire creation performing their namaz and making
prostration towards him. He 'concentrated his mind'
to find out why he was the recipient of such higher

(1) Muhammad's two sons born of Mary the Copt, and Khadija,
who died in their infancy.
(2) The following nine are said to have been Ulu'l-cazam
Prophets: Noah, Abraham, David, Jacob, Joseph, Job, Moses, Jesus,
and Muhammad.
(3) Ibid, Part I. 99-100.
THE NAQSHBANDI ORDER 289

honour. He was forthwith 'inspired' to know that the


Ka'ba itself had come to visit him and that he was so
completely surrounded by it that every one prostrat-
ing towards the Ka'ba was actually prostrating towards
himself. At the same time he received the following
"revelation": "O Ahmad! your great desire was to
visit the Ka'ba, and lo! I have sent the Ka'ba to visit
you. I now bestow upon
the ground whereon stands
your monastery, the dignity of the Ka'ba and I also
deposit within it the light of the Ka'ba itself." The
Ka'ba then entered the monastery of Ahmad, and the
ground whereon the monastery stood itself became so
intimately one with the Ka'ba, that the former was
first 'annihilated' and then received its 'subsistence' in
the latter, and thus all the realities of the Ka'ba came
to exist in the monastery also. An angel was then
heard to proclaim, "This mosque (monastery) of Ahmad
Sirhindl has superiority over all the mosques of the
world, and he who
ever performs prayer in this mos-
que will acquire the same degree of merit as though
he had offered prayer in all the mosques of the world."
It ison the basis of this legend that the Muslims of
India, more especially those of the Punjab, make a
pilgrimage to this particular mosque. The tomb of
this saint himself is said to be situated at a distance of
about twenty yards from this ground which is now
4

regarded as being quite as sacred as that of the Ka ba.


(1)

The next great favour which Aljmad, as the Qayyum,


claimed to have received from God was that He
(1) Ibid Part I. pp. 100-101.
290 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
4

bestowed upon him the title of the Depository of God's

Mercy', and actuallymade him the custodian of


1

'His Treasury of Mercy At the time when he receiv-


.

ed this favour he declared that he saw an infinite


number from heaven and standing
of angels descending
before him, in rows, with folded hands, and that they
said to him; "We are the angels of mercy, and God has
commanded us to carry out your orders." Thus Ahmad
not only claimed that he was the treasury of God's
Mercy but also that its distribution was entrusted to
him. He further asserted that he had given the charge
of keeping the seal of the permit to enter heaven on
the day of judgment to his son, Sa'ld. He declared
that all who receive from God a permit to enter heaven
on the day judgment must first get the impress on
of
it Other acts of Mercy, such as rescuing
of his seal.
sinners from hell, and assisting people at the Bridge
and at the Balances, he has entrusted to his son and
successor, Ma'sum. (1)
The story is related that once Ahmad went to the

graveyard in Sirhind, where one of his ancestors,


RafiVd-Dln, the founder of the city, was buried.
There it was revealed to him that henceforth, by virtue
of his visit to that cemetery, no one buried in it will
suffer the usual punishment of the grave till the day
of judgment. <2)
Similar sanctity is said to attach to the land situated
4

to the north of his monastery. This is called heavenly

(1) Ibid Part I. pp. 101-102.


(2) Ibid Part I. pp. 154, 155.
THE NAQSHBANDI ORDER 291

land' and it is believed that any one buried in it will

surely go to heaven. Ma'sum writes that his father


once told him that God had graciously made his burial
place 'heavenly' and that if a handful of earth from
this ground be cast into the grave of any one, the soul
of the person there buried will not suffer from any tor-
ment of hell. This particular piece of 'Heavenly land'
measures 40 yards in length and 30 yards in breadth.
On its western extremity is a well concerning which
Ahmad once declared that any one drinking of its
water thrice, would escape the touch of the fire of hell
and most surely enter heaven. (T) .
*
.

The following story is yet a further illustration of


the high claims which this saint made concerning his
personal dignity as the Qayyum of his age. It is said
that once in Sirhind plague was raging very violently.
When the mortality became excessive, people hastened
to Ahmad and asked him to pray that the epidemic
might cease. After offering prayer Ahmad declared:
"God demands one children on behalf of .the
of my
people, and I have agreed to give one." The same day
his son Muhammad Isa, eleven years old, died of the
plague. His death, however, though believed to have
taken place by way of relief for the people, failed to
bring about any abatement of the epidemic. Con-
sequently, the people came once again to Ahmad and
entreated him to pray on their behalf. This time he
was informed by a 'revelation* from God that yet an-
other son of his must die on behalf of the people.
(1) Ibid Part 1. p. 160.
292 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Again the saint consented to the death of his son,
Farukh, then ten years old. He also was attacked by
the plague and died the same day. Even this did not
have the desired effect, for the epidemic continued to
rage as violently as before. The devotees of the saint
once again besought his prayers. Ahmad now offered
his daughter Kulthum, and also the wife of his son

Ma'sum, and in consequence of his prayer they both


fellill and died of the plague. It is said that when
Kulthum was lying on her deathbed, about to breath
her last, angels appeared to the saint and congratulated
him. But this being no occasion for joy, he greatly
wondered at their felicitations, whereupon God is said
to have sent him the following extraordinary 'revela-
tion
1

: "O Ahmad! rejoice, for I have chosen thy


daughter, Kulthum, for my prophet Yahya (John the
Baptist), and these angels and saints who stand around
her bed are there to solemnize her marriage with him."
On receiving Ahmad's consent the ceremony was per-
formed by 'the spirit of Muhammad/ and then the
spirits of all the prophets and angels bore witness to it.
As soon as the ceremony was over she breathed her
last. The saint forbade the people to mourn over her
death, for he said that hesaw Yahya with a great con-
course of the angels and the spirits of the saints and
the prophets following the bier of Kulthum as if they
were marching in a wedding procession. He also said
that when her body was laid in the grave the spirit of
Yaljya caught hold of it. 1

(1) Ibid. Part I. 157-158.


THE NAQSHBANDI ORDER 293

Ahmad even declared that he had access to 'the


Preserved Tablet/ The story goes that one of his dis-
ciples, Shaykh Tahir, fell in love with a Hindu girl,
and in consequence renounced Islam and became a
Hindu. Ahmad prayed earnestly for him and he was
guided back to Islam. Soon after he again apostatized,
and again was restored to him by the prayer
his faith
of the saint. When
this was repeated the third time,

the saint studied the 'Preserved Tablet/ and discovered


that it was recorded of him that he would die as a
'sinner.' The saint records that he then erased the
1 1

word 'sinner and wrote the word 'saint in its place!


Tahir then repented sincerely of his lapse into Hinduism
and became a devoted disciple of Ahmad. Soon after
he received from the saint permission to make disciples
in the Chishtl, the Qadiri and the Naqshbandi Orders,

and was also raised to the dignity of the Qutb. Ahmad


finally sent him to Lahore as his vicegerent, where he
(163031 A. D.) (1)
lived until his death
The second Qayyum and successor of Ahmad was
the latter's third son, Muhammad Ma'sum 'Urwatu'l-

Wuthqa, born in 1598-99 A.D It is said that the name


Ma'sum, 'sinless/ was given to him in accordance with
the instruction of 'the spirit of Muhammad/ At his
birth the spirit of Muhammad, in company with the
spirits of allthe prophets and saints, is said to have
come and repeated the a^han in the ears of the child.
Miraculous events are said to have marked each stage
of his development.

(1) Ibid, Part I p. 327.


294 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
The second Qayyum claimed to have learnt from
his father the meanings of the mysterious letters which
and found at the beginning of the certain chapters of
the Quran. It is said that no one had ever known their

meanings except Muhammad and his more intimate


companions. It was a thousand years after the time
of Muhammad that they were revealed for the first
time to Ahmad, and the only person to whom he
transmitted this knowledge was this son, his successor.
It is related that in the period during which the father

was expounding the meanings of these letters to his


son, every precaution was taken against the possibility
of being overheard by any man, jinn or spirit. For
instance, the evil spirits and demons were imprisoned
in the ocean, and the angels were made to stand in
tiers with folded hands, round about Ahmad and his son.
Both the Qayyums at this time had miraculously trans-

ported themselves to Mecca, and had shut themselves


4

up inside the Ka ba.


For three days the instructions
continued to be given and they are said to have been
of such terrible nature that at every exposition of the
mystery Ma'sum became unconscious. But at the end of
the three days the saint had only completed the unfold-
ing of the one letter, qdf It is said that the mysteries
.

attaching to the remaining letters were subsequently


revealed to Ma'sum by God Himself. a)
Prince Aurangzeb, who in his early youth was a
devotee of Arimad, now became a disciple of Muhammad
Ma'sdm. The reason given for his accepting QayyQm
~~
(1) Ibid. Part I pp. 164 166.
THE NAQSHBANDI ORDER 295

II as his plr is said to be as follows. He dreamed one


night that the day of judgment had come, and that
sinners were being dragged down to hell. The angels
of hell came to him also to drive him into the fire, but
as they were about to take hold of him shouts were
heard from all sides, "Here comes Imam Ma'sum!
Imam Ma'sum! Imam Ma'sum! he is our deliverer! !"
The Qayyum then appeared on the scene delivered
the sinners from hell, and instead sent them to
heaven. Finally Ma'sum turned to Aurangzeb and
bade the angels release him on the ground that he was
his disciple. It is said that on the following morning
he went to the Qayyum and became his disciple. (1) The
saint, after initiating him into his Order, predicted that
he would succeed his father as Emperor of India. From
that time Aurangzeb was supported in his contest
against his brothers for the throne by this saint who
wielded very great influence throughout the Empire.
It was largely through the influence of this puritanical
Ma'sum, that he reimposed the jizya on his
plr of his,
Hindu subjects and forbade the use of music. Even
the practice of Sama* at the shrines of the Chishti
saintswas put a stop to.
The third Qayyum was Khwaja Naqshband Huj-
jatu'llah, born in 1624-25 A.D. He was the second son
of Qayyum II. The year of his birth is regarded as
remarkable, and is called sdl-i-muflaq, 'the absolute
year/ for it was in this very year that Qayyum I died,

(1) Ibid. Part II p. 38.


296 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
that Qayyum II succeeded him, and that Qayyum III

was born. ;

Like his predecessor, Hujjatu'llah also influenced


very greatly the reigning Emperor, Aurangzeb, in his
political career. The biographers of Qayyum III say
that it was at the instigation of this saint that Aurang-
zeb led out his great expedition against the Shi'a king-
dom of South India.
A large number of miracles are declared to have
been performed by him. The most astonishing of these
is that he is said to have raised to life his grand-
daughter after she had been dead for three days. It
issaid that his grand-daughter, Taju'n-Nisa, once fell

ill,and after suffering for some time died. When the


news was conveyed to the Qayyum he said that she
was not dead but alive. The doctors did their best to
revive her but they did not find any sign of life in her.
When three days had passed, and her body began to
show signs of decay, the people approached the saint
and requested him either to allow to make preparation
for her burial or else raise her to life. Whereupon the
saintapproached the body and called her by name, at
which she at once sat up. (1)
The fourth Qayyum Zubayr, was a grandson of
Qayyum III. It is related that his father, Abu'l 'All,
took the veil, after the manner of women, when 12
years old but discarded it when Zubayr was born 12
years afterwards. Such supernatural events as are
said to have taken place at the time of the birth of the
"

(1) 7W7~"Part III, p?9a


THE NAQSHBANDI ORDER 297

first three Qayyums are reported to have occurred at


Zubayr's birth also, and countless miracles are said to
have been performed by him from his childhood on to
old age.
It was during the time of the fourth Qayyum that

Aurangzeb died, and in the subsequent war of succes-


sion between princes A'zam and Mu'azzam, the saint

appears to have played an important role in deciding


He openly championed the cause of his
its final issue.

disciple, Mu'azzam, and encouraged him with the


promise of victory in his fight with his brother. As
predicted the battle ended in favour of Mu'azzam, who
ascended the throne with the title of Bahadur Shah.
Zubayr, however, never allowed him to forget that
it was through his influence that he had gained the

Empire.
The fourth Qayyum passed the rest of his life amid
the turbulent times of the now decaying Muslim
Empire. The hostile forces of Marhattas, Rajputs,
Sikhs, Jats,the French and the English were closing in
upon Delhi. It was during this time that Delhi was

sacked by the Persians under Nadir Shah ( 1739 A.D.)


who took away the Peacock Throne and with it

immense treasure.
The decay which had set in was due in the main to
the intolerance and fanaticism with which the four
Qayyums had imbued the Moghal Emperors in parti-
cular Aurangzeb and his successors. It is notable that
the Muslim Empire in India was at the height of its
glory in the time of Akbar, in whose reign Qayyum I
298 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
assumed office, and that it lay in ruins when the last of
the Qayyums died, in 173940 A.D. Equally note-
worthy is the fact that at the death of Zubayr the
Naqshbandl-Mujaddadi Order had spread to every
part of the Muslim world.
CHAPTER XX.

Some Minor Orders.


1. THE UWAYSI ORDER.
This Order is ascribed to Uwaysu'l-Qaram, who
derived his title from Qaran, a village in Yaman. He
was a contemporary of Muhammad but was prevented
from seeing him chiefly because of his high sense of
duty to his own mother and also owing to the fact that he
was subject to states of ecstasy which periodically over-
mastered him. He is said to have received instruction
in a mysterious way from the spirit of Muhammad.
Thus it is that when a ufl is known to have no ptr, he
1

is said to be an 'Uwaysi. The custom, to which refer-


ence has already been made (p. 190} of connecting ,

two saints or mystics in a spiritual genealogy who could


never have met because separated by a long space of
time or distance, is really derived from this Uwaysl
order. The one is said to have received instruction
from the ruhdniyat ('spirituality/ elsewhere we have
translated this word by 'spirit') of the other. Such cases
are common in the Naqshbandi other. (See pp. 187-190).
The
following anecdote concerning Uways is related
by the author of the Kashfu'l-mahjub: The Apostle said
to the Companions: 'There is a man at Qaran, called
Uways, who at the Resurrection will intercede for a
multitude of my people, as many as the sheep of Rabf a
300 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
and Mudar. Then turning to 'Umar and 'All, he said:
'You will see him. He is a lowly man, of middle height,
and hairy; on his left side there is a white spot, as large
as a dirhem which is not from leprosy (plsti) and he has
a similar spot on the palm of his hand. When you see
him, give him my greetings, and bid him pray for my
1

people. After the Apostle's death 'Umar came to


Mecca, and cried out in the course of a sermon: 'O men
of Najd, are there any natives of Qaran amongst you ?
They answered, 'Yes'; whereupon 'Umar sent for them
and asked them about Uways. They said: 'He is a mad
man who dwells in solitude and associates with no one.
He does not eat what men eat, and he teels no joy or
sorrow. When others smile he weeps, and when others
weep he smiles.' 'Umar said: 1 wish to see him.' They
replied: "He lives in a desert, far from our camels.
4

'Umar and All set out in quest of him. They found


him praying and waited until he was finished. He
saluted them and showed them the marks on his side
and the palm of his hand. They asked his blessing and
gave him the Apostle's greeting, and enjoined him to
pray for the Moslem people. After they had stayed
with him for a while, he said: 'You have taken trouble
(to see me) ; now return, for the Resurrection is near,
when we each other without having to say
shall see
farewell. At present I am engaged in preparing for the
Resurrection/ When the men of Qaran came home,
they exhibited great respect for Uways. He left his
native place and came to Kufa. One day he was seen
by liarim b. HEayySn, and after that nobody saw him
SOME MINOR ORDERS 301

until the period of civil war. He fought for *AlI, and


fell a martyr at the battle of Siff!n." (1)
D'Ohsson in his work on the Ottoman Empire says
that Uways formed the first order of the anchorites who
practised the greatest austerity. He writes: "This
visionary pretended also to have received from the
heavenly visitor the plan of his future conduct, and the
rules of his institution. These consisted in a continual
abstinence, in retirement from society, in an abandon-
ment of the pleasures of innocent nature, and in the
recital of an infinity of prayers day and night. Uways
even added to these practices. He went so far as to
draw out his teeth, in honour, it is said, of the Prophet,
who had lost two of his own in the celebrated battle of
Uhud. He required his disciples to make the same
sacrifice. He pretended that all those who would be
especially favoured by heaven, and really called to the
exercises of his Order, should lose their teeth in a
supernatural manner; that an angel should draw out
their teeth while in the midst of a deep sleep; and that
on awakening they should them by their bedside.
find
The experiences of such vocation was doubtless too
severe to attract many proselytes to the Order; it only
enjoyed a certain degree of attraction for the eyes of
fanatic and credulously ignorant people during the first
(2)
days of Islamism."
Uways was regarded as the patron saint of many of
the trade guilds in Turkey, especially that of the barber

(1) Kashf al-Mahjri, pp. 83, 84.


(2) Quoted by Rose in The Darvishes, pp. 266, 267.
302 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

tooth-drawers. According to Rose he is also the patron

of bowmen and camel drivers.

As we have seen the place assigned to Uways in


Indian hagiology is significant. There were indeed many
saints who were termed'Uwaysi' and some of them
originated certain of the other Minor Orders. One
such Order is called Madarl, and we shall now proceed
to give a brief account of it. -^

2. THE MADARI ORDER.


This Order is ascribed to BadlVd-Din Shah Madar.
Unfortunately there is much confusion in the various
details given concerning him by different hagiographers.
The following account is based on the M ir'dt-i- Madarl,

a manuscript copy of which is to be found in the Buhar


Library, a section of the Imperial Library, Calcutta.
The Mir'dt-i-Maddri is said to have had for its sources
the Iman-i-Mahmudi, a work believed to have been
written by Mahmud Kanturi, one of the vicegerents of
Shah Madar.
Shah Madar was a Jew, and his father, Abu Isfraq
Shami was a direct descendant of Aaron, the brother
of Moses. The birth of Shah Madar is said to have
been announced to his father in a dream by Moses
himself, who named the child BadlVd-Din (the maker
of religion), and said that he would be like unto him in
the dignity of sainthood. According to Moses' predic-
tion signs of the 'Mosaic saintship' showed themselves
in Madar in his youth. He received his early education
from a Jewish teacher, Hadlqa Shmi, a man who
SOME MINOR ORDERS 303

knew the scriptures by heart and truly followed


all

their teachings. This Hadlqa is said to have performed

many miracles in his life.

When
Shah Madar was still young hi*"parents died,
and broken hearted over his loss, went to his master
he,
Hadiqa and said, "I have acquired mastery over all the
Scriptures and have learnt much from you about the
mysteries of
religion, but so far I have not entered at
all into the experience of union with God. You have
taught me of one Ahmad, foretold in the Torah and
Injil, who was to come after Moses and Jesus, and
through whom alone one could find God. Where is he
1 '

to be found? His master replied, "Ahmad has passed


away from this world, but his followers are to be found
in Mecca and Medina.'* Whereupon Shah Madar
renounced all his worldly possessions and went to
Mecca. There he spent some time in the study of the
Quran and Traditions and then mastered the Fiqh of
all the four Sunnl Schools of Jurisprudence. Even so
his soul was not satisfied. At last, disappointed, he
thought of returning to his home in Syria, but when he
went to make the circuit of the Ka'ba for the last time,
he heard a voice saying to him, "If thou art a seeker
after God, hasten to the tomb of Muhammad in Medina/'
In obedience to the voice he went to the Prophet's
tomb and as he kissed it he heard a voice saying to him,
"Peace be on thee, O BadiVd-Din Shah Madar ! God
1

willing, thou wilt soon attain thy goal/ Shortly after-


wards the spirit of Muhammad appeared and, in the
presence of 'All's spirit, instructed him in the mystery
304 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
of the religion of Islam. Afterwards Muhammad com-
*

mended him to the care of All and ordered him to


instructhim as one of his own sons in esoteric know-
ledge. Shah Madar next went to Najaf Ashraf, the
sacred place of the followers of 'All. There he was
introduced by 'All to Imam Mahdi, the twelfth invisible
Imam, who further instructed him in the twelve heavenly
books. We books thus incidently in
leain of these
this connection. They are enumerated as follows: The
four books which were revealed for the children of
Adam, viz.,

Injil and Furqan.


Torah, Zabur,
Four which were sent down to the jinn viz. Rakuri,
Jajari, Dashari and Wallyan.
Four which were revealed to the Angels viz. Mir 'at,
A'lnu'r-Rab, Sirr-i-Majir and Mazhar-i-Alif.
When Shah Madar had been thoroughly instructed
in all esoteric and exoteric knowledge, Imam Mahdl
took him to the spirit of 'All, who then appointed him
his vicegerent and ordered him to go to Medina. There
the spirit of Muhammad directed him to proceed to
India.
Another version of his life speaks of him as an Arab
of the Quraysh tribe, and traces his genealogy on his
father's side to Abu Hurayra and on his mother's side
to Abdu'r-Rahman b/ Awf both companions of Muham-
'

mad. His father's name, according to this version, is


said to be 'All. In his spiritual genealogy, he is con-
nected, through 'Abdullah Makki and Sh%ykhul-Jarib
Muqaddasi with JayfGr ShUini. The story goes that
SOME MINOR ORDERS 305

Tayfur's plr had been a disciple and companion of Jesus


Christ, and that Jesus informed Tayfur that he would
live to a great age and see Muhammad! Jesus is further
said to have instructed him to remain hidden in a cave
till the appearance of Muhammad, and then to accept
his religion.

Though obscurity surrounds the origin of Badl'u'd-


Din, there is reason for believing that, on reaching

India, he first went to Ajmer where he is said to have


received instruction as to his future activities from the
spirit Khwaja Mu'mu'd-Dln. Thence he went to
of

Makanpur, in the neighbourhood of Cawnpore, where


he died in 1485 A. D. There is some difference of
opinion as to his age at the time of his death. Accord-
ing to some he lived to be 250 years old; according to
others 150. (1)
His tomb in Makanpur is visited by crowds of both
Muslims and Hindus, and is the scene of an annual
fair. Women are excluded from his shrine because it
is believed that any woman
entering it is immediately
seized with violent pains, as if her whole body were

wrapped in flames of fire. On the occasion of his 'urs


the rite of fire-walking is performed by Madari facftrs.

Burning coals of fire are spread on the ground and


sandalwood is sprinkled upon them. Then the facfirs,
following their leader, jump quickly along the path of
coals, shouting meanwhile "Dam Madar; Dam Madar;"
(1) See, Ghulam Sarwar, Khazinatu'l-Asjiya vol. II, (1914, Nawel-
kishor Press, <awnpore) pp. 310-311. See also, AkhbanCl Akhyar
Munaqiau'l-Asfiya Mu'arijub l-Wilayat.
306 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
i. e. Their cry is believed
'By the breath of Madar;'
to be a protection against injury from the hot coals,
as well as a cure for the bite of a snake or the sting
of a scorpion. After the performance their feet are
washed and are found to have received no injury.
Sometimes devotees of the saint vow a black cow at
the time of his birthday, which is supposed to have been
the 17th. Jamadlu 1-Awwal. The cow is then slaugh-
tered and the meat distributed among faqlrs. This
custom is called "gdi lutnd" i. e., plundering the cow.

3. THE SHATTARI ORDER.


This order is an offshoot of the Tayfuri Khanwada.
and is attributed to Shaykh 'Abdullah Shattari a des-
cendant of Shaykh Shihabu'd-Dln Suhrawardi. The
name Shattdr literally means *speed\ and is a term ap-
plied by the ufls to certain mystical practices whereby
they are enabled in the shortest possible time to arrive
1

at the state of 'annihilation (fand) and 'subsistence*

(Jbaqd). 'Abdulllah was the first to receive the title

of Shatfari on the completion of such practices. It


was given to him by his pir, Shaykh Muhammad 'Arif,
who afterwards sent him to India. Wherever he went
'Abdullah sought out the ufis and said to them: "If
you possess any spiritual gift, I request you to share
it with me, otherwise I invite you to share mine". He
also made this proclamation in every place through
which he passed: "Let everyone who is a seeker after
1 '

God come to me and I will lead him to God.


When in India he first took up his residence at
SOME MINOR ORDERS 307

Jaunpur, the capital of the then reigning Sulfan, Ibra-


him Sharqi. But soon his relations with the court
became strained and he was obliged to leave for Malwa,
which then was a small independent Muslim state.
Therein its capital Mandu he lived till he died in
1428-29 A. D. ;
.

Shah Muhammad Ghawth of Gwalior was a famous


saint of this Order, fourth in the line of succession
from 'Abdullah Shattarl. He travelled extensively,
making acquaintance wherever he went with leading
saints and ufls of his time. First he laboured hard to

acquire the esoteric knowledge peculiar to uflism,


which consists magic and methods
chiefly of the art of
of summoning jinn. Later, he turned his attention to
the study of mysticism and devoted himself to the
purification of his heart for the purposes of attaining
to the knowledge of God. Soon he rose to be a mystic
of so high an order that he held authority to make dis-

ciples in the fourteen Khanwadas becoming at length


a Qutb of his age. The Emperor Humayun held him in
very high esteem, and indeed it was in consequence of
his friendly relation with Emperor that Sher Shah,
after defeating Humayun, regarded Muhammad Ghawth
with suspicion. A further pretext for the new ruler's
persecution of the saint was found in his book Mi raj
(ascension). In this he described his experiences in
the path of spiritual progress, frequently making use of
pantheistic expressions. Such a book was considered
sufficient reason for condemning him to death. Muham-
mad Ghawth fled from Malwa and took shelter in Guj-
308 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
rat, which then formed an independent state under
Sultan Muhammad III. But the Ulamd of Gujrat also
'

prepared a brief against him and presented it to the


court. The Sultan however refused to take any step
unless it was signed by Shah Wajihu'd-Din, a courtier
for whom the king entertained great regard.
When Shah Wajihu'd-Din was urged by the Ulamd '

went personally to
to add his signature to the brief, he
Muhammad Ghawth order to hear his explanation
in

of the objectionable passages in his book. Shah


Wajihu'd-Dm was so impressed with Muhammad
Ghawth, that he refused to sign the brief on the ground
that the passages in question were uttered in the state
of ecstasy and hence beyond the purview of the juris-
diction of the 'Ulama. In conseqence, Muhammad
Ghawth was acquitted of the charge of heresy and
hailed as a saint. Shah Wajihu'd-Din himself became
(1)
his disciple.
Muhammad Qbawth was the author of several
books which dealt for the most part with magic, in-
cantations, and the methods of summoning the jinn.
The most notable of his extant writings are, Jawdhir-
i-lghamsa and Awrcd-i-Qhawtinyya. The saint died in
1562-63 A. D. and his tomb in Gwalior is famous as a
place of pilgrimage.
Shah Wajihu'd-Din, succeeded Muhammad Ghawth,
and in time came to be regarded as a famous saint of
Gujrat. He founded a great Madrasa, which was a
centre of learning for the whole of that district and

(1) Sec Ghulam Sarwar op. cit. pp. 332-333.


SOME MINOR ORDERS 309

actually existed as late as 1820-21 A. D. He lived


during the reigns of successive rulers of Gujrat, and
witnessed its conquest by Akbar.
He too was a notable author, and is said to have
written about 300 works, but of course this is gross
exaggeration. Some of his writings may still be seen
in the Library of Plr Muhammad Shah in Ahmadabad.
He 4j^yi^lpl8 A. D., and was buried in the centre of
his 'great Mtadrasa.Over his tomb a beatiful shrine
was built by Murtada Khau, the Governor of Gujrat
during the reign of Jahaugir.

4. QALANDARI ORDER.
The meaning of the word qalandar has not yet been
satisfactorily defined. In an article written on the
subject a few years ago, an Indian ufi claimed that it

is derived from one of the names of God in Syriac. (1)

Others have sought to find its derivation in the Persian


Kaldntar, a chief man, or Kalantar a rough, uncouth
man, but both of these are rejected by Rose as highly
improbable. Further, the idea has been put forward
that the term is derived from the Turkish Qarinda or
Qalanddri, both meaning musical instruments, or again,
that it is connected with the Turkish word qdl, mean-
ing pure; but all such attempts to trace it to known
word in various languages are beset with difficulties.
The term, whatever its meaning, is applied to an
order of faqlrs, of which we have varying descriptions.
According to some writers these faqlrs form a class of
(2) Asnar-i-Tasauwuf Lahore, July 1925..
310 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
begging monks, but others speak of them as a tribe of
nomads who make their living by conjuring and the
exhibition of performing bears, etc. Others, again,
give a more honourable account of its members,
depicting them as a pious people who travel about,
mostly without shoes, and practise the severest acts of
austerity, and at times live in a state of ecstasy.
(1)
But
in the hagiology of Indian Islam the Qalandariyya is
an order of faqlrs who are so absorbed in religious
reveries or overcome to such an extent by ecstatic
experiences that they are unable to distinguish between
things lawful and unlawful. Members of this order
are distinguished by the fact that they shave their
heads, eyebrows, moustaches and beards.
The first man known to have had the name Qalan-
4
dar is said to bave been 'Abdul- Aziz Makki. It has
generally been believed that he was a companion of the
Prophet himself. According to ufi legend he is not
only still alive, but is said to have been living though
the ages from the time of Abraham until now! In
Pakpatan, close to the tomb of Baba Farld, a small
mound (sarddba) is pointed out as the place inside of
which he is said to be now existing through in a state
of unconsciousness self-induced by the effect of Habs-i
Dam, the holding of the breath.
According to an account current in India, the order
was found by Sayyid Khidr RumI Qalandar Khapra-
dari, a disciple of 'AbduVAziz Makki. The word

(1) For a fuller discussion on the term see Rose, The Danishes*
pp. 169-70.
.SOME MINOR ORDERS 311

Rum! indicates that he belonged to Rum, or Turkistan,


while the title connected with a cup which
Khapradari is

he called Khaprd, and always carried with him. It is


said that this cup possessed the miraculous quality of

being able to supply to any one whatever was wanted.


The peculiarity of this order whereby the members
shave their heads etc, is thus explained. Khidr Ruml's
pir, 'Abdu'l-'Aziz owing to his very great age had lost

all his and his disciple in his ardent desire to


hair,
imitate his master in every detail of his life and ap-
pearance, shaved off the hair of his face.
that Khidr Rumi once came to Delhi and
It is said

there met Khwaja Qutbu'd-Din Bakhtiyar Kaki, who


initiated him in the Chishti Order and gave him the

authority to make disciples in it. In return Khidr


Ruml received Qutb-ud-Din in the Qalandarl order and
bestowed upon him a like authority. Thus originated
within the Chishityya a sub-section called the Chish-
tiyya-Qalandariyya; and in the Qalandariyya called the
Qalandariyya-Chishtiyya.
The biographers of Khidr Ruml say that he was a
contemporary of the following saints; 'Abdu'l-Qadir
Gilani, Shihabu d-Din Suhrawardi, Mawlana BahaVd-
Dln the father of Jalalu'd-Din Rumi, BadlVd-Din Shah
l

Madar, Faridu'd-Dm Aftar and Faridu'd-Din Shakar-


ganj.
The Qalandar! Order was introduced into India by
Sayyid Najmu'd-Din Qhawhu'd-dahar Qalandar. The
saint was at first a disciple of Nizamu'd-Din Awliya of
Delhi, but later at the suggestion of his pir he went to
312 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Rum and became a disciple of Khidr Rumi, who ap-
pointed him his vicegerent and sent him back to India .

Najmu'd-Din is said to have journeyed twice to


England and China and to have made the pilgrimage
to Mecca forty-two times. Among his acts of austerity
it is mentioned that once he fasted for a period of
forty years, breaking his fast every evening with the
leaves of the plum tree; and that, further, he remained
seated for thirty years on one stone. His chest, we
are also told, used to give out the sound of 'Hu\ the
ufi's abbreviated name for God (Allah). Legend
us that he lived to the great age of 200 years, and
tells

that he died in 1432 A. D. His shrine is at Mandu in


Malwa, close to the palace of Sultan Muhammad
Ghawri. He was
succeed by Qutbu'd-Dm Binadal
Qalandar Sarandaz-i-Ghawthl. The title Sarandaz
means one who casts away his head, and is said to have
been given to him because at the time of performing
E)Hikr his head would become severed from his neck.
He died in 1518 A. D. at the age of 145. He was the
last of the Qalandari saints to have lived to over 100

years.
Another saint of this order whose name is still

venerated all over North India, was Sharfu'd-Din


Bu'AU Qalandar of Panlpat. He at first held the office
of a Mufti in Delhi and was a disciple of Shihabu'd-Dln
from Qu^bu'd-
Chishtl, fourth in the line of succession
Dln Bakhtiyar Kakl. The story goes that once when
he was delivering a lecture and parading his learning,
U
a faqlr stood at the door and said, O Sharfu'd-Din,
SOME MINOR ORDERS 313

it not for this that you were born how long will
is

you continue in such disputations?" This gentle


rebuke sank deep into his heart, and forsaking his
officeand the pulpit he began to seek peace in solitude.
Eventually he cast away his books into the river
Gumtl, and as an act of penance continued to stand

knee-deep in its waters for several years. Then he


heard a voice saying to him: "O Sharfu'd-Dm, thine
austerity has been accepted, ask whatsoever thou
wiliest." He replied, "Nothing but Thee, and Thee
alone." He was then told that his prayer had been
heard, and he was ordered to come up out of the
water. Sharfu'd-Din said, Thy desire take
"If this is

Thou me from this water by Thine own hand, as for


myself I have no desire to leave this 'sea of love'." At
the next moment he found that some one had lifted
him up from the water and had placed him on the
ground. Exasperated at the conduct of this stranger,
he cried out, "Shame! thou hast spoiled my labour of
many years. But a few more moments and I would
have attained my goal." The stranger replied, "I am
*

and son-in-law of the Prophet; art thou not aware


All,
that am also known by the title of yad Allah, the
I

hand of God?" "Saying this 'All imparted to him


spiritual power and disappeared. From that time he
became a
Qalandar. According he was to others
initiated into the Qalandarl Order by Najmu'd-Din
Ghawth Qalandar.
Sharfu'd-Din's teachings are contained in a series of
letters addressed by him to his disciple Ikhtivaru'd-Din.
314 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
He died in 1324 A. D. and was buried at first in

Karnal, but the people of Panipat, claiming him to be


body and re-buried
a native of their city, disintered his
it in their own city. There is a legend, however, which
says that when the people of Panipat came to remove
his body they were prevented from carrying out their
design by some supernatural portent, and so they
merely dug up a few bricks from the tomb and, placing
these in a coffin, carried them away in procession.
On reaching Panipat they cpened the coffin and, to
their great surprise, found his body in it! It is now
supposed that he lies buried both at Panipat and
Karnal.
His 'urs at any rate is held at both the places from
the 9th. to 12th. Ramadan, during which days both
shrines are illuminated and musical festivals are held. (1)

5. THE MALAMATI ORDER.


The designation Malamati is derived from maldmat.
*'blame," and signifies one who is "blameworthy."
The term has been generally applied to the saints of
this Order, stood in a special
as indicating that they
relation to God, and, in consequence, were not subject
to the Divine ordinances. This however does not
appear to have been the meaning which the early
exponents of uflsm attached to the word. Rather it
was used by them for a mode of life sometimes adopted

(1) For Qalandari saints see Asrar-i-Tasawwuf. Manzil-i-Naqsh-


bandiyya, Lahore, July, 1925. The above account of the Qalandari
order is chiefly derived from this Sufi Journal.
SOME MINOR ORDERS 315

by the ufls whereby they cloaked their sanctity by


affecting the manners of the libertine. -

The first saint to follow the path of maldmatiyya


was Dhun Nunul-Misri who has been mentioned in
the earlier chapter of this book (see pp. 19, 20). He
'

was regarded by the Ulama of Egypt as a zindlq or


freethinker. It was his disciple, Hamdunu'l-Qassar,
who founded the Malamati Order. 'Allu'l-Hujwirl
speaking about him writes as follows: "He has many
fine sayings on the subject. It is recorded that he said:
Al-maldmat tarku s-salamat, "Blame is the abandon-
1

ment of welfare. If anyone purposely abandons his


own welfare and girds himself to endure misfortune,
and renounces his pleasures and familiar ties, in hope
that the glory of God will be revealed to him, the more
he is separated from mankind the more he is united to
God." (1)
The order was introduced into Constantionple by
Shaykh Hamza, a Mulla of Brusa, in the 16th, century.
There the maldmatls came to be known as Hamzawis,
after the name of Hamza. They formed a secret Order,
with an organization strikingly like that of the
Freemasons. "Shaykh Hamza was executed soon after
the accession of Sultan Murad
apparently in
(111),
1575. The ground of his condemnation was said to be
his excessive reverence for the Lord Jesus, and he

was sentenced to be stoned at the Hippodrome, but,


out of fear of a popular outbreak, as soon as he was
brought out of his prison his throat was cut. One
(1) Kashf ul-Mahjub. p. 66.
316 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

wonders if he was influenced by Qabiz, founder of


the Khumbasihis, a sect which held Jesus to be morally
superior to Muhammad. He too, had been executed
" (1)
with exemplary promptitude in 1527.
It is a fact that from the early days of uflsm,
there have appeared from time to time men of this

type who have led the life of a libertine under the


pretext of being followers of the Malamatl Order.
*Aliu'l-Hujwir! writing as early as the eleventh
century A. D. says: "He who abandons the law and
commits an irreligious act, and says that he is follow-
ing the rule of "blame," is guilty of manifest
wrong
and wickedness and self-indulgence. There are many
in the present age who seek popularity by this means,

forgetting that one must already have gained popular-


ity before deliberately acting in such a way as to make
the people reject him; otherwise, his making himself
1 '

unpopular is a mere pretext for winning popularity.


Describing the true principles of the Malamatiyya,
4

Aliu'l-Hujwin writes: "Now


blame (malamai) is of
three kinds: it may result (1) from following the right
way (maldmat-i-rast roftan), or (2) from an intentional
act (malamat-i-qasd kardan), or (3) from abandonment
of the law (jnalamat-i-tarh kardari). In the first case,
a man is blamed who minds his own business and
performs his religious duties and does not omit any
practice of devotion: he is entirely indifferent to the
behaviour of the people towards him. In the second
case a man is greatly honoured by the people and

(I) Rose, The Darvishes, p. 230.


SOME MINOR ORDERS 317

pointed out among them: his heart inclines to the


honour in which he is held, and becomes attached to
those by whom it is bestowed: he wishes to make
himself independent of them and devote himself
wholly to God;
therefore he purposely incurs their
blame by committing some act which is offensive to
them but which is no violation of the law: in conse-
quence of his behaviour they wash their hands of
him. In the third case, a man is driven by his natural
infidelity and erroneous beliefs to abandon the sacred
law and abjure its observances, and say to himself,
"I am treading the path of blame:" in this case his
11
behaviour depends on himself alone. 'Aliu'l-Hujwiri
has given several anecdotes to illustrate the correct
meaning of Malamatiyya. One such runs as follows:
"A story is told about Abu Yazld, that, when he was
entering Rayy on his way from the Hijaz, the people
of that city ran to meet him in order than they might
show him honour. Their attentions distracted him
and turned his thoughts away from God. When he
came to the bazaar, he took a loaf from his sleeve and
began to eat. They all departed, for was the month
it

of Ramadan. He said to a disciple who was travelling


with him: "You see! as soon as I perform a single
article of the law, they all reject me.' 1(1) Abu Yazld,
being at that time on a journey, was not legally bound
to observe the fast.

Several of the Malamatl sections have been noted


in the description of the Suhrawardi Order. A few
(1) Kashf ul-Mahjub, p. 65.
318 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
further types of the faqlrs of this Order may be briefly
described here. These it is true have no direct
connection with ufism, but are interesting inasmuch
as their peculiarities have had a certain amount of
influence upon the masses.
(1) who drink intoxicants and lead a
Libertines,
and do not practise any religious duty. They
free life
claim to be the followers of Jalalu'd-Din Rumi or
Fakhru'd-Dm 'IrfiqI. Their life, of course, is in mani-
fest contradiction to their claim.

(2) Faqlrs who take opium, Indian hemp and


other drugs, as they say, to produce quiescence of
spirit. Sometimes, however, the noxious drugs are
taken in excessive doses in order to stimulate the
imagination and craving for exaltation of their mind;
but in reality the effect is such as to make them wild
and These Faqlrs claim to belong the Qadiri
terrible.

and Suhrawardl orders.


(3) There are those who are devoted to music,
and feign ecstasy. They imitate the ufis of the
Chishtl Order in their external practices, but do not
follow the precepts of Islam.
(4) Others are given to hallucinations, and
because of their wild talk have come to be looked

upon as ufls.
EPILOGUE.
The Indian ufism has largely been built upon the
mystical ideas of Persia where it has reached the
point of its highest attainment by fifteenth century.
The situation has been historically summarised in the
following words of Evelyn Underbill: "Muhammadan
mysticism, appearing in the eighth century in the
1

beautiful figure of Rabi'a the 'Muslim St. Teresa


(717-831), and continued by the martyr
Al-Hallaj,
(ob. 922), attains expression in the eleventh
literary
in the 'Confession' of Al-Ghazali (1055-1111), and has

its classic period in the thirteenth in the works of the


mystic poets 'Attar (c. 1140-1234), Sa'df (1184-1263),
and the saintly Jalalu'd-Dln (1207-1273). Its tradition

is continued in the fourteenth century by the rather


erotic mysticism of Hafig (c. 1300-1388) and his suc-

cessors, and in the fifteenth by the poet Jaml (1414

same author the note of


In the opinion of the
decadence of the mysticism of Islam was struck at
the time of Hafiz, but it will not be far from the
truth to say that in spite of signs of deterioration
it continued to progress till the beginning of the six-

teenth century. It then reached a point from which


there was no hope of further progress. But its diver-
gence from Islam started long before it began to
(1) Mysticism, p, 462.
320 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
deteriorate. In its course of progress it gathered
elements which were foreign to Islam, and so now in
its doctrine of God, in its outlook upon life, and in its

conception of the relation of man to God, it differs to


a very great extent from the early Islam preached
by Muhammad. A
ufi whether a Wujudl or Shuhudl

i. e., a monist or modified pantheist, is never in his


theology an Ijadl, one who believes that God created
the universe out of nothing. Further, the practice of
paying an excessive homage to the saints and worship
in shrines cannot be reconciled with the religious
duties based on the rigid monotheistic teachings of
Islam. Nevertheless the extraordinary thing is that
though the present form of ufism is made up of ele-
ments many of which contradict the teachings of the
Quran it has found an abiding place in Islam and is

integrally related to it. It is now woven in the very


texture of the orthodox faith of the Muslims. A
pious Muslim some time or other in his life generally
gets initiated into some religious Order. Such initia-
tion in many casesmay mean nothing beyond a simple
bay at, repenting of one's sins and making a profession
of faith at the hand of some plr, and then promising
to be a good Muslim in future, but it also gives the

right to belong to that particular Order and grants


the privilege of being reckoned as a spiritual child of
the saint who had founded that Order. Thus it is
not uncommon to find a Muslim calling himself by
such titles as Hanafl Qadirl, or Hanafl Qadiri Chishtl,
which indicate that in the matters of the Canon ^aw
EPILOGUE 321

he belongs to the Hanafi School of Jurisprudence and


at the same time by virtue of his bay at to a pir he

belongs to the Qadiriyya or to the Qadiri and Chishtl


Orders in ufism.
This incidently illustrates that the point of primary
importance is not the teaching but the Shaykh. ufism
in action centres round the personality of its several
Shaykhs or plrs. It is who
they in its development
have contributed from their own
personal experience
and thus have given rise to multifarious forms all of
which to a great extent are the expressions of the
inner experience of the founders. This explains the
existence of varieties of mystical teachings in Tasaw-
wuf. The pantheism of Hallaj, the monism of Ibnu'l-
4

Arbi, the emotionalism of the saints of the Chishtl


Order, the legalism of the Khwajas of the Naqshbandi
Order, the high ethical standard of al-Ghazali, the
sensuous symbolism of Hafiz, the magical display of
Gurzmar faqirs, the strange peculiarities of the
Qalandars, the antinomian tendency of the Malamatis
are all found existing under the name of Tasawwuf
in Islam and are tolerated by the leaders of the dif-
ferent mystical schools. Even a way has been found
to justify the extreme pantheistic expressions like
those of IJallaj and Bayazld, which otherwise would be
condemned as blasphemy. The term Shathiyat has been
invented to be applied to all such expressions of the
ufis which if uttered by a non-ufl, will be considered

blasphemous. A ufl, no matter what his doctrinal


beliefs and mode of living are, above all is God's
322 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

'Ashiq, a lover, and as such he stands in a different


relation to God from others who are merely 'abd,
slaves. It is this peculiar relation that a ufi has
with God that entitles him to act and speak in a
manner which would be highly presumptuous and
:
even bleasphemous in others.

It is because of this element of love that ufism


has been the source of vitality to Islam. It bears out
the truth what some one has said "Dogma and
of
duty are not the whole of a religion. There are in
our nature needs of loving and of suffering, as well
as of believing and of doing; and no faith that does
not contain something to satisfy these needs could ever
have wielded that vast power which, as a matter of
fact, has been and is being exercised by Muhammadan-
ism. Hence the importance of the school to which
the name of ufls is generally given." (1)
It is chiefly because of this element of love that
it has appealed to the masses and has inspired the
poetical works in the Persian and Urdu languages. If
the mystical element in Persian and Urdu songs and
poetry were lost, one wonders what would be left. It
is true that the eloquence of the Quran is regarded

by the Muslims as an outstanding miracle, but the


part that the mystical poetry plays in the lives of
Muslims some ways greater than that of the
is in

Quran itself. To a Muslim the Arabic Quran is the


sublime word of God, but the msytic song speaks in
a language that is easily understood for it speaks in
(1) Williams S. Lilly Many Mansions, p. 118.
EPILOGUE 323

terms of love and appeals to the deepest emotion. It


rouses in his heart the innermost longing for union
with God. This is what led Dr. Pusey to observe that
the speedy growth of mystical doctrine in the thin
and arid soil of Muhammadanism also bears eloquent
witness to the longing innate in the human heart for
union with God. (1)

There is another sense in which ufism in its work-


ing process may be said to be a source of vitality to
Islam. provides various means by which a man can
It

give expression to his religious feelings. It is because in


its system it is not so rigid and stern as are the
precepts of Shari'at in Islam. This is best illustrated
in the striking difference that one can see between
the worshippers in a Mosque gathered for congrega-
tional prayer and the devotees of a saint when they
assemble in a shrine to pay homage to him. In a
Mosque the prayers are offered in a solemn, dignified
and orderly manner according to the prescribed
details, but in a shrine one can see men, women and
children all giving expressions to their inner feelings
of devotion to the man whom they believed was a
lover of God, and though his remains lie buried in
tomb, yet he lives and receives their homage, hears their
prayers and intercedes on their behalf. There in his
shrine or dargdh, the royal court as they call it, they
are free to honour him in the manner that they would
:hoose and to express their love in whatever form
they like. Of the crowd of worshippers, therefore,

(1) Quoted in op. ctt. p. 119.


324 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

some would fall prostrate, some would stand with


their hands spread and some would go round
out
the tomb as the pilgrims do in Mecca round the Kaaba.
This of course, does not mean that the shrines of
different saints have no fixed forms of devotion. In
a shrine while masses are free to show their devotion
to the saint according to their inner urge there is
to be found also a uniform method of offering the
making a manual or vow to be fulfilled
Fdtiha, or of
when a favour
is granted. Similarly one may find set
methods of muraqiba or meditation, and the custom
of tying a thread or a piece of rag to the railing or the
door of a shrine as a reminder to the saint of the
favour asked by the devotee, and the practice of
lighting a lamp, especially on Thursday, the two latter
being universally observed. On the other hand as one
goes from one shrine to another one can also notice
distinctive features. The monotonous chanting of
Illallah, or Allahu, or simply Hu accompanied with the
movement of the body from right to left which grows
faster and faster, the Sama, or the musical festival
accompanied with raqs, or dancing of the devotees
though not quite peculiar to the ufls of the Chishti
Order, are yet outstanding features of this Order's
worship. The emphasis on the observance of the
shari'at alongside ufi practice to the exclusion of
Dhikr-i-jali, marks the Naqshbandl Order. The pierc-
ing of the body and playing with red hot iron are
feats exclusively appropriate to the Gurzmar faqirs.
To be suspended by the feet while in the state of
EPILOGUE 325

ecstasy is the peculiar custom found only among the


Naushahls. Similarly the Qalandars with their head,
beard, eye-brows and moustaches clean shaven,
wandering from place to place, the Rasul Shahis in-
dulging in intoxication, the Malamatis leading, the life
of libertines all go to show the peculiar and strange

practices tolerated in present-day ufism.


however, is best illustrated in the indi-
ufism,
genous songs and poems of the ufls which are sung
by the native faqirs. For this reason we now proceed
to give a metrical translation of a Punjabi sacred lyric
which may be regarded as typical of modern uft

literature in India. This poem is entitled, Si Harfl


Dholla, i. e. a lyric of thirty stanzas in praise of the
Beloved. The poet's nom de plume isTalib. The poem
isone of those which are often sung to the accompani-
ment of music, usually a sdrangl, or fiddle. This was
originally translated by Professor R. Sirajuddin and
Rev. H. A. Walter, both of Lahore and we give it
with some alterations. This poem is a thoroughly
native, pure Punjabi poem, the popularity of which is
evidenced by the fact that it is used as an early
morning hymn by the street singers who go about sing-
ing such songs partly as religious worship and partly
with the object of receiving alms.
1,

Come, Love, within the soul Thy dwelling place doth lie,
Thy distant hone desert, and to my fond heart fly!
Thou sayst Thou dost bide than the neck vein more nigh.d)
Yet, vexing one, Thy form is veiled before mine eye.

(1) cp. Qunn 50: 15.


326 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
2.

O, Love, deceive no more! Thy fickle words forsake!


Without us and within Thy dwelling Thou dost take.
My heart, with wiles bewitched, a captive Thou dost make:
Then into words of scorn Thy mocking accents break.

3.

Oh, Love, for all our woes no pity hast Thou shown,
Exiled from Home, to pine in far off realms alone.
Through Thy false deed, Who once had made our souls Thine
own,
In this strange land, alas, no peace my heart hath known.

4.

Thou only art; all else is unearthly.


Why press this vain debate if one or separate we?
Since, when Thy face is shown, my sighs Thy grief nust be,
And in my prayers for death, my tears are tears of Thee.
5.

I sleep, and at my side Love sinks in slumber deep:


When first my eyes unclose, He rouses, too, from sleep.
I laugh, He
shouts for joy; His tears fall when I \xeep:
Yet bargains He, nor cares my plighted hours to keep.

6.

None knows my state save Love; for no one else 'twere meet.

I sacrifice my all, an offering at Love's feet.

Each moment yearns my heart its guileless Love to greet:


Unless Love quickly come, this heart must cease to beat,

7.

'Twas told that the Beloved to holy Mecca camfc:


That never man should know He chose Muhanjnad's name.
Medina, now, His home: and Talib'sd) fond lip^ frame
Prayers for "God's peace" on Him, and His higi service claim.

(1) Talib, meaning a seeker of God, is the|nom de plume of


the poet.
EPILOGUE 327

8.(D

A gift I crave whose sight sweet thoughts of Thee shall start;


With Thy dear hand, or necklace, Thou must part.
ring from
In Hindustan, my home; Thou in Medina art.
Slain by Thy love, what sins had soiled my helpless heart?

9.

By telling o'er Thy name each passing hour I grace.


Leave town and vale and make my heart Thy resting place.
Love Lord of all; His, earth and sky and space.
reigns the
Since Thou hast made me Thine, whom else should I embrace?

10.

If e'er my lips, Thy mystery reveal,(2)


unsealed.
From mighty depths great flames of fire will steal.
rivers'

Blood from God's throne will rain, the stars will earthward reel.

Ah, Love, what streams can cool when these hot fires I feel?

11.

My years of youth were spent in doleful tears and sighs.

Now, aged heart, Love's winged arrow flies.


to my
Bring hither my Beloved, the darling of mine eyes.
Talib's true love from heart as well as tongue doth rise.

12.

My artless Love goes by nor casts on me His eyes.


Heedless, He
passes by; counsel Him, O, ye wise!
Medina, now, I seek, there my sole refuge lies.
O, Talib, plead thy love, till from His course He hies.

(1) From this stanza onward the disciple speaks of himself as


woman, a bride, a wife, and uses the feminine gender for himself,
nd the masculine for the Divine Beloved.

(2) This refers to the esoteric truth of the Sufis, supposed to


tave originated with Muhammad, to which the Sufi's lips must ever
emain sealed.
328 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
13.

Beloved, my heart yearns to see Medina fair,

All hidden grief and pain to lay before Thee there.


Long years have sped since Love left me to lone despair.
All men, O Talib, now toward Thee some malice bear.
14.

Apart from the Beloved, no comfort can I gain.


Should one Love's kahma read, these inward fires might wane.
Remembering Love my lifeless heart revives again.
O, let Love learn, at last, my piteous cries of pain!
15.

Thou who my surety art, O


Love, stir not away.
Summon me to Thyself, and share my grief, I pray.
Secure my pardon, Love for I have gone astray.
To my dead soul give life, and sinless I shall stay.
16,
Mount Sinai's lofty my Love
hath put to shame.
Mounting the throne on high, all-holy God, His name.
To tread Medina's streets, as the Beloved, He came;
Now, guiding on the Path, as Chishti, spread His fame.
17.

Inside and out my Love holds His high Sovereignty:


In every place He dwells, the First and Last is He.
Save only the Beloved, none other can there be.
I live but by His life. Love's own eternally.

18.

From the great Presence sought, Thy bounteous Love I own.


Afar or near, O
Love, I see but Thee alone.
All from Thy light have come no other source have known.
Send pardon from Thyself, nor bid my steps begone.
19.

Never to know my Love were no man's mournful fate.

To her who is Love's bride my life I consecrate.


For her whom Love with welcome all would wait.
hath called,
That Love mine arm would hold, my longing passionate.
EPILOGUE 329
20.

Stricken to death, I lie, crushed by Thy beauty's wave.


In Thy love's ocean vast my soul hath found its grave.
In every town men's tongue for Thee their tribute save,
To Thee our lives we yield: to see Thy face we crave.
21.

This daily task to do, of old my destiny


That I His praise proclaim, whenever Love summons me.
O, friends, I am consumed; Love's form I cannot see.
My Love hath learned to work with what strange witchery!
22.

Who, from the path of Love, my steps shall turn aside?


My life, if Love desire, to Him would I confide.
Love will not faithless be; my trust hath time defied.
Since Love hath held mine arm, with me He must abide.

23.

Love, I am slain, whom man with gibes and taunts assail.

My heart Medina craves, for justice there to wail.


Come, O, my Love, behold, I have removed my veil

Credence my witness wins to Thy dear beauty's tale.

24.

In the Beloved's way, friends, I am lost to sight.


Then be not found,
lest I let all in search unite!
This very Love, the thief 0, seize His arm with might!
A seeker after Love, know me, by day and night.
25.

"Negation's"*!) medicine, Love, for mine eyes was brought;


And now, save only Love, I can distinguish naught.
Love's citadel He showed, with every splendour fraught.
Love, I am lost indeed: what magic hast Thou wrought?

(1) Nafi athbat. See p. 100.


330 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
26.

Love, I would die for Thee, most ravishing Thy grace.


Bring news, O friends, from whence come the Beloved's face.

My soul with joy grows faint, and faster, my heart's pace.

What if, this morn, should come Love's step and His embrace.

27.

My necklace is God's praise, wherewith I am arrayed.


My ear-rings are the prayer, "God's peace" my lips have prayed.
Love, on my heart, for gems, longing for God hath laid.
The nuptial bed I mount, invoking Chishti's aid.

28.

The heavenly lightnings flash, and blazing fountains spout.


With Sinai's splendour clothed, my glory shines about.
Love, entering at last, "My follower", calls out.
Beings of lights and fire and earth, (1) "God's blessing" shout.

29.

To meet Love, as He comes, with bended head I go,

"God's benediction" ask, and at Love's feet bow low.


This hand-maid's ministry, unworthy, all must know.
Talib, Thy slave to keepthis boon, O Love, bestow.

30.

How bountifully, Love, Thy gracious mercies fall.

Ever Thy faith I own, Thy Kalima recall;


Ever at Thy blest tomb, I sacrifice my all;
Ever on Chishti, Guide, with grateful spirit, call.

(1) That is, angels, jinn and men, who, as the Muslims be-
lieves are created out of light, fire and clay respectively, See
Quran, 15: 26, 27 and 4: 13, 14.
APPENDIX A
List of the saints of Indian Sufism arranged chrono-
logically.

*
Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

1. The Saints of the Chishtl Order.

(1) He collected the sayings of his plr, Khwaja


'Uthman Harunl, under the title of
Anisu'l-Arwafa.
Friend of Spirituals. His own teachings are found in
the collections made by several of the saints of the
Chishti Order and also in his letters, Maktubdt.

(2) He collected the sayings of eight ufl saints of


the Chishtl Order who had preceded him in a book and
called it Hisht Bahisht, Eight Paradises. He also
wrote Dalilu'l-Arifin. The Proof of the Mystics.
332 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

1. The Saints of the Chishtl Order (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine

8. *Faridu'd-Dln Shakar-
ganj (1) 1266 Pakpatan
9. Najibu'd-Din Mutawak-
kil 1272 Ghiyaspur
(Delhi)
10. Nizamu'd-Dln Abu'l-
Mu'ayyid 1273 Delhi
11. Hamldu'd-Din ufi 1274 Nagore
12. Qadi Hamldu'd-Din 1279 Nagore
13. DaudPalhi 1281 Delhi
14. Imam 'All Lahaq 1287 Sialkot
15. Burhanu'd-Dln Mahmud
Abu'l-Khayr 1288 Delhi
16. **Alau'd-Din Ahmad
Sabir 1291 Piran-i-Kaliar
17. Badru'd-Dm b. 'All

Ishaq (2) 1291 Ajodhan


(1) He to be the author of the following
is^said
books on Jawahir-i-Faridl, The Gems of
ufism:
Farid, Irshad-i-Farldl, The Instructions of Farid,
Tadhkiratu'l-Fuqara. The Memoirs of Ascetics,
FawctidtCs-Sdlikln, The Things Beneficent to the
Travellers. The last named being the collection of the
sayings of Nizamu'd-Din Awliya of Delhi.
(2) He is reputed to be the author of the famous
book on Gfism, Asrdru'l-Awliyd, *The Mysteries of
the Saints/
APPENDIX A 333

Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

1. The Saints of the Chishti Order (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine

18. Muntakhabu'd-Dm (1) 1296 Deogiri


(Deccan)
19. Sayyid Muhammad b.

Sayyid Mahmud
Kirmani 1311 Delhi
20. Nisamu'd-Dln Shlrazi 1318 Delhi
21. *Shamsu'd-Din Turk 1318 Panipat
22. Qadl Muhiu'd-Dm
Kashani 1319 Delhi
23. Khwaja 'Alau'd-Dm b.

Shaykh Badru'd-Dln 1320 Pakpatan


24. Shamsu'd-Din 1320 Zafarabad
4

25. *Sharfu'd-Dm Bu All


Qalandar (2) 1324 Karnal & Panipat

(1) He preached Islam in Deogiri. It is said that

many who refused to accept Islam on his preaching


were turned into stones.

(2) He wrote the following books on ufism:


Maktubdt, Hikmat Nama,
'Epistles'. The Book of
Wisdom'. Hukum "Hama Shaykh Bu "All Qalandar,'
4

'The Commands of Bu Ali Qalandar. Matfinaun Bu


'All Qalandar.
334 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

'^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

1. The Saints of the Chishti Order (contd.)

(1) His sayings have been collected by several of


his disciples, the most famous of these is Fawdidu'l-
Fuwad, "The Beneficent to the Heart."
(2) He is known as the Chaucer of Urdu literature.
The number of his works is said to have been equal to
the number of the names of God, ninety-nine, and the
number of his poems are said to have amounted to five
hundred thousands. But this must be an exaggeration.
He ranks very high also in Persian literature and is
known widely as Tuti-i-Hind, the parakeet of India.
He was the first to employ Persian metres in Urdu and
his famous production Khdliq Ban, a rhymed vocabulary
of Arabic and Persian words in common use explained
in Urdu is still widely read by youths. The authorship
of Ral}atul-M uhibbin, 'The joy of the Lovers,' a book
on ufism is ascribed to him.
(3) He was a grandson of Bsba Farid and wrote
Anwdrul-Majalis, The Illumination of the Assemblies
1

in which he collected the sayings of Niz5mu*d-Dln


Awliya (see 26).
APPENDIX A 335

1. The Saints of the Chishtl Order (ccmfcf .)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine
33. Mir Hasan 'Ala'i

Sanjari (1) 1336 Deogiri (Deccan)


34. Diyau'd-Dm Barm (2) 1338 Delhi
35. Burhanu'd-Din Qharlb 1340 Deogiri
36. Hisamu'd-Din Sokhta 1341 Sanbhar (Ajmer)
37. 'Azizu'd-Dln ufi 1341 Delhi
38. Shamsu'd-Dm Yahya 1345 Delhi
39. Malikzada Ahmad 1346 Delhi
40. Shaykh Danial 1347 Satrakh (near
Lucknow)
41. Fakhru'd-Dm Zaradi 1347 Was drowned on
way to Mecca
his
42. Piya'ud-Dm Bakhshl (3) 1350 Budaun

(1) He was one of the vicegerents of Nizamu'd-


Dln Awliya (26) and collected the sayings of his pir in
what is now well-known as Fawaidu'l-Fawdd *Bene-
1

ficent to the Heart .

(2) A
vicegerent of Nizamu'd-Din Awliya (26)
and the author of the famous historical treatise, Tdrikk-
i-Firoz Shdhi, The History of Firoz Shah'. He
wrote own mystical experience under
his the title of
Hasrat Kama, The Book of Regret.
1

He was one of the vicegerents of Bsba Farid


(3)
(8) and wrote Silku's-Suluk, The Mystic Path and
Sharfy-i-Dud-i-Surydnl, 'A Commentary on a Syrian
Prayer' and other books on ufism.
336 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

1. The Saints of the Chishtl Order, (conid.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine

43. Faridu'd-Dm (1) 1351 Nagore


44. Kamalu'd-Dm 'AllSma 1353 Delhi
45. Naslru'd-Dln Chiragh-i-
'Dehli (2) 1356 Delhi
46. Akhl Siraju'd-Dln 1357 Bengal
47. adru'd-Dm Hakim 1358 Delhi
48. Qutbu'd-Dm Munawwar 1359 Hansi
4

49. Ala Vd-Dln Nablll 1361 Delhi


50. Siraju'd-Din 1361 Patan (Ahmed-
abad)
51. Jalalu'd-Dm Kabiru'l-
Awliya 1364 Panipat
52. Hamldu'd-Dm Qalan-
dar (3) 1367 Delhi
53. Sayyid Muhammad b.

Mubarak Kirmam (4) 1368 Delhi

(1) He wrote Sururu 's-$udur\ 'The Gladness ot


Hearts' in which he collected the sayings of Hamidu'd-
DmNagorl (see 12).
(2) The authorship of Adabut-Talibin, The
1

Manners of the Seekers, and Intibdhu'l-Muridln, The


Awakening of the Disciples', are ascribed to him.
(3)He is said to have written Iptayrul-Majdhs,
The Best of the Assemblies' which gives a collection
1
of the sayings of NasIru d-DmChiragh-i-Delhl(see 54).
(4) He was one of the vicegerents of Nalru d-
f

Din (45) and wrote Sayru'l-Awliya 'Lives of the Saint 's.


APPENDIX A 337

1. The Saints of the Chishtl Order. (confcJ.)

(1) He was Naslru'd-Dm (see 45)


a vicegerent of
and wrote Tuhfatun-NascCih, 'A Present of Good
Counsels/

(2) He was a vicegerent of Nasiru'd-Dln (see 45)


and wrote Munaqibus-$iddlqln, 'Virtues of Good Peo-
1

ple , containing the accounts of ufi saints.

(3) Kachaucha, the seat of his shrine, is well-


known for exorcism.His biography, Kitab-i-Ashrafi,
1

The Book of Ashraf , is a popular book among the


ufis of India. He himself is the author of two books

on ufism, Bishdratu'l-Muridln, 'Good News for the


1

Disciples , and Maktubdt a collection of letters.


338 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
1. The Saints of the Chishtl Order, (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine

65. Mir Sayyid Muhammad


Gesu Daraz (1) 1422 Hyderabad
(Deccan)
66. Muhammad Mutawakkil
Kantorl 1422 Bahraich
67. Shaykh Yusuf Irchl 1431 Malwa
68. Shaykh Ahmad 'Abdu'l-
Haq (2) 1433 Radauli
69. Sher Khan Bak (3) 1433 Delhi
70. Qawwamu'd-Dln 1438 Lucknow
71. Qadi Shihabu'd-Dm 1444 Daulatabad
72. Nuru'd-Dln Qutb 'Alam
Bangali 1447 Panduah
73. Shaykh Kabir 1453 Gujrat

(1) His sayings have been collected by one of his


disciples, Muhammad, under the title of Jawdmiul-
Kaldm, The
Collection of Sayings. He himself was a
1

vicegerent of Nasiru'd-Din (45).


(2) He was a vicegerent of Jalalu'd-Dm (51). His
discipleswhen meet with each other say, *Haq, Haq!
the Truth, the Truth. In this salutation a reference is
found to the name of the saint himself.
(3) He wrote several books in prose and poetry on
various subjects. Among his books on ufism are,
Yusuf -o-ZulayQia, written in imitation of the famous
book of the same name by Jaml, and Miratu'l-Arifin,
The Mirror of the Mystics. 1
APPENDIX A 339

1. The Saints of the Chishti Order, (contd.)


Name Date of Place of
Death Shrine
74. Abu 1-Fatah 'Ala'i
Qurayshl 1457 Kalpi
75. Shaykh Muhammad
Mayna 1465 Lucknow
76. Kaku Shah (1)
1477 Lahore
(2)
77. Sa'du'd-Dln 1477 Khairabad
78. Shah Miyanjl Beg 1484 Mandu
79. Sayyid Muhammad b.
(3 >"
Ja'far 1486 Sirhind
80. Shaykh Muhammad
Rajan
(4)
1495 Ahmedabad and
Pak Patan.
81. Shaykh Junayd 1495 Hissar

(1) His shrine was supposed to be in Shahidganj,


Lahore, now famous for the Sikh-Muslim dispute.
(2) He was a disciple of Shaykh Mayna (75) and
wrote a commentary on the Futuhat-i-Makkiya in which
he has incorporated much of the sayings of his plr as
well as incidents from his life. He also wrote
Majmaus-Suluk, containing the sayings of Shaykh
Mayna and Makhdum-i-JahSniyan.
(3) He was one of the vicegerents of Nasiru'd-Dln
(45) and was an author of several books on religious
subjects. The following books he wrote on ufism:
Bdkrul-Maanl, 'Ocean of Things Spiritual,' Daqd'iqu'l-
Mcfani, The Minute Details of Things Spiritual,'
4

HaqcCiqiCl-Maanl, The Realities of Things Spiritual/


* 1

Asrdr-i-Ruh, Mysteries of Soul. !

(4) He was first buried in Ahmedabad and later


his body was exhumed and buried in Pak Patan.
340 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
1. The Saints of the Chishti Order, (contd.)

(1)He wrote Sawanih Imam Qhazall, 'The Life


of Imam Ghazal!,' and Tafsir-i-*Nurun Nabl, 'A Com-
mentary on the Light of Muhammad/ the latter being
in 30 volumes.
(2) He wrote Itkbdtu'l-Akdiyyat, 'The Positiveness
1

of the Oneness, and a commentary on the Lawd'ih of


Jaml.
APPENDIX A 341

1. The Saints of the Chishti Order, (contd.)

(1) He was a descendant of Mir Sayyid Gesu


Daraz (65).He is an author of many books on various
subjects, the chief of these is Faydul-Bdri, a com-
mentary on the collections of traditions by al-Bukharl.
He is reputed to have written several treatises on
ufism also.
(2) His name is used as an incantation for the cure
of snake-bite.
(3) He is an author of several treatises on tradi-
tion.
(4) He wrote several treatises on JJufism in Persian
and Hindi. The famous ones in Hindi are Jut J^iranjan
and Sdr Bachan.
342 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
1. The Saints of the Chishtl Order, (contd.)

(1) He wrote a commentary on the Futuhdt-i-


Makkiya of Ibn 'Arabi.

(2) The stones and pebbles of Gagrun because of


him are believed to possess the power of healing the
patients suffering from cholera. A
piece of stone
generally from the neighbourhood of his shrine, is taken
and washed and the water is given to the patient for
drinking.
(3) For his antagonism to Shi'a Islam and also
because of his oppositions to Akbar's new religion,
Din-i'Ildhl, he was first exiled and then on his return
from Mecca was poisoned, it is said, by the order of
the Emperor.
(4) He produced a treatise on technical terms of
Qfism in poetry and also several other books on the
subject of mysticism.
APPENDIX A 343

1. The Saints of the Chishti Order, (contd.)

(1) He wrote Sawdlat-i-Ahmadi, 'Questions of


Ahmad", in refutation of heresies.

(2) He is said to have written


7

'Forty two Treatises , a book, perhaps on, ufism.


(3) It is said that once while travelling he was
very thirsty and was guided to water by a partridge and
since then he forbade his disciples to eat the flesh of
that bird, a custom which is still observed among his
spiritual descendants. He wrote a commentary on
FufUju'l-Hikam, and Asrar-i-'Ajibiyya, The Strange
Mysteries', a book on ufism.
344 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
1. The Saints of the Chishti Order, (confd.)

(1) He is the author of Makhzan-i-Isldm, The


Treasure House of Islam', a book on ufism which he
left unfinished and was completed by his son after his
death.
(2) He wrote in Bhakha, the old Hindi, many
books on various subjects the chief among them being
Padmdwat, Dhoti J^dma, and Postin Ndma. On
ufism he wrote Zddus-Sdlikln, 'Provisions for Travel-
:

lers, and Maq$udu t-Tdlibin, The Goal of The


Seekers'. His little book Rashidiyya, on the rules of
debate is a well-known treatise on the subject.
APPENDIX A 345

1. The Saints of the Chishtl Order, (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine

151. PlrMuhammad 1669 Lucknow


152. Hasan Muhammad
Jamalu'd-Dm 1670 Ahmedabad
153. Shaykh Muhammad
Siddiq abirl 1673 Lahore
154. Shaykh Muhammad
Da'ud 1684 Gangoh
155. Shah Abu'l-Mu'ali 1704 Ameth, Saharan-
pur.
4

156. Abdur-Rashid 1709 Jullundhur


157. Sayyid Muhammad Sa'id
Mlran Bhlkh 1729 Kohram
158. Kalimullah 1729 Delhi
159. Shaykh Nisamu'd-Dln 1730 Aurangabad
160. Shaykh Muhammad Salim
Sabiri 1739 Lahore
161. Shah Bahlul Barki 1757 Jullundhur
4

162. Shaykh Adadu d-Dln


f
1759 Amroha
163. Shah Lutfullah 1773 Jullundhur
164. Maulana Fakhru'd-Dm 1785 Delhi
165. Sayyid ^Alimullah 1786 Jullundhur
166. Shaykh Nur Muhammad 1791 Bahawalpur State
167. Shaykh Muhammad Sa'id
Sharaqpuri 1799 Lahore
168. Muhammad Sa'ld 1806 Jullundhur
169. ^Abdul-Bari 1813 Amroha
346 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
1. The Saints of the Chishtl Order, (contd.)

Name

170. ShaylkhKhayru'd-Dm
Khayr Shah
171. Qadi Muhammad 'Aqll
172. Hadrat Bandagl Sayyid
abir 'All Shah
173. Sayyid Muhammad
A'gam
174. Sayyid Imadu'd-Dm
175. Bandagl Hafiz Musa
176. Sayyid Niyaz Ahmad
177. Ghulam Naslru'd-Din
Kale Shah
178. Muhammad Sulayman
179. Ghulam Mustafa
180. Qadi Khuda'Bakhsh
181. Mirza Roshan Bakht
182. Chore Shah Sirooj!
183. Amanat 'All
184. Hajl Ramdan
185. FaydBakhsh
186. Kbwaja Fakhru'd-Dln
187. Sayyid Ghulam Mu'lnu'd-
Dln Khamosh
188. Sayyid Mir 'Abdullah
Shah
APPENDIX A 347

Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

2. The Saints of the Suhrawardi Order.

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.

1. Nuru J d-Dln
Sayyid
Mubarak (1) 1249 Delhi
2. *Shaykh BahauM-Dln
Zakariyya 1267 Multan
3. Jamal Khandaru 1268 Uchh
4. Shaykh Sadru J d-Dm 1283 Multan
5. Shaykh Hisamu J d-Dln 1288 Budaun
6. Shaykh Hasan Afghan 1290 Multan
7. *Sayyid JalaluM-Din
Munlr Shah
Mir Surkhposh
Bukhari 1291 Uchh
8. *Shaykh Ahmad Ma'shuq 1320 Multan
J
9. piy uM-Din Rumi 1323 Delhi
10. Lal Shahbaz Qalandar 1324 Sindh
11. Shaykh RuknuM-Din 1335 Multan

1. He was one of the vicegerents of Shaykh Shi-


4

habu d-Din Suhrawardi and held the office of Shaykhu'l-


Islam in Delhi.
348 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

2. The Saints of the Suhrawardi Order, (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.

17 Shaykh Hajl Chiragh-i-


Hind 1372 Zafarabad
18. 'Mir Sayyid JalaluM-Dm
Makhhum-i-Jahaniyap
Jahangasht
19. Makhdum Shaykh Akhi
20. Sayyid llmuM-Dm
21. KabiruM-Dm Isma'll
22. Raju Qattal or Qantal
23. SirajuM-Dm Hafiz
24. Sayyid BurhanuM-Dln
Qutb 'Alam
25. Sayyid Shah 'Alam
26. Shaykh 'Abdu^l-Latif
Dawaru^l-Mulk 1484 Gujrat
27. Sayyid KablruM-Dm
Hasan 1490 Uch
28. Shah-'Abdullah Qureshi 1494 Delhi
29. SamauM-Dm 1496 Delhi
4

30. Abdu^l-Jalil Qutbu^l-


'Alarn 1497 Lahore
31. Qadl NajmuM-Dm 1505 Gujrat
32 Sayyid Uthman Shah
Jhhula 1506 Lahore
33. Shaykh llmuM-Dln 1510 Chuniwal
APPENDIX A 349

2. The Saints of the Suhrawardi Order, (contd?)


Name Date of Place of
Death Shrine.
34. Qadi Mahmud 1514 Gujrat
35. Shaykh Musa Ahangar
(Ironsmith") 1519 Lahore
36. Sayyid HajrAbdu^l-
Wahab 1525 Delhi
37. Shaykh 'Abdullah
Biyabam 1529 Delhi
38. Shaykh Jamali 1535 Delhi
39. Shaykh Adham Zaynu^l-
'Abidln 1536 Delhi
40. Sayyid JamaluM-Dln 1542 Delhi
41. Mulla Flroz Mufti 1565 Kashmir
42. Makhdum Sultan Shaykh
Hamza 1576 Kashmir
43. Shaykh Naurozl Reshi 1578 Kashmir
44. Baba Da^ud Khaki 1585 Kashmir
45. Sayyid Jhulan Shah Ghore
Shah Bukhharl 1594 Lahore
46. Sayyid Shah Muhammad
'Uthman Jhula
b. 1602 Lahore
47. Shaykh Hasan, known as
Hassu Tell 1603 Lahore
48. Mlran Muhammad Shh
Mauj Darya Bukharl 1604 Lahore
49. Sayyid JaUlu'd-Din
Haydar 1612 Kashmir
50. Baba Robi Reshi 1615 Kashmir
350 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
2. The Saints of the Suhrawardi Order, (contd.)
Name Date of Place of
Death Shrine.
51. Sayyid ImaduM-Mulk 1629 Lahore
52. Shah Arzani 1630 Patna
53. Baba NasibuM-Dm 1637 Kashmir
54. Sayyid ShihabuM-Dm 1631 Lahore
55. Sayyid 'Abdu^r-Razzaq 1638 Lahore
56. Sayyid Shah Jamal 1639 Lahore
57. SayyidMahmud Shah
Naurang 1643 Lahore
58. Mawlana Haydar 1647 Kashmir
59. Shah Dawla Daryal 1664 Gujrat (Panjab)
60. Shaykh Jan Muhammad 1671 Lahore
61. Shaykh Muhammad
Isma'll, known as
Miyao Wadda 1674 Lahore
62. Shaykh Hasan Lalu Kashmir
1689
63. Shaykh Ya'qub Kashmir
1694
64. Sayyid Zinda 'All 1699 Lahore
4

65. Shaykh Abdu*r-Rahlm 1703 Kashmir


'

66. Baba Abdullah 1705 Kashmir


67. Shaykh Jan Muhammad
'
1708 Lahore
68. Shaykh Hamid 1752 Lahore
69. Shaykh Karamullah
Qureshl 1785 Shahjahanpur
70. Shaykh Sikandar Qureshl 1799 Lahore
71. Shaykh Shah Murad
Qureshi 1800 Khokhar
72. Shaykh Qalandar ShSh
Qureshi 1832 Lahore
APPENDIX A 351

^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

3. The Saints of the Qadirl Order.

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine,

1. Shah Inayatullah 1515 Koh-i-Hakhaki


*2. Sayyid Muhammad
Ghawth 1517 Uch in Jhang
3. Mir Sayyid Shah Firoz 1526 Lahore
*4. Sayyid 'Abdu^l-Qadir II. 1533 Uch in Jhang
5. Sayyid Mahmud Hudurl 1535 Lahore
6. Sayyid 'Abdu^l-Qadir
Gllam 1535 Lahore
7. Sayyid 'Abdu^r-Razzaq 1542 Uch in Jhang
8. Shah Latlf Barn 1543 Nurpur
(Rawalpindi)
9. Mir Sayyid Mubarak
Haqqanl 1549 Uch in Jhang
10. Sayyid Muhammad
Ghawth Bala Plr 1552 Satghara (PanjabJ
11. BahaVd-Dm Gllani
Bahawal Sher 1565 Hujra
*

12. Sayyid Abdulla Rabbanl 1570 Uch in Jhang


4

13. Sayyid Isma il Gllani 1570 Lahore


14. Sayyid Hamid Ganj
Bakhsh 1570 Uch
15. Shaykh Da^ud Karmam 1574 Shergarh
16. Shaykh Bahlul Daryal 1575 Chiniot
17. Shaykh Abu Is^aq 1577 Lahore
18. Sayyid Mir MirSn 1578 Lahore
352 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

3. The Saints of the Qadirl Order, (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.

19. Sayyid Nur 1580 Chunian (Lahore)


*20. Shah Qumes 1584 Sadhaura ( Ambala)
21. Sayyid Ismail b. Sayyid
Abdal 1586 Fort Rathor
22. Sayyid Allah Bakhsh
Gilani 1586 Bengal
23. Sayyid Shah Nur Huduri 1588 Lahore
24. Hadrat Musa Pak
Shahld 1592 Multan
4

25. Shaykh Abdu^l-Wahab 1592 Lahore


26. Sayyid ufi BadnrM-
Din
27. Sayyid Kamil Shah
28. Sayyid Husayn
29. Shaykh Ni'matullah
30. Shah Badar Gilani
31. Shah ShamsuM-Dln
4

32. Abdu J l-Qadir Gilani III 1613


33. Shah SbayruM-Din
Abu J l-Mu'all 1615 Lahore
34. *Miyan Nattha 1617 Lahore
35. Sayyid 'Abdu'l-Wahab
Gilani 1627 Lahore
*

36. Shaykh Abdullah Bhattl 1627 Delhi


37. MullaHamid 1635 Lahore
APPENDIX A 353
*
Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

3. The Saints of the Qadiri Order, (contd.)


354 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
'^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

3. The Saints of the Qadirl Order, (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.

52, *Dara Shikoh (1) 1660 Delhi


53. Shah aftullah Sayfu^r-
Rahman 1669 Hujra
54. Hajl 'AbduM-Jamll 1671 Lahore
55. Hajl Muhammad Hashim
Gilani 1676 Lahore
56. Sarwar Din
^Sayyid
Huduri 1689 Lahore
57. Sayyid Muhammad Amir
Gilani 1691 Hujra
58. Shaykh Hajl Muhammad
Nawshah Ganj
Bakhsh 1692 Chhani Sahnpal
4
(Wazirabad)
59. Sayyid Ja far b. Hajl
Muhammad Hashim 1696 Lahore
60. Sayyid 'Adbu^l-Haklm
Gilani 1697 Lahore

(1) He wrote the following books:


Sakinatu*l-Awliyd, on the life of Miyao Mir.
Majma*ul-Bahryan, The Meeting of Two
Oceans, in which he has attempted to reconcile Islam
with Hinduism.
Hasndtu'l-Arifm, dealing with Qadirl Order.
Ramuz-i-Ta$awwuf, The Secrets of ufism, and Tariqat-
i-Hacjiqat. The Path of Reality.
APPENDIX A
^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

3. The Saints of the Qadiri Order, (contd.)

Nawshahl 1713
73. Sayyid Nur Muhammad
b. Sayyid Muhammad
Amir 1714 Hujra
74. Shaykh Khamosh
Muhammad Naw-
shahl 1715 Chhani Sahnpal
75. Hafig Barkhurdar Naw-
shahl 1718 Chhani Sahnpal
356 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

3. The Saints of the Qadiri Order, (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.

76. Shaykb Fatih Muhammad


GhiyahuM-Din 1718 Kirana
77. Sayyid 'AbduM-Wahab 1719 Lahore
78. Khwaja Hashim Darya
Dil Nawshahi 1721 Chhani Sahnpal
79. Sayyid Ahmad Shaykh iTl-
HindGllam 1722 Kotla
J
80. Sayyid Badru d-Din
Gilani 1722 Lahore
81. Shah Sharf 1723 Lahore
82. Shaykh Ismatullah Naw-
shahl 1725
83. Shaykh Ahmad Beg
Nawshahl 1727 Sialkot
84. Shah Inayat 1728 Lahore
85. Sayyid Hajl 'Abdullah
Gllanl 1728 Lahore
86. Shaykh Jamalullah Naw-
shahl 1729 Chhani Sahnpal
87. Shah Muhammad
Ghawth GilanI 1739 Lahore
88. *Pir Muhammad Sachyar 1739 Gujrat
4

89. ^Shaykh Abdu^r-Rahman


Pak Rahman Naw-
'

shahl 1740 Tehri 'Abdu^r-


Rahman
APPENDIX A 357

3. The Saints of the Qadirl Order, (contcf.)

(Lahore)
358 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

3. The Saints of the Qadirl Order, (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.
106. Shaykh 'Abdullah
Bilochi 1797 Lahore
107. Shaykh Mahmud b.
Muhammad 'Aglm 1801 Hujra
108. Sayyid 'Adil Shah Natthu
Gilam 1805 Lahore
109. Sayyid Shadi Shah 1806 Lahore
110. Sayyid 'All Shah 1812 Lahore
111. Sayyid Sardar 'All Shahid 1813 Hujra
112. Sayyid QutbuM-Dln Hujra 1834
113. Shaykh Muslim Khan 1838
114. Sayyid Shah Bare ahib 1854 Delhi
'

115. Shah 'Abdu^l-'Azlz 1879 Delhi


'

116. Sayyid Qhawth All Shah 1881 Panipat


4. The Saints of the Naqshbandl Order.

1. *Khwaja Muhammad
Baqibillah Berang 1603 Delhi
2. *Shaykh Ahmad Faruql
Mujaddid Alf-i-Thanl 1615 Sirhind.
3. *Shaykh Jahir 1630 Lahore
4. Khwaja Berang 1632 Delhi
5. Mulla Husayn 1640 Kashmir
6. Sbwaja Kbawind Hadrat
Ishan 1642 Lahore
7. Sbwaja Haji Khidr 1642 Sirhind
APPENDIX A 359
*
Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

4. The Saints of the Naqshbandl Order, (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.

8. Sayyid Adam Banawrl 1643


9. Shaylkh Hamid 1644 Lahore
10. Shaykh Nur Muhammad '
1649 Peshawar
11. Mir AWl-'Ula 1650 Akbarabad
12. Shaykh Ahmad Said 1659 Sirhind
13. Shaykh Muhammad 1664 Sultanpur
Shaykh Muhammad
:1:

14.

Ma' sum 1668 Sirhind


15. Shaykh Muhammad 1672 Ambala
16. Shaykh Muhammad Sharif 1672 Shahabad
17. Khwaja MumuM-Dln (1) 1674 Kashmir
18. Shaykh 'Abdu^l-Khaliq 1675 Kasur
19. Khwaja Da->ud Mishkati (2) 1685 Kashmir
20. Shaykh Muhammad Amin
Dar< 3) 1686 Kashmir
21. Shaykh SayfuM-Dm 1686 Sirhind
22. Shaykh Sa'di 1696 Lahore

(1)He wrote the following: Fatawa-i-Naqsh-


bandiyya, The Decisions of Naqshbandiyya
1

Kanzus- ,

Saddat, The Treasure of Virtue/ and Risdla Ridwdnl.


(2) He is the author of Asrdrul-Abrdr, The Sec-
rets of Good People'.
(3) The
authorship of Qatrat, The Drops, is

ascribed to him.
360 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
'"Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

4. The Saints of the Naqshbandi Order, (conic/.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.

23. Maulana Hajl Muhammad


Ismail Ghauri 1699 Peshawar
'

24. Makhdum Hafiz


Ghafur 1701 Kashmir
25. Shaykh Muhammad
Murad 1718 Kashmir
26. Sayyid Nur Muhammad 1723 Budaun
27. Khwaja Muhammad '

iddlq 1724 Sirhind


28. Khwaja 'Abdullah Balkhl 1726 Kashmir
4

29. Khwaja Abdullah Bukharl 1728 Kashmir


30. -Shaykh 'Abdu^l-Ahad b.
Khazmatu^r-Rahmat 1729 Sirhind
31. Shaykh Muhammad
Farrukh 1731 Sirhind
32. Hajl Muhammad Afdal 1733 Sirhind
33. Haji Muhammad Muhsan 1734 Delhi
34. Shaykh Muhammad Fadil 1739 Patiala
35. ghwaja Hafig Sa'ldullah 1740 Shajahanabad
36. *Shaykh Muhammad
Zubayr 1740 Sirhind
37. ShahGulshan 1742 Delhi
38. Shaykh 'Abdu^r-Rashid 1742 Delhi
39. NuruM-Din Muhammad '

Aftab 1743 Kashmir


APPENDIX A 361

^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

4. The Saints of the Naqshbandl Order, (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.
40. Shaykh Hajl Muhammad
Said 1752 Lahore
41. ghwaja 'AbduVSalam 1758 Kashmir
42. Shah Muhammad adiq
Qalandar 1758 Kashmir
43. Khwaja Muhammad A'zam '

Domri (1) 1771 Kashmir


44. Khwaja KamaluM-Din 1774 Kashmir
45. Hadrat Shah Shamsu'M-Din
Hablbullah Mirza Jan-i-
Jana Mazhar 1780 Delhi
46. Maulwi Ahmadullah 1783 Panipat
47. Shaykh Muhammad Ihsan 1791 Delhi
48. Maulwi 'Alimullah 1796 Gangoh
49. Maulwi Thanaullah 1797 Panipat
50. Shah Dargahl 1811 Rampur
51. afiuM-Dln afl u l-Qadar 1821
t> <>
Lucknow
4

52. Shah Abdullah Ghulam


V

AH 1824 Delhi
53. Shah Abu Said 1834 Tonk
54. ShahRauf 1837
55. Shaykh Muhammad Asghar 1839 Delhi

(1) He is the author of the famous history of


Kashmir known as Tarifeji 'Azaml, The History of
*Azam.
362 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

4. The Saints of the Naqshbandl Order, (contd.)

Name

57. Maulwl Karamullah of


Delhi
58. Mawlana 'Abdu^l-Qbafur
59. Mirza Rahimatullah Beg
60. Sayyid Munawwar Shah
61. Maulwi Khatib Ahmad
62. Mawlana Muhammad Jan
J
Shaykhu l-Haram
63. Shah Ahmad Sa'id
64. Imam 'All Shah a t r

(Gurdaspur)

5. The Saints of the Minor or the Irregular Orders.

1. -Sayyid Salar Mas'ud


Ghazi 1033 Bahraich
2. Shaykh Isma'il 1056 Lahore
* l

3. Aliu J l-Hujwirl 1072 Lahore


4. Sayyid Ahmad Sakhi
Sarwar 1181 Multan
5. Sayyid Ahmad Tokhta 1205 Lahore
6. Sayyid Ya'qub adar
Dlwan 1207 Lahore
7. Mir Sayyid Husayn
Khung Sawar 1213 Ajmer
APPENDIX A 363

^Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

5. The Saints of the Minor or the Irregular


Orders, (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.
8. Sayyid 'Azlzu'd-Dm
Makkl 1215 Lahore
9. ufi Badhm 1240 Delhi
10. Sayyid Math 1262 Lahore
11. Khwaja 'Aziz 1267 Budaun
12. Amir Kablr Sayyid 'All
Hamadani 1287 Kashmir
13. Shaykh NuruM-Dln
'Abdu J r-Rahman 1296 Kashmir
14. Shaykh Nuru^-Dm
Malikyar 1296 Delhi
15. Shaykh Badru
J
d-Dm
Ishaq 1316 Delhi
16. Bulbul Shah 1326 Kashmir
17. Shaykh Ishaq Maghribl 1374 Nagore
18. Shaykh SharfuM-Din
b. (1) Yahya Munirl 1380 Rajgir Hills
19. Sayyid Ishaq Gazrunl 1384 Lahore
20. -Shaykh 'Abdulla Shat-
tarl 1429 Mandu (Multan)
(1) He is an author of several books on ufism the
chief of these being Mahtubdt, 'Epistles/ Irshadu*s-
Sdlikin, The Directions for The Travellers/ Madanu*l-
Maam, _The Mine of Things Spiritual, and a commen-
tary on Adabul-Muridin.
364 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
:1

'Indicates that mention has been made of him in the text.

5. The Saints of the Minor or the Irregular


Orders, (contd.)

Name

21. Shaykh 'All Flru


22. Shaykh 'All b. Ahmad
23. *Shaykh Badi'u'd-Din
Madar
24. Shaykh NuruM-Din Wall 1438
25. Shaykh BahaVd-Dm
Ganj Bakhsh
26. Shaykh Ahmad Katthu
27. Shaykh Jamal Gojar
28. Shaykh HilaluM-Dm
29. Sayyid Muhammad
Amin
30. Malik ZaynuM-Din
31. ZabaruM-Din
32. Shu'ayb
33. Shah JalaluM-Dm
34. Shaykh Sulayman b.
4
Affan 1537 Delhi
35. Sayyid Muhammad
Ghawth 1562 Gwalior
36. Baba Quds 1578 Kashmir
37. Sayyid GbyathuM-Din
Gilani 1582 Lahore
38. *Shaykh WajihuM-Din 1589 Gujrat
39. Baba Wale 1592 Kashmir
APPENDIX A 365

5. The Saints of the Minor or the Irregular


Orders, (contrf.)
366 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
5. The Saints of the Minor or the Irregular
Orders, (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.

57. Shaykh Baql 1654 Akbarabad


58. 'Abdu^l-Hakim 1658 Sialkot
59. liaklm Sarmad 1660 Delhi
Shaykh Da ud
j
60. 1660 Kashmir
61. Shaykh Abu Turab Shah
Gada 1661 Lahore
J
62. Najmu d-Dln Baba
Sakhl
63. Mir Muhammad 'AH
64. Baba Zahid
65. Sayyid Hamid
J
66. Abu l-Fatih
67. Baba Habib Lattu
68. Mir Taju
69. Shah Muhammad Qadirl
Suhrawardi, & Kub-
rawi 1705 Kashmir
70. Baba Uliiman Qadiri,
Suhrawardi &
1705 Kashmir
71. Muhammad Hashim 1706 Kashmir
72. 'Abdu'r-Rahlm 1708 Kashmir
73. Mirza Hayat Beg 1708 Kashmir
74. Shaykh Husayn 1710 Kashmir
75. QSdl Haydar 1710 Kashmir
76. Mawlana 'Inayatullah 1713 Kashmir
APPENDIX A 367

5. The Saints of the Minor or the Irregular


Orders, (contd.)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.

77. Sultan Mir Ju 1713 Kashmir


78. Mir Abu J
l-Fatih 1713 Kashmir
79. Shaykh Muhammad 1714 Kashmir
80. Qadi Dawlat Shah
Husaynl 1714 Delhi
81. Mirza Kamil 1718 Kashmir
4

82. Abdu J l-Latif 1721 Kashmir


83. Mir SharfuM-Din 1722 Kashmir
84. Mir Muhammad Hashim
Gilani 1722 Kashmir
85. Mawlana 'All Asghar 1727 Kanauj
86. Baba Muhammad Mehdi 1737 Kashmir
87. Shaykh Fatih Shah Shat>
tari 1737 Lahore
88. Plr Munammad Isma'll
Kubrawi 1737 Kashmir
89. ghwaja Ayyub Qurayshi 1742 Lahore
4

90. Baba Abdu J l-Baqi Kub-


rawi 1744 Kashmir
l 4

91. Rustam All b. All


Asghar 1764 Kanauj
92. Shah Wall Ullah Muhad-
dith 1765 Delhi
93. Mir Muhammad Ya'qub
Gilani 1765 Lahore
368 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
5. The Saints of the Minor or the Irregular
Orders, (confd)

Name Date of Place of


Death Shrine.

94. Hafiz 'AbduM-Khaliq


AwesI 1771 Bahawalpur
95. Sayyid Shah Husayn
Gilan! 1790
v

96. Sayyid Abdu^l-Karlm


Pir Bahawan Shah 1798 Lahore
97. Maulwi Ghulam Farid 1801 Lahore
98. Mufti Rahimullah 1819 Lahore
99. Shaykh Nur Ahmad
Husayn 1820 Lahore
l 1

100. Shah Abdu^l- Aziz 1823 Delhi


101. Sulfan Bala Din Awes! 1825 Bahawalpur
102. Shaykh Laddhe Shah 1837 Lahore
103. Ahmad Shah 1860 Kashmir
APPENDIX B.

THE PRINCIPAL ANNIVERSARIES OF THE


SAINTS 'URS IN INDIA.
1

The date of death is observed, and in the following list the


dates are given according to the Muslim Calendar.

1. Sultan Bahu, Bahu in


Dist.Jhang ... 1st Muharram.
2. Bhore Miyan, Rampur 4th
3. FariduM-Din Shakar-
ganj, Pak Patan ... 5th-7th
4. Langar ahib, Hyder-
abad ... 10th
5. Salar Mas'ud Ghazi,
Bahraich ... llth
j
6. Shaykh Ibadu l-Huda,
Gwalior ... 19th
7. Hajl Warith 'All Shah 21st
J
8. Shamsu l-Haq, Jabbi,
Shahpur ... 21st
J
9. Shah Jamalu l-Huda,
Rampur ... 23rd
10. MutiVr-Rasul, IBudaun 25th
11. Mir Ashraf Jahangir
Samnanl, Kachaucha 25th-28th
12. Warijh 'All Shah, Dewa
Sharif ... 16th afar.
370 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
13. Shah Jamalullah, Rampur 3rd Safar.
14. Muhammad 'Abbas 'All
Khao Naqshband,
Amroha ... 5th ,,

15. KhwajaMutma^in, Tunsa 6th


16. ThanauM-Dm Zakariya,
Tunsa ... 7th
17. Shah Nizamu'd-Din
Chishtl, Bareilly ... 12th
18. Karlm Shah, Surat, ... 13th
19. ShamsuM-Din Sayyal 13th-15th
20. Sakhi Sarwar Sultan,
Dhaunkal ... 13th
21. 'Abdu^l-Quddus, Gan-
goh ... 14th
22. Shah Dargahl, Rampur 14th
23. Imam 'All, Sialkot, ... 15th
24. 'Alm^l-Hujwiri, Lahore 20th
25. Shah Mayna, Lucknow 23rd
26. Sa j in Fadal Ilahl, Kusur 25th
27. Makhdum Shah 'All,
Cwanpur ... 26th
28. Shah Bulaqi, Murada-
bad ... 27th
29. Shaykh Ahmad Faruql,
Sirhind ... 27th-28th
30. adiq Shah, Cwanpur... 28th
31. Plr Muhammad Naw-
shah, Naushahra ... 4th Rabi'ul-Awwal.
APPENDIX B 371

32. Khwaja Zarl Bakhsh,


Jalalabad ... 4th Rabi'ul-Awwal.
33. MuntakhibuM-Din, Au-
rangabad ... 6th
34. Miyan Mir, Lahore ... 6th
35. Shah Hamdan, Kashmir 7th
36. Makhdum 'AlauM-Din
Sabir, Piran Kaliar 7th-13th
37. Sakhl Sarwar, Lahore 8th
38. Ghwthu-H-A'zam, Am-
bala 9th
39. Jamal Bahar, Monghyr 12th
j
40. Khwaja Qutbu d-'Din
Kaki, Delhi ... 14th
41. Nawshah Ganj Bakhsh,
Naushahra ... 15th
42. Shah Muhammad Said,
Sharqpur ... 15th
43. Abu^l-Mu'ali, Lahore 16th
44. Shah Muhammad
Ghawth, Lahore ... 16th
45. Ghawth Shah, Panipat 17th
46. NizamuM-Din Awliya,
Delhi ... 18th
47. Husayn Bakhsh, Far-
rukhabad ... 19th
48. Ghulam Qadir, Lahore 19th
49. Talib Husayn, Far-
ruhkabad ... 21st
372 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
50. Shah Jamal, Lahore ... 22nd Rabi'ul-Awwal
51. Fadlu^r-Rahman, Murad-
abad 23rd
52. Farid Thani, Mathan
Kot 2nd Rabi'u'th-Tham
53. Mihran Shah, Ahmad
Nagar 10th
4

54. Ghawthu l-A 2am,


J
Ba-
tala 10th
55.. Gydrhunn Sharif of
4

Ghawthu J l-A gam. . . llth


56. Ladora Dargah, Dar-
bhanga llth
57. Shah Dawla, Gujrat,
(Punjab) 19th
58. ufl Muhammad Imam-
uM-Din, Mukhtas-
sar 20th
59. Ghawthu^l-A'sam, Ra-
walpindi 30th
60. 'Abdu^-Hakim, Ghazi-
pur 12th Jamadi'l-Awwal
61. NigamuM-Dln, Delhi ... 15th
62. Zinda Shah Madar,
Makanpur 17th
63. Pir Hayder Shah, Jalal-
pur ...5th-7th
64. Bibl Pakdamanan,
Lahore ... 7th
APPENDIX B 373

65. FakhruM-Din, Delhi ... 7th Jamadi^th-Thanl.


66. Hamid Qadiri, Lahore, 8th
67. Hadrat Imam ahib,
Sialkot ... 17th
68. Baqi Billah, Delhi ... 28th-29th
69. Kbwaja Mu'lnuM-Din
Chishtl ... 6th-14th Rajab.
70. Shah adar Diwan,
Lahore ... 16th
71. Bandagl Shah Lutfullah,
4

Bijnor ... 1st Sha ban.


4

72. Abdu l-Kanm, Rampur


J
2nd
73. BadruM-Dm Ishaq, Ajo-
dhan ... 4th
74. Sayyid Shah Ghawth,
Budaun ... 5th
75. Bandagl Shah, Sikandar-
abad ... 9th
76. Shah 'Abdu^l-Bari, Am-
roha ... llth
77. Khwaja Muhammad
Hadrat Ishan, La-
hore ... 12th
78. Bawajl Nur Muhammad
Naqshband, Chaw-
rah ... 12th
79. ShamsuM-Dln Turk,
Panipat ... 19th
80. Shh Altamash, Delhi 20th
374 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
81. 'Abdu^l-Karlm, Sialkot 20th Shaban.
82. Maulwl Ayyubl, Luck-
now ... 21st

83. Anwar, Kakori ... 22nd


84. Sarmad Shahid, Delhi 22nd
85. Bahlul Shah, Lahore ... 27th-29th
86. Shaykh Bilawal, Lahore 28th
87. Shamsu J d-Dln Hablbul-
lah, Sirhind ... 1st Ramadan.
88. Haji Ramadan Chishtl,
Lahore ... 2nd
89. 'Abdu J l-BarI Mahiri,
Amroha ... 4th
90. Muhammad Daru, Gan-
goh ... 5th
91. Bu 'All Qalandar, Pani-
pat and Karnal ... 12th-13th
92. Shah Muhammad Gosha
Nashln, Ahmadabad 15th
93. Muhammad Ghawth.
Gwalior ... 15th
94. Mulla Hamid Qadiri,
Lahore ... 17th
95. NaslruM-Dln Chiragh-i-
*Delhl, Delhi ... 18th
96. Najibullah Mutawwak-
kil, Delhi ... 19th
97. RuknuM-Din Abul-
Hasan, Vellore ... 20th
APPENDIX B 375

98. Hujjatullah GhayWl-


Lisan, Delhi 21st Ramadan.
99, Shah Junayd, Ghazipur 24th
100. Shah 'Allmullah, Rae-
barelli 25th
101. Shaykh Hasan Afghan,
Malakan 26th
102. Dlwan Muhammad Nur-
u J d-Dln, Ajodhan ... 27th
103. Sharfu J d-Dm, Calcutta 28th
104. Miyao Wadda, Lahore 28th
105. Shaykh Salim Chishtl,
Fatehpur Sikri 29th
106. Ahmad Sarwar, Murad-
abad 8th Shawwal.
107. Shyakh Misrl,Bombay 13th
108. Wazir 'All, Rampur ... 13th
109. Habibu J r-Rahman,
Budaun 15th
110. Amir Khusru, Delhi ... 18th-20th
111. Shah 'All Hayder, Ka-
kori 26th
112. Miyan 'Abdu^l-Haklm,
Rampur 2nd Db'1-Qa'adah.
113. Nisamu^d-Dln, Kakori 7th
114. Shah Taqi, Cambellpur 8th
115. Sayyid Muhammad Gesu
Daraz, Gulbarga ... llth-15th
4

116. 'Ashiq Ali, Dongriabad 17th


376 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
117. Shah Wilayat 'All, Agra 18th Dh'1-Qa'adah.
118. Shah 'Alam, Racpur ... 27th
119. 'Abdu J l-Khaliq, Baha-
walpur ... 28th
120. Makhdum-i-Jahaniyap
Jahan Gasht, Uchh 9th 10th Dhil-Hajj.
121. Din Muhammad, Amrit-
sar ... llth
122. Hadrat Fadil, Batala ... 12th
123. Basit 'All, Allahabad ... 18th
INDEX

'Abbasid, 133.
Abdal, 105, 106, 207.
'Abdu J l-Ahad, 277.
'Abdu'l-'Aziz Makkl, 310, 311.
'Abdu J l-Karlm, Makhdum, 240.

'Abdu-4-Khaliq Ghujdawani, 188, 190.


'Abdullah Ansari, 197.
Bahrl, 162.
Bayabani, 204, 205.
Hanlf, 119.
Karmani, 209.
Khaki, 122.
Shattari, 306, 307.
J
'A6du l-Qadir Gilanl, 42, 107, 110, 113, 172, 176-182,
184, 187, 197, 211, 229, 253256, 276, 311.
'Abdu'l-Qadir, II, 254, 255.
'Abdu'l- Wahid b. Zayd, 14, 163, 174.
'Abdu^l-Wali ghan ahib, 137.
'Abdu^r-Rahim Khao, 242.
'Abdu^r-Rahim Lodl, 243.
'Abdu J r-Rab, 104.
'Abdu^r-Razzaq, 274.
'Abdu j s-amad, 242.

Abel, 127.
Abl Dara. 54.
378 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

Abl alih, 176.

Abu Ahmad, 175.


Ahmad Yasawl. 188.

'All of Sindh, 21, 187.

Abu Amr Qazwinl. 125.


Abu Bakr, 36, 161, 174, 190, 279.
Abu Darda, 10.
Abu Hamid Muhammad al-Ghazall, see al-Ghazali.
Abu Hayat, 255.
Abu Ishaq Gazruni, 172.
Abu Ishaq Ibrahim, see Ibrahim b. Adham.
Abu Ishaq Shaml Chishtl, 166, 174, 175, 193, 302.
Abu^l-Fadl, 280.
Abu^l-Farah Tartawsl, 172.
Abu^-Hasan kharqani, 187, 188, 197.
Abu->l-Hasan b. Sallba, 125.

Abu^l-Jannab Ahmad b. 'Umaru 1-Khiwaqi, 173, 182.

Abu^l-Layth, 211.
Abu^l-Qasim, 59.

Abu^l-Qasim b. Junayd, 171.


Abu^l-Qasim Gurganl, 188.
Abu Muhammad, 175.
Abu Muhammad 'Abdullah, see Burhanu J d-Din Qutb
'Alam.
Abu^n-NajlbSuhrawardl, 172, 173, 197.
Abu Sa'ld, 72.
Abu Said Abu^l-Khayr, 197.
Abu Sa*id Mubarak Mukharraml, 176, 177.
Abu Sa Id b. Mu'inuM-Din, 207.
INDEX 379

Abu Sa'id Tabrezi, 197,


Abu alih, 176.
Abu Sulayman Darani, 18, 19.
Abu Yazld, see Bayazld.
Abu Yusuf, 175.
Abu Yusuf Hamadam, 168, 188, 197.

adab-i-zahirl, 91.
AdaVl-Muridin, 182.
Adam, 24, 57, 58, 64, 82, 127.
Adhamiyya, 163.

adhan, 277.
adh-DSahabi, 120.
adh-dhat, 53.
advaiia, 142.

Afaliyyat, 54. 75.


Ahl-i-Khilu>at,227.
Ahl-i-$ukbat, 227.
Ahmad Faruq, 276-285.
Ahmad M'ashuq, 232235.
abwdl, (Sing, hal), 67, 168.
Ajmer, 196, 197, 200, 202209, 211, 213.

Ajodhya, 216, 221.


okas, 152.
l

Akasha, 118.
akhfa, 61, 62.

al^Ama, 54, 146.

'Alam-i-Khalq, 61, 62, 65.


'Alam-i-Kabir< 60, 61.
'Alam-i-Malakut, 57, 104.
'Alam-i-Mith&l, 57.
380 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

'Alam-i-Ndsut, 57, 104.


'Alam-i-Saghlr> 60, 61.
4

'AlauM-Din All 'Ahmad abir, see 'Ali Ahmad abir,


'AlauM-Din of Bengal, 224.
'AlauM-Din Kayqobad III, 36.
4

AlauM-Dln Seljuqi, 36.


Al-Beruni, 134.
Aleppo. 37.
Alexander the Great, 115.
Alexanderia, 20.
al-fardu*l-kamil. 82.
iami \ 82.
l, 35-30, 67, 71, 92, 117.
Al-Mehdl. 82.

Al-Muwaffiq, 134.
Altamash 185, 212, 215.
Alwar, 249.
al-Wujudu*l-Mutlaq, 53.
4

Ali, 121, 161, 162, 174, 178, 190, 211, 303.


'

AH Ahmad abir, 218, 220, 225-227.

'Allu^l-Hujwiri, 69-72, 83, 90-92, 103-105, 112, 115.


169, 171, 181, 315-317.
'AliDinwarl, 175.
4

AlI Farmadi, 188.


4
Ali Ramitam, 189.
4

Amar Makki, 22, 171.


Amir Kbiisru, 223.
Amir Sayyid Kull, 189.
Amir Sultan Shamsu^d-Din, 185.

Amrullah, 59.
INDEX 381

Ana*l-Haqq, 22, 23, 55, 75.


Anasagar, 201, 203.
Aniyyat, 23, 55, 84.
Annihilation, 83, ff, 92,
4

Aql, Primal Reason, 58.


'Aqil, 121.
Areopagite, 17.
Arendoke, C van, 165.
4

Arif , 17.

'Arif Rewgari, 188.


4

Arif, Shaykh, 306.


Aristotle, 18.
Asdba fl Marafati*$-Sahaba, 120.
Asaf Jah. 280.
Asceticism, 9-16.
Ashabu^s-^afa, 6.

Asiatic Society of Bengal, 136.


Astrabad, 197.
4

Aftar, see Faridu d-Din Attar.


Af-Tariqat, 75, 160.
Aurangzeb. 136, 273, 294, 296, 297.
'Awarifu*l-Ma'arif, 42, 184.
Awliya, (Sing, wall), 102, 106.

B
iaba Farld, 44, 107, 208, 215-221, 225, 226, 310
Baba Khaki, 122.
Baba Ratan, 120.
Baba SamasI, 189.
Baba Tahir, 119.
382 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Bad! Vd-Dln, 280.
Bad! Vd-Dm Shah Madar see Madr Shah.
BadruM-Dm Sulayman, 219.
Badl see Abdal.
Baghdad, 26, 167, 168, 176, 177, 184, 188, 197, 211.
Bahadurpur, 249.
Baharistdn, 51.
Baha J uM-Dm, father of Jalalu J d-Dm RumI, 36.
J
BahaVd-Din, father of Khwaja Shamsu d-Dln Hafiz,
47.

BahaVd-Din Naqshband, 186, 189, 190.


BahaVd-Din Zakariya, 185, 212, 216, 229-231.
Bahawal Shah, 258.
Bahlul Shah Darya j i, 256.
Bahlul Shahl Section of the Qadirl Order, 256-258, 265,
266.

Bahraich, 123.
Bakhtiyar, a little of QutbuM-Din Kaki, 214.
Balkh, 36, 133, 164, 199.
Balban, 218, 223.
Bale Miyan, 122.
Baluchistan, 119.
Bandagi, creatuxeliness, 83.
Baqa, subsistence, 76, 83.
BaqI billah, 275-279.
Barabanki, 123.
Barmak, 133.
Bar Sudhayli, 17.
4

Ba Shara sections' |of|the Suhrawardl Order, 234-247.


Bashlr. 138.
INDEX 383

Batala, 239, 240.


Bay at, 87.

Bayazid I, 188.

Bayazid Bistaml, 21, 168.


, on the doctrine of sukr, 'intoxication'
169, 170.
, in the chain of succession of the
Naqshbandi Order, 187.
, as a maldmati 317.
Bdzgasht, one of the rules of the Naqshbandiyya, 191.
Bengal 209.
Be Shara' sections of the Suhrawardi Order, 234, 235,
247-252.
Bhagvatgiat, 134.
Bha'l Bala, 157.
Bhakti, 145.
Bhawan Shah, 245.
Blbi Pakdamanan, 121.
Bihar, 256.
Bihishti darwaza, 219.
Bistam, 21.
Bistamiyya, 161.
Brahma Gupta, 133.

Brahman, 142, 145-148.


Brahma siddhanta, 133.
Brown, J. P. 88, 178.

Browne, F. G. 42, 49.


4

Bu All Qalandar, 312-314.


Budaun, 220.
Buddha, 144.
384 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Bukhara, 188, 189, 195, 220, 236.
Burhdn-i-Nabawi, 103.
BurhanuM-Din, 37.
BurhanuM-Din Qufb-i-'Alam, 236.
Bustan, 41-43, 184.
C
Canton, 118.
Carra de Vaux, 36.
Ceylon, 119, 209.
Chajju panthis, 120.
Chakras, 148, 149.
Chela, 140.
Chengiz Khan, 32, 183, 216.

Chilla, 175.
Chisht, 174.
Chishtis, 93.
Chisht! Order, and musical festivals, 113, 215.
, traced to Hasan Basri, 162.
, founded by Abu Ishaq Shaml, 166.
, one of the four main Orders, 174-176.
, introduced in India, 193-208.
, after the death of Kbwaja Mu'inuM-
Din, 209-219.
, and its sections 220-227.
Chitagong, 107.
Chitor, 239.
Chuhas of Shah Dawla, 245, 246.
Conversion, 73.
Creative Existence, 143.
Creative Truth, 57, 79, 143.
INDEX 385

D
Dafdll faqirs, 124.
Damascus, 37, 160.

Dancing Darwishes, 38.


Dara Shikoh, 110, 134, 136, 175, 270-273.
Dargah, 106.

Darwish, 119, 130, 165.


Das Gupta, 150, 152, 156, 158.
Data Ganj Bakhsh, 115, 128, 129, 200.
Da'ud, 249.
Dawla Shah, 242-245.
Dawla Shah! Section of the Suhrawardl Order, 242-247.
Dawlat Shah, 31.
Death, in the sense of self-mortification, 76, 77.
De la Valle Possim, 152.
Delhi, 185, 200, 206, 212-216, 221, 222, 225, 253.
Devotions, classifications of, 90.

, General acts of, 90-95.

, The special acts of, 96-101.


Dhikr, 1, 4, 55, 69, 70, 88.

,
one of the special acts of ufl devotion, 90.

, Jail, 97, 190.

, Khafi, 98, 190.


Dhu'n-Nun Misrl, 18-20, 315.
Din-i-Ilahi, 280.
Divine Effulgence, 78-83.
Divine Essence, 78, 82.
Divine Love, 69.

Diwan-i-Hafiz, 43, 47.


Diwdn-i-Jdmi, 49.
386 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Diwan-i-Shams-i-Tabriz, 38.
I?iySVd-Dln Najlb Suhrawardi, 182, 184.
D'Ohsson, 301.
Du'd-i'Mdthura, 95.
Durud, 95.

Eckhart, 17.
Ecstasy, 4 70. t

Egypt, 19, 315.


Essence, 53, 54, 78, 82, 84, 146.
Etah, 223.
Eternal Beauty, 50.
Existence, 80.
F

Faghna, 189,
FakhruM-Dln, son of Mu InuM-Dln Ajmen,
4

207.

FakhruM-Dln Iraqi, 318.


FakhruM-Din Razl, 36.
Fans, 21, 35, 76, 81.
the doctrine of, 83, 84.
,

, the negative aspect of, 84-86.

, the positive aspect of, 86.

, ^liuM-Hujwirl^s teaching on, 129.


, compared with the Buddhistic Nirvana, 150-153.
, compared with the Upanishadic Moksa, 153-158.
Fand fi*l-baqiqat, absorption in Reality, 67.
Fand filldh wa baqd billdh, the annihilation and subsist-

ence in God, 145.


Fand wa baqd, annihilation and subsistence, 72, 126, 153.
INDEX 387

Farldi, section of the Chishtl Order, 215-219.


FariduM-Din 'AftSr, 31-35.
FarlduM-Dm Shakarganj, see Baba Farid.
Fatehpur Sikri, 208.
Fatiha, 179, 18O* *
FSfima, MuhaJMad's daughter, 178.
Fatima, wife of Wuhammad Qbawth, 253, 254.
Fthi ma fihi, 38.

Firdawsl, author of Shahnama, 34


Firdawsl, a title of AWl-Jannab Ahmad, 173, 182.
Firdawsiyya Order, 173.
Fudayl b. 'lyad, 12-14, 163, 164.

128.

Gautama, 150.
Gesu Daraz, 224.
GJiaflat, heedlessness, 170.

Ghawth, 104.
Ghawthu*l-A'zam, 177.
Gfaazi Khan, 243.
GhSz! Miyao, 122-124.
Gbfizi Sultan Muhammad, 247.

QhiySthpur, 223.
GhiySthuM-Din Tajghlak, 222.
Ghujdawan, 188.
Gita, 135.
Giydrhmn Sharif, 179.
Gnosis, 70.
388 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
God, ufl conception of, 52-61.

, conception compared with Advaita philoso-


Qfl

phy of the Upanishads, 142444.


, ufi conception compared with Vishista-advaita

of Ramanuja, 144-146.
, the Qfi doctrine of TanazzuI$mT\d the Hindu
doctrine of namarupa, 146-148.
Gujrgt, 41,236, 307-309.
Gujrat (Punjab), 242,244-246.
fiulbarga, 225.
Gulistan, 41,42.
Gulshan-i-Raz, 43, 76.
Gunas, attributes, 146.
Guru, spiritual preceptor, 140.
GurzmSr faqirs, 324.

H
4

IJablb Ajami 166-169, 174.


tfabibiyya, 166, 167,174.
Habs-i-dam, 99, 188.
IJadlih-i-Qudsi, 54.
J
, Kbwaj* Shamsu d-Din, 43, 47, 48, 64, 65.

Jaml Blbl, 206,207.

tfaj, 90.

IJijI Afdal, see Muhammad Afdal.


IJfijI Shah Muhammad, 260-263.
4

IJftkim At&, 188.


181.

(emotional), 70.
Haltftj, see Husayn b. Mansur.
INDEX 389

Hama ost, 52.

Ramadan, 197.
Hamdunu'l-Qassar, 315.
Hamza, 224, 315.
Hamza Shhi, 224.

Hamzawis, 315.

Hansl, 216.
Haqiqat, reality, 71, 75, 181.
Haqiqatu*l-Mukammadiyya, 55, 57, 59.
Hartman, 188.
Harun (a town), 195.
HSrunu'r-Rashld, 133, 163.
Harut, 127.
Hasan, 104, 162.
IJasan Basri, 11, 162, 163, 166.
Hasan Khattall 125 ,130.
Hasan Nizami, 223.
Hasan Sari^u's Saqati, 167.
Hasan Zanjani, 128.
Hassu Tell 226, 267.
Hay, The Living One, 181.
HayStu^l-Mir, 256-259.
Hayula, substance, 143.
Hellenic culture, 18.
Herat, 197, 198, 225.
Hijaz, 110.
Hinduism according to $ufts, 137-139.
Hindu Philosophy, 142-158.
IJira, 110.

Hiryana, Professor, 145.


390 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
t*

IJisamiyya, a section of the Chishti Order, 224,


IJisfimuM-Dln b. Mu'inuM-Dln, 207
yisfimuM-Dln Bi&hari, 223.
HKsamuM-Din Manikpurl, 224.

IJisfimuM-Dln Nagore, 228.


Hash dar dam. 191.
Hw, 55.

IJujjatullah, 295, 296.


HuM, 81.

Humayun, 307.

IJusayn, 104, 162.


Husayn b. Mansur, 21-25, 55, 130, 171.

liusayn Shfihi, a section of the Qadirl Order, 265-269.


Husrl, 125.
Huwiyyat, 23, 55.
Huzayra, princess, 218.

Ibnu'VArabi, 24, 37.


Ibn Batata, 119,
Ibn Hlajar ^sqalfinl, 120.
Ibn Ij'anbal, 10.
Ibn Sad, 10.
Ibn Sin, 58.
Ibnu^l-Farid, 114.
Ibrfthim b. Adham, 12, 13, 163-166.

Ibrahim b. Faflk, 24.

Ibrfihlm Kbawwfis, 91.


Ibrahim Qandozl, 193.
Ibrahim Sharql, 317.
INDEX 391

Iconium, 36.
Ida, 149.

Iby&u*l-UUim, 27, 28, 92, 184.


Ijadiyya, 52.
Ildhiyyat, 83.

7/mf, cognitional knowledge of God, 70.


'Ilm-i-Safina, book knowledge, 7.

Ilm-i-Slna, heart knowledge, 7.

7/mu*J Kalarn. 27.


Illumination, 78-82.
Imdn-i-Makmudi, 302,
Indbat, repentance, 73.
India, 187, 193, 169, 200, 211, 212.
J-ne5s, 55, 84.

Injil, 135.

Intoxication, of the love of God, 169, 170, 172.

Iraq, 110, 127.


Isfahan, 47, 197.
7sn<?, 69.
4
Ism Il, Hsfiz, 240-242.
4
Isma il Shahi, a section of Suhrawardi Order, 240-242
Ismatullah, 206.
Ismu-l A
?am, 117.
4

Istidrdj, 108.

Jabarut, 56, 57. 75.


Jafardiq, 168,169,187.
JalSl b.Al^mad Kabir, see Makhdf2m-i-Jah&niyn.
Jalab, attributes of God, 227.
392 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

Jalall, a section of the Suhrawardl Order, 236, 237.


JalaluM-Dln Rumi, 35-41, 84, 156, 197, 318.
JalaluM-Dln Surkhposh, 236.
Jamabaynu*lqurbayn, 84.
Jamdli, attributes of God, 227.
Jaml, Mulla Nuru'd-Din 'Abdu'r-Rafrman, 49-51.
Jfin Muhammad, 242.
Janissaries, 188.
Jaypal Jogi, 203.
Jihd, 96.

Jehanglr, 208.
Jesus, 23.
Jihadu'l-Akbar, 96.
Jihadul-Asghar, 96.
JllSn, 176.
Jili, 23, 24, 53, 59, 74, 80.
Journey of a ufl, significance of, 73.
, of Reality 74.
, of creature, 74.
, the three great, 75.
Junayd, Abu'l-Qasim, 22, 125, 164, 166, 171-175.
Junaydiyya, a religious order, 171-174, 182.

K
K&ld, a title of QutbuM-Din, 214.
Kankan, 119, 133.
Karamat, 108-111.
KarbalS, 121.
Karkh, 167.
a religious order, 167.
INDEX 393

Karma, 151.
Karman, 146.
Karmniyya, a section of the Chishti Order, 209.
Karnal, 314.
Kashf, 27.

Kashfrfl-Mabi&b, 83, 125, 126, 164, 167, 188, 299.


Khafi, an organ of spiritual apprehension, 61-63.
phalli, brother of Muhammad Ismail SuhrawardI, 242.
Khalq, the created universe, 57.
Khanwadah, 160, 172, 174.

Khatm, 95.
ghawla, 10.

ghaybar Pass, 118, 119.

Khidr, 111, 115-117, 181, 188.


ghidr Rumi, 310-312.
ghidr SwistanI, 270.
Khilwat dar anjuman, 191.
n, 197.
dat 168.
9

ghubthiydt, 42^
ghulasatu*l-Arifm, 229.
Khurasan, 160.
Khusru Khan, 223.

Kbwarizm Shah, 36.


Kbwas KhSo, 242.
Kitabu*l-Ishdrat, 58.
Kitabu*t-Tau>asin, 22.
Knowledge, 67, 70.
Kokileswar Sastari, 148.
Krishna, 138.
394 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Kubrawl, sec FirdawsL
Kubrawiyya, 173.
Kufa, 300.
Kufr, 76, 138, 139.
Kulal, 189.
Kulliyat-i-Shams-i-Tabriz, 38.
Kulthum, 292.
Kumayl, 162.
Kundalini, 149.

Laccadive, 119.
Lahore, 110, 121, 128, 130, 200, 238, 242.
Lahut, 24, 56, 75.
LSI Husayn, 265-269.
LSI ShahbSz, 247-248.
La&if, 61-63, 99, 148, 286.
Latlfa, 63.
Laf BarrI, 256.
La$lfa-i-Ghaybiyai 48.
Law&ih, 51, 56.
Le Petit St. Jean, 165.
Light of Allah, 58.
Light of Muhammad, 58, 160.
Lisanu* l-&hay$ 48.
Literary History of Persia* 48.
Logos, 30, 58.
Lucknow, 51.

Ludhiana, 51.
INDEX 395

M
Macdonald, D.B. 17, 171.
Macrocosm, 61.
Madarl Order, 302-306.
Madar Shah, 302-306.
Madhu 267-269.
Madras, 118.
Magi, 199.
Mahabat Khao, 170.

Mahant, 202.
Mahmuda, 100.
Mahmud Anjlr Faghwam, 189.
Mahmud Ghaznawi, 122.
Mahmud Shabistarl, 43-46.
Majrria*ul-Bahrayn> 136.
Makanpur, 305.
Makhdum-i-Jahaniyan Jahan Gasht, 236-238.
Makhdumi section, 237-238.
Makran, 119, 133.
Malabar Coast, 118, 119.
Maldkut, 75.
Maldive, 119.
Malikzada Ayyaz, 223.
Malwa, 307.

Mamun, 133.
Man of
God, 39.

Mansur, 133.
Mantiqu*t-Tayr, 32, 33.
Maqdmat, 67, 178.
Mar'ashi, 166.
396 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

Ma'rifat, 67, 70, 181.


Ma'rufu'l-Karkhl, 18, 19, 167.
M'arSf Shah, 260.
Mfirut, 127.
Massignon, Louis, 22.
M'asum, 291, 223-295.
Maihnawi Sharif, 35, 38, 63, 197.

Mathnawi Jaml, 49.


Maunat, 108.
Mawaddat, 170.
Mawdud. 175.

Mawlawl, a religious order, 38.

Maya, 35.
Mazdr, 106.
Mecca, 90-92, 120, 200.
Medina, 185, 201.
Mehna, 197.
Memoirs of the Poets, 31.
Merv, 113.

Mesopotamia, 19, 119, 187.


Microcosm, 61, 74.
Mimshfid Dinwarl, 166, 174, 175.
Miracle, 108.
Mini. 307.
Mlrtn Muhammad Shah Mawj-i-DaryS Bukbfiri, 238-
240.
Mirn Shfihi section, 238-240.

Mir^at-i-Madari, 302.
-i-Mas'Gdi, 123.
Sayyid Gesudarfiz, 224, 225.
INDEX 397

MirzS JSn-i-Jaho Mazhar, 138, 139.


Mishkatu*l-Anwdr, 27, 30, 35.
Miyan Kiel, a section of the Qidiri Order, 265-274.
Miyn Mir, 110, 111, 269-274.
Miyan Nattha, 271-273.
MiySn WaddS, 240-244.
Moksa, 150, 153, 154, 157.
Monastic Orders, 185.
Mongols, 183.
Mount Lukam, 125.

Muadh b. Jabal, 57.

Muawiya, 105, 119.


Mubarak ghilji, 221.
Muhammad Afdal, 138, 139.
Muhammad b. Qasim, 119.
Muriammad Fudayl, 261, 262.
Muljammad Ghawtb, 253.

Muhammad Isma'll, see Miyan Wadda.


Muhammad Shah 'Alam, 236.
Muhammad Ta,ghlak, 223.
Muhammad YadgSr, 198.
Muharram, 121.

MuhlVd-Dln, see *AbduM-Q5dir JilSnl,


l
Mta InuM-Dln Chishti, 110, 125, 129, 193-208, 305.
Mujahada, 90, 96.
Mujahadatu*n-Hafs, 96.

MujSwir, 122.
Mu'jiza. 108.
Mukti, 158.
Mullt NSruM-Din *Abdua r-Rakmin Jiml, see Jiml.
398 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Mulls Shah, 27.

Multn, 185, 212, 216, 231-233.


Mundqibu^l-Arifin, 37.
Mun'im, 170.

N
Hadhpr, 124.
Nadhir, 138.
Nadirah, 274.
Kadis, 149.
Hafbatu*l-Uns, 20.
Nafi-athbat, 100.
Nafs, 62. 76-78, 92.
Najd, 300.
Najib, see Nujubd.
NajmuM-Din GhawthuM-Dahar, 311-313.
NajmuM-Dln Kubra, 59, 173, 182-184.
NajmuM-Dln Sutfhra, 212, 213.
Namarupa, 147, 148.
Namaz, 90, 92, 94.
Nacfib, see Nuquba.
Naqshbandi Order, 185-192, 275-298.
Naqshbandiyya, 49, 137, 161, 174.
Nasir Mast, 244.
Naslru^d-Dln Astrabadi, 197, 225.
Nasut. 24, 75.
Natthe''MiyfiD, 111.
Nature, 54.
Nawshah, 262. 263.
Nawshh Ganj Bakhsh, 261.
INDEX 399

Nava Vihara, 133.


Nazar bar qadam, 191.
Negation and affirmation, 100.
Neo-Platonism, 17, 20, 53.
Nibbana, 152.
Nicholson, Professor, 18, 20. 38, 71, 74, 84.
Nigdh dasht, 191.
NilGfar Kfafinam, 185.
Nimat, 170.
Ni'mat KhatUn, 242, 243.
Ni'matullfih, 249-251.
Nirguna, 146, 147.
Nirvana, 150-152.
Nlshapur, 25, 31, 36, 196, 197.
Nishpranca Ideal, 144, 145.
Nizam of Hyderabad, 208.

NizSmiyyah College, 26.


NizSmiyyah Section, 220-224.
Nizimu'd-Din, 94.
NizamuM-Dln Awliyi, 113, 128, 214, 219-224, 227.
Nizamu-'l-Mulk, 26.
Nujuba, 106.
Nuquba, 106.
NOruM-Dln Mubarak Qbaznawl, 185, 228.
NuruM-Dln Qibla 'Alam, 224.
NuruM-Mub-ammadiyya, 58.

o
Om, 153.
Oneness, 84.
Oneness of the Essence, 54.
400 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

Orders, 174-192, 187, 190, 193.


Orenburg, 188.

Padmas, 149.
Pak 'Abdu'r-Rahman, 262-264.

Pakpatan, 107, 219.


Pak Rahmams, 262-264.
Pandits, 133, 202.
Pandnama, 32, 33.

Panipat, 314.
Panjab, 111, 200, 216, 219.
Pantheism, 168.
Pas anfds, 99.

Path, 67-72, 74, 75, 161.


Penukondah, 237.

Perfect Man, 74.


Perfect Unit, 81.
Persia, 119, 121, 185, 186.
Pingla, 149.
Pir, 87,89, 99, 106, 140, 141, 160, 162, 179, 188, 189, 190,
191.

Piran-i-Kaliar, 219, 225, 226.


Pir-i-Gha'ib, 103.
Pir Karim, 209.
Pir Muhammad Sachyar, 262-264.
Plrzadas, 120.
Plato, 18.
Platonism, 30.
Platts, 42.
INDEX 401

Plotinus, 132.
Prithviraj, 200, 205.
Prophyry, 18.

Pseudo-Dionysius, 17.
Pure Essence, 53.

Purgative life, 69.


Purusa, 149.

Q
Qadiri Order, 113, 172, 175-182, 197, 253-255.
Qadiriyya, 137, 162, 174, 194.
Qadr, 28.
Qalandarl, 124.
Qalandarl Order, 309-314.
Qalb, 61-65.
Qandhar, 233.
Qaran, 299, 300.
Qasim b. Abu Bakr, 187.
Qasr-i-'Arifm, 189.
Qawwal, 112.
Qawwdli, 112.
Qayyum, 81, 285-298.

Qayyumiyat, 285, 288.


Qumesiyya, 255, 256.
Qumes Shah, 255,
Quniya, 36.

Quran, 6, 93, 94, 100, 102, 112, 115' 130, 131, 132, 135,
136, 138, 195, 210, 241.
Qurb-i-fara*id, 84.
Qurb-i-nawdfil, 84.
402 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Qushayri, 7, 30.

Qutb, 104.
QutbuM-Dln Aybak, 206.

Qutf>uM-Din Blnadal, 312.


QutfmM-Dm Kakl, 197, 209, 215, 228, 311.

R
Rabija, 12, 14-16, 109, 162.
Radha Krishna, Sir, 156.

Radauli, 123.
RSmanuja, 144, 145.
Ramayana, 135, 140.
Ram Chandra, 138, 139.
Ramitan, 189.
Rimpur, 39.
Rapture, 169.
Raq^ 113.
Rasulabad, 237.
Rasul Shahl section, 249-252.
Reality, 67.
Rehatsek, 51.
Religious Orders,
, the origin of, 159-173.
, the main, 174-192.
,the Chishtl, 193-227.
.the Suhrawardl, 228-252.
, the Qadiri Order, 252-274.
, the Naqshbandl 275-298.
t

.the Uwaysl, 299-302.


the MadSrI, 302-306.
,
INDEX 403

,
the Shattarl, 306-309.
, the Qalandari, 309-314.
, the Malamatl, 314-318.
Renunciation, 73.
Repentance, 73.

Rewgar, 188.

Rhys Davids, 151.


Ris&il, of Sa'di, 42.
Riwayat, 125.
RiyaduM-Dln, 207.

Ruh, 61-63, 65, 76.


RuknuM-Dln, 32.

Rum, 110.

Sabiri Section, 225-227.


Sada Suhagin, 249.
Sadhaura, 256.
Sa'dl, 41, 42, 184.
4

Sa d Shamsu J d-Dln, 113.


4

Sa dullah, 265.
SadruM-Dm, 231, 232.
Safar dar watan, 191.
Safaru*l-abd, 74.
Safaru>l-Haq, 74.
Saflnatu*l-Awliyd, 175.
afluM-Dln, 254.
Sahl b. 'Abdullah Tastarl, 172.
Said gharraz, 83.

Saints, of early ufism, 12-15.


404 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

, the veneration of, 102-104.


, the hierarchy of, 104-106.
, of the early days of Islam in India, 118-131.
, of the fourteen ^hdnwadas, 163-173.
, of the Chishti Order, 174-176, 193-227.
, of the Qadirl Order, 176-182, 253-274.
, of the Suhrawardl Order, 182-186, 228-252.
, of the Naqshbandl Order, 186-189, 275-298.
, of the Uwaysl Order, 299-302.
, of the Madari Order, 302-306.
,
of the Shattan Order, 306-309.
, of the Qalandari Order, 309-314.
, of the Malamatl Order, 247-252.
Sakmatu^l Awliya, 110, 271.
SalSr Mas'ud Ghazl. 122-124.
alat, 90.

$alatu*l Ma bus, 93.


Salik, 67.
Sallm Chishti. 208.
Salaman-o-Absal, 51.
Salmanu^l- Farsi, 187.
Sama, 112-115, 215.
Samanyas, 147, 148.

Samarqand, 195.
Sammasi, 189.
Sanjar, 193.
Sankhya, 134, 147.
Saqatf, 168.
Saqa^iyya, 167.
SariuVSaqatf, 160, 162, 171.
INDEX 405

Sasvata, 152.
Satisfaction, 72.
Sayrani^llah, 76.
Sayr fillah, 75.

Sayr ilallah, 75.

Sayyid Bukharl, 236.


Sayyid Siknadar, 276.
Schroder, 152.
Seal o? Sainthood, 82.
Self-annihilation, 168.
Self-mortification, 77, 96.
Canon E., 185.
Sell,
Seven Valleys, 34.
Shah Jamal, 267.
Shah Muhammad Ghawth, 307, 308.
Shajra, 95.

Shakargani, see Baba Farid.


4

ShamsuM- Arifin Ghawri, 242.


ShamsuM-Din, a title, 59.

ShamsuM-Dln Aflaki, 37.


Shamsu^d-Dia Hafiz, see Hafig.
ShamsuM-Dln Tabrezi, 36-38.
ShamsuM-Dm Turk, 226, 227.
Shankara, 147,148.
Shaqdyiqun'-Wb'maniya, 168.
SharfuM-Dm Bu AU Qalandar,
4
312-314.
4

Sh^rfuM-Dln lima il Jabaruti, 60.

Shanal, 87, 181, 215.


Shariurs, 115.
Order, 306-309.
406 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Shathiydt.
Shaykh, see ptr.

Shaykh Sa'di, 31.


ShaykhuM-YunSni, 132.
Sher Shah, 242, 307.
Ske'ru*l-Ajam, 47.
Shibli, 47, 125.
ShihbuJ d-Dln Muhammad Qbawri, 205, 206.
J
ShihSbu d-Dm Suhrawardl, 7, 30, 42, 184, 185, 197, 211,
228,230.
Shirtz, 41,47,184.
Shu'ayb, 216.
Shuhudi, 284.
ShuhQdiyya, 52, 142, 144, 284.
Sikandar Lodi, 253.
?ila, 283.
Silsila, 160.

Sindh, 118, 133, 247.


Sipa Salar, 61-63.
SirSjuM-Din, 224.
Sirawanl, 125.
Sirhind, 205, 276, 278, 282, 289, 290, 291.
SistSn, 193.
Sitr Mu'alla, 123.

Sobriety, 169, 170, 172.


Sokhar, 189.
Srinagar, 107.
Stages, 67, 68-72.
States, 67, 72, 73, 76.
Subsistence, 76, 83.
INDEX 407

ufi, speculation concerning God, 52.


, derivation of the word, 6.

, significance of the journey of a, 73.


, stages of the journey of a, 68.

, devotions of a, 90.
, notable features of the practices of a, 102-117.
, speculation concerning God compared with
Hindu Philosophy, 142-148.
and also see, 161, 162, 164, 169, 170, 184, 191, 196,
210, 211, 212, 215, 227.
ufism, beginning of, 7,
, the earliest form of, 8,

, speculative elements in, 17-25.

, the influence of Hellenic philosophy, 18,


, the Pantheistic elements in, 21-25.

, finds recognition in Islam, 25-30.


, classic periods of, 31.

, music in, 112.

, introduction in India 118,


, in relation to Indian thought, 133-158.
see also, 160, 161, 162, 164, 168, 171, 184, 185.

SufySn Thawri, 164.


Suhag, 248, 249.
Suhagl section, 248, 249.
Suhrawardl Order, 175,182-186,212,228-234.
, sub-sections, 234-252.
4

, Ba Shara sections, 234-247.


, Be Shara' sections, 247-252.
Suhrawardiyya, 162, 172, 174, 197.
Sukr, 169.
408 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Sulayman Shah, 260.
Sultanu*l-adhkar, 99.
Sultan Sarang Ghakkar, 242.
Svetakdta, 144, 147.
Svetasvatra, 146.
Swarup, 148.
Syria, 36, 37, 127.

Tabar Hind, 120.


Tabriz, 197.
Tadhkiratu*l-Awliyd, 14, 32, 244
Taghlaqabad, 222.
Tahdrat, 90.
Tahmld, 96.

Tajalli, 78-83.
Tajrid, 120.
Takhr, 96.

Takia, 185.
Tamim Ansari, 118.
Tamimu^d-Darl, 10.

Tanazzuldt, 52-57.
Taqlld, 26.
Tarjuamnu*l-Asrar, 48.
fanqa-i-Khwajagdn. 189.
Tariqa-i-Naqshbandiyya 189 t

Tarlqai, 67, 181, 188.


Tartar, 193.
Taitawsiyya, 172, 174, 176.
Ta$awwuf, 6, 210, 211, see Sufism.
INDEX 409

Td 5m, 22.

Tashkand, 188.

Tathagatha, 15.

Tawajjuh, 88, 99.


Tawakkul 28, 71, 73, 165.

Tawayt, 73.

Tau^fd, 28, 71, 168, 171.


Tawhidu*dh-dhat, 78.
Tar'hldu>l-afaL 28, 78.
Tcwhidu*s-sifdt. 78.
Tcyfur! ^lanwada, 187.
i ayfuriyya, 168, 169, 171.
tayfur Sham!, 304, 305.
Titus, Dr. M. T., 120.
Torah, 135.
Triad, 53.
Turkey, 185, 187.
Turkistan, 127.
TOs, 25.

U
'Ubudiyyat,58, 83.
Uchh, 217, 236, 238, 253, 254, 255
Uddalaka, 144.
4

Umar, 161, 300.


4
Umar'Abdu^AzIz,
b. 105.

Umayyad, 11.
Ummatullah, 206.
Umm Salma, 162.
Union with God, 34, 67, 72.
410 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA
Unity, 54, 56.
Unity of all existence, 33.
Unity in God, of Essence, 78.

, of attributes, 78.
, of acts, 78.
Universal Self, 71.
Universal Soul, 156.
Universal Succour, 82,
Upanishads, 135, 136, 140, 143, 144-147, 153, 154.
Urquhart, Dr. 140, 141.
'Urs, 107, 114, 115, 123, 202, 207, 219, 226, 246.
U&l, 161, 162.
'Uthman, 161.
l

'Uthman tx Maz un, 10.

'UthmSn, a saint, 119.


'UjhmSn HSruni, 196.

Uwaysiyya, 299-302.
Uwaysu^l-Qaram, 162, 299-302.

V
Vedanta, 140, 154.
Vedas, 135, 137.
Veils of light and darkness, 67.
Veneration of the saints, 102.
Venkataramana, 141.
Vicar of God, 82.
Vidya< 145.
Vinnana, 152.
Visheshas, 147, 148.
INDEX 411

Vishistadvaita, 144, 145.


Visitation to a shrine, 106, 107,

W
Wajd, 70, 169.

WajihuM-Dm, 308, 309.


Wahab, 118.

Wafrlat, 55, 75.


Wafydiyyat, 75.
Wahid, 55.

Wakidiyyat, 56, 75.


Wali, see Awliya.
Wasl 72.
Wild see Awtdd.
A^orld of Command, 75.

World of Creation, 75.


Wujudl, 284.
Wujudiyya, 52, 142, 284.
Wuquf-i-adadl, 192.
Wuquf-i-qalafa, 192.
Wuquf-i-Zamanl, 192.

Yad dasht, 192.


Yadgar, Muhammad, 198.
Yad karo, 191.
Yajanavalkaya, 154.
Yasi, 188.
Yogi, 148.
Yognadis, 149.
412 SUFI SAINTS AND SHRINES IN INDIA

fog Sutra, 134.


Yusuf Chishti, 225.
Yusuf-Zulaykha, 43, 50, 51.

Zabur, 109.
Zabld, 60.
Zahid, 17.
Zaydiyya, 163.
Zinda plr, 256.

Ziyarat, see visitation.


Zubayr, 296-298.
Zuhd, 69, 70, 73.
Zuhra Blbl, 123.
Zulfa, acompanion of Rabi'a, 109.
Zulayklja, mother of NigamuM-Dln Awliya, 220.

Printed and Published by C. O. Forsgren, at the Lucknow Publishing


House, Lucknow. 1739-3-36.

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